CC’s 2022 in Photos

As we close out 2022, we reflect on what was another remarkable year filled with moments of joy and sorrow, hope and resilience. From classes, hockey games, and musical performances, to the inauguration of a new president, Commencement, and a new class of students, this was 2022 at CC.

We wish our entire CC community a happy, healthy, and inspiring 2023!

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Opt-in for Electronic W-2s and 1095s

Colorado College employees can consent to retrieve tax documents electronically.

CC employees, including student employees, will have the option to obtain tax documents through Self-Service Banner beginning Jan. 1, 2023.
By consenting to receive your tax statement(s) W-2s and 1095s electronically, you agree to return to SSB each year to print the needed copies of your tax forms, as you will need to attach your tax forms to federal, state, or local income tax returns. Individuals should review the instructions for each form and/or consult with a tax advisor on use of the form’s information.
The process requires employees to consent to use the electronic delivery. To consent:
  • Log into SSB
  • Select the Employee tab
  • Select Tax Information
  • Select Electronic Regulatory Consent
  • Check Consent to receive W-2 electronically, and Consent to receive 1095-C electronically
  • Submit
Consent provided for each electronic form will be valid for all subsequent tax years unless revoked by you or upon termination of your employment at Colorado College. In the event of new system implementation, everyone will be notified on the new method to access electronic tax statements. To receive your tax statement(s) electronically, please consent before Dec. 31, 2022. Should you choose to revoke your consent and receive mailed paper tax statements in the future, access SSB and uncheck the “My Choice” consent box(es) or provide written notification to CC’s Payroll Office.
If you choose to continue to receive mailed paper tax statements, it is important to keep your employee contact information up to date. Student employees can update mailing addresses through the Registrar’s Office. Other CC employees can update mailing addresses through the Office of Human Resources.

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Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Stories of Community Impact this Fall

Introduction

This block, the CCE focuses our newsletter on storytelling, rendering visible some of the community work happening all around us, each day, in and alongside the classroom, by staff, faculty, and students.  We’d like to shift the narrative to a focus on what we are doing rather than what we are not. And, there is room for growth in building deeper and more widespread engagement.  To that end, our hope is that storytelling serves both to celebrate, and to inspire.

Our campus is deeply engaged in community work.  For example, did you know:

  • 68% of students, on average, engage in community work per year, according to the annual Student Experience Survey data gathered since 2015.

  • Over 180 students are deeply engaged in the CCE through leadership programs that blend sustained engagement and learning, such as the Bonner Fellowship and Community Engaged Scholars. [i]

  • CC has at least 50 active, ongoing community partnerships including local nonprofits that work with student volunteers, interns, and organizations; community-engaged learning classes; and institutional partnerships.[ii]

We are proud of this scope. The numbers above demonstrate breadth, and the stories below highlight depth.  Read on to find out more….

The Bonner Fellowship in Action

Figure 1: A group of Bonners at the CCE Fall 2021 Retreat

Figure 1: A group of Bonners at the CCE Fall 2021 Retreat
In its sixth year at CC, the Bonner Fellowship welcomed 15 additional students, now totaling 40 Fellows! The Bonner Fellowship is a four-year, cohort-based, paid fellowship that seeks to provide developmental learning, community engagement, and community building to students who are committed to deep and sustained social change work. Our Bonners, after one year of exploration, commit to a community-based internship with one local community partner and work to build capacity within the organization through a culminating senior capstone project by the end of their time in the fellowship.
This year, our Bonners will be working with 25 different community partners across various issue areas, from arts and media for social change to immigrant and refugee justice to environmental justice and many more! Check out the podcast that senior Bonner Chloë Brooks-Kistler ’23 has been working on in partnership with Daily Dose 719 for her capstone project: The 719 Perspective. Next month’s episode will be an interview with CC President L. Song Richardson!

