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1st Annual Education and Camp Expo

Yellow Scene Magazine Presents

CALL 303.828.2700 TO BUY TICKETS. THEY WILL BE EMAILED TO YOU.


Featuring representatives from area camps, schools, and extracurricular activities.
Learn which camp or school is best for your child, and check out the best kids gear, doctors, dentists and more.
Door Prizes Including:
Restaurant Gift Certificates, Camp Scholarships, Sporting Events, Entertainment, Museums, Massages and More

Plus:
Climbing Wall from Avid Adventures, Bouncer from Fun Services, Rosie the Spider and friends from Butterfly Pavilion, Babysitting and Seeking Sitters Corner

Every attendee of the Expo receives a FREE ticket to the 14’ers game that night at 7pm!

Contact us to reserve your booth at Boulder County’s biggest Education and Camp Expo. Booth and Print Packages available. All packages include marketing insertions into Cloth Event Bags handed out to all attendees.

Call 303-828-2700 or email advertising@yellowscene.com for more information.

Vendors Include:

BME Federal CU
Camp Gan Isreal
Community Financial CU
Global Sound
Huntington Learning Center
Madcap Theater
Mountain View Montessori
Primroseplitz
Thorne Ecological
A Rising Star
Boulder Country Day
Cooks Studio
Crow Canyon
Eastern Sun Academy
Friends School
Great Clips
La Petite
Learning Tomorrow
Metro State College
access counseling
Alexander Dawson Camps
Alexander Dawson School
Avid 4 Adventures
Bits Bytes Bots
Broomfield Academy
Broomfield Event Center
Catalyst EDU
Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning
Chippers
Crawdaddy toys
Doghouse
Easter Seals
Flagstaff Academy
IBBA Vision Quest
Id-ra-ha-ja
Mountain Kids
Piggy Roo
Rennaissance adventures
Rocky Mountain Theater for Kids
Watershed
YMCA
Young Rembrandts
Colorado Christian University
Colorado Youth Program
Kids Theater West
New Vista High
Rocky Mountain Daycamp
Wild Bear Center
Ballet Nouveau
Robotics Camp
St. Vrain School District
BME Federal CU
Cooks Studio
Eastern Sun
Friends School
Kids Theater West
La Petite
Mountain Kids
New Vista
Wild Bear Center
Mile High Football Club

December 2008

Education, Local Schools


What I Did Last Summer

Camp Essays from Area Families

There are so many kids in the area who want to go to camp each summer. Sometimes it’s a little too expensive, however. So we partnered with a dozen camps in the region to offer our a scholarship program—the catch being the kids and families had to write about their experiences. (more…)

December 2008

Education, Local Schools, Uncategorized


One Really Long Ballot

(Don’t Send in Your Mail-in Ballot Yet: Check back here next week to see our endorsements on these issues and much, much more. —ed)

Sure, the whole Obama vs. McCain battle gets all the glory, but voters in Colorado need to be prepped on so much more than the race for the White House. With 18 amendments and initiatives (ranging from quick and easy constitutional cleanups to messy battles about bestowing legal rights on fertilized eggs), we have the longest ballot in the U.S. this election season. The two states closest to Colorado—California and Oregon—have a rather pedestrian dozen issues to vote on. Wusses. In fact, Colorado voters haven’t seen this many items on Election Day since 1912, and this doesn’t include numerous county and city ballot items. It’s a whole lot to take in. We’re here to help with a little background on some of the more important issues you’ll be voting on next month.

AMENDMENT 48
What/Who is a Person Anyway?

Colorado, by most estimates, is pretty darn close to being split evenly between conservatives and liberals, which makes watching the campaigns for this issue so interesting. On one side are the conservatives trying to do their best to redefine Roe vs. Wade one state law at a time. On the other are the liberals trying to defend the rights of women in Colorado and beyond. This isn’t necessarily an abortion issue (yet), instead this amendment is about defining a person to include any human being from the moment of fertilization—basically when sperm meets egg. This would have all sorts of ramifications on everything from abortion to the medical treatment of pregnant women to interpretation of state laws. Those in favor say it will afford all human life proper rights and give the courts clear direction on who is actually a person. Those against it worry it will encroach on medical professionals’ judgment and infringe on individuals’ rights to make decisions about their bodies. This should be a partisan fight for the ages.

