images pueblo, co: 2008
DESCRIPTION
Pleasing to the eye with its clean water and mountain views, Pueblo’s environmental efforts has made it a Preserve America community. The city boasts well-known attractions such as Pueblo Zoo and the Historic Arkansas Riverfront, but is perhaps best known for growing close to 10 million pounds of chile peppers each year. Pueblo’s 105,000 residents can be proud of their nationally ranked school system and affordable home prices, plus four native sons who are Medal of Honor recipients.TRANSCRIPT
WILD ABOUT THE NEW BUILDINGZoo introduces Islands of Life exhibit
ALL IN GOOD TASTINESSUnion Avenue eateries offer their own special fare
This Ain’t Their First RodeoProfessional Bull Riders gallop into new headquarters
2008 | IMAGESPUEBLO.COM | VIDEO VIGNETTES
SPONSORED BY THE GREATER PUEBLO CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND PUEBLO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
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OF PUEBLO, COLORADO
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OF PUEBLO, COLORADO
2008 EDITION | VOLUME 14
CONTENTS
FEATURES
12 HISTORICAL TREASURE TROVEHistory buffs of all types can fi nd plenty to occupy an afternoon (or two, or three) along Pueblo’s Golden Mile.
14 ALL IN GOOD TASTINESSYour taste buds are in for a treat at any of the eateries along the Union Avenue Historic District downtown.
16 WILD ABOUT THE NEW BUILDINGThe zoo’s Islands of Life Building opened in April 2007 in the renovated sandstone structure formerly known as the Animal House.
18 STATE OF THE ARTSArt lovers will fi nd lots to see at the Sangre de Cristo Arts Center, as well as at unexpected locations all over the city.
20 THIS AIN’T THEIR FIRST RODEOThe Professional Bull Riders Association opened its new four-story headquarters on the Arkansas River in July 2007.
35 MUSIC TO EVERYONE’S EARSThe Pueblo Symphony Orchestra has been making the world a more musical place since 1928.
40 GUSTO GROWS FOR GRIDIRONFootball has a special signifi cance in Pueblo’s past, present and future.
ON THE COVER Photo by Michael W. BunchHeadwaters Fountain in downtown Pueblo
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PUEBLO BUSINESS 26 Cleared for Takeoff
Pueblo has become the gateway for U.S. Air Force aviation with a new world-class training facility.
29 Biz Briefs
31 Chamber Report
33 Economic Profi le
DEPARTMENTS
10 Almanac: a colorful sampling of Pueblo culture
22 Portfolio: people, places and events that defi ne Pueblo
37 Education
41 Health & Wellness
44 Community Profi le: facts, stats and important numbers to know
OF PUEBLO
SENIOR EDITOR LISA BATTLESCOPY EDITOR JOYCE CARUTHERS
ASSOCIATE EDITORS KIM MADLOM, ANITA WADHWANIASSISTANT EDITOR REBECCA DENTON
STAFF WRITERS CAROL COWAN, KEVIN LITWIN, JESSICA MOZO
DIRECTORIES EDITORS AMANDA MORGAN, KRISTY WISEEDITORIAL ASSISTANT JESSY YANCEY
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS SHARON H FITZGERALD, MELANIE HILL, DAN MARKHAM, JOE MORRIS, VALERIE PASCOE
ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER TODD POTTERINTEGRATED MEDIA MANAGER ELIZABETH WEST
ONLINE SALES MANAGER MATT SLUTZSALES COORDINATOR SARA SARTIN
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS JEFF ADKINS, WES ALDRIDGE, TODD BENNETT,
ANTONY BOSHIER, MICHAEL W. BUNCH, IAN CURCIO, BRIAN MCCORD
CREATIVE DIRECTOR KEITH HARRISWEB DESIGN DIRECTOR SHAWN DANIEL
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR NATASHA LORENSASST. PRODUCTION DIRECTOR CHRISTINA CARDEN
PRE-PRESS COORDINATOR HAZEL RISNERSENIOR PRODUCTION PROJECT MGR. TADARA SMITH
PRODUCTION PROJECT MGRS. MELISSA HOOVER, JILL WYATT
SENIOR GRAPHIC DESIGNERS LAURA GALLAGHER, KRIS SEXTON, VIKKI WILLIAMS
LEAD DESIGNER JANINE MARYLANDGRAPHIC DESIGN JESSICA BRAGONIER,
CANDICE HULSEY, LINDA MOREIRAS,AMY NELSON, CARL RATLIFF
WEB PROJECT MANAGER ANDY HARTLEYWEB DESIGN RYAN DUNLAP, CARL SCHULZ
WEB PRODUCTION JILL TOWNSENDDIGITAL ASSET MANAGER ALISON HUNTER
COLOR IMAGING TECHNICIAN CORY MITCHELLAD TRAFFIC MEGHANN CAREY, SARAH MILLER,
PATRICIA MOISAN, RAVEN PETTY
CHAIRMAN GREG THURMANPRESIDENT/PUBLISHER BOB SCHWARTZMAN
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT RAY LANGENSR. V.P./CLIENT DEVELOPMENT JEFF HEEFNER
SR. V.P./SALES CARLA H. THURMANSR. V.P./PRODUCTION & OPERATIONS CASEY E. HESTER
V.P./SALES HERB HARPERV.P./VISUAL CONTENT MARK FORESTER
V.P./TRAVEL PUBLISHING SYBIL STEWARTEXECUTIVE EDITOR TEREE CARUTHERS
MANAGING EDITOR/BUSINESS MAURICE FLIESSMANAGING EDITOR/TRAVEL PUBLICATIONS SUSAN CHAPPELL
PHOTOGRAPHY DIRECTOR JEFFREY S. OTTOCONTROLLER CHRIS DUDLEY
ACCOUNTING MORIAH DOMBY, DIANA GUZMAN, MARIA McFARLAND, LISA OWENS, JACKIE YATES
RECRUITING/TRAINING DIRECTOR SUZY WALDRIPCOMMUNITY PROMOTION DIRECTOR CINDY COMPERRY
DISTRIBUTION DIRECTOR GARY SMITHMARKETING COORDINATOR AMY AKIN
IT SYSTEMS DIRECTOR MATT LOCKEIT SERVICE TECHNICIAN RYAN SWEENEY
HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGER PEGGY BLAKEBUSINESS DEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR
NICOLE WILLIAMSSALES SUPPORT MANAGER/
CUSTOM MAGAZINES PATTI CORNELIUSOFFICE MANAGER SHELLY GRISSOM
Images of Pueblo is published annually by Journal Communications Inc. and is distributed through
the Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerceand the Pueblo Economic Development Corp.
For advertising information or to direct questionsor comments about the magazine, contact
Journal Communications Inc. at (615) 771-0080or by e-mail at [email protected].
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce
302 N. Santa Fe Ave. • Pueblo, CO 81003Phone: (719) 542-1704 • Fax: (719) 542-1624
www.pueblochamber.org
Pueblo Economic Development Corp.301 N. Main St. • Pueblo, CO 81002
Phone: (719) 544-2000 • Fax: (719) 543-1650 www.pedco.org
VISIT IMAGES OF PUEBLO ONLINE AT IMAGESPUEBLO.COM
©Copyright 2007 Journal Communications Inc.,725 Cool Springs Blvd., Suite 400, Franklin, TN 37067,
(615) 771-0080. All rights reserved.No portion of this magazine may be reproduced
in whole or in part without written consent.
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Member Custom Publishing Council
Member Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce
Please recycle this magazine
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OF PUEBLO, COLORADO22
Inside: PARKVIEW MEDICAL CENTERSPECIAL SECTION
COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITYSPECIAL SECTION
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Located on I-25 at Exit 1024703 North Freeway • Pueblo, CO 81008 • (719) 544-4700 • (719) 544-6526 Fax
For Reservations, Call (800) 972-0165www.ramada.com
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• Free Movie Channel, Full CableTV & Nintendo
• Free High-Speed Wireless Internet
• On-Site Fitness Center with Free Weights & Cardio Equipment
• Complimentary Managers ReceptionFeaturing Wine, Beer, Soda & Snacks
• Coffee Maker, Iron & Board, Hair Dryer& Clock Radios in Every Room
• Outdoor Pool (Seasonal)
• Guest Laundry Facilities & ValetDry Cleaning Service
• Mini-Suites Available
• Variety of Restaurants Nearby
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What’s Online More lists, links and tips for newcomers
IMAGESPUEBLO.COM
1 2
3
VIDEO 1 INSIDE LOOK Join us on a virtual tour of Pueblo through the lenses of our award-winning photographers at imagespueblo.com.
VIDEO 2 DINING IN THE DISTRICTTake a tasty food tour of Historic Union Avenue with Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce President & CEO Rod Slyhoff at imagespueblo.com.
VIDEO 3 ANIMAL ATTRACTIONFind out why visitors go wild over the diverse inhabitants of the Pueblo Zoo at imagespueblo.com.
GARDENING IN THE ROCKIESWelcome to the Rocky Mountain region, where gardening is an adventure. Few regions on earth possess such a diversity of climates and plant communities. Find out more at imagespueblo.com.
DINING DIVERSITYColorado isn’t defi ned by any one regional cuisine. Instead, you’ll fi nd everything from Old West-style chuck wagon dinners to high-end international fare. Get a taste of regional cuisine at imagespueblo.com.
ABOUT THIS MAGAZINEImages of Pueblo is published annually by Journal Communications Inc. and is sponsored by the Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce and the Pueblo Economic Development Corp. In print and online, Images gives readers a taste of what makes Pueblo tick – from business and education to sports, health care and the arts.
WEB SITE EXTRA
SEARCH OUR ARCHIVES Browse past issues of the magazine by year or search for specifi c articles by subject.
INSTANT LINKS Read the entire magazine online using our ActiveMagazine™ technology and link instantly to community businesses and services.
EVEN MORE Read full-length versions of the magazine’s articles; fi nd related stories; or read new content exclusive to the Web. Look for the See More Online reference in this issue.
“Find the good – and praise it.”– Alex Haley (1921-1992), Journal Communications co-founder
jnlcom.com
MOVING PICTURES PLUS
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LIVE LINKSHot links allow users to quickly link to other sites
for additional information, and an ad index allows you to easily locate local advertisers in the magazine.
SEARCH AND YOU SHALL FINDAn easy-to-use search function allows you to fi nd specifi c articles or browse content by subject.
A VIRTUAL TOOLBELTTools allow you to customize the look and function of the magazine on your desktop as well as print individual pages or save the magazine for offl ine reading.
MORE OF THE SAMEAnd that’s a good thing. Inside, you’ll fi nd the same award-winning photography and compelling content as in the printed magazine.
SHARE WITH A FRIENDE-mail individual stories using the pop-up text window.
Virtual Magazine
Turn the pages of our
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Homage to the Chile
More than 10 million pounds of
chile peppers are grown annually in
Pueblo County. That deserves a party.
The annual Loaf ’N Jug Chile &
Frijoles Festival enters its 14th year in
2008, with events taking place along
the Union Avenue Historic District.
The theme of the festival is
everything chile-related, and other
attractions include a farmer’s market,
arts, crafts and live entertainment.
The event coincides with the
annual Signature of Pueblo’s Finest,
an art show held at the Pueblo
Convention Center.
Bessemer’s Liquid AssetThere is a refreshing addition to the swimming pool area at
Minnequa Park. The Pride City Band and several Bessemer
business representatives were in attendance in July 2007 for the
opening of a new spray attraction at the Minnequa Park pool.
The water-soaking feature was constructed for youngsters
in the Bessemer community, which is located in the southern
portion of the Pueblo metropolitan area.
The improvement cost $270,000 and was financed by
the city of Pueblo, but the YMCA has been put in charge of
overseeing all of Pueblo’s outdoor public swimming pool sites
as of Jan. 1, 2008.
Heavy Metal HistoryThe steel industry helped shape the West, and there now is a museum
that honors its impact on the Pueblo region.
The Steelworks Museum of Industry and Culture is located in a mission-
style building that once served as headquarters for the Colorado Fuel and
Iron Corp. in Pueblo. The Bessemer Historical Society purchased and
ultimately renovated the building, which is listed on
the National Register of Historic Places.
The museum has exhibits related to history of
mining, labor, steel production, early industrial
medicine and railroading, as well as the history
of Pueblo and Colorado.
Home of the Brave
Here’s a salute to William J. Crawford, Drew D. Dix, Raymond G. “Jerry” Murphy and Carl L. Sitter.
These four native sons of Pueblo are all recipients of the Medal of Honor. It is the highest award for valor in action against an enemy force that can be bestowed by Congress on an individual serving in the U.S. armed forces.
In 1993, the U.S. Congress proclaimed Pueblo “America’s Home of Heroes,” and a memorial was erected in 2001 to honor the recipients. The memorial consists of four 8-foot bronze sculptures and is located outside the Pueblo Convention Center.
10 IMAGESPUEBLO.COM PUEBLO
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Still Lavish TodayOne of the most beautiful spots in Pueblo has plenty of
historical significance.
Mineral Palace Park is situated in the same vicinity where Pueblo’s
25-domed Colorado Mineral Palace was constructed in 1889. The
palace was a lavish structure built to promote Pueblo’s stature in the
smelting industry, but the large building was demolished in 1942.
Still in existence on the spacious property is Lake Clara, named for
Clara Latshaw. She persuaded landowner Harry Brown to ultimately
sell the property to Pueblo for $35,000 for construction of a park,
when Brown had originally insisted on getting $45,000 for the land.
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Pueblo | At A GlancePOPULATION (2006 ESTIMATE)Pueblo: 103,730, Pueblo County: 152,912
LOCATIONPueblo is situated beside the
Arkansas River in southeastern
Colorado, 110 miles south of Denver.
BEGININGSThe El Pueblo Trading Post was
established in 1842, and the city
of Pueblo was incorporated in 1870.
FOR MORE INFORMATIONGreater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce
302 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pueblo, CO 81003
Phone: (719) 542-1704, Fax: (719) 542-1624
www.pueblochamber.org
PEDCO (Pueblo Economic
Development Corporation)
301 N. Main Street
PO Box 1957, Pueblo, CO 81002
Phone: (719) 544-2000 or 800-522-1120
Fax: (719) 543-1650
www.pedco.org
SEE VIDEO ONLINE | Take a virtual tour of Pueblo at imagespueblo.com, courtesy of our award-winning photographers.
Pueblo
Fast Facts Founded in 1872, the Colorado
State Fair is held in Pueblo each
year at the 102-acre Colorado
State Fairgrounds.
