The Denver Post

Residents’ choice down to two

- By Joe Rubino

Skyview or Central Park?

The voter-decided process to pick a new name for Denver’s soon-to-be-former Stapleton neighborho­od has produced two finalists. By Saturday, a winner should be known and the last name of the city’s former mayor and known Klu Klux Klan member Benjamin F. Stapleton will be one step closer to being history in the east Denver enclave.

Stapleton United Neighbors, the registered neighborho­od organizati­on managing the voting process, announced on its Facebook page Sunday that Skyview and Central Park were the top two vote-getting choices in the second round of public polling.

Online voting in the final round is open. Adult residents of the neighborho­od have until 2 p.m. Thursday to cast a ballot.

Central Park is the leader, according to charts the organizati­on has shared on Facebook that detail the results of the multi-round voting process. Central Park, the name of the park that is the neighborho­od’s most celebrated public feature, earned the most points on the ranked-choice ballots in each of the first two rounds.

Skyview, a reference to the neighborho­od’s past life as the city’s internatio­nal airport, edged out other semifinali­sts Mosley and Concourse in the second round of voting to make the final two. Notably, none of the original nine candidate names that honored indigenous people or people of color — Peterson, Randolph or Mosley — made the final two.

Amanda Allshouse, president of the board for Stapleton United Neighbors, which is going by the acronym SUN during the renaming process, said the organizati­on is keeping vote totals private until final results are made public Saturday. She said the decision to withhold vote totals is part of a quality assurance process as the organizati­on tallies and validates ballots. Allshouse “feels good” about participat­ion in the first two rounds.

Efforts to rename Stapleton are decades in the making, dating back to when the neighborho­od was still home to the city’s Stapleton Internatio­nal Airport.

As recently as 2019, property owners voted down a name change, but that was before the name received renewed attention this summer from social justice activists engaged in the Black Lives Matter movement.

“I’m so happy that the community has embraced this process as much as possible and the SUN board has really met the timeline that we laid out back in June and stuck with it,” Allshouse said. “With the goal being to have a community and a culture that is welcoming and inclusive for all, a name change doesn’t achieve that alone. There is still going to be work to do after this over.”

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