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momentum. Even the recent school
board election has failed to thwart its
advance.
The foundations, the Piton
Foundation, backed by a Denver
oil company, and the Donnell-Kay
Foundation, a so-called family foun-
dation, have become the dominant
players on Denver\u2019s education scene.
They sponsor tax increases for voter
approval, sponsor and fund char-
ter school applicants, push thinly
researched reports that seek to change
the direction of Denver schools. With
their funding, a network of aligned
groups have emerged, from groups
like Padres Unidos and Metropolitan
Organization for People, that pay
hundreds of thousands of dollars
in salaries to put professional orga-
nizers on the street, to the national
group, Stand for Children, which
has received over $300,000 to open
shop in Denver to impact the Denver
School Board race.
Perhaps most concerning is a
website called EdNewsColorado.org,
run by a former Denver Post reporter
and Piton employee, Alan Gottlieb.
EdNewsColorado.org features cover-
age of the statehouse and of educa-
tion issues, mostly written by Todd
Engdahl and Nancy Mitchell, a for-
On November 24, Gov. Bill Ritter,
Lt. Gov. Barbara O\u2019Brien, the Colorado
Coalition to End Hunger and Share
Our Strength, the leading national
organization working to end child-
hood hunger, announced the launching
of the \u201cCampaign to End Childhood
Hunger in Colorado.\u201d The campaign
will immediately work to increase
the number of children enrolled in
school breakfast and summer food
programs while developing a compre-
hensive plan to end childhood hunger
in Colorado by 2015. Lt. Gov. O\u2019Brien,
former president of the Colorado
Children\u2019s Campaign and long-time
Inside the
Cherry Creek
News &
CeNtral DeNver
DispatCh
\u2022Mazel Tot
Chanukah
celebrations page 16
\u2022 New and Notable page 5
\u2022Surviving Stressful family
gatheringpage7
\u2022Eating with conscience
page 10
\u2022 Different faiths align page 9
Downtown is getting a unique
Christmas tree lot, with sustainably
forested trees, music, home-baked
cookies and proceeds going to ben-
efit Concerts For Kids, a non-profit
organization that supports a range
of area children\u2019s non-profits. It will
be staffed by a unique program that
marries returning veterans with
jobs with an environmental twist.
Dale Deleo, the president of
Europa Landscaping and a mem-
A campaign to end childhood
hunger in Colorado is launched
Christmas trees with a difference
children\u2019s advocate, will co-chair the
initiative for the administration.
The Denver Foundation, with its
commitment
to address-
ing
short
and
long
term solu-
tions to the
hunger cri-
sis, was also
recognized
for its role
in encour-
aging
the
launch of the
Campaign
to
End
Childhood
Hunger. With
the support
of its donors, the Foundation has con-
tributed over $700,000 within the past
year to front line food pantries across
the state of Colorado. Additionally, it
has been instrumental in supporting
the creation of the Colorado Coalition
to End Hunger.
\u201cToo many children in Colorado
are facing hunger, and in this mod-
ern day and age, that is simply unac-
ceptable,\u201d states Kathy Underhill,
Executive Director of the Colorado
Coalition to End Hunger. \u201cTogether
ber of the Concert for Kids board,
is the prime mover behind the the
tree lot. Located in the center of
Downtown Denver for the next
two weeks, shoppers can visit Tiri\u2019s
Garden beginning at noon on Friday
to select and purchase their favorite
tree to take home with them for the
holidays.
\u201cWhen we created Tiri\u2019s Garden
in May 2009, we didn\u2019t anticipate
the year-round effect it could have
on the residents of Downtown
Denver,\u201d says Christie Isenberg,
President of Concerts For Kids.
\u201cOnce again, with the generosity
of Shames Makovsky Realty and
Europa Landscaping, we are able to
provide them (and others) with an
easy-access solution for decorating
their homes.\u201d
More than an estimated three mil-
lion dollars have been spent by two
foundations to push a radical agenda
to privatize Denver\u2019s public schools.
The agenda includes a strong
anti-union push to get rid of teachers
as public employees, and to short-
circuit direct accountability by an
elected school board.
The effort includes well-funded
grassroots groups that target poor
and minority parents, an organiza-
tion devoted to creating a political
army to support its aims, an opin-
ion-leader organization fronted by
two former mayors, but driven by a
cadre of people paid for their activ-
ism, even a propaganda arm, staffed
by former reporters churning out
pieces, some terribly slanted.
And while Denver parents and
voters strong-
ly
support
their tradition-
al, neighbor-
hood schools,
this group of
single-mind-
ed advocates are far more influen-
tial than even elected school board
members. As a result, Denver Public
Schools reform efforts are ever more
controversial. With charter schools
replacing closed neighborhood
schools, and charters being located
in traditional school buildings over
strenuous neighborhood objections,
the move to privatize Denver\u2019s pub-
lic schools is growing in force and
Foundations, news site
drive DPS changes
go online to
thecherrycreeknews.com
to learn more
by Guerin Lee Green
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