Showing posts with label city council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label city council. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Reflections on the results

The 2007 Denver municipal election has come and gone, with just a few runoff races to follow. What should we make of the results?

I win again!: The last time an incumbent lost in this city was in 1987, when both Mary DeGroot and Dave Doering upended City Council members John Silchia and Nieves McIntyre, respectively. So it comes as no surprise that every incumbent won in 2007 as well.

Tiny protest: In March, The Kenney Group reported that Mayor John Hickenlooper's approval rating was 84%. The latest polling figures showed him receiving 87% of the vote, minus any write-in votes. So it looks like Danny Lopez was successful in getting Denver's protest vote - it just wasn't nearly enough.

Chinny chin chin: Carol Boigon was uncomfortably close to losing, beating Carol Campbell by just 5%. That's an amazing result when you consider that Boigon is an incumbent running against a first-time candidate. Not only that, but Boigon raised $146,000 to Campbell's $9,000. And Boigon didn't even spend two-thirds of her money, retaining more than $90,000 cash on hand. I guess she didn't want to empty her "rainy day" fund quite so soon.

Hey, big spender: Judy Montero raised more than $145,000 to win just 2704 votes, or $53.84 per vote. That's far and away the most expensive price, beating out Shelly Watter's $34.93 and Michael Hancock's $32.54. In losing efforts, I'll bet Niccolo Casewit is wondering whether he should have spent $23.13 for each of his 160 votes, and Ben Romero may wonder whether $8000 was the right price for just 359 supporters.

The Acrimonious Eighth: Darrell Watson is no longer in the running for the Council District 8 seat. His frequent boasts of being "the clear frontrunner" were nothing more than hype, and one suspects the acrimonious attacks laid against candidate Carla Madison backfired, causing the loss of second place by just 74 votes. Meanwhile, Sharon Bailey remained above the fray and came out on top.

Neato for Nevitt: In the tight Council District 7 race, Chris Nevitt nearly pulled off the impossible, falling just 196 votes shy of avoiding a runoff. Shelly Watters beat Julie Connor for second place, but has virtually no chance of winning a runoff. The base of Connor's support was unions and small donors, while Watters gathered big ticket donations from developers. Even if he sits on his hands, the populist Nevitt will gather a disproportionate share of Connor's support and cruise to victory.

Loopy for Lopez: Paul Lopez was even closer to a walkoff victory, needing just 150 votes to avoid a runoff. But that's in part because Council District 3's turnout was so abysmal. Whereas 5,132 voters participated in the 2003 runoff election, just 3,488 showed up for this year's contest. It is unreasonable in the least to expect JoAnne Phillips to overcome her 3-to-1 disadvantage.

And the worst performance goes to...: This year's worst electoral performance was put in by Council District 3's Antoinette Alire. With just 75 votes, she became just the second candidate in a dozen years to receive less than 100 votes. Her only inferior was Jerry Retzlaff, who received 43 votes in his 1999 bid for Council District 10 against incumbent Ed Thomas.

Money votes: Money means votes in virtually every election. The graph below shows a rather clear correlation between money raised and votes received. The only race which upended this conventional wisdom was Council District 8, where Sharon Bailey won a clear majority without going hat-in-hand to every resident, developer, and politico in Denver. Good for her!
All over but the shouting: Don't expect competitive runoff races. In 2003, frontrunners won all but two of the eight runoff elections. That might give hope to challengers, but think again. Come-from-behind victories by Rick Garcia and Rosemary Rodriguez were against May voting margins of just 2% and 5%, respectively. Our three runoff races feature margins of 8% (Bailey over Madison), 20% (Nevitt over Watters), and 30% (Lopez over Phillips).

So to those remaining underdogs, it's either "good luck" or, more likely, "good night."

Update: See also the updated notes on the final results.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Who got the money in 2007?

A few observations on the campaign finances in the 2007 Denver municipal elections.

