Times-Call (Longmont)

CUTS SCRUTINIZE­D AS REC CENTERS REDUCE HOURS

While voicing support for newcomers, Denverites worry about resources for neighborho­od kids

- By Joe Rubino jrubino@denverpost.com

Budget cuts aimed at offsetting the city’s spending on shelter, food, bus tickets and other support for new-arriving migrants hit Denver’s 30 recreation centers this week in the form of slimmed-down hours.

Those cuts could be harbingers of more painful budgetslas­hing to come as the city grapples with how to support newcomers in the wake of a federal border deal — and the prospect of financial support to cities — falling apart.

The most visible impact so far came Tuesday as several rec centers moved their opening times later, curtailing or eliminatin­g early morning hours. At the Athmar Recreation Center in southwest Denver, that meant opening at 7 a.m. Tuesday instead of 6 a.m. — though some other centers now don’t open until 9 a.m.

The slightly later start wasn’t a major inconvenie­nce for nearby Ruby Hill resident Sonia Herrera, who wrapped up a visit to the Athmar center just after 8:30 a.m. Tuesday. Her husband is bummed, though. He likes to get in an early workout before the center gets busy and his workday begins, she said.

A more painful change will come on Sunday when the center will be closed entirely instead of offering afternoon hours. Sundays are “family days,” Herrera said. She and her husband often take turns playing basketball or swimming with their 9-year-old son while the other works out.

With their discounted neighborho­od membership, it’s an affordable outlet for weekend fun and activity.

“Money is tight, so it was nice to have a place to just have access,” Herrera said.

She is not holding the reduced hours against migrants, many of whom are fleeing political and economic strife in Venezuela. Herrera’s parents immigrated from Mexico and were greeted with opportunit­ies here in the U.S., she said.

“I am grateful they are being helped,” she said of the migrants. “I wish I could do more for them.”

Reduced rec center hours have been bundled with rolling, week-long closures of four of the city’s five Denver Motor Vehicle offices, forthcomin­g

cuts to spring parks and rec programs, and other small changes to DMV and parks services as part of a budgetredu­ction package aimed at saving the city $5 million, Mayor Mike Johnston announced earlier this month.

For most recreation centers, the cuts mean reduced hours on the days they’re open. But regional centers — the largest, including Carla Madison and Central Park — are closing one day a week.

Johnston emphasized at a press conference on Feb. 9 that “there would not be a crisis” in Denver if Republican congressio­nal leaders in Washington had not scuttled a bipartisan deal that would have provided migrants with work authorizat­ion and supported cities in their efforts to integrate them.

As of Tuesday afternoon, Denver was sheltering more than 2,800 migrants in hotel shelters. That’s almost six times as many new arrivals in city shelters as the 500 or so the city was supporting when Johnston was inaugurate­d in July, though the total has ebbed and flowed since large numbers of migrants began arriving in late 2022.

Johnston has repeatedly warned that the city is facing a budget deficit of up to $180 million in 2024 due to the crisis. That’s a figure that would require much deeper digging than a $5 million haircut from the parks and motor vehicle department­s.

But it is a worst-case scenario, administra­tion officials acknowledg­e.

“The projection was arrived at in early January when the city was experienci­ng a very high, sustained influx of newcomers and we were evaluating our length of stay policy,” Johnston spokeswoma­n Jordan Fuja said in an email last week. “The city expects to refine its 2024 projection­s based on these shifts; however, we are not at that point yet.”

The pace of arrivals — at times driven by buses of migrants sent to Denver by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott — isn’t the only factor dictating estimates, Fuja noted.

After several months of allowing migrant families to stay in city-funded hotel shelters indefinite­ly during winter cold snaps, the administra­tion earlier this month reinstated lengthof-stay limits. Families may now stay in shelters for only 42 days. Individual­s without children may stay for two weeks before they must find other arrangemen­ts.

Crisis has been costly, but cuts have drawn criticism

The city estimates it has spent $42 million on the crisis so far, dating back to December 2022 when the first busloads of people started arriving from the southern U.S. border.

Of that, more than $8.1 million has gone to paying for hotel rooms and other facilities, $6.3 million has gone to pay for migrants’ bus tickets to other destinatio­ns as well as other transporta­tion costs, and nearly $17.2 million has paid for staffing, according to a breakdown provided by Fuja.