Lake Pueblo State Park, an
11-mile-long water reservoir,
boasts 60 miles of shoreline
and is one of the top recreation
spots in the state.
The 3.5-mile-long Pueblo Levee
Mural Project is listed in the
Guinness Book of World Records
as the longest mural in the world.
Area kayakers are rejoicing,
as a new whitewater park opened
in downtown Pueblo in May 2005
and covers a half-mile stretch with
eight different water features.
SEE MORE ONLINE | For more Fast Facts about Pueblo, visit imagespueblo.com.
Almanac
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H istory buffs of all types can find plenty to occupy an afternoon (or two, or three) along Pueblo’s
“Golden Mile,” a treasure trove of museums packed into one walkable area of town.
One popular destination is the InfoZone News Museum, which is housed in the Robert Hoag Rawlings
Public Library. An interactive facility, InfoZone aims to increase knowledge about the freedom of speech and press, the history of Pueblo and the newspapers that have served the community, says Tracey Mattoon, news museum manager.
“We opened in 2003 and get a lot of visitors,” Mattoon says. “We’re on the fourth floor of the library and have
the best view in town of the city’s historic district.”
InfoZone features a 100-seat movie theater, touch-screen computer kiosks and exhibits that showcase the history of newspaper production, including a working Linotype typesetting machine. And then there’s Hoagie, the animatronic newsboy that welcomes visitors.
“He talks, he moves, and the kids
GOLDEN MILE OF MUSEUMSSHOWCASES REGION’S RICH HISTORY
STORY BY JOE MORRIS | PHOTOGRAPHY BY MICHAEL W. BUNCH
HistoricalTreasure Trove
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just love him,” Mattoon says. “We have parents who bring their children in daily just to see Hoagie.”
For those who like their history a little more mobile, there’s the Pueblo Railway Museum, a program of the Pueblo Railway Foundation. With displays of railroading equipment, as well as operational trains (full size and model), the museum gives a fascinating glimpse into the rich railway history of the region, says Cork Hayden, a foundation volunteer.
“We have a pretty good stable of stuff at the rail yard,” Hayden says. “We have a whole bunch of rolling stock and are free and open to the public. We also have rides from time to time, at least four to six times a year.”
Among the collection are three loco-motives, one of which has been painted in a bicentennial motif, a few cabooses, and several boxcars and f lat cars, Hayden says.
A broader historical perspective can be attained at the El Pueblo History
The Pueblo Railway Museum has full-scale and model trains on site.
Hoagie, an animatronic newsboy, greets visitors to the InfoZone News Museum. Left: The new El Pueblo History Museum opened in 1990.
Museum, which features the El Pueblo trading post, now an archeological site enclosed by glass. The museum also contains approximately 9,000 square feet of gallery space used for a rotating series of exhibits and events.
Next up for the museum will be a chil-dren’s gallery, set to open in May 2008.
“We have an outstanding history museum, and we’re still growing,” says Deborah Espinosa, museum director.
Still want more? Then head over to the Southeastern Colorado Heritage Center, which is housed in a 1924 rail-road freight depot that once belonged to the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad.
The center soon will have an exhibit created in collaboration with the Pioneer Telephone operators.
“Their old museum is in the tele-phone building, and they want to get it out from behind locked doors,” says Chris Ball, director of development and marketing. “We’re working to add it to our antique telephone exhibit and history of telephony, so all of that history can be made available to the public.”
In addition to the many standing exhibits, special events are frequent. And be sure, for once, to take any wooden nickels you’re offered.
“We’re involved in the wooden-nickel program here in the historic district,” Ball says. “We give them out with every admission, and then people can take them to select merchants along the Union Avenue Historical District and redeem them for all kinds of things.”
Three’s a CharmOLD FIREHOUSE GETS
NEW LEASE ON LIFE
They don’t have a dalmatian
yet, but it’s a matter of time.
Work is progressing rapidly
on the Hose Company No. 3
Museum, which will be both
a historical archive and
monument to Pueblo’s
firefighting community. With
a new roof in place and work
continuing to renovate the
historic structure’s interior,
museum officials say they hope
to open full time in 2009.
“We’ve got the roof and
plumbing done, and we’re
working on a grant that will let
an architectural and engineering
firm begin work on the interior,”
says Mark Pickerel, curator.
The station, which once
housed horse-drawn fire
equipment and still has its brass
pole, was built in 1881. It last
saw active duty in 1979, and
then was closed by the city.
A private collector created a
museum on the site in the early
1980s, but it was shuttered
again a few years later.
But Pickerel and others,
including Gary Micheli, public
education officer for the
Pueblo Fire Department,
were determined to bring
the building back to life. They
began working to restore the
structure, securing a grant for
the roofing and infrastructure
work. The group continues to
assemble a collection that will
be housed in the firehouse once
it’s fully refurbished.
Among the artifacts already
obtained are Old No. 1, Pueblo’s
first motorized fire truck, and
a 1911 American LaFrance
Chemical Wagon. Altogether,
there are more than 500 items,
200 pictures and 150 books
for display.
– Joe Morris
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SEE VIDEO ONLINE | Take a tour of the eateries along the Union Avenue Historic District with Rod Slyhoff at imagespueblo.com.
All in Good
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H ungry? Rod Slyhoff says your taste buds are in for a treat at any of the eating establishments along the
Union Avenue Historic District.For example, the president and CEO
of the Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce often starts his day with an iced double mocha latte and a spicy burrito at The Daily Grind. Or he might visit the Hopscotch Bakery for a breakfast scone and a hot cup of Pueblo-brewed Solar Roast coffee.
“There are quite a few unique, family-owned dining spots scattered along three or four blocks of Union Avenue,” Slyhoff says. “From dawn to dusk, you can always get a good bite to eat in this district.”
For lunch, Slyhoff says one of his favorite places to get a juicy hamburger is the Gold Dust Saloon.
“My favorite lunch there is their thick bacon cheeseburger with a basket of fries,” he says. “The fries are especially good because they are cut in a ribbon design so that they still have a bit of the potato skin on them.”
Up the street a bit is Papa Jose’s Cafe, one of Pueblo’s top Mexican food dining spots. The restaurant features dishes such as chiles rellenos (peppers stuffed with cheese and fried in egg batter) and sopapillas, which are fried dough pockets filled with honey or sweet jelly.
“To fill our sopapillas, my mother, Elly, uses a pineapple and tomato jelly recipe that she keeps a secret – even from me,” says Michael Pacheco, co-owner of Papa Jose’s. “Our sopapillas are also covered with cinnamon and sugar. They are delicious.”
In the mid-afternoon, Slyhoff occa-
sionally stops by the Cock & Bull Tavern for a cool beverage and a large iced bowl of shrimp.
“Also on their menu is a sun-dried tomato pesto served with olive oil and bread,” he says. “Plus for dessert, their bread pudding is amazing.”
Across from the Cock & Bull is a sports bar called Zipper’s, with food specialties that include a spicy chicken ranch sand-wich topped with provolone cheese.
“My favorite dish at Zipper’s is the stacked beef f latbread, which is tender roast beef layered with spinach and tomato,” Slyhoff says. “It is served with an artichoke and chutney sauce. It’s incredible.”
For dinner, Slyhoff says he can’t get
enough of the garlic knot appetizers and the spinach lasagna entrée at Angelo’s Pizza Parlor. Or he might wrap up his day by frequenting Rio Bistro restaurant for a dry-aged filet mignon or a plate of sauerbraten.
“Union Avenue is a special place in Pueblo, and it has really become a destination for dining,” Slyhoff says. “If you haven’t eaten there lately, be sure to check out one of these places soon. And be sure to say hello if you happen to see me.”
CHAMBER CEO SHARES TIPS ON TOURING UNION AVENUE EATERIES
Tastiness
Papa Jose’s Union Cafe is a popular downtown Pueblo destination. Left: Rod Slyhoff, president and CEO of the Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce, enjoys a hamburger and fries at Gold Dust Saloon.
SEE MORE ONLINE | To learn more about the many dining options in Pueblo, visit the archives at imagespueblo.com/07.
STORY BY KEVIN LITWIN | PHOTOGRAPHY BY MICHAEL W. BUNCH
PUEBLO IMAGESPUEBLO.COM 15
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I t was the fall of 1999 when Pueblo Zoo officials decided to close their Animal House and Monkey Island attractions, both of which had
been around since 1940.The two attractions had fallen into
disrepair, and there was talk in 1999 about actually demolishing both zoo landmarks. However, that demolition never took place, and today the sites are alive again – although under a different name and with a new focus.
The Islands of Life Building opened in April 2007 in the renovated sandstone structure that was long known as the Animal House. Meanwhile, Monkey Island also reopened but did so with-out a name, since monkeys no longer inhabit it.
“Now it is simply known as the island at the Islands of Life exhibit,” says Jonnene McFarland, director of the Pueblo Zoo. “The small island has ring-tail lemurs running around as well as lizards and meerkats that zoo visitors can enjoy watching.”
McFarland says the former Animal House structure has been completely transformed and now features several new attractions in its current existence.
“We basically gutted the building’s interior except for an artistic fountain and an interesting animal cage, and then put in all new exhibits,” she says.
The Pueblo Zoo recently opened its renovated Islands of Life exhibit.
BuildingWild About
PUEBLO ZOO CELEBRATES OPENING OF ISLANDS
OF LIFE EXHIBIT
MIC
HA
EL
W. B
UN
CH
the New
STORY BY KEVIN LITWIN
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Sculpting a StoryANIMAL ART LENDS FINISHING TOUCH
Three large animal statues seem to be roaring their
approval these days atop the newly renovated
Islands of Life Building at the Pueblo Zoo.
The building’s roof has long been home to lifelike
cement sculptures of a lion, bear and ape. These
works were sculpted nearly 70 years ago by former
Pueblo resident John Sutton.
“The inscribed name of John Sutton was
discovered when our current zoo artist, Richard
Montano, took on the task of restoring the beautiful
sculptures,” says Jonnene McFarland, director of the
Pueblo Zoo. “Richard discovered John Sutton’s name
carved into the lion’s back. Also inscribed is the number
40, indicating that the works were completed in 1940.”
Montano also noticed that the three sculptures
were covered with layers and layers of paint, which he
painstakingly removed.
“Richard eventually saw that the statues were
originally painted in Colorado’s three metal colors –
copper, silver and gold,” McFarland says. “He finished
the restoration by adorning each sculpture with
metallic paint so that they appear to be made of
metal. The roof of the Islands of Life Building is now
graced with a copper bear, silver ape and a gold lion.”
Sutton also was responsible for sculpting a drinking
fountain in the Islands building, with the fountain
resembling the stump of a tree with vines around it. In
addition, he carved artistic designs on an animal cage
that Montano also has
painstakingly restored.“John Sutton
eventually sculpted for the Denver and Bronx zoos before he died in 1998,” McFarland says. “His artwork is excellent, and Richard Montano did a great job bringing all of Sutton’s art objects back to virtual life here at the Pueblo Zoo.”
– Kevin Litwin MIC
HA
EL
W. B
UN
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“All the current displays feature island themes. For example, we have a rock island, an ocean island and a South American tree island with actual species of animals from South America. There are about 25 species of animals in the entire Islands of Life display.”
One of the centerpieces of the building is a mock shipwreck of The Thatcher, a boat that has much of its inner structure on display in plain view for zoo visitors.
“People can see the captain’s quarters
as well as plenty of biology-related findings that a ship’s crew might find on a sailing adventure,” McFarland says. “It all goes with the Islands of Life theme. Visitors might even be surprised to see the captain’s skeleton within the ship as part of the exhibit.”
Pueblo Zoo is located in City Park and has a total of more than 400 animals from all over the world. The not-for-profit zoo is operated by the Pueblo Zoological Society.
Now that the massive Islands of Life
Building renovation project has been completed, McFarland says the zoo will start concentrating on a couple more upcoming endeavors.
“We will soon be opening an exhibit of naked mole rats, which are hairless rodents from Africa that are the size of small hamsters,” she says. “Another exhibit will feature cottontop tamarins that are small, cute primates. Both of these exciting new additions to the Pueblo Zoo will be here by the summer of 2008.”
SEE VIDEO ONLINE | View more of the watchable wildlife at Pueblo Zoo by visiting imagespueblo.com.
River otters are always favorites at the Pueblo Zoo. Right: Zebras are part of the African Plains exhibit. PHOTOS BY ANTONY BOSHIER
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VISUAL ARTS ARE ALIVE AND WELL IN PUEBLO
The Buell Children’s Museum has 12,000 square feet of interactive exhibits for kids of all ages.
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P ueblo’s plethora of visual art offerings truly is a sight for sore eyes – and healthy ones, too. Visitors will find lots to
see at the Sangre de Cristo Arts Center, as well as at sometimes surprising locations all over the city.
The cultural hub of southern Colorado, the Sangre de Cristo Arts and Conference Center first opened in 1972 with a single gallery. Today it has grown to include six gallery spaces and the 12,000-square-foot Buell Children’s Museum.
“The Arts Center is an absolute jewel,” says Lynn Stenzel, a Pueblo-based artist. “The grounds, the buildings, the gal-leries – it’s really, really top-notch.”
“We pride ourselves on providing programs that show the importance of art in our lives,” says Erin Ragulsky, marketing manager for the Sangre de Cristo Arts Center. “We try to support our local art community as well as bring in national and international artists.”
Exhibits rotate four times a year and include works from some of the center’s permanent collections – the Francis King Collection of Western Art; the Gene Kloss Collection, featuring draw-ings, paintings and intaglio prints; the Ruth Gast Collection of Historic Santos; and the Regional Contemporary Art Collection, which showcases the works of Colorado artists of the past 50 years.
In the spring of 2008, the Center will host an exhibit featuring the works of internationally acclaimed artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude, in conjunction with the Over the River project the artists are installing on a nearby stretch of the Arkansas River.
The Buell Children’s Museum, which ranked the second-best children’s art museum in the nation in 2001 by Child magazine, opens the world of art to kids with a series of hands-on, multisensory exhibits. Kids of all ages also can make some visual art of their own in the Artrageous Studio.
Pueblo’s wealth of visual art is not confined to the Sangre de Cristo Arts
STORY BY CAROL COWAN | PHOTOGRAPHY BY MICHAEL W. BUNCH
Teachers in TownPUEBLO DRAWS
ART EDUCATORS
The Colorado Art Education
Association held its fall
conference in Pueblo in October
2007 – the second time the
organization has done so,
and certainly not the last.