First, our expectation that people give money to ensure a victory by their candidate just doesn't add up. Look at the below fundraising numbers put up by Mayor John Hickenlooper. Why are people giving in droves to a man who is cruising to victory? Why do his finances skyrocket at the end, with no serious race in sight? Because they want power and access, and for that, nothing's better than a sure winner for the top post in city government.

Then there's the matter of incumbents. In addition to their war chests, they can raise money quickly. Look at the sharply increasing figures for Councilwoman Carol Boigon, who raised nearly $100,000 in just four months:

Then there are the open seats. Here the candidates in Council District 7 (Nevitt, Watters, and Connor) clearly outpaced the field.

Finally, we look at the challengers. How hard is to raise money against an incumbent? Only one breached the $10k barrier.

If donors were largely ideological, new challengers willing to instantiate ideas would gain the most money. But what donors really want is access. So you give money where it's sure to do some good, to those people who are sure to get re-elected. See the below averages for City Council fundraising by incumbents, open seat candidates, and challengers.

Oh yes, and then you bemoan what a terribly boring election we're having. Why haven't we heard any new ideas?

Be a dear and pass another hors d'ourve, won't you?

Gulchie Awards announced

Coyote Gulch has announced the 2007 Gulchie awards, recognizing candidates in the Denver municipal elections who have best employed the Internet in their campaigns.

The winners were:
Mayor - John Hickenlooper
Auditor - Dennis Gallagher
Clerk and Recorder - Jacob Werther
Council District 1 - Rick Garcia
Council District 2 - Jeanne Faatz
Council District 3 - Paul Lopez
Council District 4 - Peggy Lehman
Council District 5 - Mitchell Poindexter
Council District 7 - Chris Nevitt
Council District 8 - Darrell Watson
Council District 9 - Judy Montero
Council District 10 - Jeanne Robb
Council District 11 - Michael Hancock
Council At-Large - Carol Boigon

We want to give special recognition to Judy Montero for her weblog, Carla Madison for the video of the Raging Grannies, Greg Rasheed for his video introduction, Mark Roggeman for design and Carol Campbell for the print a sign application.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

What the city should call foreigners who aren't allowed to work in the US

A "Tempest in a Teapot" has arisen over the correct phrasing of "undocumented workers" or "illegal aliens," as reported by Dear Denver.

Councilwoman Judy Montero initiated the conversation in a 1-minute segment of a recent City Council meeting.

Meanwhile, Mayor John Hickenlooper denies any official city policy regarding the matter.

Update 4/24: The persnickety George in Denver is outraged by the comments. See his post entitled "Judy Montero - Patronized and Pandered" for his seething anger.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

More Post complaints about the election

The folks over at the Post must have some rather scintillating lives. I'm growing bored with Denver Post comments about boring elections, such as Susan Barnes-Gelt's article entitled, "Denver's doldrums election."

She thinks that "[t]he climate reflects too much groupthink leading to a faux election where important issues (and there are several) aren't debated." I think that the lack of a serious mayoral contest has destroyed any campaign coverage, meaning issues have not been presented in the mainstream press until very recently (and limited at that).

Barnes-Gelt can talk all she want about the serious questions in front of us - including government privatization, FasTrack compromises, the zoning code update, and the infrastructure task force - but until the media seeks (and publishes) answers about serious questions from our local candidates, we'll have the kind of vapid race their coverage demands.

Friday, April 13, 2007

What others think of City Council

Penny Parker of the Rocky Mountain News sums up the dull (but important) work of our city council:
EAVESDROPPING on a man at Elway's: "Denver City Council is like a really long PTA meeting."

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Political force in the Home Builders Association of Metro Denver

I have been openly (sometime unreservedly) critical of the Denver dailies. But occasionally critical and hard-working reporters do slip through the cracks. One such reporter is Stuart Steers of the Rocky Mountain News.

It takes more than a little gusto to rip through the campaign statements over every political candidate for municipal elections in Denver. But if you want to understand the power of such powerful organizations as the Home Builders Association of Metro Denver, that's what it takes.

