Phil Boatright ducks under a lifted GMC box truck in his automotive repair shop and points to a large hole about mid-chassis. Jagged pipe flanks the missing part.
Phil Boatright ducks under a lifted GMC box truck in his automotive repair shop and points to a large hole about mid-chassis. Jagged pipe flanks the missing part.
Phil Boatright ducks under a lifted GMC box truck in his automotive repair shop and points to a large hole about mid-chassis. Jagged pipe flanks the missing part.
End-of-year field trips to the zoo, Garden of the Gods and college campuses have been called off for Atlas Preparatory School students because thieves stole catalytic converters from two activity buses last week.
Administrators at the charter school, which primarily serves low-income students in southeast Colorado Springs, also are scrambling to figure out how athletes can get to girls’ soccer games and track-and-field meets over the remaining few weeks of school.
“It’s rather unfortunate,” Brittney M. Stroh, executive director of Atlas Prep, which enrolls 1,100 kindergarten through 12th graders.
“We’re in the last four weeks of school, and we don’t have any way to transport kids to cultural and recreational field trips and sporting events.