“We had a vision to bring
these teachers to Pueblo
because of the rich culture and
history here,” says Cynthia
Ramu, conference co-
coordinator and veteran art
educator at the Pueblo School
for Arts. “They loved Pueblo,
and they’ve requested to come
back every two to three years.”
No wonder Pueblo is so
popular with art teachers.
Area merchants, restaurateurs,
businesses and museums all
got on board to help provide
some 150 art-related events
and activities for the 600-plus
educators that converged
on the city for the four-
day conference.
Several events centered
on Pueblo’s culture, including
gallery and public art walks,
a tour of the renowned Levee
Mural Project and a visit to the
El Pueblo History Museum.
Other events included an
invitational art exhibit featuring
the works of CAEA teachers
and the annual Empty Bowl
fundraiser for the homeless –
a tradition among art teachers
and students all over the state.
Additionally, Ramu says,
keynote speeches by inter-
national artists and writers,
master classes, special
receptions and entertainment
made for a fantastic weekend.
CAEA is slated to return to
Pueblo in 2010.
– Carol Cowan
The Sangre de Cristo Arts and Conference Center boasts impressive
permanent and rotating exhibits.
Center alone. The center, along with the Downtown Association and other civic groups, sponsors the Art and Soul Street Gallery, a downtown beautification project that displays throughout the city sculptures created by Colorado artists. The works are for sale, and some have been purchased and donated back to the city as permanent installations.
“We set out to do something that would beautify the downtown area but also promote the arts,” says Peggy Willcox, chairwoman of the Art and Soul Street Gallery. “We’ve got bronzes, things made out of stone, found-object art – it’s really quite a mix.”
Additionally, Willcox says, beautiful public art can be seen at the convention center, the college campus and along the Historic Arkansas Riverwalk.
While you’re down at the river, take a look at the largest mural in the world where over 177,000 square feet of art – that’s about two miles – is painted on the 65-foot-tall levee.
Local artists’ works are on display at area restaurants such as Park East and The Daily Grind Cafe, as well as at galleries, gift shops and studios such as Lynn Stenzel’s working studio showroom in the old post office building.
“Pueblo has a really significant arts community,” Willcox says.
In this case, seeing is believing.
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I f you’re a rodeo fan, you couldn’t pick a better hometown than Pueblo, and the Professional Bull Riders Association couldn’t agree
more. The PBR opened its four-story headquarters on the Arkansas River in July 2007.
“We were located in Colorado Springs, and three cities gave us opportunities to relocate – Reno, Kansas City and Pueblo,” says Denise Abbott, vice president of public relations and marketing for the PBR. “Pueblo had the best opportunities. The Riverwalk is gorgeous, and Pueblo residents have opened their arms to us.”
Before the PBR’s arrival, Pueblo already had a place in its heart for rodeo. The National Little Britches Rodeo Association, which is for kids ages 5-18, began holding its 10-day national finals rodeo in Pueblo in 2005 and plans to continue holding it here at least through 2010.
“We chose Pueblo as our new host city
PROFESSIONAL BULL RIDERS GALLOP INTO NEW HEADQUARTERS
Their
STORY BY JESSICA MOZO
The PBR Built Ford Tough Series is the association’s top-drawing tour.
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The Professional Bull Riders Association recently opened its new Pueblo headquarters. PHOTO BY MICHAEL W. BUNCH
because of the Colorado State Fairgrounds facility and the great, supportive com-munity,” says Kimber Solberg, executive director of the National Little Britches Rodeo Association. “We experienced an outpouring of welcoming from Pueblo.”
The National Little Britches Finals Rodeo is the organization’s largest event, bringing more than 850 contestants and their families to Pueblo. Contestants compete for prizes such as saddles, buckles and thousands of dollars in college scholarships.
“We continue to hear more Pueblo people who have gone to their events say Little Britches is really exciting,” says Rod Slyhoff, president of the Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce. “Their arena is divided into three arenas, so there’s something going on all the time – bull-riding, calf-roping, pole-bending. Our community has really enjoyed it.”
The event pumps more than $10 million into the local economy.
“The economic impact was $10.5 million in 1997, and that was when we had only 500 contestants,” Solberg says. “It’s even greater now.”
PBR’s largest event is the Built Ford Tough Series, considered the “major league” tour. The Built Ford Tough Series features the world’s top 45 bull riders competing at events in 35 cities across the United States, with the world finals wrapping up the tour in Las Vegas in November.
“Bull-riding is growing tremendously,” Abbott says. “More than 104 million viewers watch our events on TV around the world, and more than 1 million people attend our events each year.”
In turn, Pueblo is continuously exposed to a growing audience.
“Every time one of the worldwide viewers watches a PBR event, they hear that PBR’s headquarters are located in Pueblo,” Slyhoff says. “That’s worldwide advertising we could never afford to buy.”
Though PBR has been in Pueblo less than a year, the organization didn’t waste any time demonstrating its support for the community.
“They’ve already donated to the River-walk and participated in our annual Chile & Frijoles Festival,” Slyhoff says.
If rodeo is happy to be in Pueblo, then by all accounts, the city is thrilled to be its home.
“We did the ribbon-cutting for the new PBR building in August [2007], and well over 1,500 people were there to welcome members of the PBR staff,” Slyhoff says. “There’s a lot of community pride for the sport. We’re proud to say we’re home to one of the fastest growing sports in the world.”
SEE VIDEO ONLINE | Visit the sparkling new headquarters of the Professional Bull Riders Association at imagespueblo.com.
SEE MORE ONLINE | To learn more about the National Little Britches Finals Rodeo, visit the archives at imagespueblo.com/06.
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Now there’s another reason to visit the Greenway and Nature Center
of Pueblo. Mandalyn Falls Restaurant opened next to the center in 2006 and has already become a local favorite.
Owned by husband-and-wife team Rowdy and Amanda Lindt, Mandalyn Falls specializes in American, Mexican and Italian cuisine. The Lindts named the restaurant after their oldest daughter.
“We serve a relaxed lunch, with sandwiches, soups, salads, burgers, chicken salad and vegetarian sand-wiches. We love to serve on our outdoor patio,” says Rowdy Lindt. “In the evenings, we offer fine dining, with steaks, pasta primavera, lasagna and our award-winning smoked prime rib. But we’re always family-friendly – you can come in dressed in shorts after a bike ride or a really nice outfit.”
Mandalyn Falls has two dining rooms – a large one for groups, and a small one with two-person tables for more intimate dining.
“Three sides of the small dining room are all windows, so there’s a great view of the [Arkansas] river,” Lindt says.
Though they are separate entities, Mandalyn Falls and the Greenway and Nature Center work together to bring visitors to the area.
“We’ve had people come to eat at our restaurant, and then they go visit the Nature Center,” Lindt says. “We’ve even gotten several visitors from out of state, and we’re starting to build a client base in Colorado Springs and Denver. One group from Denver told us our overall package was better than any restaurant in Denver.”
The Lindts created the restaurant’s menu from favorite dishes from both sides of their family. Lindt has been the lead cook so far, but they plan to hire an executive chef in the near future.
“The restaurant is a lot of work, and it can be stressful,” Lindt says. “But when people leave smiling, that’s the greatest reward.”
A Natural Choice for Dining OutMANDALYN FALLS IS ONE OF PUEBLO’S NEWEST AND MOST DELICIOUS DINING DESTINATIONS
Mandalyn Falls’ menu includes prime rib, baked potatoes and mixed
vegetables. PHOTO BY MICHAEL W. BUNCH
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Partners Share Addiction To Angling
Ben Olson and Ron Van Valkenburg are so enthused about fly-fishing,
they decided to open a combination fly shop and guide service in Pueblo. Located on Main Street, the shop is called Anglers Addiction.
“We worked together as guides in Ridgeway, and we decided we could do even better than the shop we worked for,” Olson says. “We love sharing the fly-fishing addiction.”
The difference between fly-fishing and traditional fishing is in the rod.
“With a f ly rod, you use the weight of the line to cast the lure,” Olson explains. “With a regular rod, you use the weight of the lure to cast the line. You use a lot more f lexible rod for f ly-fishing.”
Olson and Van Valkenburg offer guided f ly-fishing trips and classes in f ly-fishing, f ly-tying, entomology and advanced tactics. Their shop feels like a comfortable den, with a pool table, a 100-inch projection screen for fishing videos, a dartboard and plenty of coffee.
“A bunch of people come in every day for coffee and tell fish stories,” Olson says.
Though Anglers Addiction has been open little more than a year, the shop’s inventory has already grown exponentially – a ref lection of the growing popularity of the sport here.
“There are f ly fishermen all over Pueblo, and a ton of people come from Colorado Springs and Denver, too,” Olson says. “Last winter, Fly Fishermanmagazine called Pueblo’s Tail Water the best warm water fishery in the state.”
Largemouth and smallmouth bass, carp, crappie, bluegill, wipers and trout are just a sampling of fish commonly caught in area waters like the Arkansas River, the Pueblo Tail Water, San Isabel Lake, Martin Reservoir and Horseshoe Reservoir.
“Fly-fishing is absolutely growing in Pueblo and all over the country,” Olson says. “The No. 1 comment we hear from people is that they always wanted to learn to f ly-fish.”
AN
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SEE VIDEO ONLINE | Take a virtual fly-fishing tour by visiting imagespueblo.com.
The Arkansas River is among top Pueblo spots for fly-fishing.
PUEBLO IMAGESPUEBLO.COM 23
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Pueblo resident Marty Brens knows being an artist can be a lonely
endeavor, with many days spent painting all alone. So she founded Art in the Aspens, a five-day workshop that not only educates but also promotes fellow-ship among aspiring artists.
“I owned a gallery in Snowmass Village and started the program 18 years ago,” Brens says. “When I moved to Pueblo six years ago, I started running it here.”
Brens recruits well-known profes-
sional artists from all over the country to teach the workshops, and aspiring artists f ly in for a week to study and learn from an instructor. During the summer months, workshops are held at three Colorado ranches that provide lodging, meals and inspiring scenery.
“I bring in all the chefs, and artists have private accommodations,” Brens says. “We go out on location painting en plein air. The instructor helps every-one with problem-solving and does demonstrations of different techniques.”
The ranch workshops are held at Echo Canyon Ranch in LaVeta, Wil-derness Trails in Durango and Red Rock Ranch in Westcliffe. In the spring and fall, Brens also offers a series of classes in Pueblo at Red Raven Studios. For the Pueblo workshops, students stay at local hotels.
Class sizes for all the workshops are kept to a maximum of 12 students.
“Artists get a lot of one-on-one attention that you don’t get in a larger workshop,” Brens says. “Students really enjoy the camaraderie. They paint together, eat together and connect and learn from each other.”
Some students return every year.“Probably 30 percent are repeat
students, which has allowed me to develop wonderful friendships,” Brens says. “If you want to reach new levels with your painting, an extensive work-shop like this is the way to do it.”
Visit www.artaspens.com for more information.
Advocating Creative Camaraderie
Artist Marty Brens works on a painting at her Pueblo home.
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Serving Daily Cups of Sunshine
Brothers Mike and David Hartkop’s coffee roaster doesn’t look much like a coffee roaster at all. For starters, it has
300 12-inch square mirrors on it.The contraption the brothers invented is a solar-powered
coffee roaster – the novel idea behind their innovative company, Solar Roast Coffee.
“We started building solar roasters in 2004 in southern Oregon, and we opened a mail-order coffee company later
Solar Roast Coffee uses solar power to produce what its owners call “the most earth-friendly brew on the planet.”
ST
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that year,” says Mike Hartkop, 26. “We started getting such a demand that the rainy weather in Oregon didn’t provide enough solar power to roast our coffees.”
The brothers looked all over the country for a new city in which to root their growing business, and Pueblo fit the bill.
“Pueblo is fantastic. The sunshine is great, and people are friendly and accommodating,” Hartkop says. “We moved to Pueblo in January 2007 and opened for business in March.”
The two roast their coffee at the industrial lot on Aspen Circle and have a coffee shop with indoor and outdoor seating at Third and Main Street.
“Pueblo people come in and say, ‘Is this real?’ ” Hartkop says with a laugh. “They’re excited about it. People have said it’s the best coffee they’ve had. They end up taking a few pounds home and even sending it to relatives. They’re proud it’s made in Pueblo.”
Solar Roast Coffee roasts seven different coffee beans from all over the world, including Africa and South America. All are 100 percent organic, and five are certified fair trade.
“Every other coffee roaster is supporting oil producers, but as long as there’s sun, there’s free energy, and you can reduce your impact,” Hartkop says. “It’s something we’re passionate and excited about. There are coffee shops everywhere, but we’re doing something no one else in the world is doing.” – Stories by Jessica Mozo
Follow the Quiet Herd
You can’t miss Star Nursery & Landscaping Co. when traveling
south along Interstate 25. Just look for the life-size statues of deer, a buffalo, a bear and other animals representing Colorado’s wildlife.
The animal statues found through-out the nursery are creations of Chuck Prichard, third-generation owner of Star Nursery & Landscaping Co. Prichard’s animal statues won first place for commercial f loats in the 2007 Colorado State Fair parade.
A longstanding Pueblo landmark, Star Nursery dates back to 1926 and is one of Colorado’s oldest continuously operating nurseries.
Today, the grounds boast a water-fall, a horse harness museum and two of the oldest adobe homes in Pueblo. Four Sheltie dogs patrol the property at night, adding to the
historic nursery’s character.Visitors to the nursery will find
shrubs, trees, lawn statues, perennials, rose bushes and, of course, a quiet herd of Colorado wildlife grazing along Interstate 25.
“We at Star Nursery enjoy doing business in Pueblo because of our great customers and the city’s fore-
thought to develop the attractions we have here, such as the Riverwalk, nature trails and our newest addition, the Pro Bull Riding headquarters,” Prichard says.
A bull-riding fan, Prichard knows exactly what he’ll be adding next to his collection of life-size animal statues – a rodeo bull.
Star Nursery & Landscaping Co. was started by Frank Starginer Sr. in 1926.
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W ith its newly buzzing skies and thousands of pilots from across the country expected to arrive for training over the next few years, Pueblo has become the gateway for
U.S. Air Force aviation. In December 2006, Colorado Springs-based Doss Aviation
Inc. opened a new $17.5 million flight training facility on 45 acres adjacent to the Pueblo Memorial Airport.
The campus, called the Initial Flight Screening Training Facility, is where 1,300 to 1,700 commissioned Air Force officers will be trained each year to become military pilots and navigators.