Especially when one of the most important tasks of the next Denver City Council is going to be implementing the recommended changes of the Zoning Code Taskforce.

Review Steers' article entitled "Developers build campaign coffers: Elected officials bound to have say in major projects." Specific mention is provided to council candidates Marcia Johnson, Carol Boigon, Jeanne Faatz, Peggy Lehmann, Doug Linkhart, Shelly Watters, Carla Madison, and Charlie Brown.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Prophet predicts

In early March, the Wash Park Prophet predicted victories for Chris Nevitt in Council District 7, Darrell Watson in CD8, and Stephanie O'Malley for Clerk and Recorder. He had no prediction for CD3, and anticipated incumbents would win without a runoff in all other races.

He added to those predictions today, indicating the likelihood of Shelly Watters getting into a CD7 runoff, Carla Madison making the CD8 runoff, and Paul Lopez facing down Ben Romero in a CD3 runoff.

The Prophet's predicted winners all have one thing in common: they are the financial frontrunners in their race. Furthermore, his predicted runners-up all have the second largest coffers. And the races he anticipates to avoid a runoff all have enormous financial divides between the frontrunner and any challengers.

We understand that the "money primary" represents votes - and the opportunity to get more votes. Those facts lead toward the obvious conclusion: candidates with the most money normally win. Nevertheless, simply following the money line doesn't strike us as a terribly inspired "prediction."

But it does lead us to wonder... does the Prophet moonlight as an Accountant?

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Meet the candidates

All of the announced candidates in Denver's 2007 municipal elections are briefly profiled online on Channel 8's Denver Decides site.

Only three biographical facts are provided: Education, Occupation, and Family. But I really enjoyed the photos.

View all of your prospective candidates online at Denver Decide's "Meet The Candidates."

Monday, April 9, 2007

CIty Council Attendance Rates

In a recent Park Hill forum, Council District 5 candidate RJ Ours indicated that his campaign was stimulated in part by a Rocky Mountain News article regarding attendance at City Council meetings.

The article in question ran on September 5, 2006. Political beat reporter Daniel Chacon penned the investigative piece, entitled "Council missing in action."

You should really read the full article, as it discusses whether attendance records indicate anything important with regard to the dedication or effectiveness of City Council members. For the sake of convenience, however, the calculated figures are provided below.
Councilperson // District // Meetings // Missed // Percent
Carol Boigon, at-large 289 81 28
Judy Montero, Dist. 9, north Denver 261 77 30
Marcia Johnson, Dist. 5, east Denver 269 73 27
Michael Hancock, Dist. 11, NE Denver 276 72 26
Charlie Brown, Dist. 6, southeast Denver 291 68 23
Kathleen MacKenzie, Dist. 7, S.Denver 249 56 22
Rick Garcia, Dist. 1, northwest Denver 298 48 16
Jeanne Robb, Dist. 10, central Denver 311 43 14
Doug Linkhart, at-large 300 35 12
Peggy Lehmann, Dist. 4, SE Denver 279 23 8
Jeanne Faatz, Dist. 2, southwest Denver 237 21 9
Elbra Wedgeworth, Dist. 8, NE Denver 51 25 49*
Rosemary Rodriguez, Dist. 3, W. Denver 142 18 13*

Friday, April 6, 2007

Campaign contributions

The candidates have filed their March 2007 campaign finance reports, and the results are unsurprising.

Mayor John Hickenlooper has the most money by far, with nearly $600,000 in campaign contributions. Other candidates with deep pockets include Councilman Charlie Brown, Auditor Dennis Gallagher, Councilman Michael Hancock, Councilman Judy Montero, and Councilman Carol Boigon - all with more than $100,000 in contributions so far.

Unsurprisingly, all but one of the above (Boigon) lack any serious competition.

Also unsurprisingly, the best way to get elected is to already be elected. Incumbent City Council members have raised an average of $88,676. Their direct challengers have raised an average of $2,353.

