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Commerce City Sentinel Express 080323

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VOLUME 35 | ISSUE 31

WEEK OF AUGUST 3, 2023

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State preschool Denver Disruptors bicycle racers to roll through Commerce City program leaves some unsure

A month before universal preschool starts, Colorado is backpedaling on a major funding promise BY ERICA BREUNLIN THE COLORADO SUN

And, the NCL is set up in a way that allows men and women on the teams chances to contribute to the score. Some teams, such as the Denver Disruptors, have a full team of both men and women. Other teams that do not have both women’s and men’s divisions may merge with another women’s/men’s team for the purposes of competing in the NCL Cup Series. For example, the Goldman Sachs ETFS Racing women’s team and

A preschool in Greeley that has shepherded countless kids through the first years of their education over the past 21 years may welcome its last class of 4-year-olds next month, eyeing an uncertain future as it dives into the state’s newly expanded preschool program. Nearby, a different preschool that caters to mostly children of low-income families has only been able to fill a quarter of its classrooms for the start of the school year and is weighing its options — which could include closing its doors. Preschools across Colorado are sprinting to make final preparations for the start of the state’s expanded preschool program, known as universal preschool. And with less than a month until the first day of school, many question whether they’ll have enough state funding to stay open. That question has bubbled up in the past month, after Colorado’s new Department of Early Childhood changed the way it will calculate how much funding preschool providers will receive during their first few months of the program. Instead of paying a provider for the number of students it has the capacity to educate, as originally promised, the department will now dole out funding based on

SEE RACERS, P2

SEE UNSURE, P3

The Denver Disruptors are made up of men and women professional cyclists. The team is currently in first place in points. The team COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL CYCLING LEAGUE will compete at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park on Aug. 13 in Commerce City.

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• Vestas to lay off 200 employees

BUSINESS

National Cycling League event will bring big competition to the city in August BY JOHN RENFROW JRENFROW@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

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•27J Schools moves online-only Dec. 1

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LOCAL OBITUARIES LEGALS CLASSIFIED

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

LOCAL

Can’t get enough professional sports teams in Colorado? Good. The National Cycling League has you covered. It’s bringing an exciting, free professional bicycle race to the Front Range. The NCL Cup, a series, is in its first year, and composed of 10 cycling teams composed of men and women — including the league-leading Denver Disruptors. They compete in three races across the country for one NCL Cup champion to be crowned this fall. The first event in Miami in April rallied nearly 20,000 spectators. The league is hopeful for similar numbers as cyclists race a

course around the Colorado Rapids’ soccer stadium at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City on Aug 13. “It’s the world’s first majorityminority and female-owned sports league,” said Reed McCalvin, the vice president of teams and operations for the NCL. “The four founders, and then myself, a founder with a very little ‘f,’ basically wanted to help change the face of sports and equality in sports.” The founders include successful executives, tech company veterans, NFL agents, lawyers, and more, with high-profile investors in professional sports, such as the NBA’s Bradley Beal and the NFL’s Jalen Ramsey and Derwin James. They all have the same goal: to bring cycling to the next level on a new, even playing field. The races are not multi-day, grueling races with mountain passes somewhere along the way like the Tour de France and ones closer to home

from years past, including the Colorado Classic and USA Pro Challenge. The NCL is criterium-style racing, meaning they’re fast-paced as cyclists ride on a set race course, doing laps to gain points along the way. The women and men compete in different competition groups for the same team, so each side brings equal weight to the scoreboard. A new, even playing field

BRIEFS: PAGE 2 | OBITUARIES: PAGE 4 | CLASSIFIEDS: PAGE 21 | LEGAL: PAGE 23

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