AMENDMENT 50
Casino Play

If you’ve ever been bummed while stuck betting just $5 apiece on three simultaneous hands of blackjack in a Black Hawk casino, this amendment should pique your interest. On the table is a proposal to give Central City, Black Hawk and Cripple Creek the chance to expand their respective gambling halls. As it stands, casinos have to limit bets to five bucks, can only offer slots, blackjack and poker, and must shutter at 2 a.m. If passed, each municipality could vote to up gambling maximums to $100, add more games and extend hours. It’s easy to see why some want this approved: The estimated influx of tax dollars from the switch is expected to net the state $300 million in the next five years (paying for things such as community colleges and other programs). It also gives these communities the power to decide what’s best for them, and it could make Colorado casinos a tourism destination. Or it could pave the way for a mini Vegas in our beloved mountains, increase our compulsive gambling problem and limit the flexibility of how the state spends the gambling revenues. You decide.

AMENDMENT 56
Oh Boy, a Health Insurance Issue

With the progress of Democratic pushes for universal healthcare in Colorado stalled—again—this amendment pops up as a way to ensure most of the state’s employed residents are insured. It would amend the state’s constitution to require private employers with 20 or more workers to provide health insurance while limiting the amount an employee must pay to 20 percent. This probably sounds nice to those who favor universal healthcare but know that a majority of Colorado employers with more than 25 workers offer some type of insurance already. Wading through this is no different than the universal issue. The good: It’ll boost productivity as workers will be healthier, make coverage more affordable and spread the burden of solving the state’s uninsured health care crises across a large pool of business owners. The bad: This could raise costs for businesses that would ultimately be passed down in the form of lower wages and does nothing to combat the overall high cost of healthcare or help employees of
smaller companies.

ST. VRAIN VALLEY SCHOOLS
Looking for Money

The St. Vrain Valley School District lags in terms of per-pupil spending. It has fallen on hard economic times recently and layoffs have been commonplace. That’s why district officials have decided to go to the voters with two separate initiatives asking for money. One is a $16.5 million mill levy override, the other is a $189 million bond (for the uninitiated, bonds pay for bricks and mortar, mill levies people and programs). The mill will restore 85 teaching and staff positions, cut down on class size and add art, music and language programs. The bond will pay for a high school in Frederick, convert an existing high school into a K-8 institution and fix a bunch of other stuff. Few have opposed the issue, except Dacono officials, since it doesn’t include an elementary school inside of town limits.

DACONO
More Money for Town Officials

Speaking of Dacono, residents will be asked to increase the salaries of the mayor and council. Under the proposal, the mayor’s monthly salary would increase from $75 to $250; the council’s would move from $50 to $150. If approved, the raises would go into effect on Jan. 1. Maybe they should forgo raises and start saving for their own school. Just sayin’


October 2008

104th North, Dacono, Local Schools, Politics


Two Towns Too Small to Not Share Schools’ Cash

There’s a storm brewing in Carbon Valley, and it has nothing to do with a quick moving monsoon typical of the season. Frederick is mad at Firestone, and town leaders are airing the dirty laundry in public. Firestone says its holding onto $145,000 from development fees that was earmarked for St. Vrain Valley School District needs. (more…)

September 2007

104th North, Boiling Point, Firestone, Local Schools


Reading Programs

Boulder Public Library, 303.441.3100 1000, Canyon Blvd, Boulder.

Carbon Valley Branch Library, 303.833.3510, 320 Maple St #B, Frederick.

Dacono Public Library, 303.833.2317 x129, 512 Cherry St, Dacono.

Mamie Dowd Eisenhower Public Library, 720.887.2300, 3 Community Park Rd, Broomfield.

Lorraine David Children’s Library, 303.828.5417, 625 Pierce St, Erie.

Lafayette Public Library, 303.665.5200 775, W Baseline Rd, Lafayette.

Longmont Public Library, 303.651.8470, 409 4th Ave, Longmont.

Louisville Public Library, 303.335.4849, 950 Spruce St, Louisville.

August 2007

Education, Local Schools


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