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  • Gardner Commends: New North Korea Sanctions Sanctions Were Mandated by Gardner’s 2016 North Korea Sanctions Bill

    Gardner Commends: New North Korea Sanctions Sanctions Were Mandated by Gardner’s 2016 North Korea Sanctions Bill

    Washington, D.C. – Senator Cory Gardner (R-CO), Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on East Asia, the Pacific, and International Cybersecurity Policy, released the following statement today after the United States Treasury announced sanctions targeting three North Korean state-sponsored malicious cyber groups.

    “I welcome the Administration’s fulfillment of these long-overdue sanctions against North Korea-sponsored hacking groups,” said Senator Gardner. “North Korea’s illicit cyber activity was one of the major reasons why I led the North Korea Sanctions and Policy Enhancement Act, which President Obama signed into law in 2016. It was the first standalone legislation to impose mandatory U.S. sanctions against anyone who contributes to Pyongyang’s nuclear proliferation, human rights abuses, and malicious cyber actors, such as the entities designated by Treasury today.”

    Background

    • On February 10, 2016, the Senate approved the North Korea Sanctions and Policy Enhancement Act and on February 12, 2016, the House of Representatives approved the Senate version of the bill. 
    • On February 18, 2016, President Barack Obama signed Gardner’s North Korea Sanctions and Policy Enhancement Act into law. This legislation received rare, overwhelming bipartisan support, passing the Senate 96-0 and the House of Representatives by 408-2. The bill imposes mandatory sanctions on individuals who contribute to North Korea’s nuclear program and proliferation activities, cyberattacks, censorship of its citizens, and the regime’s continued human rights abuses, and is a drastic new direction away from the Administration’s discretionary sanctions. 
    • On March 8, 2019, Gardner wrote to Secretary of State Pompeo and Treasury Secretary Mnuchin, asking for a firm Administration response to recent reports that hackers linked with the North Korean regime conducted cyberattacks on multiple U.S. and European targets, including banks utilities, and oil and gas companies. He urged the Administration to fully comply with the North Korea Sanctions and Policy Enhancement Act and designate any persons knowingly engaging in activities to undermine cybersecurity on behalf of the Government of North Korea. 

     

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  • Construction Begins on Additional State Hospital Beds

    Construction Begins on Additional State Hospital Beds

    PUEBLO — The Colorado Mental Health Institute at Pueblo (CMHIP) began construction last month on a unit that will add 24 beds to the state’s forensic hospital. Adding beds to the state hospital in Pueblo is part of a coordinated strategy to ensure patients are able to access competency services in a timely manner.

    The 24 beds will be within CMHIP’s High Security Forensic Institute building and are expected to open in November 2020. The project budget is $7 million.

    The 24 beds are part of a total 128 beds being added this summer through December 2021:

    On June 3, the Forensic Services Jail-Based Evaluation and Restoration team opened a second location for jail-based competency evaluation and restoration services, adding 18 beds at the Boulder County Jail. ($2.2 million)

    We are in the process of construction and modifications at CMHIP that will lead to a medium-security restoration to competency unit, increasing CMHIP’s capacity by 42 beds with an estimated opening in December 2019. ($844,000)

    The Colorado Mental Health Institute at Fort Logan’s F2 & F3 Cottages will be renovated to add 44 beds, increasing the hospital’s capacity by almost 50 percent with an estimated completion date of December 2021. The additional beds will be dedicated to restoration, while the hospital’s current 94 beds will remain dedicated to civil patients. ($17.8 million)

    In March, the Department reached an agreement that resolved an eight-year-old federal lawsuit over wait times for court-ordered competency services by expanding community-based services, providing treatment for people in jail waiting for services, and expediting inpatient services for Coloradans experiencing a serious mental health episode.

    “These beds are important to expand the state’s capacity to serve people who are awaiting trial and need inpatient competency services,” said Robert Werthwein, director of the Department’s Office of Behavioral Health, which oversees the mental health institutes. “Adding beds is part of a larger solution that includes an expansion of community-based services in an effort to better serve people in our state.”

    The Department is also working through the Behavioral Health Task Force and the Long Term Competency subcommittee, which was created by Governor Polis, to develop a comprehensive plan for individuals in the criminal justice system who have been found incompetent to proceed, and on future solutions to increase community interventions as a means to reduce demand on forensic solutions to mental health.

