Year: 2021 (Page 16 of 23)

The Building Bulletin April 2021

We have our final design!

Not really – now comes the hard part, making sure the building is structurally sound, figuring out where wiring and ductwork goes, and a million other details. Ewers Architecture spent a lot of time in March reviewing comments from the February congregational meeting, holding information sessions, and talking to the BET and staff. They even brought a ladder to the grounds so they could look at the view from the height of the new building and take a lot of pictures. We feel this design is a wonderful answer to many of the concerns brought up at the meetings. We hope you agree. You can view the new plans here.

Celebrate our trees!

One of the unfortunate aspects of expanding our building is the loss of some trees. The Climate Justice Ministry decorated the trees that will be gone, so you can visit the grounds, acknowledge their loss, and appreciate their contribution to our surroundings. 

We will be remediating the loss by replanting on our grounds or paying for the city to replant elsewhere.  There may be an option for yard trees planted by congregants who live within ½ mile of the church to count towards our remediation, so stay tuned for more information soon if you live within a ½ mile of the church and are looking to plan a new tree in your yard!

Looking Back

When Peter Ewers and Ann Ormsby came to assess the view, we took the opportunity to survey our sidewalks. The city would like five-foot sidewalks with a separation from the street. This would necessitate losing more trees and shrubs and would encroach on our usable space.  After several discussions, the city has signaled that they would entertain a modified proposal.  We walked around our part of the block with the architects and our landscape architect and came up with options. The civil engineer consulting for Ewers Architecture will write a proposal that we hope the city will accept. Keep your fingers crossed!

The next week was spent in several input-gathering sessions with staff, congregants, and the Architects. Those interested attended meetings focused on Worship, Sanctuary, Sound and AV, Choir, and Family Ministry. There was interesting feedback and comments. We have read them all, and the architectural team has incorporated many of them into the latest design iteration.  

On March 15, we had a meeting with the city IDAP (Integrated Design Assistance Program) coordinator and energy modeler.  We talked about options for the HVAC system, how to price alternatives, and what the city hopes to see from our building. It was an interesting discussion and gets the ball rolling with the city.

Looking Forward

This month we will meet with Pinkard Construction and Ewers architecture to firm up our schedule. We want to understand what tasks the church is responsible for and be sure we meet our deadlines.

Viewing Recommendations From Our Community

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]We might have a few rainy afternoons to fill in the next few weeks. Thank you all for submitting these recommendations! Here is the complied list of recommended viewing options from last week’s check-in:

  • 800 Words
  • A Million Little Things
  • All Marvel movies, in timeline order
  • Amend
  • Andy of Mayberry
  • Any Ken Burns documentary (2 votes)
  • Arrested Development
  • Being There
  • Blade Runner
  • Blown Away
  • Bridgerton
  • Drop Dead Diva
  • Emily in Paris
  • Finding Your Roots, with Henry Louis Gates, Jr
  • Gilmore Girls
  • Good Girls
  • Good Will Hunting
  • Great British Baking Show
  • I’m Not There
  • Lincoln
  • Modern Love (based on articles in NYT)
  • Monster Hunter
  • Moving Art (an end of day soother)
  • My Octopus Teacher (2 votes)
  • Nancy Drew
  • News of the World
  • Nomadland
  • Off the Map
  • Our Friend
  • Outlander (2 votes)
  • Peanut Butter Falcon
  • Poldark PBS
  • Prodigal Son
  • Promising Young Woman
  • Queen’s Gambit
  • Riverdale
  • Roma
  • Schitt’s Creek (2 votes)
  • Seaspiracy
  • The Atlantic Crossing
  • The Big Flower Fight
  • The DIG
  • The IT Crowd (funny)
  • The Kominsky Method
  • The Mauritian
  • The Simpsons
  • The Walking Dead
  • The West Wing
  • This is Us
  • Unorthodox
  • Wanted
  • Wings of Desire

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Songs for Tough Times

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]As a follow up to the wonderful service on Sunday with our guest Melanie DeMore, we asked you to share a song or two that keeps you going through the tough times.

 

“Amazing Grace” – John Newton

“Be Not Afraid” – Bob Dufford, S.J.