The administra­tion expects that number to jump by another $14.3 million shortly when the city pays off outstandin­g invoices from its hotel provider, rectifying a clerical error that disrupted payments last year.

City Councilwom­an Stacie Gilmore has been a vocal critic of the Johnston administra­tion’s bookkeepin­g. She resigned as chair of the council’s safety and housing committee in November in part over what she felt was a lack of transparen­cy around the administra­tion’s spending on the mayor’s House 1,000 homelessne­ss initiative.

Her skepticism hasn’t waned with the migrant crisis.

She said making financial decisions based on the city’s worst-case scenario was “troublesom­e when you’re trying to right-size shifting priorities in our budget.”

She is already hearing from nonprofit organizati­ons in her far-northeast Denver district that are worried about the possibilit­y that the city will not renew their contracts if the belt-tightening persists.

“This is a delicate balance, and I’m concerned with the directions the administra­tion is going,” Gilmore said. “We’re talking about foundation­al neighborho­od support.”

Those concerned leaders include Angie Rivera-malpiede, a former Regional Transporta­tion District director who now runs a nonprofit that operates the popular Denver Connector micro-transit shuttle programs that serve people in the Montbello neighborho­od and in Globeville and Elyria-swansea.

She recently learned from the city’s Department of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture, or DOTI, that contracts with transporta­tion management associatio­ns were under review and may not be renewed amid the budget crisis, she said. Right now, the Connector program is funded through October.

Rivera-malpiede said rides on the Connector shuttles are free and could benefit migrants who find housing or jobs in the north Denver neighborho­ods the program serves. But for now, she is worried about the potential impact on long-term residents, especially older people who have come to rely on the rides.

“This program itself is so extraordin­arily successful because it is a program of the community and for the community in an area that has for years lacked service,” she said. “This program needs to be there for them. It absolutely does.”

DOTI spokeswoma­n Nancy Kuhn confirmed Tuesday that several contract renewals with transporta­tion management associatio­ns have been paused while the department engages in “a broader discussion about budget savings for 2024,” though no decisions have been made.

The Connector’s contract, which is about eight months from expiring, is not among those paused at the moment, Kuhn said.

‘They are taking away’ services for children

The prospect of the Montbello Recreation Center being closed on Saturdays beginning this week worries Dianne Cooks, a Montbello resident for four decades. She also is the executive director of Families Against Violent Acts, an organizati­on dedicated to supporting families impacted by violence.

“Saturday kids don’t have school. They look forward to going to the rec center and watching basketball inside and outside. That keeps them from getting into trouble,” Cooks said of the changes. “And they’re being limited. They are taking away what we have really pushed our young people to do.”

Cooks emphasized that she wants migrants to feel welcome in Montbello as they try to establish themselves in a new country and enroll their children in schools. When her organizati­on hosts its annual summer resource fair in June, she said, all informatio­n will be provided in English and Spanish.

Johnston said he knew the recreation center cuts could be painful for lowerincom­e families with fewer resources for child care and services.

The administra­tion arrived at its cuts after weighing the impact through an equity lens, he said at that Feb. 9 press conference. That meant preserving days of operation at neighborho­od rec centers that already were open only six days per week because those centers are often located in neighborho­ods populated by “kids with the greatest needs, where we know that if we reduce their access to positive things to do, the risk of them getting into additional challenges goes up.”

Sonia Herrera said she felt bad for the staff at the Athmar center.

 ?? PHOTOS BY HELEN H. RICHARDSON — THE DENVER POST ?? Michael Wooten, an Independen­t Life Skills trainer, left, pushes his client Dennis Gonzales in his wheelchair to go work out at the Athmar Recreation Center in Denver on Tuesday. Denver rec centers are changing their hours amid budget cuts.
PHOTOS BY HELEN H. RICHARDSON — THE DENVER POST Michael Wooten, an Independen­t Life Skills trainer, left, pushes his client Dennis Gonzales in his wheelchair to go work out at the Athmar Recreation Center in Denver on Tuesday. Denver rec centers are changing their hours amid budget cuts.

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