     

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  • DAY 1 of PEDAL THE PLAINS BEGINS

    DAY 1 of PEDAL THE PLAINS BEGINS

    Denver, CO (Friday, September 13) — The 3-day tour Pedal The Plains (PTP) presented by Viaero Wireless began today in Lamar, Colorado. This year’s ride is taking participants on a 164-mile adventure as they cycle through the Southeastern Plains of Colorado where history runs deep from outlaws and bandits, to the Santa Fe Trail and the Amache Japanese-American Relocation Center.

    The Governor of Colorado, Jared Polis, joined the ride for the official kickoff this morning to see riders on their way.

    “This is an amazing opportunity to highlight southeastern Colorado. By no means is Pedal The Plains flat, over the next three days riders will experience more than 2,400 feet of elevation gain,” commented Governor Jared Polis.

    Riders will head from Lamar to Holly on a 43.6 mile ride, stay in Holly for departure on day 2 to Springfield, riding 73.7 miles. Day 2 brings 108 mile ride, a Century Plus Option, taking riders into Kansas and back. For day 3, riders make their way 47.1 miles from Springfield ending the 3-day tour in Lamar.  

     

    Jason Sumner, Author of “75 Classic Rides Colorado: The Best Road Biking Routes”, is participating this year and had this to say after today’s Day 1, “It was a deceivingly hard day. The mileage and climb weren’t too bad, but the wind and heat made things tough out there. There were lots of rewards for your hard work though. Great lunch in Granada, and it was fascinating to learn about the area’s history, especially the Amache Relocation Center.”

     

     

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  • Gardner and Bipartisan Group of Senators Condemn North Korean Labor Camps

    Gardner and Bipartisan Group of Senators Condemn North Korean Labor Camps

    Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Cory Gardner (R-CO), a member of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, co-sponsored a bipartisan resolution condemning the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s (DPRK) political prison labor camp system. As North Korea appears to indicate interest in resuming talks with the U.S., the resolution, Senate Res. 303calls on the DPRK to dismantle their brutal system, noting instances of religious persecution, rape, forced abortions and brutal executions within the camps. U.S. Senators Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), and John Cornyn (R-Texas) are original cosponsors of the resolution. 

    “North Korea is the world’s leading abuser of human rights, and their vast network of brutal labor camps is barbaric and an affront to humanity,” said Senator Gardner. “The United States must maintain the maximum pressure campaign against the Kim regime, as called for by the Gardner-Markey Asia Reassurance Initiative Act, until North Korea fully denuclearizes and respects the rights of its people, including completely dismantling these shameful and truly inhumane facilities.”

    “The crimes against humanity the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea are committing are unparalleled in the world today,” said Senator Hawley. “It has been estimated that more than 400,000 people out of 500,000 imprisoned were killed over a 30-year span. That these conditions exist in the 21st century, after the horrors the world witnessed in the last, is unconscionable. Just as then, we cannot remain silent. We should consider sanctions against those responsible and send a clear message to Pyongyang that the global community is not going to rest until these camps are abolished.”

    “The world knows that North Korea abuses its own population by keeping people—many of them innocent of any wrongdoing—in horrific conditions in forced labor camps,” said Senator Cortez Masto. “The North Korean regime must halt its human rights violations, and the United States and the international community must do all we can to highlight these atrocities and stand up for those who are suffering.”

    “North Korea’s use of labor camps is a gross abuse of human rights,” said Senator Van Hollen. “The existence of these camps is well-documented, and we must continue to shine a light on their cruel and inhumane practices. Speaking out about these issues – and leveraging international pressure – will help us hold North Korea’s feet to the fire.”

    “The world has rightly been focused on North Korea’s nuclear weapons program and other illicit activities, but the United States cannot ignore the atrocious human rights violations occurring in North Korea’s labor camps,” said Senator Markey. “If we are to remain true to our values, we must raise awareness about these actions and call for their immediate halt. We must get back to negotiations with North Korea, and must include human rights front and center in that agenda.”

    “North Korea should feel the weight of the entire United States Congress on its shoulders,” said Senator Blackburn. “The human rights abuses committed in labor camps under Kim Jung Un’s watch are unacceptable. I join my colleagues in the Senate in calling on North Korea to immediately cease these horrific practices and to put an end to its gulag system.”