LGBTQIA2+ Engagement

Figure 2: CC Mobile Arts team at Pikes Peak Pride 2022

Figure 2: CC Mobile Arts team at Pikes Peak Pride 2022
As part of the Colorado Springs community, our students, staff, and faculty continue to grieve the lives lost in the Club Q shooting. We feel the impacts of injustice and we stand in solidarity with our LGBTQIA2+ friends, family, neighbors, and colleagues. Following acts of injustice we grieve, we comfort one another, we share messages of love and support, and we act. Colorado College has engaged in supporting the local LGBTQIA2+ community in a multitude of ways, and here we highlight just a few stories of impact, as well as opportunities to join in creating a more just community, one where all are safe to build the lives they dream. 

  • The CCE actively builds community partnerships with local organizations such as Inside Out Youth Services and Community Health Partnership, both High Impact Partners, who are focused on building a safe and inclusive community.
  • Inside Out Youth Services has worked with a number of CC students as interns, fellows, volunteers, peer-mentors, and thought partners. For example, Misbah Lakhani ’24 is in their third year of interning with Inside Out Youth Services through the Bonner Fellowship, working to develop a Feminism and Activism 101 curriculum for Colorado Springs youth who participate in IOYS programming. Jaxon Hoskinson ’24, CCE Gender and Sexuality Coalition Issue Organizer, participates in the IOYS’ Safe at School Coalition seeking to create a more inclusive community through anti-bullying efforts.
  • Community Health Partnership builds community collaborations around four focus areas, one of which is LGBTQIA2+ health. CHP is working to develop a plan for local healthcare systems to provide competent medical and behavioral health services the LGBTQIA+ community and, in collaboration with IOYS, provide a space for these services. Second-year Bonner Fellow, Luke Ortiz-Grabe ’25 is providing support for this process ensuring the voices of those who will be impacted by the plan are heard throughout its development.
  • CC Mobile Arts, a program of Colorado College that seeks to provide recurring and diverse high-quality, multi-disciplinary arts experiences at no cost to the public, has hosted and supported a number of events celebrating the LGBTQIA2+ community including Keep COS Queer, Youth Pride, and LGBTQ+ Oral History Launch in 2021 and Pikes Peak Pride in 2022. Many CC students, including Bonner Fellows Juniper Wolf ’23, Jasmine Linder ’23, and Manu MacEdo ’24, engage in this work through partnership building, outreach, and event execution.
  • CC faculty member Rushaan Kumar launched the LGBTQ+ Oral History Project in the fall of 2021 in collaboration with CC and UCCS students and local community members. The LGBTQ+ Oral History Project is an archive of LGBTQ+ life, resistance, resilience, and history in Colorado Springs. Kumar has continued gathering stories through his LGBTQ Social Movements in the U.S. course. Through this work, students gain insight on the impact oral histories have in preserving LGBTQ+ subcultures, memories, and lived experiences. These stories are available to the public on Spotify to continue to inspire future research and help folks to develop a sense of place in Colorado Springs.

Want to get involved? Give! Give your time, talents, and energy. Here are a few local organizations working to create a safe, equitable, inclusive community:

Join the Gender and Sexuality Coalition at Colorado College or one of our other active Issue Coalitions to collaborate with others on issues you care about and work towards collective impact. 

Give financially: There are a number of Go Fund Me links to directly support the families who lost a loved one in the Club Q shooting.

Publicly Engaged, Actionable Knowledge Project

The CCE re-launched the PEAK Project this fall, which connects CC educators and community partners to co-create community-engaged learning courses. Through promoting community-engaged teaching, the CCE aims to connect knowledge to action for community impact.
How does it work? CC faculty propose courses they’d like to connect to community work and community partners propose possible connections to CC courses. The CCE then plays “matchmaker” to connect educators and partners whose interests align. Once matched, the CCE gathers stakeholders together to learn about best practices, acts as thought partners as needed, and works to share the story of the class once finished.
As examples, this fall the PEAK Project connected:
  • A business policy and strategy course with a local environmental nonprofit, Catamount Institute, to support the fundraising strategy of the organization.
  • An astronomy class to a North Middle School classroom, so CC students could help teach sixth graders about astronomy.
  • A probability and statistics class to Community Health Partnership to analyze data from their LGBTQIA2+ health equity needs assessment, and to the City of Colorado Springs Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Services for their data analysis needs for accreditation.
  • … and more!
If you’re interested in participating, email jradke@coloradocollege.edu

Have You Heard of BreakOut?

