New mayors in Lakewood, Arvada

Voters on Tuesday were set to elect new mayors for two of Colorado’s largest cities, bringing to an end eight-year runs at the top of Lakewood’s and Arvada’s municipal power structures.

Councilwoman Wendi Strom held a sizable lead over challengers Cathy Kentner and Don Burkhart in Lakewood, the state’s fifth-largest city, with 46.7% of the vote, according to unofficial results. In Arvada, the state’s seventh-largest city, John Marriott held a slender 50.3% to 49.7% lead over Lauren Simpson, with just over 200 votes separating them out of 33,000 tallied.

Both Marriott and Simpson currently serve on the City Council.

Suburban voters had a host of candidates and ballot issues to decide on in this election, including a myriad of local tax measures and three separate ballot questions in Commerce City about whether residents can keep backyard ducks, chickens and bees. In early results, chickens and bees were in the winning column while ducks were not so welcome.

The winner in Lakewood will replace Mayor Adam Paul, who has served 16 years in total on the City Council, while Mayor Marc Williams, who has been on Arvada’s council for nearly 25 years, will make way for Tuesday’s top mayoral vote-getter.

“It’s been good to turn this page and move on,” Paul told The Denver Post last month.

In a mayor’s race in Thornton, which lands between Lakewood and Arvada in size with nearly 145,000 residents, incumbent Jan Kulmann was leading opponent Julia Marvin by more than 1,000 votes out of 20,000 ballots counted. The contest in the north suburb has had its share of drama.

Kulmann, who has been Thornton’s mayor since 2019 and has sat on the council for a decade, spurred a resident lawsuit two years ago that accused her of violating the city’s term-limits statutes by trying to get re-elected mayor. But the Colorado Supreme Court ruled that Kulmann was OK to seek her seat again this year.

Meanwhile, in Boulder, voters used a new method — known as ranked-choice voting — to choose its next mayor. In a five-way tussle for Golden mayor, incumbent Laura Weinberg was leading the crowded field with nearly 48% of the vote.

Tax measures on the ballot in metro Denver included funding requests for police and fire services, sidewalks, open space acquisition and affordable housing. In Brighton, a measure seeking $2 million annually to buttress the city’s police department operations through an increase in the sales tax was trailing badly in early results Tuesday evening, by a margin of 63.9% against and 36.1% for.

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