    In the resolution, the Senators call upon the international community to join them in demanding the labor camps be dismantled, and create a special tribunal to investigate and remedy North Korea’s crimes against humanity, consider targeted sanctions against those involved in these crimes, and ban the import of goods made by North Korean prison laborers. 

     

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  • Broncos Game of the Week: Bennett at Strasburg

    Broncos Game of the Week: Bennett at Strasburg

    1.) HEAD COACHES: Brian Brown (Strasburg)/ Rick Jacoby (Bennett)

    2.) ADMINISTRATOR(S) ON DUTY: Michelle Woodard, Jeff Rasp (Strasburg); Cassie Salberg, Carlos Tello (Bennett)

    3.)SECURITY: TBA           

    4.) FRIDAY’S SCHEDULE:   BRONCO’S HS FOOTBALL GAME OF THE WEEK!

    • 5:30 pm (90:00) –  Field Open for Warm-ups: SHS – South/BHS – North

    • 6- 6:50 p.m. – Bronco Pre-game Activities (Circle Drive area)

    • 6:45 p.m.  –  Welcome & Sportsmanship/Bronco Announcement

    • 6:45 p.m.   –  Bronco Cheerleaders Stage on West Sideline

    • 6:48 p.m.   –  Bronco Cheerleaders Perform

      • 6:53 p.m. (10:00)   –   Bennett takes field (from East) – Starting Line Up
      • 6:55 p.m. (8:00)    –    Strasburg takes field (from South) – Starting Line Up
      • 6:58 p.m. (5:00)    –  National Anthem
      • 7:00 pm (2:00)     –    Coin Tossed by Bronco Alumni Billy Thompson
      • 7:02 p.m. (0:00)   –   Game Time – Game Ball Delivered by Miles

    * HALFTIME – 15 MINUTES *

    Strasburg Youth Football Teams Play at ½ Following Strasburg H.S. Cheer Routine            

    OFFICIALS

      • PLEASE PARK IN THE HIGH SCHOOL PARKING LOT. This lot is just off Colorado Ave.
      • A School Administrator will meet you at the front doors of the school off Circle Drive and direct you to pre-game, halftime and post-game dressing area.
      • Saturday’s officials are selected by the CHSAA office

    Karl Kramer, Shannon Hartman, Cary Fry, Drew Walton, Richard Iversen

    VISITING TEAM INFORMATION

      • DRESSING ROOM – Visitors’ locker room – High School PE locker rooms.
      • BUS PARKING – PLEASE PARK IN THE NORTH DIRT SCHOOL PARKING LOT (DRIVE TO THE WATER TOWER AND TAKE A LEFT AND FOLLOW THAT TO BEHIND THE SCHOOL)
      • BENCH AREA – East side-lines.
      • PRE-GAME – North end of field.
      • PRE-GAME & HALFTIME – Visitors’ locker room – High School.
      • SECURITY – Administrator will provide you with a locker room key.
      • TRACK – Please cross the track on the protective cover when entering and exiting the field.
      • UNIFORMS – White, road uniforms.

    FAN INFORMATION

      • PARKING – SPECTATOR PARKING IS LOCATED AT THE MAIN (HIGH SCHOOL & ACROSS THE STREET) BUILDING (56729 E. Colorado Ave). THERE ARE 2 ENTRANCES, MAIN GATE IS OFF CIRCLE DRIVE & EAST GATE BY WATER TOWER PARKING LOT
      • ONLY APPROVED SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS AND TEAM PERSONNEL WILL BE ALLOWED INSIDE FENCE ALONG TRACK AND/OR ON SIDELINES.
      • Admissions prices: $6.00 for adults $5.00 for students (K-12)/seniors (60+).
      • Accepted passes: CHSAA, CHSCA and media credentials only.
      • No artificial noisemakers (cowbells, drums, whistles, air horns, thunder sticks, etc.) per the Colorado High School Activities Association.
      • Dogs are not permitted, with the exception of service dog
      • Restrooms (Port-a-Potties) are located on the east side of the football field.

    Thank you and good luck!

     

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  • Spinney Mountain State Park remains closed following damaged ensued from severe storm

    Spinney Mountain State Park remains closed following damaged ensued from severe storm

    LAKE GEORGE, Colo. — A severe thunderstorm late Tuesday night pounded Spinney Mountain and Eleven Mile State Parks with heavy rain and hail, followed by flash flooding, and Spinney Mountain remains closed from the damage caused by the storm.