Challengers thus not only face the battle of name recognition, but also must overcome the 40-to-1 disadvantage in contributions necessary to get their names known. (Nor can it be said that the Denver media helps in this regard. No wonder Denver municipal elections have a slightly higher rate of re-election than in the old Soviet Duma.)

As for the open City Council seats, Council District 7 is the most competitive with $146,681 raised by current and expired candidacies. By contrast, Council District 8 has managed only $67,395 and Council District 3 will be the cheapest seat in the house at a combined total of just $28,634.

Further analysis will be forthcoming, but in the meantime enjoy the numbers below and visit the Denver City Clerk's campaign finance site online for more detailed information.
DENVER MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS
CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS
AS OF 03/31/07

Council District 1
Rick Garcia $75,830.00
Unopposed

Council District 2
Jeanne Ryan Faatz $20,680.00
Unopposed

Council District 3
Paul E Lopez $15,595.00
Ben Romero $7,994.57
Mark Gerard Roggeman $2,100.00
JoAnn Phillips $2,050.00
Kathy E Sandoval $895.00
Niccolo Casewit $0
Antoinette Alire $0

Council District 4
Peggy Lehmann $47,510.00
William Arthur Rutherford III $6,088.29
Ike Kelley Jr $0

Council District 5
Marcia Johnson $63,781.83
Mitchell Poindexter $3,550.00
Ronald J Ours Jr $325.00

Council District 6
Charlie Brown $164,546.00
Unopposed

Council District 7
Chris Nevitt $65,208.63
Rochelle Watters $52,723.00
Julie Ann Connor $21,800.00
Dennis Smith $0

Council District 8
Darrell B Watson $31,554.91
Carla Ann Madison $26,385.99
Sharon Bailey $9,365.00
Greg Rasheed $0

Council District 9
Judy H Montero $128,565.00
Waldo Benevidez $0

Council District 10
Jeanne Robb $44,567.00
Unopposed

Council District 11
Michael Hancock $130,700.00

Council At Large
Carol Ann Spickler Boigon $125,120.78
Doug Linkhart $85,460.00
Carol E Campbell $8,858.38

Clerk & Recorder
Stephanie O'Malley $20,020.00
Jacob Werther $450.00

Auditor
Dennis Gallagher $136,854.57
Bill Wells $0

Mayor
John Hickenlooper $592,860.06
Danny Lopez $0


UPDATE (04/09): This posting originally indicated that Councilwoman Jeanne Faatz had $77,008, but that number is incorrect. Councilwoman Faatz explained that her financial disclosure for 2006 unwittingly included more than $56,000 in financial contributions for the 2003 race. Her subsequent January 2007 disclosure and the amended January 2007 disclosure both indicated a revised figure of $0 for that time period. Her February and March disclosures followed the same form, indicating that her campaign has raised a total of $20,680 instead of $77,008. It seems to Denver Politics that the Faatz campaign would still need to submit a revised form for 2006, because that report remains in error... and a rather significant error at that. However, we're not experts in campaign finance, and so have updated our figures above to match the campaign's internal figures.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

POLL: Funding governmental services through private donations


Official Disclaimer: Internet polls are NOT scientific and anyone who claims otherwise is a fool.

Funding Governmental Programs with Private Money, revisited

We recently published news of the philosophical conflict between the Mayor's office and several members of Denver City Council regarding the use of private funds to sustain governmental initiatives.

Colorado Confidential's Erin Rosa has now weighed in on the matter, suggesting that the Mayor's initiatives are irresponsible and unethical.

Review her concerns online at the post entitled "Funding Conflicts of Interest." And to witness some of the history of this concern in the Denver Police Department's "broken windows" campaign, visit "Police Group Paid For Crime Consultants In Denver."

Monday, April 2, 2007

Upcoming Candidate Forums

Gerald Trumble is helping to direct voters to numerous upcoming candidate forums. Go ahead and meet them, and ask your most difficult questions.

We're a democratic republic, after all, and you need to know who will best represent your concerns.