“We looked everywhere from Alabama to Texas to California and decided on Pueblo for its abundance of airspace, good flying weather and underutilized airport,” says Frank Hunter, president and CEO of Doss Aviation Inc. “We worked closely with Pueblo’s local government to build what we think will be the finest U.S. Air Force training facility in the United States – or the world.”
In addition to providing planes, aircraft hangars and classroom space, the facility, which is the only one of its kind in the area, includes 195 hotel rooms with three-star standard service, a gymnasium, dining area, f light simulator area, a small retail store, a barbershop, a computer lab and a medical center.
Hunter says support from the city and county helped Doss Aviation, Inc. successfully renovate the 20-year-old building,
STORY BY VALERIE PASCOE
PHOTOGRAPHY BY MICHAEL W. BUNCH
PEDCO SCORES ANOTHER WIN BYRECRUITING U.S. AIR FORCE FACILITY
Frank G. Hunter is president of Doss Aviation Inc. Left: Hundreds of commissioned Air Force officers will train each year at Doss Aviation’s Initial Flight Screening Training Facility near the Pueblo Memorial Airport.
ClearedTakeoff
for
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formerly owned by Lockheed Martin, into a world-class f light training facility.
“The officials in Pueblo were great to deal with. Everything we asked for, we got,” says Hunter. “They also went the distance when the Air Force came around with its source selection evaluation team.”
For Jim Spaccamonti, president of the Pueblo Economic Development Corp. (PEDCO), landing the Initial Flight Screening Training Facility not only means a win for Pueblo’s business development efforts, it also signifies a substantial injection into the local economy over the life of the facility.
Spaccamonti points to PEDCO’s status as a private organization as an advantage in dealing with government entities and companies like Doss Aviation Inc. that are looking to relocate or expand to the area.
“Because we’re a private organization, we can work with companies in a very confidential manner to keep information quiet. We take a very professional, businesslike approach,” says Spaccamonti. “In this case, at the end of the day, we were able to help bring a good business deal to the military while
remaining confidential and respectful of their goals.” Over the past year, PEDCO has been instrumental in
attracting five major enterprises to the area including an AT&T technical center with 550 employees, an Express Scripts medication screening call center and the world headquarters for the Professional Bull Riders, which created 180 local jobs.
Since PEDCO’s inception in 1981, the organization has helped recruit more than 60 major Fortune 500 companies to Pueblo and announced more than 18,000 primary jobs for the area.
“We absolutely pride ourselves on working with companies, satisfying their needs and going out of our way to make sure we exceed their expectations,” says Spaccamonti. “It takes a team to accomplish this, and I think we have one of the best teams in the nation in being aggressive and delivering on our promises.”
The lobby of Doss Aviation Inc.’s new facility is spacious and welcoming. Inset: Doss Aviation Inc. houses a gymnasium that may be used by individuals who are training at the facility to become pilots.
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RESTORING GRANDEURWhen Gary and Leilani Adrian
purchased the home on West 13th Street, they weren’t just launching a reclamation project. They also took on a history assignment.
The home, now The Edgar Olin House Bed & Breakfast, had been earmarked for condemnation when Gary Adrian, then living in Colorado Springs, first took notice. The attraction was immediate.
“I fell in love with the architecture,” Adrian says.
The Adrians began the lengthy restoration effort in 2003, opened part of the home for guests in 2005 and finally completed the project in 2007.
Along the way, they delved into the home’s history, including its construc-tion by 19th-century entrepreneur Edgar Olin and its time as the residence of a prominent judge, James W. Colter.
They’ve put that research to use, naming each of the four guest rooms after an individual who lived in the home previously.
Like the Adrians, guests have quickly taken a shine to the home. Business has been doubling annually since the bed and breakfast opened.
ATHLETIC CLUB FLEXES ITS MUSCLES
Pueblo Athletic Club has bulked up.The fitness center has just completed
a three-year renovation project, more than doubling the space under its roof to 43,000 square feet while also making improvements outdoors. The club began the $4 million renovation project in 2004, though it remained open through-out construction.
PAC’s entrance was rebuilt to include a well-lighted lobby, expanded nutrition center and new physical therapy clinic. A new wheelchair lift provides that “all the areas generally needed by someone in a wheelchair are accessible,” says Deb Beaudry who owns the facility with husband Eric.
Outside the facility, the club has completed a pool with zero-depth entry, slides and outdoor concessions. An 8-foot wall surrounds the pool and much of the area is shaded.
Additionally, all of the pools are now filled with mild salt water, which is gentler on hair and skin.
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The Edgar Olin House Bed & Breakfast is the carefully restored former home of 19th-century entrepreneur Edgar Olin and later, Judge James W. Colter.
FROM PASTORING TO PACKAGING
Bob Glasgow served as a pastor in Kansas, Minnesota and Pennsylvania before his family settled in Pueblo. It was a lifestyle that demanded a lot of moving.
Today, this retired pastor brings his expertise with packing to the job of owning Bob’s Pack and Ship. Besides the primary packaging and shipping services, Glasgow’s business offers a variety of business services, including copying, business cards, notary, rubber stamps, passport photos and promo-tional products.
Bob’s Pack and Ship is an independent entity, allowing it a bit more flexibility in services than some chain franchises offer. But with a link to a national distribution center, Glasgow “can offer prices on smaller orders that are com-petitive with the big guys.”
Bob’s Pack and Ship, located at 959 W. Highway 50, is open from 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 9 a.m.-noon Saturday.
PDI PROVIDES WORK AND PRIDE
Pueblo Diversified Industries is a collection of eight separate business
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units providing goods and services to the region and beyond. It’s also a service agency.
The organization’s sole mission is to create employment opportunities for individuals with disabilities. More than 200 people with disabilities participate in the service, working in manufacturing, public service and other tasks.
“It’s a true vocational match, finding what they can do and what they are interested in doing,” says Karen Lillie, the president and CEO of Pueblo Diversified Inc.
The staff provides the necessary job training and support services to allow individuals with a variety of disabilities to enter the workforce. Some people, most frequently those suffering mental illness, will use PDI to transition back to the commercial workforce.
“This helps people be productive and feel productive,” Lillie says.
CHIEFTAIN IS TOPS The Pueblo Chieftain truly has the
community covered.Since its founding in 1848, the
newspaper has been a vital part of residents’ days for 140 years, And even in an age of 24-hour news, the paper remains a must-read.
For the past decade, The Pueblo Chieftain has ranked first in the United States in the percentage of city res-idents who subscribe to the paper, says Paulette Stuart, the paper’s promotions manager. More impressively, it’s not really a contest.
According to the paper’s Web site, www.chieftain.com, the most recent circulation audit showed that more than 70 percent of Pueblo households subscribed to both the daily and Sunday editions of the paper. The Washington Post, taken by 45 percent of D.C. res-idents, was second on the list.
“It’s because we’re a community newspaper,” Stuart says. “We really do cover the community.”
And when it’s not reporting the news in Pueblo and surrounding counties, The Chieftain is working to make them better. The paper, led by third-generation publisher Bob Rawlings, is a sizable contributor to charitable efforts such as United Way and other initiatives funded through the Robert Hoag Rawlings Foundation.
– Dan Markham
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One-Stop Business BuilderCHAMBER EXPLORES EVERY ANGLE TO PROMOTE COMMUNITY AND ITS BUSINESSES
S ome chambers of commerce focus on business growth, others on tourism and community development. The Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce does it all.
“We have our convention and visitors’ bureau located right here in the chamber, so we have the pleasure of not only servicing our business members, but also making sure that any convention that comes to town is serviced,” says Phyllis Samora, vice president. “And if someone is getting relocated with their job, or wants to move here, we handle the relocation-information duties as well.”
That’s a tall order for a nine-member staff already handling the needs of a 1,300-member organization, but one that Samora says the chamber’s team does well.
“We truly work as a team, and we never forget that,” Samora says. “We all pull together, especially when we’re doing the big events.”
And there’s no shortage of activities that are either sponsored by, or enlist the help of, the chamber. Monthly luncheons and after-hours mixers, an annual business expo, a golf tournament, and ribbon-cuttings and open houses for members are all on the chamber’s calendar, as well as large-scale events such as the Loaf ’N Jug Chile & Frijoles Festival.
“We have to watch how we balance everything, and make sure that the business community is always paid attention to,” Samora says. “We definitely utilize things like our ambassador program, where we have about 40 members who are our front-row people at a lot of events. We couldn’t do it without them.”
The chamber also makes effective use of its Web site, www.pueblochamber.org, to promote the activities and
news of its members, and chamber president Rod Slyhoff finds himself on the road to Denver quite a bit to make sure the Pueblo business community’s voice is heard by state legislators.
It all comes down to being a lot of organizations under one umbrella, something that Samora says the Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce does by making sure that its members understand that more often than not, what helps one company helps the entire business community.
“We say that no matter what we’re doing, we’re always finding a way to bring dollars into Pueblo,” she says. “That way everyone prospers.”
As an example, she points to McDonnell Douglas, saying, “When they came, they wanted to join the chamber and be a big part of the community. We knew they wouldn’t be selling Delta rockets to anyone in Pueblo, but all of their employees live here, do business here and shop here.”
The chamber’s mission statement says, in part, that the chamber “works to accomplish its purpose by serving as the voice of the Pueblo business community … by providing members with networking, promotional and educational opportunities, as well as information and business counseling assistance.”
For Samora, that says it all.“We take great pride in servicing the entire Pueblo
community,” she says. “We have ‘Greater’ in our name because we handle the entire county. And when someone does become a member, whether they’re very small or very big, we want to get to know them.” – Joe Morris
The Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce covers a great deal of ground in promoting its 1,300 member businesses, as well as the community.
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Business | Chamber Report
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PUEBLO
TRANSPORTATION
Pueblo is at the crossroads
of two major highways,
Interstate 25 (north/south)
and U.S. Hwy. 50 (east/west).
Many licensed motor freight
carriers do interstate and
intrastate business in Pueblo.
Pueblo also is home to the
Pueblo Memorial Airport,
capable of handling
virtually any size aircraft.
Great Lakes Airlines provides
commercial flights.
Burlington Northern Santa Fe
and Union Pacific-Southern
Pacific rail lines serve Pueblo,
freight only.
INDUSTRIAL PARKS
Most of the available
acreage in Pueblo is in
planned industrial parks.
Service for sewer and water,
natural gas, electricity and
telephone already are in
place. Most industrial parks
offer convenient access
to interstate highway
transportation and feature
on-location rail service.
Colorado City Industrial Park
Minnequa Industrial Park
Pueblo DepotIndustrial Park
Pueblo Memorial Airport
Industrial Park
Pueblo West Industrial Park
Pueblo West Industrial
Park North
TAX STRUCTURE
Real property tax assessed by
political subdivision in which
the property is located.
County sales tax 1%
State sales tax 2.9%
City sales and/or use tax 3.5%
State individual tax 4.63%
of Colorado taxable Income
Vehicle license tax percentage
of list price and vehicle weight
Lodging tax 4.3% in addition
to sales tax, charged only
on hotel/motel rooms in
city limits
State motor fuel tax .22/gal.
for gas, .205/gal. for diesel
BUSINESS POINTS
Pueblo’s building costs always
have been among the lowest
in America, largely because
the weather allows
construction to go on
year-round. The city’s cost-
of-construction index is
approximately 9% lower
than the national average
and comparable to or lower
than most other cities in
the Sun Belt.
Pueblo has one of the highest
percent ages of home
ownership in America.
According to ACCRA’s cost-
of-living report, Pueblo’s
housing continues to rank
approximately 8.4% below
the national average.
Pueblo is in the enviable
position of having almost
three times more water than it
currently needs for drinking,
irrigation, hydroelectric power
and recreation.
The 45,000-square-foot
Pueblo Con vention Center
is the premier meetings
destination in southern
Colorado.
Sources:
www.pueblochamber.orgwww.pedco.org
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Greater PuebloChamber of Commerce(800) 233-3446
www.pueblochamber.org
Pueblo Economic Development Corporation(800) 522-1120
www.pedco.org
Forbes magazine named Pueblo among the top 100 small cities
for business in 2006.
BUSINESS CLIMATEPueblo has a low cost of doing business – among the lowest in
America – which is a key reason why more than 50 companies
have located here in recent years. Pueblo serves as the southern
boundary for the state’s major business growth corridor, better
known as the Front Range of the Rockies.
Business | Economic Profile
PUEBLO IMAGESPUEBLO.COM 33
311 Economic Profile.indd 33 12/6/07 3:02:38 PM
Healthy bodies, healthy minds,healthy lifestyles ...
Come in and see our new $3.5 million expansion including our Sports Performance and Rehab Clinic!
Pueblo Athletic Club58 Glenroyal Dr. • Pueblo, CO 81005
(719) 561-3488 • www.puebloathleticclub.com
Pueblo Athletic Club Where You Belong
34 IMAGESPUEBLO.COM PUEBLO
311 Arts.indd 34 12/6/07 3:01:00 PM
The goal of the Pueblo Symphony Orchestra is to make the world a more musical place, and it has
been doing that since 1928.“Being a symphony that is 80 years
old is quite an achievement in these days of declining arts support,” says June King, executive director of the Pueblo Symphony Orchestra. “So when we celebrate our 80th anniversary in 2008, we are really going to celebrate.”
Actually, the orchestra’s 80th cele-bration already has begun, since their performance season always runs from October through April.
“We still have a concert in February 2008, one in March and another in April, along with a special children’s concert also in April,” King says. “There is plenty of time in early 2008
to attend a performance of this won-derful symphony.”
Today’s Pueblo Symphony Orchestra is made up of 75 musicians, none of whom are paid a great deal of money. King says they all have other full-time jobs and have joined the symphony simply to stay connected with the art form.
“Our musicians perform because they love to perform,” King says. “We don’t have a union and we aren’t a big group like the symphonies in Los Angeles, Cleveland or New York. But being in Pueblo for 80 years is something that everyone can be proud of.”
The orchestra is conducted by Dr. Jacob Chi, who King says gets the absolute best out of every musician.
“Jacob is very formal – he is a Chinese master who tries to do everything right,” she says. “He is a stickler for good performances, which is why we perform our six main seasonal concerts in tuxedos. Jacob also works well with the young people who have recently joined the symphony as apprentices.
They will be the ones who will even-tually take the place of retiring musicians within our orchestra.”
The symphony performs its con-certs in the 625-seat Hoag Recital Hall on the campus of Colorado State University-Pueblo. Each performance is sold out, and the orchestra sold nearly 500 season tickets for the 2007-08 concert season.