“Beautiful Day” – U2

“Benedictus” from The Armed Man: A Mass for Peace

“Bridge Over Troubled Water” – Simon & Garfunkel

“Dama de Mis Amores” – Ray Sepulveda and Tito Nieves

“Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead” – Harold Arlen

“Dona Nobis Pacem” – Traditional

“Don’t Stop Believing” – Journey

“Here Comes the Sun” – The Beatles

“Here I Am Lord” – Dan Schutte

“I Am Light” – India Arie

“I Will Always Love You” – Dolly Parton

“I Will Survive” – Gloria Gaynor

“Imagine” – John Lennon

“Keep Going Song”  the Bengsons

“Landslide” – Stevie Nix

“Lean on Me” – Bill Withers

“Let it Be” – Paul McCartney

“Light At The End Of The Tunnel” – Andrew Lloyd Webber

“Light of a Clear Blue Morning” – Dolly Parton

“May I Have This Dance With You?” – Scott Krippayne

“On Eagle’s Wings” – Michael Joncas

“On the Road Again” – Willie Nelson

“Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head” – BJ Thomas

“Ripple” – Grateful Dead

“September Song” – Walter Huston

“Silent Night” – Franz Xaver Gruber

“Standing Outside the Fire” – Garth Brooks

“The Mother” – Brandi Carlile

“The River” – Garth Brooks

“This Little Light of Mine” – Harry Dixon Loes  (Sam Cooke version)

“Tomorrow” – Andrea McArdle

“We Shall Be Known” – Ma Muse

“We’ll Meet Again” – Vera Lynn

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Letter From the Ministers: A guilty verdict, accountability, and working toward justice.

Dear Foothills Community,

We breathe deeply in relief for the news of Derek Chauvin’s guilty verdict on all three counts. We pray that this brings some amount of solace to George’s family. We hope it signals a turning point in our nation’s willingness to hold police officers accountable – an outcome that so many black families have been denied. 

Yet, we also know that this verdict does not represent justice. Justice requires systemic change and a world where Black Lives always Matter. Justice requires ending the school to prison pipeline, the new Jim Crow, the insidious persistent presence of white supremacy within each of us and across our lives. Justice requires repentance. Justice demands an accounting of the violence and harm that reside at the root of our nation and the caste system that keeps us all from true freedom. Justice demands a true change in how we operate, a turning away from this culture of death.  

We also know that no verdict can take away the trauma and the grief of what happened to George Floyd or the accumulation of pain after incidents just keep coming, especially for people of color. We are especially holding in our hearts the people of Minneapolis and those closest to this trauma. No verdict can change what happened at the end of the 9 minutes and 26 seconds. And so, even as we are grateful for this outcome, we lament and we rage. We demand change.  

Unitarian Universalists of color are leading a vigil tomorrow, Wednesday, evening at 6:30 PM MST. We encourage everyone to join in this space to pray and hold space together. Please invite anyone you know who is seeking community to be together, to breathe together, and to grieve and support each other – and to gain strength for the continued work ahead.  

In solidarity,

Rev. Gretchen, Rev. Sean, and Rev. Elaine 

April Fool’s Pranks

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Last week we asked you to share a favorite April Fool’s Day prank. Here are your responses:

  • Conspiring with my son’s coworkers at Avo’s to prank him on our dinner take out order last week.
  • Convinced my brother I won $1000.
  • I used plastic food models at work. I brought them home and set the breakfast table with the fake food. The models were really realistic and fooled the kids.
  • “Not my own but memorable: NPR interviewed gardening maven Barbara Damrosh about her recipe for compost lasagna! They did it totally straight, discussing the luscious flavors and fragrances and then ended. It was left to us listeners to remember what day it was.”
  • My daughter went into display settings on her brother’s computer and flipped the screen sideways. We said maybe he clicked on an April Fool’s virus. He was convinced she had broken his computer!
  • My husband was looking out the window toward the public bathroom in Remington lot and said to me” that guy came out of the bathroom without any clothes. I got up to look and….
  • Oh the worst was about 10 years ago my husband wakes me up first thing in the morning. He tells me he had forgotten, but we had a big potluck dinner event for Larimer County that night (he was working with the county courts at the time) and we needed to bring a casserole! I was freaking out and running to the kitchen to see what we had to make and he let me know it was April 1st. I was sure mad at him at the time for freaking me out but it really was funny nonetheless😂
  • On a hot day I would not mind if someone taped the sink sprayer.
  • Our son would rubber band the trigger on the kitchen sink nozzle so it sprayed in your chest when you turned on the water. We never learned. Got us every year!
  • Putting googly eyes on things at the grocery store.
  • The Rapture happened and no one qualified.
  • When riding my horse, being told by stable mates to go find a ” left-handed bit stretcher”!!! (I know better now!!😁)

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