Figure 3: BreakOut participants get ready to depart for Alamosa, Colorado over fall break 2022

Figure 3: BreakOut participants get ready to depart for Alamosa, Colorado over fall break 2022
BreakOut is a CC student organization, supported by the CCE, that aims to get students off campus through community engagement opportunities with local and regional organizations. Opportunities typically take place on Saturdays during the academic year and over block breaks. This fall, BreakOut engaged with 10 community partners and over 60 CC students. BreakOut students travelled to Alamosa, Colorado over Fall Break to support La Puente Home, Inc. Students assembled and distributed Thanksgiving boxes for people in need, created decorations for their Thanksgiving celebration, sorted through clothing donations for both the shelter and street outreach team who assist people without housing, and much more. Brendan McCune ’25 shared, “I have found a lot of value in BreakOut trips. I’ve met amazing people from CC and the community and have seen incredible and inspiring organizations at work.”

If you are interested in learning more about BreakOut opportunities, please contact Kylie Orf ’24, student director of BreakOut, at k_orf@coloradocollege.edu. You can also stay up to date with opportunities by following the CCE on Instagram.

[i] This figure includes: 95+ Community Engaged Scholars, 40 Bonner Fellows, Public Achievement coaches, 13 student interns, and 23 student organization leaders. These numbers do not include the students who participate in CCE community opportunities, workshops, and student organizations, and those who use our resources.
[ii] This figure includes but is not limited to: 12 High Impact Partners; 16 student organization partners; 25 Bonner Fellow partners; BreakOut service opportunities; community-engaged learning classes; individual student volunteers; institutional initiatives like Stroud Scholars, Public Interest Fellowship Program, and the annual Martin Luther King Jr. commemoration; faculty-led initiatives and research; and more!

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Around the Block – Campus News

Begin 2023 by Honoring Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

ID: poster for MLK day It Starts With Me
Colorado College will continue its tradition of hosting a community-wide celebration in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr., gathering in-person for the first time in three years.

On Monday, Jan. 16, the community is invited to begin the day with the All People’s Breakfast and social hour from 7:30-8:30 a.m. in Ed Robson Arena. The breakfast is followed by this year’s keynote presentation featuring speaker Mike Edmonds and focusing on the theme “It Starts with Me: Cultivating a Beloved Community Mindset to Transform Unjust Systems.” Reserve your seat now at Eventbrite.

At 10:15 a.m., participate in a Unity March from the CC campus at the corner of Cache La Poudre and Tejon St., to Acacia Park, where the program features local dance and musical performers and guest speaker Sharon Tunson.

The world-renowned Cleo Parker Robinson Dance Ensemble will wrap up the day’s events at 7 p.m. in the Mohrman Theatre in Armstrong Hall, with special guests, the Colorado Springs Chapter Choir of the Gospel Music Workshop of America, also performing.

All events are free and open to the public.

Student Lounge Named After Rochelle Dickey

ID: women in dresses near the multicultural lounge, smiling. One women holding flowers, expressing joy, other women looking on grinning
During Homecoming and Family Weekend 2022, CC hosted a ribbon cutting of its first-ever multicultural student lounge: The Rochelle T. Dickey Student Lounge. This was made possible through a collaboration between CCSGA and the Butler Center. The space honors Dickey, who retires after 32 years of service (36 years at CC if you count her time as a student!) in Spring 2023.