Tickets for the six main concerts are $30 and $25 for each performance, while prices are $10 each for the three Symphony for Kids family programs presented each year.
“The Symphony for Kids program encourages parents and grandparents to bring their young children so that the youngsters can get an early taste and appreciation for music and the arts,” King says. “We also host a free concert in May for fourth-graders in Pueblo’s public school districts, and we host music master workshops for high school and college-aged students. We are always busy at the Pueblo symphony, which is why we have been around for 80 years.” – Kevin Litwin
Music to Everyone’s EarsSYMPHONY MARKS EIGHT DECADES OF ENTERTAINMENT AND ENLIGHTENMENT
The Pueblo Symphony Orchestra celebrated its 75th anniversary in 2005. Left: Accomplished conductor Jacob Chi has successfully led the Pueblo Symphony Orchestra for more than a decade. PHOTO BY ANTONY BOSHIER
PUEBLO IMAGESPUEBLO.COM 35
Arts & Culture
311 Arts.indd 35 12/6/07 3:01:14 PM
2118 Chatalet Ln. • (719) 564-2000 • www.lcca.com
Life Care Center of PuebloCommits to Care
• 24-hour nursing care
• In-house therapy services
• Convenient southside location
• Outpatient rehab for pediatrics through geriatrics
Plan a tour today!
36 IMAGESPUEBLO.COM PUEBLO
311 Education.indd 36 12/6/07 3:02:41 PM
A well-run business always has a plan for success, and it’s no different for a progressive
school system. Good thing, then, that the Pueblo City Schools now has a six-point working plan that will carry the system forward on several fronts.
The strategic plan was born out of new superintendent Dr. J. William Covington’s interview process. Covington, who took the system’s helm in July 2006, says that a multifaceted plan of action was one of the major things he discussed when he was interviewing for the position. So, creating the document was a top priority once he came on board.
“They asked me how I was able to accomplish some of the things we did in my former school district, and I told them it was through vision, strategic planning and engaging the community,” Covington says. “We invited everyone to be a major contributor to developing goals and objectives for the school district. They asked me if the same thing could be replicated here, and I said ‘of course.’”
Covington assembled a group of six people to lay the framework for the plan. The group underwent training with The Cambridge Group Inc., a Montgomery, Ala.-based planning corporation, to help prepare them for the task. The group then used their training and knowledge of the community to develop
the district’s mission statement and the basic underpinnings of the strategic plan. At that time, the group solicited input from other area leaders to further develop the focus of each of the plan’s specific points, eventually bringing 350 people into the process.
And with the contributions of busi-ness leaders, school and university instructors, parents and other commu-nity activists, the plan was formulated, finalized and adopted in June 2007.
“This is not a plan that was developed by the board and superintendent’s staff,” Covington says. “It was developed by the community, and I think that’s why it’s good. All the necessary stakeholders were at the table.”
Adopting the plan will be a tall order, especially when factoring in the global aspect of the mandates, but Covington says he believes that, over time, the district can achieve the desired results.
“We have set a goal to begin imple-menting things now that will not cost an astronomical sum of money, and finish putting things in place by the fall of 2008,” he says. “We’re looking at things like a realigned curriculum, quality instructional delivery and more.”
A chief goal, Covington says, is to achieve international standards of learning, so that children in the Pueblo City Schools can compete not just in the United States, but also around the world.
“If we’re going to become a world-class school district, it would be very inappropriate for us to just compare ourselves to other school districts in the state or nation,” Convington says. “We’re going to begin looking at international standards, and ensure that our curric-ulum is aligned to those.”
– Joe Morris
A New School of ThoughtPUEBLO CITY SCHOOLS ENLISTS COMMUNITY LEADERS TO CREATE STRATEGIC PLAN
Pueblo City Schools recently introduced its new, six-point strategic plan that aims to deliver its students “a world-class education for success.”
JE
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All Pueblo City Schools students will successfully complete a comprehensive individualized education plan to prepare them to enter 21st-century academic pursuits or the global work force.
All Pueblo City Schools students will meet or exceed international standards and measures of achievement.
Pueblo City Schools will recruit and retain a highly qualified, competitive workforce sustained by cutting-edge professional development for internationally competitive schools.
Pueblo City Schools will provide a system of support for students to be civil, responsible, healthy and involved members of the global community.
All Pueblo City Schools are conducive to superior teaching and learning, and are capable of responding to the diverse needs of 21st century learners.
Pueblo City Schools will secure and utilize 100 percent of human, financial and physical resources required to create and sustain world-class public schools and this strategic plan.
6 Points to the Strategic Plan
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Education
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With an eye on the future, and following the success of Pueblo Technical Academy,
Pueblo School District No. 70 hopes to create additional f ield-specific centers of learning at each of its four high schools.
“At the academy, our regular curric-ulum is taught by using technology,” says Dr. Dan Lere, superintendent. “We didn’t want to have a high school that just teaches technology, but one where the students learn math, English, American history and foreign languages, but they do so through technology-based instruction.”
Lere, who took the superintendent’s job in July 2005, says he saw the poten-tial for similar specific types of teaching at other sites but knew that building entirely new schools wouldn’t be feasible. So he set out to work with educators and community members to find a workable solution.
Fine-Tuning Students’ FocusADMINISTRATORS CONSIDER EXPANDING FIELD-SPECIFIC ACADEMY APPROACH
Pueblo Technical Academy is a science and technology magnet high school.
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It’s a very, very good time to take up welding
in Pueblo.
With several major projects under way in the
area and a high-quality training program available,
people interested in good-paying, long-lasting jobs
are turning to the profession now more than ever.
“It’s always been popular, and we’ve seen increased
enrollment over the past 10 years, but in the last two
semesters it’s just gone crazy,” says Emilio Gonzales,
department chair for welding and machining at
Pueblo Community College. “When there are a
lot of jobs, good jobs, available people flock to our
programs. And right now there’s a lot of opportunity
around here in welding.”
Xcel Energy’s Comanche power plant is one source
of those jobs. With a multibillion-dollar addition to the
plant under way – a project that’s expected to take
several years to complete – the power provider is
snatching up program graduates as fast as the
welding program can provide them.
“The people from the plant came over recently
and offered just about everybody a job out there,”
Gonzales says. “They basically took the whole class.”
The welding instruction is split into two major
sections: the AAS degree program, which offers
advanced instruction following completion of basic
welding courses; and the two-semester, welding
certificate program, which provides training in
Shielded Metal Arc Welding, Gas Tungsten Arc
Welding, Gas Metal Arc Welding and the
Oxyacetylene cutting process, training which
also is included in the longer degreed program.
“All of our instructors work in the field, and
we have a top-of-the-line facility,” Gonzales says.
“Lincoln Electric brings us new equipment every
year, and the job sites send us trailer loads of scrap
metal, so we have the cleanest, newest equipment
and lots of materials to practice on.
“Normally, I tell students that I don’t know what
it’s going to be like when they graduate, but I’m
not saying that these days. Welding is huge right
now, and our facility can compete with anybody
in the nation.”
– Joe Morris
Forging a Future CareerPCC’S WELDING PROGRAM PREPARES STUDENTS FOR IMMEDIATE JOBS
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Education
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“We’re growing, so we’re looking at adding classroom space at the high school level, but we don’t need to build another [main] building,” Lere says. “What we want to do is build several much smaller schools adjacent to our high schools, so all the students can share the common areas.”
These new annexes would house the proposed academies, which would feature field-specific, specialized cur-riculum and instruction utilizing health sciences, fine arts, language, math and science and more.
Lere points to Pueblo West High School as a good example of how all this might play out.
“The school was built for 1,300 students, and we have about 1,285 there now,” he says. “Rather than build another school just like it, with the same curriculum, we can build a specialized academy close enough to access the cafeteria, gym and auditorium – all the things that we know we don’t need to spend taxpayer money duplicating.”
With a working plan in hand, and a successful model to use as an example, Lere says the next step will be to hold community forums throughout the 2007-08 school year to begin selling parents and area residents on the idea.
“We’re going to be telling them that the graduation rate is higher at smaller high schools, and that just making the current ones bigger is not good for the students,” he says. “We need to break them up in smaller schools, and we don’t have to build a lot more to do that.”
The goal, Lere says, will be to utilize existing buildings and add to them, rather than building entirely new schools.
Student input also will be actively sought because, as Lere puts it, “They know where they’re going long before we do. We had kids podcasting and blogging before we even knew what those terms meant. They understand the future is about communication and design, about being creative thinkers rather than just memorizing math formulas. The academy concept is a real paradigm shift for us, but not for them.”
– Joe Morris
PUEBLO IMAGESPUEBLO.COM 39
311 Education.indd 39 12/6/07 3:02:52 PM
Football has a special signif-icance in Pueblo’s past, present and future.
For many in the community, fall weekends are spent at Dutch Clark Stadium. The 14,000-seat stadium is the home to all four of the city high schools’ teams and the occasional college game.
“It’s the premier high school facility in the state of Colorado, for football, soccer or anything else,” says Kevin Romero, chief officer of student support and community services for Pueblo City Schools. “I’ve been to a number of facilities in the state, and we have the best by far.”
Football games are played Thursdays, Fridays and Saturday nights, depending on the number of home games on the Pueblo City Schools schedule. But two nights stand out.
In September, East and South high schools play the Cannon Game, an event that attracts a near-sellout crowd to Dutch Clark. The only game bigger in Colorado occurs the following month, when Centennial and Central hook up in
the Bell Game.The Bell Game is the oldest rivalry
in the western United States and sixth oldest in the country, with the first contest played in 1892. Since 1950, the winner has taken temporary possession of an old train bell.
Dutch Clark Stadium, named for the Pro Football Hall of Fame member and local legend, offers more than just plenty of seats and outstanding football. With the Arkansas River sitting beside it and an old railroad station in view, “it’s the best atmosphere for high school athletics,” Romero says.
Though football is king, the stadium is also used for other sports, such as an exhibition soccer match between Colorado Rapids and Colorado State University - Pueblo and the state’s 2A and 3A track and field championships in the spring.
“More and more people across the state are becoming familiar with Dutch Clark Stadium,” Romero says. “It’s a special place.”
A group of football lovers is hoping
to return that special feeling to CSU-Pueblo. The organization Friends of Football has been raising money to resurrect football, wrestling, and women’s track and field at the university.
The group already raised the neces-sary $7 million to bring back those sports, and is now embarking on a second fundraising mission to construct a top-flight on-campus facility to house those and other university sports. The organization already is halfway to its $6 million goal.
“Football has been a huge void since it was dropped in 1985,” says Dan DeRose, a member of the organization and a former player for the ThunderWolves.
DeRose and the Friends of Football believe that the return of the three discontinued sports, and football in particular, can be a prime factor in boosting the school’s student population.
“Football is the one sport that can drive enrollment,” says DeRose, who adds that an on-campus stadium to serve as a hub is an integral part of the equation.
– Dan Markham
Dutch Clark Stadium is named for Dutch Clark, the only Colorado native in the NFL Hall of Fame. PHOTO BY MICHAEL W. BUNCH
Gusto Grows for GridironSCHOOL RIVALRIES, REBIRTH OF CSU PROGRAM SIGNIFY FOOTBALL’S IMPORTANCE
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Sports & Recreation
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P arkview Medical Center has been strengthening the lives of Pueblo area residents for more than 80 years. Today, that commitment is firmer than ever as the
medical center continually adapts to meet the area’s growing health-care needs.
“For Parkview, this is it – this is our community,” says Mike Baxter, chief operating officer at PMC. “Our commitment remains right here and we’re focused on the needs of our community.”
Founded in 1923, the nonprofit medical center is governed by a board of local citizens who provide valuable support and direction to the hospital’s administrators. PMC also serves as the county’s second-largest employer with more than 1,500 employees.
Dedicated service from these and countless business leaders, volunteers and physicians mean families of this scenic southeastern Colorado community have access to the most up-to-date health care treatment options available. PMC now provides the region’s most experienced certified Level II Trauma Center, which is staffed 24 hours a day by board-certified physicians and highly trained critical care nurses.
PMC also is home to the region’s first certified Stroke Center, which earned the coveted Gold Seal of Approval from the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. Additional specialties include cardiac care, women’s services, emergency services and neurological services.
Parkview also is the area’s only hospital to offer a complete behavioral health program to include adolescent, adult and geriatric as well as chemical dependency care. And to help heal and comfort the county’s youngest patients, PMC’s Kidsville® provides an innovative 12-bed pediatric depart-ment staffed by specially trained nurses. The newly renovated unit – made possible through the sponsorship of local businesses – features updated façades and rooms, state-of-the-art beds, f lat screen televisions, DVD players and interactive elements to make children feel at home.
Other recent improvements to the growing medical center
Parkview Medical Center is a nonprofit entity, so it reinvests revenues to continuously improve services.
Commitmentto CaringPARKVIEW MEDICAL CENTER MAINTAINS STEADFAST DEDICATION TO COMMUNITY
include an upgraded nursery equipped to care for acutely ill newborns; a comprehensive, five-star Joint Center that sees patients through to recovery; and numerous upgrades to f loors, waiting areas and patient rooms.
Demand from the community, increased inpatient and emergency room volume, and a desire to provide patients with more private rooms all have driven the latest renovation and expansion efforts, Baxter says. Plans also are under way to add patient rooms, upgrade operating suites and remodel sections of the emergency department, which in any given month experiences a five to 10 percent increase in patient volume from the previous year.
And in an effort to provide timely emergency treatment to even more of the county’s residents, Parkview recently broke ground on a freestanding emergency facility and outpatient clinic in Pueblo West.
“The new facility will provide an opportunity to work with the Pueblo West metro board to address the 24/7 health care needs of the community,” Baxter says.
The project is just one of many innovative new ways Parkview Medical Center is exceeding health-care expec-tations in this Colorado community.
– Melanie Hill
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PUEBLO IMAGESPUEBLO.COM 41
Health & Wellness
311 Health.indd 41 12/6/07 3:04:36 PM
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311 Health.indd 42 12/6/07 3:04:39 PM
A t St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center, cancer patients are treated with much more than
the latest in medical technology. Oncology staff in the hospital’s Reverend Roger Patrick Dorcy Cancer Center pro-vide physical, emotional and spiritual care through every stage of treatment.