Below is an abbreviated list of forums. For the full version, visit Denver Direct.
Date - Time - Location - Sponsor
Apr02 - 7:00pm - 2401 Welton Street - Curtis Park Neighbors
Apr05 - 6:30pm - 3921 Holly Street - Greater Park Hill Neighbors
Apr11 - 6:00pm – 1330 Glenarm Street - CHUN, INC, League of Women Voters [UPDATED]
Apr12 – 6:00pm - sw corner of 21st & Humboldt - Merchants at 22nd and Humboldt
Apr14 – 9:00am - 2900 Downing Street - InterNeighorhood Cooperation
Apr19 – 7:30am - TBD - Denver Downtown Partnership

CD8: Cole Neighborhood Association meeting

Gerald Trumble continues to tape candidate forums, providing a valuable public service to folks who otherwise wouldn't get to see their prospective city council members.

Visit Denver Direct to view the opening remarks of all City Council District 8 candidates: Sharon Bailey, Carla Madison, Greg Rasheed, Lynn Smith, and Darrell Watson.

Private Money In City Government: A Good Idea or Bad?

Privatizing government services is generally considered a Republican idea, but what happens when a Democratic mayor funds many of his social service initiatives through private donations?

Chirstopher Osher of the Denver Post explains in "Mayor dreams big; donors come true."
Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper has raised at least $104 million from private donors to pay for a variety of city programs, including help for the homeless, a guarantee of college scholarships for the poor and plans for planting up to 1 million trees.

Since taking office in 2003, the mayor repeatedly has tapped private sources to pay for some of his top initiatives.

"People don't like throwing money at problems, especially tax money," Hickenlooper said. "Philanthropic sources are careful, but they have a higher tolerance for innovation."

As the money has poured in, though, some are beginning to question what the rules are when private money moves into the public sphere.

Those who raise concerns applaud the mayor for his fundraising prowess and good intentions but question whether there is sufficient transparency to gauge whether conflicts of interest are developing from donors.

They also caution that the fundraising could end up inflating city budgets in the end as some of the privately funded programs eventually require taxpayer support.

The biggest concerns seems to revolve around accountability and special favors:

Early in his tenure, Hickenlooper even established the Office of Strategic Partnerships, lodged in the Department of Human Services, to coordinate the fundraising and the efforts of nonprofit foundations.

But the fundraiser in chief raised concerns among some City Council members that he may have overreached when he secured $150,000 from an as- yet-undisclosed private foundation to pay some of the costs of a gang task force wanted by District Attorney Mitch Morrissey.

Councilwoman Carol Boigon said she won't back private funding of the gang task force because she fears it could create a situation where a defendant feared his prosecution was because an enemy donated money.

"When we are in the position of being able to take away someone's money, property, freedom and good name, I think it's very important that we be very, very clear and beyond any remote question that this is truly a public process and not privately funded," Boigon said.

Councilwoman Jeanne Faatz has said it's crucial that the mayor divulge the source of the gang funds to ensure no conflict of interest develops. She wants even the identity of the person who supplied the money to the foundation disclosed.

The mayor said he will reveal the foundation when it actually forwards the money to the city, but he said he doesn't know who gave the money to the foundation and wants to keep it that way.

"We didn't want the district attorney or the chief of police to know what individual had given money so there could never be any accusation that this person was avoiding prosecution or this person was getting this or that," the mayor said. "That's why we wanted the money to be anonymous."

Hickenlooper also wants to allow donors to contribute anonymously to his scholarship foundation program, which has raised $70 million so far, $50 million of which came from oilman Tim Marquez and his wife, Bernadette.

Faatz has questioned whether privately funded initiatives could end up with a hidden tax bite in the future. She voted against the mayor's homelessness initiative in part because she feared adequate resources hadn't been identified to pay for programs in the future.

"You can build a bureaucracy and end up not having buy-in to put that in the general fund," Faatz said, while stressing that she thinks Hickenlooper's ability to tap private donors is one of his top strengths.

Faatz also has been a stickler for full disclosure of donors, including in the scholarship program.

