The Denver Post

Morrison residents to fight new houses at ballot box

- By John Aguilar

Pushback against new constructi­on in metro Denver is nothing new.

But what’s happening in Morrison — where voters will soon have the opportunit­y to undo already-approved plans for a 1,350home community at the doorstep of the historic town — is a sign that robust growth on the Front Range isn’t going to continue unchecked without a fight.

The upcoming ballot measures to derail the Red Rocks Ranch project at the northeast corner of Morrison Road and C470 come on the heels of a vote last summer by residents in Greenwood Village to scrap a plan to zone a 44-acre area near the Orchard Station light rail stop for a dense, mixed-use project. It also follows a threatened effort in Castle Rock in 2016 to require that annexation­s larger than 5 acres go to a vote of the people.

Jeff Whiton, CEO of the Home Builders Associatio­n of Metro Denver, said resistance to developmen­t at the ballot box is “becoming more prevalent” as traffic congestion worsens and land is in increasing­ly short supply. But he said holding elections on individual projects creates unwelcome uncertaint­y for the developmen­t community.

“Once you go through the deeply complex and expensive process of getting the entitlemen­ts for the property, that should be enough,” Whiton said. “Builders and developers

are going to take their business outside Colorado if they can’t trust the decisions of city councils or county commission­ers.”

But what if the community itself can’t trust its elected leaders’ decisions? That’s what Loren Oswalt said prompted him and some fellow Morrison residents to counter the Red Rocks Ranch proposal at a special election next month, and again at the regular November election.

“It’s overloadin­g the Rooney Valley,” he said, referring to the picturesqu­e stretch of land between Golden and Littleton bisected by C-470. “Right there is our front door — there has to be more reasonable growth.”

Oswalt and his allies are worried that traffic impacts from a neighborho­od with nearly 1,400 new homes will overwhelm the secluded town of fewer than 500 residents near Red Rocks Amphitheat­re. The initia- tives aim to reincorpor­ate the 345-acre property back into Morrison — the town council voted to detach it from the town into Jefferson County in May — and zone it as commercial.

“I think it should be remain in Morrison for control and for the sales tax base,” said Kathy Dichter, a former Morrison mayor who has been at the forefront of the Red Rocks Ranch fight. “I think this is putting authority back in the hands of the people who live in Morrison.”

Oswalt criticized the town council for holding much of the discussion about the project over the last year in executive sessions, which are closed to the public.

Mayor Sean Forey said the public had plenty of chances to comment on Red Rocks Ranch as it went through hearings before Morrison’s planning commission, the Rooney Valley Commission and the town council. He lauded the project, which could include more than 300,000 square feet of office and commercial space, as “the smartest kind of growth.”

He pointed out that the previous zoning for the parcel before the town council amended it in May would have allowed a denser arrangemen­t of 1,000 homes on 100 acres and commercial buildings up to 125 feet in height.

Andrew Trietley, asset manager for Ventana Capital, which acts as the agent for Red Rocks Ranch’s property owner group, said the blueprint approved by the Morrison Town Council three months ago conforms with Plan Rooney Valley, a long-range planning document jointly issued last year by Morrison and Lakewood.

Under the new zoning, a developer would be required to set aside land for a new Jefferson County school, Trietley said. That would not be the case under the previous zoning. He also disputed the notion that an all-commercial developmen­t at Red Rocks Ranch would generate less traffic than a neighborho­od with 1,350 homes, citing traffic studies that have showed the opposite.

 ?? RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post ?? Loren Oswalt is fighting against a proposed developmen­t in Morrison, where voters will have two elections this fall to dismantle a residentia­l plan that would build 1,350 homes at Red Rocks Ranch at the doorstep of the historic town of fewer than 500 residents near iconic Red Rocks Amphitheat­re.
RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post Loren Oswalt is fighting against a proposed developmen­t in Morrison, where voters will have two elections this fall to dismantle a residentia­l plan that would build 1,350 homes at Red Rocks Ranch at the doorstep of the historic town of fewer than 500 residents near iconic Red Rocks Amphitheat­re.

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