“The Dorcy Cancer Center boasts a phenomenal team of medical profes-sionals consisting of board-certified radiation oncologists, medical oncol-ogists/hematologists, surgeons and a palliative/hospice care specialist. In addition, the medical team is supported by certified physicists, dosimeterists and radiation therapists who are double-
certified in radiation therapy and diagnostic imaging,” says St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center Chief Executive Officer Michael Stenger. “This level of knowledge and experience is extremely unique in a community the size of Pueblo.”
The 40,000-square-foot facility – named in memory of the beloved Pueblo clergyman and former member of the hospital’s board of trustees – opened in April 2006. The Dorcy Cancer Center was designed to meet the cancer treat-ment needs of all Southern Colorado through 2025, but also draws patients from as far away as Kansas and New Mexico. – Melanie Hill
The new Roger Patrick Dorcy Cancer Center PHOTO BY MICHAEL W. BUNCH
Providing Compassionate CareST. MARY-CORWIN OFFERS GAMUT OF SERVICES FROM SCREENING TO TREATMENT
PUEBLO IMAGESPUEBLO.COM 43
Health & Wellness
311 Health.indd 43 12/6/07 3:04:47 PM
SNAPSHOTPro Body
PUEBLO
MEDICAL SERVICES
General practitioners, 57
Medical specialists, 77
Surgical specialists, 57
Hospital beds, 713
Mental-health institutes, 1
CLIMATE
Avg. annual snowfall, 31 in.
Avg. annual precipitation
11.19 in.
Avg. January low, 14 F
Avg. July high, 91 F
For current time and
temperature call 542-3120.
The Pueblo County growing
season is 180 days, but the
county’s elevation range
(4,400 to 12,000 feet) can
influence what can be grown
in different areas. Crops such
as alfalfa, corn, melons,
onions, peppers and tomatoes
thrive throughout Pueblo
County, but all require
supplemental water. Trees and
shrubs that do well include
apache plume, cotton wood,
crab apple, honeylocust,
juniper, lilac and pine.
Source: CSUCooperative Extension
HOME ON THE RANGE
Avg. home price, $116,097
Avg. mortgage payment, $690
Apartment rent
One-bedroom, $404
Two-bedroom, $494
Three-bedroom, $589
Avg. monthly utility costsNatural gas, $43.05
Electricity, $37.50
Water, $25.07
Telephone, $42.50
COMMUNITY RESOURCES
Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce302 N. Santa Fe Ave.
542-1704, (800) 233-3446
Beulah Fire Department485-3111
Boone Town Government712 E. Main St., 947-3311
Colorado City Metropolitan District4497 Bent Brothers Blvd.
676-3396
Pueblo City Hall1 City Hall Place, 553-2489
Pueblo County215 W. 10th St., 583-6000
Pueblo County Veterans Service Office1120 4th St., 583-4544
Pueblo West Metropolitan District109 E. Industrial Blvd.
547-2000
City of Rye489-3441
HOSPITALS
Parkview Medical Center400 W. 16th St., 584-4000
St. Mary-CorwinMedical Center1008 Minnequa Ave.
560-4000
Colorado MentalHealth Institute600 W. 24th St., 546-4445
EDUCATION
Private schools (7), 848
Catholic schools (3), 433
Public schools (48)
School districts (2), 24,542
Public four-year
colleges (1), 3,600
Two-year colleges (1), 3,230
Charter schools (4)
SCHOOLS
Pueblo City Schools
549-7100
School District No. 70
542-0220
Colorado State University-
Pueblo, 549-2100
Pueblo Community
College, 549-3200
University of Phoenix
599-5282
Colorado Christian University
528-5080
Colorado Technical University
595-0200
Intellitec College, 542-3181
John Robert Powers
(800) 847-8904
LIBRARIES
Rawlings Public Library
100 E. Abriendo Ave.
562-5600
Barkman Branch
1300 Jerry Murphy Road
562-5680
Lamb Branch
2525 S. Pueblo Blvd.
562-5670
Mahlon Thatcher
White Branch
298 S. Joe Martinez Blvd.
562-5660
SNAPSHOTThe air in Pueblo is so clean that residents often can see purple
mountains’ majesties 70 miles away. That is one of the numerous
advantages of living in this city of clean water, a nationally ranked
school system and reasonable home prices.
44 IMAGESPUEBLO.COM PUEBLO
Community Profile
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CHURCHES
More than 100 places of worship
represent the ever-growing
religious services in Pueblo. Most
major faiths and denominations
are represented.
African Methodist Episcopal, 1
Assemblies of God, 6
The Baha’i Faith, 1
Baptist, 23
Bible Independent, 4
Catholic, 22
Christian, 3
Christian (Disciples of
Christ), 2
Christian Science, 2
Church of Christ, 6
Church of God, 4
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, 6
Divine Science, 1
Episcopal, 2
Evangelical Free Church, 1
Foursquare Gospel, 1
Free Methodist, 1
Full Gospel, 10
Independent, 12
Jehovah’s Witnesses, 4
Jewish, 3
Lutheran, 6
Mennonite Missionary
Alliance, 1
Nazarene, 2
Nondenominational, 1
Orthodox (Eastern), 2
Pentecostal, 5
Presbyterian, 3
Religious Science, 1
Seventh-Day Adventist, 2
Southern Baptist, 10
Unitarian, 1
United Methodist, 11
Wesleyan, 1
AREA SIZE
City, 40.88 square miles
County, 2,389 square miles
LIFE IN PUEBLO
At the beginning of 2004,
the median price for a
single-family home was
approximately $104,643.
The city’s housing costs
continue to rank
approximately 8 percent
below the national average.
Pueblo’s construction costs
have always been among the
lowest in America,
approximately 9 percent lower
than the national average.
The Hispanic community in
Pueblo makes up nearly half of
the county’s population.
LEISURE OPPORTUNITIES
Golf holes, 91
Movie screens, 20
Parimutuel betting days, 180
Protected recreation lands
32,762 acres
Museums, 10
Symphonies, 2
(Pueblo & Youth)
Welcome toColorado East Country
Colorado East Bank & Trust wants to make you three promises:
• We promise to listen.
• We promise to understand.
• We promise to do everything we can to help you achieve your
fi nancial dreams.
Visit us online at www.coloeast.com
PUEBLO1515 Fortino Blvd.
(719) 584-2000
PUEBLO WEST94 S. Tiffany Dr.(719) 547-4488
PUEBLO SOUTH1219 S. Prairie Ave.
(719) 561-5000
Chartered 1905
.
The area code for Pueblo i s 7 19 . IMAGESPUEBLO.COM 45
311 Community Profile.indd 45 12/6/07 3:02:12 PM
NEWSPAPERS
The Pueblo Chieftain825 W. Sixth St., 544-3520
PARKS AND RECREATION
Greenway and Nature
Center, 549-2414
Lake Pueblo State Park
561-9320
Pike National Forest, 523-4061
RESOURCES FOR SENIORS
AARP Info Center at
Pueblo Mall
1117 S. Prairie
543-8876
Pueblo Area Agency on Aging
1120 Court St.
583-6611
Pueblo County Veterans
Service Office
1120 Court St., 583-4544
Senior Citizen
Resource Development
& Coordinating Agency
230 N. Union Ave.
545-8900
UTILITIES
CableComcast of Colorado, LLC
807 N. Greenwood, 546-3216
ElectricAquila
105 S. Victoria, 546-6438
San Isabel Electric
893 E. Enterprise Drive
547-2160
GasXcel Energy
615 West St., 549-3611
WaterBoard of Water Works
319 W. 4th St., 543-2217
Phone
Qwest Communications
308 E. Pikes Peak – Colorado
Springs, (800) 244-1111
ACCOMMODATIONS
Abriendo Inn
300 W. Abriendo Ave.,
544-2703
Best Western Eagleridge
Inn & Suites
4727 N. Elizabeth St.
543-4644
Comfort Inn (North)
4645 N. Freeway, 542-6868
Comfort Inn Pueblo West
77 S. Radnor Drive, 547-9400
Days Inn
4201 N. Elizabeth St.
543-8031
Econo Lodge
4615 N. Elizabeth St.
542-9933
The Edgar Olin House
Bed & Breakfast
727 W. 13th St., 544-5727
Guest House Inn & Suites
730 N. Santa Fe Ave.
543-6530
Hampton Inn (North)
4703 N. Freeway
544-4700
Hampton Inn & Suites (South)
3315 Gateway Drive
566-1726
La Quinta Inn & Suites
4801 N. Elizabeth St.
542-3500
Microtel Inn & Suites
3343 Gateway Drive
242-2020
Pueblo Hotel & Conference
Center, 4001 N. Elizabeth St.
543-8050
Pueblo Marriott
110 W. First St.
542-3200
Quality Inn & Suites
3910 Outlook Blvd.
544-5500
Super 8 Motel
1100 Hwy. 50 W.
545-4104
Valu Stay Inn & Suites
2001 N. Hudson, 542-3750
Wingate Inn
4711 N. Elizabeth St.
586-9000
46 IMAGESPUEBLO.COM PUEBLO
Community Profile
311 Community Profile.indd 46 12/6/07 3:02:15 PM
Everyday moments can be learningmoments with your kids. For more tips, visit bornlearning.org
I spysomethinggreen.
Bob Root • Brad Rice
510 West Third Street • Suite 100P.O. Box 4560 • Pueblo, CO 81003
(719) 544-9139
PERFORMING ARTS
Broadway Theatre League
Union Avenue’s Memorial Hall
is home to Broadway Theatre
League’s professional, national
touring productions that have
included Tony Award-winning
musicals such as Evita; plays
such as Children of a Lesser God; and stars of the
Broadway stage such as
Marvin Hamlisch, Carol
Channing and Rita Moreno.
For tickets, call 545-4721.
Children’s Playhouse Series
The Sangre de Cristo Arts
Center, in cooperation with
Pueblo County, presents a
series of live, family-oriented
performances each season.
For further information,
call 295-7200.
Sangre De Cristo Dancerz
This company, a resident
ensemble at the Sangre de
Cristo Arts Center, consists
of people with and without
disabilities and is cosponsored
by Very Special Arts
Colorado. For information,
call 295-7200.
Damon Runyon Repertory
Theatre Company
Damon Runyon Repertory is a
professional theater company
dedicated to presenting the
city of Pueblo with high-
caliber stage shows, as well as
educational opportunities for
the youth of Pueblo and
surrounding communities
through their Damon Runyon
Repertory Abbreviated
Children’s Theatre. Damon
Runyon Repertory stages an
average of eight main stage
shows a year in the city of
Pueblo. Information is
available at 564-0579.
Festival Fridays
These concerts – featuring
Colorado jazz, reggae, blues,
soul and rock ’n’ roll bands –
take place on Friday evenings
in July and August on the
Sangre de Cristo Arts Center
paseo and indoors in January.
Call 295-7200 for information.
Impossible Players
What’s impossible for these
troupers? Not a lot. They put
on four productions a year at
Pueblo Community College.
Phone 542-6969 for general
information.
Pueblo Choral Society
The 85-member Pueblo Choral
Society can be heard regularly
at CSU-Pueblo’s Hoag Hall,
as well as other venues
throughout Colorado.
They sing classical, religious,
operatic, light operatic,
seasonal and ethnic folk
music. To find out more,
call 544-4455.
The area code for Pueblo i s 7 19 . IMAGESPUEBLO.COM 47
Community Profile
311 Community Profile.indd 47 12/6/07 3:02:17 PM
Mission Foods Pueblo2110 Santa Fe Dr. • Pueblo, CO 81006
(719) 543-4350www.missionfoods.com
Pueblo Symphony
The Pueblo Symphony
orchestra presents a six-
concert season of eclectic
programs appealing to many
different tastes. For more
information, contact the
Pueblo Symphony office at
545-7967.
Sangre De Cristo
Ballet Theatre
This company is a resident
dance company of the
Sangre de Cristo Arts
Center. Each year, the
company presents a
major fall and spring
performance in addition
to The Nutcracker each
December. For information,
call 295-7200.
Southern Colorado
Theatre Company
Since its inception, Southern
Colorado Theatre Company
has strived to present
professional, high-quality
productions. For information,
call 406-9612.
Center Stage Performing
Arts Series
For more than 20 years,
the Sangre de Cristo Arts
Center has offered this
series of national touring
dance, music and theater
attractions. For tickets,
call 295-7200.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce302 N. Santa Fe Ave.Pueblo, CO 81003542-1704, (800) 233-3446Fax: 542-1624www.pueblochamber.org
Source:www.pueblochamber.org
48 IMAGESPUEBLO.COM PUEBLO
Community Profile
311 Community Profile.indd 48 12/6/07 3:02:21 PM
Your HealthYour Hospital
IN SICKNESS AND IN HEALTH
Parkview Plans New Facility in Pueblo West
Top Customer Care
S p e c i a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e c t i o n
Pueblo SSA- Parkview.indd A1 12/10/07 3:54:25 PM
Wow, how things have changed in 10 years.
Mike Baxter recently took a look at what Parkview Medical Center meant to the Pueblo community in 1997, compared to the hospital’s impact on this region 10 years later in 2007. The senior vice president and chief operating officer at Parkview Medical Center was surprised at what he saw.
“Our wages payroll in 1997 was $36.4 million compared to more than $75 million in 2007, and that $75 million in ’07 conservatively meant about a $150 to $200 million overall economic impact to the Pueblo community,” Baxter says. “In addition, we now have 1,600 full-time and over 1,900 overall employees, making us the largest private employer in Pueblo County.”
Baxter adds that there were 26,000 visits to Parkview’s emergency room in 1997, and that number more than doubled to 55,000 in 2007. Meanwhile, the hospital provided $5.5 million of charity care in ’97, compared to $28 million just 10 years later.
“I’d also like to point out that Park-view reinvests its profits right back into Pueblo because we aren’t part of a chain or branch – our money doesn’t go to any other city,” Baxter says. “The money stays right here, and you can see it at work in some of the technology we have purchased and upgraded in recent years.”
Upgrades will include a complete renovation of two operating rooms, at a cost of $600,000 each. The result will be the latest equipment and tech-niques for performing orthopedic and neurological surgeries.
“Yes, it might sound cliché, but our mission really is customer focused – we
Primary Focus: Top Customer CarePARKVIEW MEDICAL CENTER’S IMPACT GROWS ALONG WITH COMMUNITY
Founded in 1923, Parkview Medical Center has become a regional landmark.
P a r k v i e w M e d i c a l C e n t e r
S p e c i a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e c t i o n
Pueblo SSA- Parkview.indd A2 12/10/07 3:54:32 PM
This special section was created for Parkview Medical Center by Journal Communications Inc.
