The Denver Post

Sawyer, Replin and Fry look to unseat District 5 incumbent Susman.

- By Andrew Kenney Andrew Kenney: 3039541785, akenney@denverpost.com or @AndyKnny

The political history of eastern Denver is written in rezoning applicatio­ns.

For the neighborho­od insider, life is punctuated by hourslong public hearings about new apartment and condo buildings. If someone wrote a textbook, the chapter titles would be “Holly Street,” and “Mt. Gilead Church” and all the other shorthand names that have developed for the neighboron­neighbor brawls that periodical­ly rack District 5.

It may just be the perfect breeding ground for developmen­t politics: There’s an old way of life — the rows of midcentury ranches — that’s quickly been overlaid with a patchwork of scraped houses, new condos and other changes. The pace of change isn’t the fastest in the city, but it’s happening among milliondol­lar homes and powerful neighborho­od groups, although the district also includes East Colfax Avenue and less politicall­y connected neighborho­ods.

It’s all crystalliz­ing in this year’s elections as incumbent Mary Beth Susman fights for a third term amid a strident challenge from three candidates: Amanda Sawyer, Stephen Replin and Michele Fry.

The outspoken urbanist

Susman, 71, is an outspoken “neourbanis­t” and a 46year resident of Hilltop. She found her entrance to city politics in the Lowry developmen­t of the 1990s, when she was chair of the community advisory group.

“It was the birth of what was known then as neourbanis­m — the thought that you could put commercial areas right inside residentia­l. There was so much pushback, even for a small community center,” she said.

She won election in 2011 in a tight race and went unopposed in 2015. While in office, she has focused on transit issues and housing, saying the district should embrace its fair share of growth. She also wants a stronger bus network and greater city ownership of transit issues.

“We should preserve the character of these neighborho­ods but understand we might need to increase the number of people who can enjoy these very special neighborho­ods,” she said.

She’s met fierce neighborho­od resistance at times. Most recently, she supported a doomed and controvers­ial rezoning proposal that could have put 23 residentia­l units on South Holly Street. Some residents protested that it would make a busy road more dangerous.

“I feel strongly about what kind of community I want to live in,” said Susman, who holds a doctorate in sociology. “You can’t live in a democratic society if only one group of people gets their way all the time.”

At times, the rezoning fights have turned serious: In 2015, residents sued the city over an earlier developmen­t decision, alleging that Susman’s communicat­ions with a developmen­t lobbyist had tainted the process, among other problems.

The courts rejected their arguments, with a district court judge finding that Susman had only discussed public informatio­n and hadn’t committed to any position before the hearing. The incumbent ultimately voted against that rezoning.

Susman leads the fundraisin­g pack with more than $100,000 raised or carried over from the last election cycle. Sawyer follows with about $85,000 raised, including $40,000 from herself. Fry has raised $27,000, including $19,000 from herself. Replin has selffunded $1,900.

The new activist

Amanda Sawyer, 40, moved from San Francisco with her husband and three kids in 2016, buying a fourbedroo­m in Hilltop. She’s not new to Colorado, having split time as a kid between a Chicago suburb and Avon.

“Pretty quickly I realized that the Denver I flew in and out of as a kid and hung out in with my brother is not the Denver of today,” said Sawyer, an MBA and attorney who consults for health care companies.

The argument over the 23 units on Holly Street opened her eyes. She liked the building, but thought it was the wrong location, feeding into her general doubts about the city’s redevelopm­ent.

“Do we want to be a city of high rises with no soul? Or do we want to be Denver? Because the Denver I grew up hanging out in cared about green space and cared about the residents who grew up here,” she said.

Sawyer doesn’t describe herself as a NIMBY — notinmybac­kyard — but she thinks Susman is “out of touch” with constituen­ts. East Denver doesn’t have the right infrastruc­ture for growth, she said. And Sawyer feels that the neighborho­ods have been unfairly ignored as the city focuses sidewalk constructi­on on lowincome neighborho­ods.

And where new infrastruc­ture is planned, she worries that Denver could overdo developmen­t. For example, she worries that city officials could go for fivefloor developmen­t or higher along the new East Colfax busrapid transit line. She wants to see something closer to three floors. (City planning officials haven’t announced their ideas yet.)

“It’s not an antidevelo­pment, prodevelop­ment issue, it is an issue of being thoughtful, of making sure that East Colfax stays with the heart and soul of East Colfax as this sort of funky area of Denver that has struggled,” she said.

Her passion, she said later, “stems from a real desire to bring the community back into the process.”

The political veteran

Michele Fry, 47, says she falls between Sawyer and Susman on developmen­t issues.

“I’m right in the middle,” said Fry, the chief of staff for Rep. Jovan Melton. On the controvers­ial Holly Street rezoning, she falls closer to Susman: She saw the proposal as a net gain for the area because of its sustainabl­e design and forsale units.

But her platform is focused more on good governance than developmen­t, she said. She thinks the city has done a poor job of getting neighborho­ods involved in decisions.

“There is no transparen­cy. There is zero accountabi­lity. You don’t know what’s being built in your neighborho­od. And I don’t understand how that happens,” she said. Fry also has said she’d focus more on seniors and working families.

“There are some community meetings, just everybody is not included in them. It seems to be the ones that have the time, that are dialed in,” she said.

She previously ran for the seat in 2011, the year Susman took office. She criticizes the incumbent, but she’s also perturbed by the tone of the campaign. She pointed to a radio interview that Sawyer did: Interviewe­r Chuck Bonniwell referred to Susman as a “developer’s ho,” and Sawyer did not admonish him.

“You can disagree with Mary Beth’s propensity to be overly prodevelop­ment. I do,” she said. “But at some point, you stop that vitriol. I’m out to win to bring cohesivene­ss back to our community.”

Sawyer said she was caught offguard in the interview and wished she had pushed back more strongly.

“We should preserve the character of these neighborho­ods but understand we might need to increase the number of people who can enjoy these very special neighborho­ods.”

Mary Beth Susman, incumbent

The absolute opponent

Stephen Replin, 71, has the staunchest stance against developmen­t — not just in the race, but perhaps across the city elections. He has called for a complete twoyear moratorium on rezonings, which would freeze numerous developmen­t proposals.

“Let’s let the city absorb the units that are under constructi­on,” the business coach and attorney said at a recent forum. At the moment, the regional market appears to be absorbing a surge of new apartments, but a downturn is always possible.

“It was a fabulous, fabulous place without intensive traffic, without much crime,” Replin said. “I want those days back.”

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