"There could still be expectations on the donor, and it could create cozy relationships," Faatz said. "It seems to me to be more upfront that if a public official is asking something of someone else, that that is transparent."

What do you think? Is this all a very progressive and well-intentioned effort, or are the likely consequences for public access and accountability too severe to allow continuation?

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Official Ballot for 2007

The official ballot for the mail-in May 1, 2007 municipal elections will include the following candidates:
MAYOR
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Danny F. Lopez_____
John Hickenlooper_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

AUDITOR
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Bill Wells_____
Dennis J. Gallagher_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

CLERK AND RECORDER
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Jacob Werther_____
Stephanie Y. O’Malley_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBERS AT LARGE
(Vote for Two/ Vote por Dos)
Carol Boigon_____
Doug Linkhart_____
Carol E. Campbell_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRICT 1
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Rick Garcia_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRICT 2
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Jeanne Faatz_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRICT 3
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Antoinette Alire_____
Paul D. López_____
Niccolo Casewit_____
JoAnn Phillips_____
Kathy Sandoval_____
Mark Roggeman_____
Ben Romero_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRICT 4
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Peggy A. Lehmann_____
Ike Kelley_____
Bill Rutherford_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRICT 5
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
R.J. Ours_____
Marcia Johnson_____
Mitchell Poindexter_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRICT 6
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Charlie Brown_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRICT 7
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Shelly Watters_____
Dennis Smith_____
Chris Nevitt_____
Julie Connor_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRICT 8
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Darrell B. Watson_____
Carla Madison_____
Sharon Bailey_____
Greg Rasheed_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRICT 9
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Judy H. Montero_____
Waldo Benavidez_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRCT 10
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Jeanne Robb_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

COUNCILMEMBER DISTRCT 11
(Vote for One/ Vote por Uno)
Michael Hancock_____
(Write-In/Otros nombres)_____

BALLOT QUESTIONS:

Referred Question 1A
Shall the elected office of the District Attorney in and for the Second Judicial District of Colorado (the Denver District Attorney) be limited, as are the offices of the Mayor of Denver and the members of the City Council of Denver, to no more than three consecutive four-year terms, thereby lengthening the term limitation set forth in the Colorado constitution by one term, for any District Attorney elected or appointed on or after January 1, 2001?

_____YES _____NO

For the exact (and possibly updated) wording of the ballot, please visit the Denver Election Commission.

The following candidates either dropped out or never submitted the requisite number of signatures to appear on the May 2007 ballot:

Mayor: Dwight Henson
Clerk & Recorder: Kevin Slevin, Don Henderson, Kim Sayers, Sharron Klein
District 1: Gerald Styron
District 3: Donald Sandoval
District 6: Steven Frank
District 7: Andy Archuleta, Jan Belle, Ari Harrison, Jake Schroeder
District 8: Lynn Smith, Donna Davis, Roger Cobb, Joshua Mitchell

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Profile: Videotape of the District 8 and At Large City Council candidates

An image is worth a thousand words, then Denver Direct has just offered a million or so helpful words for Denver voters this campaign season.

Gerald Trumbule visited a candidates forum sponsored by the San Rafael neighborhood association on Thursday evening (March 22nd), and videotaped all of the introductory statements by candidates.

Would you be interested to see the likes of District 8 candidates Sharon Bailey, Carla Madison, Greg Rasheed, Lynn Smith, and Darrell Watson? No matter where you live in Denver, the candidates for the At-Large Seat are important: Carol Boigon, Carol Campbell, and Doug Linkhart.

Please visit Denver City Council District 8 Candidates Speak at San Rafael 3-22-07.

The vast majority of Denver voters will never meet these candidates face-to-face. That's why issue-based, Internet resources are so valuable. Thanks, Jerry!

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Issue: Private money to combat Denver's gang problem

It's an interesting idea to allow private citizens or entities to support the public prosecution of gangs in Denver. The question, however, is whether it's good idea.

Mayor Hickenlooper proposed it a while back, and city council appears skeptical. Read the entire article at the Rocky Mountain News, and let me know what you think.