    An estimated 16 inches of hail was dumped over the area, with Spinney Mountain receiving the brunt of it. 

    The gate is closed to the Spinney Mountain Access Road, which is impassable due to the damage ensued. The south boat ramp at Spinney Mountain is also in need of repairs, but the north side was unaffected. No timetable has been set for when Spinney Mountain will reopen, but it will be assessed on a daily basis as repairs are made and the roads dry out.

    The Charlie Meyers State Wildlife Area parking lot is accessible, but the access road below the dam is closed. CPW will be monitoring the Dream Stream to assess damage and high water conditions. 

    Eleven Mile remains open on both shores. There were impacts to several campgrounds on the south side of Eleven Mile, but none that would affect any reservations.  

    Motorists are advised to drive carefully and to expect road damage and debris along County Roads 92 and 59.

     

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  • Application period opens for Underfunded Courthouse Facility grants

    Application period opens for Underfunded Courthouse Facility grants

    DENVER – The application period is now open for grants to help eligible counties cover costs associated with courthouse master planning services, repair and remodeling, or construction projects. About $3 million is available from the Colorado Underfunded Courthouse Facility Cash Fund.

    Forty-two counties which meet at least two of the criteria set in statute are eligible for grants; 17 of those counties are given the highest priority for grants because they meet all the statutory criteria.

    Applications, rules and other information on the grants may be found at https://courts.state.co.us/underfunded. Grant applications must be received by 5 p.m. October 15, 2019.

    Under Colorado law, counties are responsible for building and maintaining courtrooms and other court facilities; the Judicial Department is responsible for furnishing those courthouses. The 2014 General Assembly created the grant program to help counties with the most limited financial resources ensure access to safe courthouses that allow for the efficient and effective administration of justice.

    To be eligible for grants, counties must meet at least two of four criteria set in statute: counties whose total population is below the median among all Colorado counties; counties in which per-capita income is below the state median; counties in which property tax revenues are below the state median; and counties in which the population living below the federal poverty line is above the state median.

    Funds from the grants may be used to pay for master planning services for a courthouse project, matching or leveraging additional grant funds or to address emergency needs due to the imminent closure of a courthouse. Grant funds may not be used to pay for furniture, fixtures or equipment, and cannot be used as the sole source of funding for new construction unless the need stems from the imminent closure of a courthouse.

    Completed applications should be sent by 5:00 p.m. October 15 to Marty Galvin, c/o State Court Administrator’s Office, 1300 Broadway, Suite 1200, Denver, CO 80203. Applications will not be accepted by fax or e-mail.

     

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  • Gov. Polis Issues Executive Order to  Support Colorado Workers

    Gov. Polis Issues Executive Order to Support Colorado Workers

    DENVER — Gov. Polis today signed an executive order creating the Office of Future of Work at the Department of Labor and Employment (CDLE). This Office will be a central point for the state’s efforts to respond to Colorado’s rapidly changing economy and workforce.

    “Colorado’s economy is the envy of the nation but to ensure that success touches everyone in our state, we must prepare workers for the jobs of the future,” said Governor Jared Polis. “Technology, cost of education and a shifting need for skills are just a few of the challenges our workforce faces. This Office will be dedicated to developing effective strategies to combat these challenges and set Coloradans up to thrive.”

    “CDLE is excited to champion the Office of the Future of Work in partnership with other state agencies, diverse stakeholders, and national thought leaders to shape an equitable, sustainable, and inclusive economy of the future,” said CDLE Executive Director Joe Barela. 

    The Office will be researching, analyzing, and developing recommendations on this issue. It will also identify opportunities for communities to transition effectively to emerging industries and, where appropriate, consult with the Just Transition Office to align efforts.

    The Office will be led by the CDLE executive director who will submit a report to the Governor with recommendations for potential policy initiatives at least once per calendar year beginning in 2020.

    Read the full executive order here.

     

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  • Delta Sonics kick off Stadium Sessions series of live music before home football games at CSU

    Stadium Sessions — the series of free outdoor performances by top Colorado bands before every Colorado State University home football game — returns Sept. 7 with a show by the Delta Sonics.

