Woodland Park to solicit applications to fill open mayoral seat gazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
This enrollment period is available to anyone who is currently without health insurance.
Hilltopâs Health Access is available to assist the public in navigating the online process by comparing coverage options side-by-side, determining if they qualify for a discount based on their income, enrollment assistance.
Hilltopâs Health Access can also help assure individuals are paying the lowest possible amount.
Call 244-0850 or go to hilltopshealthaccess.org for information.
Mesa County Libraries will present virtual Write-A-Will seminars at 10 a.m. Monday, March 1 and at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday,
March 10.
Seminars will be presented via Zoom and pre-registration is required by calling 243-4442 or online at the Event Calendar at mesacountylibraries.org.
From USA TODAY Network and wire reports
Alabama
Montgomery: A different take on “Masks We Wear,” an original, contemporary piece that has previously offered a Mardi Gras flair, dances its way into downtown Saturday. Montgomery Ballet has a one-night performance at Commerce BeerWorks, as well as one a week later Feb. 27 in Pike Road at The Chapel at the Waters. Tickets for each are $50. “Masks We Wear in the Neighborhood” features choreography by the ballet’s artistic and executive director, Danny Mitsios, and music from composer Jake Pugh. For those who have seen previous “Masks We Wear” performances, Mitsios said this is a completely different ballet with new music, new storylines and new metaphors. “The idea is that this year, instead of the Mardi Gras party scene, we’re doing the masks that people wear in their neighborhoods,” Mitsios said. “Outside their house, they show one thing, but inside their house it’s a different story.” Tickets are on sale now
WOODLAND PARK • In its first regular meeting since his death, the City Council on Thursday honored the late Mayor Val Carr as a hardworking public servant who made a deep impact on the bedroom community a half-hour’s drive west from Colorado Springs.
Carr, who stepped into his role as mayor last April, died Tuesday after a two-month battle with COVID-19. His death was a shock to the community, which just six months before bore the loss of former Mayor Neil Levy, who died in August of complications from kidney cancer. Levy was 66.
After opening the meeting with a moment of silence to honor Carr, 71, council members and city staff recalled happier memories of the man they described as passionate, funny and dedicated. They recalled his love for music and how, clad in a top hat and handing out sheet music, he led the community in singing Christmas carols at the city’s annual tree lighting in December.