For more information, contact:Parkview Medical Center
400 W. 16th St.Pueblo, CO 81003
Phone: (719) 584-4000, Fax: (719) 584-4734
©Copyright 2007 Journal Communications Inc., 725 Cool Springs Blvd., Suite 400,
Franklin, TN 37067, (615) 771-0080.
All rights reserved. No portion of this special advertising section may be reproduced in whole
or in part without written consent.
On the cover: Parkview Medical Center in Pueblo, Colo.Photos by Michael W. Bunch
want to treat our patients well,” saysC.W. Smith, president and CEO of Parkview Medical Center. “For example, in the area of staffing ratios, we have more nurses per patients than many of our competitors, including hospitals located north of us. We have a well-trained and committed staff devoted to providing patients with the best possible outcomes.”
Parkview also offers almost every medical service, including open-heart surgery, neurosurgery, a behavioral medicine program and a chemical depend ency program.
“We have an excellent cadre of phy-sicians and continue to recruit top doctors based on community need,” Smith says.
He adds that the hospital has been a longtime backer of nursing programs at the local colleges.
“We spend a significant amount of dollars with Colorado State Univer-sity-Pueblo in support of its nursing program, as well as supporting the nurs-ing, radiology and respiratory therapy programs at Pueblo Community Col-lege,” Smith says. “These are simply more ways for Parkview to help our community grow.”
The hospital also just remodeled its Kidsville Pediatric Unit, which provides complete family-friendly care for the youngest of patients.
“Parkview is a regional health-care center that has become a Pueblo land-mark – it has been around since 1923,” Smith says. “We provide the majority of service in our market area, and we stay fiscally responsible and up- to-date on technology. We know what we’re doing here at Parkview Medical Center, and we do it well.”
Parkview Medical Center President and CEO C.W. Smith says a continued
commitment to patient care has kept the hospital ahead of competition.
w w w . p a r k v i e w m c . o r g
K e e p i n g a F i n g e r o n t h e P u l s e o f O u r C o m m u n i t y
Pueblo SSA- Parkview.indd A3 12/10/07 3:54:36 PM
Bill Wood wants to run a healthy company, both for his employees and the bottom line.
The CEO of San Isabel Electric Association was recently told by the company’s health insurance provider
that San Isabel would receive a 6 percent discount on its insurance costs, if an accepted employee wellness program was put into place.
Enter Parkview Medical Center.“The wellness plan had to meet cer-
tain criteria, so we needed help from an outside source,” Wood says. “Having been a heart patient myself at Parkview, I was impressed with the level of care I received while I was in their hospital. So I gave Parkview a call about imple-
From left, Parkview Vice President of Managed Care Ryan Lown and Director for Health Initiatives Marian Heesaker discuss how a wellness plan benefits employees as well as the bottom line with Bill Wood, CEO of San Isabel Electric.
In Good CompanyPARKVIEW DEVISES EFFECTIVE WELLNESS PLAN FOR SAN ISABEL ELECTRIC
P a r k v i e w M e d i c a l C e n t e r
S p e c i a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e c t i o n
Pueblo SSA- Parkview.indd A4 12/10/07 3:54:41 PM
What’s This on My Bill?PARKVIEW HELPS WHEN INSURANCE QUESTIONS ARISE
Being a patient in a hospital can be a confusing and
emotionally draining time.Even if the care has been
exceptional, a patient might experience anxiety after receiving their bill and not understanding some aspects of it. That is when Parkview Medical Center can help even more.
“We want a hospital stay to be as easy on the patient and their family as we can possibly make it, from providing them with exceptional care through the fi nal billing process,” says Ryan Lown, vice president of managed care for Parkview Medical Center. “It’s a confusing business but we are here to help.”
Parkview representatives actually meet with employer groups in Pueblo on an annual basis, providing them with contacts at the hospital in case a health coverage issue might come up.
“We meet with human resource directors at Pueblo companies, and then these individuals contact us if one of their employees has a health insurance question,” Lown says. “If a question arises, we are able to work with Parkview’s business offi ce and that company’s insurance carrier, and get things fi gured out. Then we call the human resources director to explain the employee’s situation in an understandable way. Health insurance is complicated, so we assist in making it understandable.”
Parkview Medical Center
also brings several programs to worksites in an effort to promote health and well-being.
“We might schedule a health fair at a company site, providing blood pressure screenings, fl u shots, classes on asthma and stress – all in a relaxed and familiar environment for a company’s employees,” says Marian Heesaker, director for health initiatives for Parkview Medical Center. “It’s all done in an effort to keep our worksites healthy and productive, and the employees feeling valued.”
Parkview also has formed a partnership with an organization that specializes in setting up health information centers at the workplace.
“The health information centers are currently in 52 Pueblo companies, supplying health information to employees on a monthly basis – information such as early detection of diseases, who should get a fl u shot and ways to combat allergies,” Heesaker says. “In addition, the center offers information on subjects such as how to talk to your teenager about smoking, and backpack safety for school kids.”
Heesaker says the partnership is just another way for Parkview Medical Center to work toward keeping the Pueblo community as healthy as possible.
“There will always be a need for health care, but we also need to educate the community on how to prevent disease and promote health,” she says. “It is simply the right thing to do.”
menting a health wellness program for my 110 employees at San Isabel Electric.”
Wood says Marian Heesaker, direc-tor for health initiatives at Parkview Medical Center, devised a program that the company’s employees could follow.
“We now do four wellness programs on our company site each year, and Park-view is a great help getting us qualified speakers to educate our employees,” Wood says. “One of the programs is a December health fair that includes blood pressure checks, cholesterol testing, bone density tests and even f lexibility tips. Parkview is very accommodating – they are here at 7 a.m. to conduct the health fair, then our workers head out to the job sites.”
Not only does the wellness program meet the initial goal of satisfying the company’s insurance provider’s require-ments – thereby qualifying San Isabel for lower rates – but the education and prevention aspects of the plan translate into even greater benefits for the com-pany and its employees alike.
San Isabel Electric Association is in the electric utility business, which can be a dangerous industry. Employ-ees climb poles, work on electrical lines from bucket trucks and do under-ground power line work. Keeping both safety and overall wellness on the minds of employees creates an atmosphere of heightened efficiency and greater productivity.
“We always have mandatory monthly safety meetings, and now four of those meetings are a combination safety/wellness session,” Wood says. “Our people need to be in good shape and good health, and Parkview is helping us in that regard.”
K e e p i n g a F i n g e r o n t h e P u l s e o f O u r C o m m u n i t y
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Pueblo SSA- Parkview.indd A5 12/10/07 3:54:46 PM
N ational surveys estimate that women make 85 percent of the health care decisions for their family.
Women often decide when someone needs to go to the doctor, or if a family member should visit the emergency room. They also keep tabs of when their young children need to get their immunization shots up to date.
It was because of these caring individuals that the Spirit of Women Hospital Network was launched in 2000. The national program is advocated by hospitals in 55 U.S. cities that are advancing the cause of women’s health.
Parkview Medical Center is now a Spirit of Women member.“Women these days want to be educated on how to keep
their families healthy and safe, and that’s what we liked about this national program,” says Marian Heesaker, director of health initiatives for Parkview Medical Center. “Spirit of Women pro-vides creative programming and good, credible information.”
Heesaker says that for only $25, any woman in Pueblo can become a lifetime member of the Spirit of Women network.
“There are no strings attached – one $25 payment gets a woman a lifetime of information centered on families, careers and being knowledgeable,” she says. “Members receive a national Spirit of Women magazine, e-mail blasts and news-letters about upcoming women-oriented events around Pueblo, and shopping discounts at several Pueblo-area merchants.”
Members also receive information on current topics such as the HPV vaccine being an appropriate or inappropriate option for a teenage daughter, or what brands of vitamins are
best for young children.“There is also information on osteoarthritis; for example,
a woman might have once been athletic but now suffers bone and joint pain, and the Spirit of Women program shows that this arthritis is very treatable,” Heesaker says. “Or perhaps a woman is expecting a baby. Spirit of Women offers information for Mom to teach the siblings about the respon-sibilities of being a big brother or big sister to the family’s new addition.”
Parkview’s involvement with Spirit of Women also allows the hospital to host a variety of innovative education programs that are intended to improve the overall health of women in Pueblo.
“We schedule education programs that are entertaining – we actually use the word ‘health-u-tainment’ to describe them,” Heesaker says. “For example, Parkview is involved with the national Day of Dance in February that increases physical activity in women. Many people don’t realize that heart disease kills more women each year than breast cancer, and Day of Dance is a fun way to incorporate exercise into a heart fitness program.”
More information on the Spirit of Women program can be found at Parkview’s Web site, www.parkviewmc.org, or call the hospital’s Spirit hotline at (719) 595-SPRT.
“Spirit of Women encompasses every decade of a woman’s life, from childhood to old age,” Heesaker says. “And all it costs is $25 to receive health updates for a lifetime.”
That’s the SpiritPARKVIEW ALIGNS ITSELF WITH NATIONAL WOMEN’S HEALTH PROGRAM
Red shoes symbolize the annual Day of Dance event, a national women’s initiative that promotes heart health awareness.
P a r k v i e w M e d i c a l C e n t e r
S p e c i a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e c t i o n
Pueblo SSA- Parkview.indd A6 12/10/07 3:54:48 PM
S ound the sirens: Parkview Med ical Center is expanding.
Actually, the hospital is add ing a 17,000-square-foot, one-story emergency facility and outpatient clinic in Pueblo West.
Construction began in November 2007 and the opening is tentatively scheduled for November 2008.
“The population for Pueblo West in 1986 was about 3,500 residents, but today the population is more than 30,000 people – so it’s time for such a facility to serve that area,” says C.W. Smith, president and CEO of Parkview Medical Center. “This will be a 24/7/365 emergency center, and will actually be the only facility in Pueblo West to offer that level of care.”
The building will be constructed in phases, with Phase One costing the hos pital around $13 million.
“That total includes the land purchase, infrastructure, roads, construction and hospital equipment,” says Vince Velasquez, director of facilities and construction at Parkview Medical Cen ter. “Some roads are already in place on the site, but additional ingress and egress roadways must be con-structed. Phase One is getting the building up and running, and then the other phases will go into effect over time.”
Smith says those phases include even tually adding an operating room and recovery room. There are also future plans for a 90-bed hospital.
“Our real focus right now is on Phase One, with the ER to be equipped with a small laboratory, CT (computed tomog-raphy) scanner and radiology department,” Smith says. “We will also have a three-bed holding area to keep patients for up to 23 hours.”
There will also be a helicopter pad for transporting critical patients to the appropriate facility.
Parkview officials are also currently in the process of looking into constructing a new, two-story patient tower on the main campus. It will have 27 private patient rooms on each floor.
“The tower will be built so that it would have the capac-ity to eventually become a seven-f loor structure,” Smith says. “But that project won’t begin until late 2008. There is a need for more rooms at Parkview Medical Center, but we want Pueblo West functioning before we address the main campus.”
Smith adds that Parkview will continue to plan and tackle construction projects based on the medical needs of Pueblo County residents.
“We just keep putting our profits back into capital improvement projects that will ultimately benefit the entire Pueblo community,” he says. “The reason we all got into the medical profession is to help people. That’s what Parkview Medical Center is all about.”
Not Quiet on the Western FrontPARKVIEW TO CONSTRUCT EMERGENCY AND OUTPATIENT CLINIC IN PUEBLO WEST
In March 2007, Parkview Medical Center purchased land in Pueblo West and has plans to construct a 17,000-square-foot facility there that will house a 24-hour emergency and outpatient clinic, including laboratory and radiology services.
K e e p i n g a F i n g e r o n t h e P u l s e o f O u r C o m m u n i t y
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Are You Ready for Some Football?
The Art of Teaching
Colorado State University – Pueblo
S p e c i a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e c t i o n
Pueblo SSB-University.indd B1 12/10/07 3:59:02 PM
I ncreased enrollment, new programs and modern facilities are on the horizon at Colorado State University-
Pueblo. The educational institution is cele-
brating its 75th anniversary in 2008 as it gears up for growth in the coming century.
“CSU-Pueblo has been around for 75 years under one name or another,” says President Joseph A. Garcia. “I think what people want to see is that it’s not only here, but it’s changing, it’s growing.”
Whether it’s the addition of a master’s degree in education or the scheduled opening of a new, student-funded $11.6 million Student Recreation Center, CSU-Pueblo is a dynamic insti tution that is planning for the future.
That’s quite different from the univer-sity’s rather inauspicious beginnings, according to John E. Smith, emeritus pro-fessor of chemistry and a self-described
historian of CSU-Pueblo and all its incar-nations. He good-naturedly admits he was around for most of those changes.
The university was founded in 1933 and brief ly named San Isabel Junior College before founders settled on Southern Colorado Junior College. Classes were held on the top f loor of the Pueblo County Courthouse for 31 full-time and 32 part-time students.
In 1937, the school was renamed Pueblo Junior College, where Smith earned his associate’s degree in 1950. Armed with a doctorate in chemistry from the University of Colorado in Boulder and with experience at the Naval Research Lab in Washington, D.C., Smith returned to his alma mater to join the faculty.
But change was in the offing. In 1963, Pueblo Junior College became a state-funded, four-year institution with a new moniker, Southern Colorado State
College and in 1964, Gov. John A. Love broke ground on a new campus north of town.
“I was one of the first to occupy the new college in its new campus setting,” Smith recalls.
In 1974, the original campus on Orman housed SCSC’s College for Com-munity and Career Education (CCCE) and in 1975, SCSC’s focus was changed to a polytechnic university and became known as the University of Southern Colorado (USC). In 1979, CCCE sepa-rated from the University of Southern Colorado and became Pueblo Vocational Community College, joining the state community college system. It was renamed Pueblo Community College in 1982. USC became Colorado State University – Pueblo in 2003.
From the seed originally planted in 1933, two institutions of higher educa-tion have sprouted. Pueblo Community
CSU-PUEBLO MARKS 75 YEARS AS THE CITY’S EDUCATIONAL LEADER
Worth An
Seventy-five years ago, the Pueblo County Courthouse housed the first classrooms of now CSU-Pueblo.
AnniversaryCelebrating
C o l o r a d o S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y
S p e c i a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e c t i o n
Pueblo SSB-University.indd B2 12/10/07 3:59:08 PM
This special section was created for Colorado State University-Pueblo by Journal Communications Inc.