    The third season of Stadium Sessions features a stellar lineup of performances at the Coors Light Ram Walk Tailgate, which opens four hours prior to kickoff on Meridian Avenue north of Canvas Stadium.

    In addition to the live music, which begins with a Little Kids Rock performance, the tailgate features lawn games, food trucks and beverages for purchase. TVs will be on display for live, nationwide game-day viewing.

    The full Stadium Sessions lineup, presented in partnership with CSU, the Bohemian Foundation and KRFC 88.9 FM Radio Fort Collins, is:

    • Saturday, Sept. 7 – Delta Sonics
    • Saturday, Sept. 21 (Ag Day) – The Movers & Shakers
    • Friday, Oct. 4 (Homecoming — On the Oval) – Kind Dub and Kerry Pastine & The Crime Scene
    • Saturday, Oct. 5 – Float Like A Buffalo
    • Saturday, Nov. 2 – Instant Empire
    • Saturday, Nov. 16 – Jeff Finlin
    • Friday, Nov. 29 – Macy Todd

    Stadium Sessions performances will be re-aired the Wednesday after each home game on KRFC 88.9 FM Radio Fort Collins at 7 p.m. and streamed online worldwide at krfcfm.org.

    “We are honored to partner with Colorado State University in this way and be able to provide the service of booking the bands for the Stadium Sessions and record each wonderful performance to then re-air and stream online,” said Jen Parker, executive director of KRFC 88.9 FM Radio Fort Collins. “Our overall CSU partnership is extremely important to us as we help promote education, the arts, lifestyle, events and all things positive and meaningful in our great community.”

    About the Delta Sonics

    The Delta Sonics’ music takes a Chicago blues base and seasons it with swing, Delta, New Orleans R&B and some early rock ’n’ roll. They were named Westword’s best blues band in Denver six of the last seven years. The band made the semifinals in the Memphis International Blues Challenge in 2012, over 30 other Colorado bands. The band has also played in Kansas City, St. Louis and New Orleans, among other cities.

    Al Chesis supplies vocals and foot-stomping showmanship, but it’s his harmonica playing that grabs you. He has been a Hohner endorser since 1992. Bob Pellegrino, the Colorado Blues Society’s best slide guitar player three years in a row, supplies the dazzling slide guitar, while Alissa Chesis on bass and Stefan Florez on drums “drive the bus.”

    The Sonics have  been the Mile Hi “go-to” band for national touring blues acts for nearly 15 years. The band has backed performers like Big Bill Morganfield, Steady Rollin’ Bob Margolin, Ronnie Baker Brooks, Grammy-nominated Lurrie Bell, Grammy-nominated John Primer, the late Pinetop Perkins, and the late Bo Diddley.

    The Delta Sonics opened for B.B. King twice, Robert Cray three times, and Jimmy Vaughn twice, among many others. Chesis was also a special guest on the Big Head Todd and the Monsters album Black Beehive, on the cut “I Get Smooth.”

    For more information about Stadium Sessions, visit stadiumsessions.colostate.edu.

     

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  • CSU Early Childhood Center, Washington School celebrate historic milestones Sept. 7

    The Colorado State University Early Childhood Center made history in 2013 when it moved into the Poudre School District’s former Washington School. This year, the ECC is celebrating its 90th anniversary, as well as the 100th anniversary of the opening of the Washington School building.

    To mark the rich history of both institutions and their impact on children’s lives, the Early Childhood Center is inviting the community to an open house at the ECC on Saturday, Sept. 7, from 10 a.m. to noon.

    Original location on Laurel

    What is now the ECC in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies was launched as a summer preschool program in 1929 by the Department of Home Economics.

    The preschool was originally located at 212 W. Laurel St. in the building that is now occupied by the Rainbow Restaurant. In 1933, the preschool moved out of the Laurel location temporarily to 129 S. Meldrum St., but returned to the Laurel location in 1934 when it became the Home Economics Practice House.

    As recorded in department history, the site on Laurel Street was a cheerful, sunny building, and the big porch was perfect for active play when it was too wet or cold to be outdoors. There was a large playground shaded by a beautiful tree, and the playground had easy access to the CSU Oval for trike rides, dance and swim classes in Ammons Hall, the Geology Building’s rock collection, and many other campus wonders. Just as today, the trains were a feature of campus. The children enjoyed watching the 11:20 a.m. passenger train to Cheyenne as it rolled by.

