HomeMy WebLinkAboutWINGSHADOW, 1225 REDWOOD STREET - PDP/FDP - 30-02A - MEDIA -Future home enables Frontier
to expand its youth programs
By STACY NICK 11/1 1/6:]. cost another $500,000,
StacyNick@coloradoan.com
are expected to begin
After years of talking
this week as soon as the
about moving Frontier
group has the green light
High School to a larger
from the city of Fort
location, the dream will
Collins, said Annette
soon become a reality.
Zacharias -Piper, Wing -
In early February,
shadow development di-
Wingshadow, a Fort
rector. Funding for the
Collins organization ded-
school came from dona-
icated to at -risk youths,
tions and grants.
is relocating the school,
The 21,000-square-
now housed at First
foot site is perfect,
Christian Church, 2700
Zacharias -Piper said.
S. Lemay Ave., to the for-
"It was affordable, but
mer Diamond Crest As-
it also has lots of poten-
sisted Living Home, 1225
tial," she said. "The lay -
Redwood St.
out makes it a facility
The facility was pur-
where we can do it all —
chased for $1 million, and
the school, the shelter
renovations, which will
and the child-care center
— on the same site but
independent of each oth-
er at same time."
In addition to increas-
ing the student capacity
from 65 to 110, Frontier's
child-care center will in-
crease from 16 to 40 chil-
dren and the new crisis
center also will open.
The center will act as a
temporary shelter for
teens who need help,
something that has sore-
ly been lacking in the
community, said Steve
Bolton, who co-founded
Wingshadow with his
wife, Shirley.
See FRONTIER/Page B4
Frontier
Continued from Page Bl
SHARING CHORES: Frontier High School students, from left, Nicole Lombardo, 17, Kas-
sandra Cano, 17, and Lindsey Carlson, 16, work in the kitchen at the school's future home
at 1225 Redwood St. The school hopes to be completely moved in by February.
"We have (homeless) facili-
ties for families and adults but
this will be the fast just for
teens," he said.
Youths will be able to stay at
the shelter, which has beds for 12
boys and six girls, for as long as
90 days, Bolton said.
"Some kids have an argument
with parents and just need a
place to stay overnight to cool
off," he said. "Others have been
put out by their parents."
The shelter will be open 24
hours a day, seven days a week
with an on -duty therapist and a
consulting psychiatrist, Bolton
said.
The school, which has been
bursting at the seams for years,
also will add two grades — sev-
enth and eighth — to its current
ninth through 12th grade pro-
iiftilesfta?
To find out more about
Frontier High School's new
facility, the community is in-
vited to attend weekly tours
of the school. Each week for
an indefinite period of time,
Wingshadow will provide a
tour of the new facility, locat-
ed at 1225 Redwood St., at 8
a.m. Thursdays.
Registration for the free
tour is not necessary. For
more information, call An-
nette Zacharias -Piper at 419-
3252.
gram.
"It just amazes me to see this
is happening," Bolton said. "The
reason is because of the support
we've had here and the people
who work with us. It's much
greater than anything Shirley or
I could have done by ourselves:'