For more information, contact:Colorado State University-Pueblo
2200 Bonforte Blvd. • Pueblo, CO 81001(719) 549-2100 • Fax: (719) 549-2371
www.colostate-pueblo.edu
©Copyright 2007 Journal Communications Inc., 725 Cool Springs Blvd., Suite 400, Franklin, TN 37067,
(615) 771-0080.
All rights reserved. No portion of this special advertising section may be reproduced in whole or in part without
written consent.
On the cover: Wolf statue at CSU-PuebloPhotography by: Michael W. Bunch
Not Your Ordinary JoeW ith an ambitious vision of growth for Colorado State
University-Pueblo, Joseph A. Garcia took the helm in 2006 as the institution’s 13th president.
What attracted Garcia to Pueblo? “What I love about it is, fi rst, it’s in southern Colorado, where I
want to be,” he says. “Second, it is an institution that is providing access for a lot of fi rst-generation students who don’t have a lot of money but have an abundance of ambitions and dreams.”
Self-described as “just an ordinary Joe,” Garcia is anything but. A Harvard-trained lawyer, his diverse employment history includes stints as the Rocky Mountain States representative for the U.S. De-partment of Housing and Urban Development, executive director of the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies, and a partner in a Colorado Springs law fi rm. Before joining CSU-Pueblo, Garcia was president of Pikes Peak Community College for fi ve years.
He has twice been included in Hispanic Business magazine’s His-panic Legal Elite and was twice chosen President of the Year by the Colorado Community Colleges State Student Advisory Council.
Within the last year, Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter has named Garcia co-chair of his P-20 Education Coordinating Council as well as a commissioner to the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education.
Early in his CSU-Pueblo tenure, Garcia laid out a fi ve-year plan with goals to increase enrollment, improve retention and graduation rates, and renovate and construct new facilities.
“As we look at enrollment growth, we want to create a different mix between commuter and resident students,” Garcia says. “We want to have more resident students on campus. I think that changes the whole nature of an institution when you move from overwhelmingly commuter to one that has a larger critical mass of resident students.”
From left: Colorado Sen. Abel Tapia, CSU-Pueblo President Joseph A. Garcia, Friends of Football members Mike Roumph and Dan DeRose, and CSU System Board of Governors member Bonifacio “Boney” Cosyleon
College (PCC) was established in the 1980s when the University relinquished its two-year mission to concentrate on bachelor’s and master’s degrees. PCC and CSU-Pueblo continue to partner in meeting the higher education needs of Southern Colorado, and many of PCC’s graduates transfer to CSU-Pueblo each year to continue their studies.
While the university’s 75 years of history are sprinkled with colorful anec-dotes, Smith’s favorite is the story of the school’s founding.
“Twelve years before, in 1921, Pueblo suffered a devastating, multimillion-dollar f lood with loss of life. It was terrible,” he says. “In fact, in those days, there weren’t government programs to bail you out, so the people themselves had to bail themselves out.”
In addition, Smith says, the Mafia gained a foothold in the region in the 1920s, resulting in municipal govern-ment corruption. That was compounded by the 1929 stock-market crash and the drought-prompted Dust Bowl years of the 1930s.
“Knowing all this, it’s amazing that the people of Pueblo decided to try to establish a junior college,” Smith said. “There was devastation all around, peo-ple getting by hand to mouth and yet, they wanted to provide for their chil-dren something more than just a 12th-grade education.
“It was a Herculean effort and a testimony to the remarkable strength of character of the people of the town.”
MIC
HA
EL
W. B
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Are You Ready for some
CSU-PUEBLO FANS GEAR UP FOR A NEW SEASON OF GRIDIRON IN 2008
W hen crisp fall air and lost freshmen herald another autumn on the campus of
Colorado State University-Pueblo in 2008, a noise not heard in more than two decades will be added to the mix – the roar of a football crowd.
For the first time since the university fielded a gridiron squad in the fall of 1984, football will be back.
“It allows us to start the school year off with a lot of excitement,” says Todd Kelly, director of development for CSU-Pueblo athletics. “I don’t want to take anything away from our current fall sports, but in our society, obviously, football is a big interest with alumni, students and the media.”
The university also is bringing back men’s wrestling and women’s track and field.
A serious budget crunch in the mid-1980s at what was then the University of Southern Colorado led to the elimi-nation of several academic and athletic programs, including college staples such as football, baseball, tennis and golf.
Through the years, many of the programs were reinstated, but foot-ball – with its higher price tag – never made the cut. That changed when a Pueblo booster club, Friends of Football, launched a fundraising campaign in early 2006. Unbelievably, the group raised $7 million in one year.
“All of a sudden, they had the money, all the money that we asked for,” Ath-
letics Director Joe Folda recalls. “At that point, the president got very interested in it.”
CSU-Pueblo President Joseph A. Garcia had only been at the university’s top post for a few months, but he readily recognized that football’s return could help achieve a number of his stated goals – increased enrollment, improved student life, a stronger community connection, and higher retention and graduation rates.
“Most people aren’t aware of this, but our athletes have a 20 percent higher retention rate and graduation rate than
our nonathletes,” Garcia says. “Very different from a Division I program. We want more student athletes here because they are more likely to graduate at a higher rate.”
The addition of the three sports will nearly double the number of student athletes on campus, from 196 to 341.
Friends of Football, many of whom donned pads during their college days, aren’t stopping with $7 million. They set a new goal – to raise an additional $6 million to build a new stadium on campus and to build it in time for the start of the 2008 season.
Football coach John Wristen (left) and Athletic Director Joe Folda at the site.
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MoreCSU-PUEBLO’S ROLE EXTENDS BEYOND CAMPUS INTO THE WIDER COMMUNITY
W hen most people think of a university’s role in a community, they think education, and that’s certainly the primary contribution. Yet, Colorado
State University-Pueblo imparts much more than wisdom – it gives back in myriad ways.
“Our mission is to serve the higher-education and work-force-preparation needs of southern Colorado, and you can’t do that by staying on campus. You have to get out there and work with employer groups, K-12 institutions, everybody you can, to let them know that you’re here to meet the needs of the region,” says Colorado State University-Pueblo President Joseph A. Garcia.
That means working with chambers of commerce and other business organizations and companies themselves to identify where the job growth is now and is likely to be in the future.
CSU-Pueblo helps build the region’s economy in other ways, too. A 2004 economic-impact study conducted by Drs. Jay Goodman and Kevin Duncan, professors in the Hasan School of Business, found that CSU-Pueblo contributes more than $112 million annually to the local economy.
“It’s a thrill to have such a large impact, and it puts CSU-Pueblo among the economic leaders in town,” Duncan says.
The study compared CSU-Pueblo’s impact to other regional economic players, and the university fared well. CSU-Pueblo exceeded Rocky Mountain Steel Mills and the Colorado State Fair on Pueblo’s economy and Colorado College’s impact on Colorado Springs’ economy.
“If you want to estimate the impact of an institution or
business on a local economy, it’s based on that economic activity’s ability to bring money from the outside in,” Duncan explains.
CSU-Pueblo fits that bill, attracting both federal and state dollars. The survey also revealed that about two-thirds of the university’s 4,000 students wouldn’t be in Pueblo if the university weren’t there.
“So, we attributed their spending to the impact,” he adds.CSU-Pueblo’s contributions also range from the cultural
and artistic to the scientific. For example, water availability and quality are key com-
munity concerns. An in-depth research study, involving five faculty members and numerous students, began in December 2006 to determine the health of Fountain Creek.
“We definitely feel that this project is an outreach,” says Dr. Del Nimmo, adjunct research professor of biology.
With initial funding from the Lower Arkansas Valley Conservancy District, project participants are studying the creek’s aquatic life to discern whether pollution is taking a toll.
“What is currently the nature of the aquatic life in Foun-tain Creek, from its headwaters to the confluence with the Arkansas River?” is the question Nimmo’s group is exploring. “We’re using living organisms as indicators of conditions within the creek itself,” he says.
In particular, researchers are concerned with metals and metalloids, such as mercury, cadmium, zinc and selenium. The study is expected to take at least three years.
Students and faculty at CSU-Pueblo are involved in a variety of community projects, including water testing.
Textbooks
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I n an arrangement that speaks vol-umes about the academic flexibility and innovation of Colorado State
University-Pueblo, professors Richard and Vicky Hansen each teach art part time, essentially occupying one full-time professorial position.
“It allows each of us to contribute as teachers but then to have dynamic, crea-tive lives as artists,” Richard says. “I think we then bring that to the students.”
These two vibrant artists met at freshman orientation at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va., where they both earned bachelor’s degrees.
“When we were 21 and we knew everything,” Vicky says with a laugh, “we came out to Colorado, bought 40 acres and built an adobe home and
TEACHINGRICHARD AND VICKY HANSEN ENJOY ARTISTIC FREEDOM AT CSU-PUEBLO
The
ARTof
Left: CSU-Pueblo professor Richard Hansen specializes in public art. Top: Professor Vicky Hansen (right) assists a student in an art class at CSU-Pueblo.
studio. Now we’re able to live in this wonderful landscape that we love and teach, which is just a joy.”
The couple has been working and living in Colorado for 35 years and joined the university faculty in 1992.
Vicky is a potter with a deep appre-ciation for wood-fired kilns. In fact, she has two on her property.
While CSU-Pueblo’s art department boasts both gas and electric kilns, Vicky hosts workshops at her home so stu-dents have an opportunity to explore wood-fired ceramics.
“It [wood] adds this chance and mys-tery to the whole process,” she says. “It creates wonderful interactions with the surfaces of the clay.”
Staying with the kiln to continually reload it with wood, which takes 18 to 24 hours, also develops a sense of cama-raderie among the artists, she says.
Vicky describes her art as a com-bination of landscape and movement. Her specialty is vessels, yet she’s working toward more functional forms.
Richard, on the other hand, looks at landscape in a different way.
“I was a student of poetry who
became a studio artist who then became a landscape architect, only to find out the whole time I was simply trying to make poems – poems using stone and water,” he explains. “In many ways, I work in the gap between sculpture and landscape architecture.”
His specialty is public art, and his works include fountains, sculptural seating and basins. One of Richard’s favorite pieces is actually in Pueblo – the Farley/Reilly Fountain – a feature of the Arkansas Riverwalk Project.
Some of his other public pieces can be found in Virginia, Wisconsin, Mary-land, Minnesota and various cities and towns in Colorado.
He says he hits his stride when his work is “a visual delight that is also improving ecological health or making people aware of the preciousness of water.”
That’s something that he also instills in his students.
“I see my job as to proffer them an experience and understanding of the visual fundamentals,” he says, “and then fanning the flames that are inside each one of them to discover their own artistic identity.”
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CSU-PUEBLO BOASTS ALUMNI WITH TOP-NOTCH CREDENTIALS
I f you remember Potter’s Pharmacy on Elizabeth Street in Pueblo, you aren’t the only one. So does Brig.
Gen. Roger F. Mathews, deputy com-manding general for operations with the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command.
“I was fortunate to work for a great man, Harold Dickerson, who owned Potter’s Pharmacy,” Mathews recalls. “Harold knew everyone in the town it seemed, and they frequently visited the pharmacy just to talk with Harold. The pharmacy was largely untouched from the ’60s. I loved working there.”
A Fort Collins native, Mathews was a business major at the University of Southern Colorado, the precursor to Colorado State University-Pueblo, where he graduated in 1978.
It’s no surprise that Mathews was an Army ROTC cadet, but it is unusual that the U.S. Marine Corps led to his ROTC participation. After attending a Marine platoon leader course in the summer of 1975 at Quantico, Va., Mathews returned to the Pueblo campus for his sopho-more year.
His training led ROTC leaders to tap Mathews to head up what he calls “a small aggressor team” for tactical train-ing exercises against ROTC junior cadets. The experience prompted Mathews to transfer to the Army ROTC program a year later.
“What stands out as my lasting impression of my time in Pueblo was the small-town feel,” Mathews says. “The next important memory was my
Dana Perino, a graduate of CSU-Pueblo, is the White House Press Secretary for President George W. Bush. Top: Col. Roger F. Mathews, also a CSU-Pueblo graduate, was named brigadier general in 2007.
of Their ClassAt the Head
connection to relatives living nearby. My family originated from Colorado and, as the son of a career Air Force officer, I spent most of my life living elsewhere. Pueblo put me back in touch with my roots.”
Mathews is one of a number of CSU-Pueblo alumni who excel in their chosen fields.
Another is Dana Perino, who was appointed White House press secretary for the George W. Bush administration in August 2007. Perino had been deputy secretary since March 2006.
Professor Jennifer Mullen, chair of the Mass Communications Department and Center for New Media at CSU-Pueblo, remembers Perino as an outstanding student.
“Although Dana thought her career
would take her into broadcast journal-ism and that she wanted to be the news gatherer,” Mullen says, “she realized through some other opportunities and her other professional growth that she wanted to be more in the spokes person role.”
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University Web Site
www.colostate-pueblo.edu
Campus
Pueblo, Colorado
Founded
1933
Estimated 2007-08 Annual Cost for An
Undergraduate Student
Colorado residents, $3,184, Nonresidents (out-of-state) tuition, $13,543, Western Undergraduate Exchange tuition, $7,550
Room and Board
$6,000
Employees
671 (384 faculty members and 287 staff members)
Fall 2006 On-Campus Graduate/Undergraduate
Head Count
4,142 (3,925 undergraduate students and 217 graduate students)
Head Count by Ethnicity
Caucasian (55.5%), Hispanic (25.4%), Unreported (6.5%), African American (5.2%),
FASTFACTS
International (2.9%), Asian (2.5%), Native American (2.1%)
Fall 2006 Number of Countries and States
Represented
25 countries and 45 states
Fall 2006 Continuing Education Enrollment
1,846 students
Student to Faculty Ratio:
16-1
Registered Student Organizations
70
FY 2006-07 Degrees Awarded
768 bachelor’s degrees; 63 master’s degrees
Colleges/Schools
Hasan School of Business, College of Education, Engineering and Professional Studies, College of Science
and Math, and College of Humanities and Social Sciences
Museums and Libraries
University Library, Fine Arts Gallery, Pueblo Sports Hall of Fame (Massari Arena), Pueblo Latino Chamber Lifetime Achievement Wall (Occhiato University Center)
Alumni
More than 37,000
Varsity Sports and Championships
Competes in 12 sports in the NCAA Division II Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference: Basketball, baseball, golf, tennis and soccer for men, and basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, tennis and volleyball for women. Three sports – football, wrestling, and women’s track and field – will be added in the fall of 2008 to bring the total sports offered to 15.
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