    West of Ammons Hall

    In 1936, the preschool moved to a building located directly west of Ammons Hall and east of the current entrance to the Lory Student Center parking lot. This was the former location of the CSU apiary (bee hives), according to a history written by Dean Schachterle, retired general manager of CSU Central Receiving. The preschool remained at this location until 1972.

    Marie Macy served as director of the Preschool Laboratory for 18 years, from 1955 to 1973. The school served as a learning lab for students in the College of Home Economics. The 22 children in the school attended from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. each day, and the staff at the preschool taught graduate and undergraduate classes in the afternoon. “Those years were certainly an invaluable and memorable opportunity for me to have been associated with such excellent students, children, parents, staff, and faculty,” she wrote. Learn more about Macy’s memories of her time at the Preschool Laboratory on her Legacies web page.

    Move to Gifford 

    The building housing the lab school was torn down in 1973, and Rockwell Hall was the new location of the preschool starting in 1972, until it moved to a building in Aggie Village in 1974. In 1976, it was relocated to the west end of the new Gifford Building on campus, where it remained until moving to its current location in the Washington School in 2013. Barbara McCornack was the director of the Early Childhood Laboratories starting in 1979 until her retirement in 1996. The Gifford Building housed two half-day preschool programs, and the Village Child Care Center across the street was the home to a full-day program. Phyllis Sakarada was the long-time cook for the early childhood programs and prepared the lunches in the Gifford kitchen.

    A toddler program was added in 1982, and the two programs were combined into one located in the Gifford Building. McCornack remembers that at one point, children from 20 different language backgrounds were enrolled, most of whom were children of CSU students, staff, or faculty. In fall of 1992, in collaboration with the Poudre School District, children with special needs were integrated into the morning classrooms. McCornack wrote about her experiences in the department history: “So many good memories and friendships were made with children, parents, staff, and student teachers, but what I’ll always cherish is the look in the eyes of a child who has discovered something new – that ‘a-ha’ experience that is at the heart of the teaching and learning experience.”

    Historic Washington School

    The Washington School location has allowed the ECC to greatly expand its childcare offerings to include space for infants and to remain open year round. The Washington School has its own rich history as part of the fabric of Fort Collins. It was built in 1919 to fill the need for more grade schools to serve the growing population. Paul Havenar worked for Poudre School District as a teacher and a principal. His first assignment as a principal in the district was in 1979 at the Washington School, where he remained until 1987. “It was a fun eight years,” he said. As a small school, Washington School was originally combined with Dunn Elementary and housed K-2. Some of the staff, including Havenar, was split between both schools.

    There was originally an apartment in the basement for an onsite custodian for the school. Schachterle even recounts a story of a baby being born in the basement apartment in 1923 to the niece of the custodian and his wife. More recently, Washington School served as the site of the Lab School for Creative Learning in the Poudre School District. As the 21st century unfolded, the needed upgrades to the aging building became too expensive, and Poudre School District sold the building to CSU in 2011. It subsequently underwent extensive renovation before opening in 2013 as the ECC.

    Through the many different locations, the mission and philosophy of the Early Childhood Center has remained constant: teaching, research, and service – involving students in observational and applied experiences with young children, providing a resource for faculty to conduct research, and serving the Fort Collins and CSU communities with high-quality early care and education. An outreach mission is also emphasized, and grant monies are available to help CSU student parents afford the cost of childcare.

    “The importance of the first five years of life cannot be overstated,” said current ECC Executive Director Karen Rattenborg. “The ways that children are nurtured during this time are critical to their future health and development. This is why the Early Childhood Center is so beneficial. We not only support the development of the children in our care, we also train the next generation of professionals so that they can implement best practice for children and families.”

    Each year, the ECC serves approximately 150 children (ages 6 weeks to 6 years) while simultaneously training more than 130 students from various departments across campus including Food Science and Human Nutrition, Human Development and Family Studies, Occupational Therapy, the School of Education, and the School of Theatre, Music, and Dance.

    “For 100 years, the Washington School has served a variety of purposes in different ways, but all educational, and now it serves the vital role as the home of the ECC,” said Havenar.

    The Early Childhood Center is in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies, part of CSU’s College of Health and Human Sciences.

     

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