Winter Break Information

Adam F. Press Fitness Center:

Winter Break Operating Hours

  • Wednesday, Dec. 21: 6:30-9 a.m. and 12:15-7 p.m.
  • Thursday, Dec. 22 through Wednesday, Jan. 4: CLOSED

Half Block Operating Hours

  • Thursday, Jan. 5 and Friday, Jan. 6: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
  • Saturday, Jan. 7 and Sunday Jan. 8: CLOSED
  • Monday, Jan. 9-Friday, Jan. 13: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
  • Saturday, Jan. 14 and Sunday Jan. 15: CLOSED
  • Monday, Jan. 16-Friday, Jan. 20: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
  • Saturday, Jan. 21 and Sunday, Jan. 22: CLOSED
  • Monday, Jan. 23-Friday, Jan. 27: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.

Normal Operating Hours Resume

  • Saturday, Jan. 28: 11 a.m.-7 p.m. 
  • Sunday, Jan. 29: 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m.
CC Mail Center Open Limited Hours for Winter Break
Staff will be on hand to receive deliveries from Amazon, USPS, UPS, and FedEx and to release mail and packages to students on the following days:
  • Tuesday, Dec. 27, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
  • Friday, Dec. 30, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
  • Tuesday, Jan. 3, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 
As a reminder, students have access to the package lockers everyday 8 a.m.-8:30 p.m. 
Bookstore:
  • Wednesday, Dec. 21, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.  
    • All rental returns are due by 5 p.m.
  • Thursday, Dec. 22, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 
  • Friday, Dec. 23, 9 a.m.-12 p.m. 
  • Saturday, Dec. 24-Monday, Jan. 2: CLOSED
  • January 3-27: Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 
The Counseling Center
There is always a 24/7 counselor on call as well as after-hours phone counselors available at (719) 389-6093, press 2; or by contacting Campus Safety.   

Campus Safety Tips If You’re Away During Winter Break

 
Protect Your Belongings
  • Bring valuables with you or stow them out of sight in a closet, locked trunk, or lockable storage area.
  • Do NOT leave your bike on a rack! Take bicycles home or bring them inside a locked residence hall room or office. During breaks, we see a large increase in bike thefts.
  • IF you are leaving a bike on campus for Winter Break:
    • Campus Safety will be tagging bikes for removal bikes from racks if they are missing parts, haven’t moved in a long time, or appear abandoned. If you receive an orange band on your bike, contact Campus Safety so your bike lock does not get cut!
    • All bikes collected will be reserved for 30 days, then will be donated. 
    • If you have a bike you no longer use, you can donate the bike to the CC Bike and Ski Co-op; drop it off at Campus Safety or the Outdoor Education Center.
  • Make sure your bike is registered.
Lock Up
  • No matter what floor, lock all exterior windows and doors and remind roommates/other family members to do the same.
  • Take out the trash.
  • Clean out the refrigerator and remove anything that could go bad.
  • Unplug electrical appliances including space heaters.
  • Leave the heat on in buildings to prevent pipes from freezing.
  • Extension cords are designed for short term use. UNPLUG all extension cords.

    Secure Vehicles
    • If you’re leaving your vehicle on campus, email parking@coloradocollege.edu BEFORE departure to make appropriate accommodations for permitted lots and street zones.
    • The Parking Office will be closed during Winter Break.
    • If leaving a vehicle in a university parking lot or garage over the break, remove all valuables, close the windows tightly, and lock the doors.
    Campus Safety support during Winter Break
    Normal coverage, 24/7/365
    Non-emergency number, (719) 389-6707
    Emergency number, (719) 389-6911
    Stay connected using RAVE Guardian App
    If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Campus Safety, campussafety@coloradocolledge.edu and find additional resources.

    Robert G. Moore to Retire in Spring 2023

    ID: caucasian man with very little white hair, wearing a dark suit, white shirt, blue stripe tie, smiling at the camera.
    By Julia Fennell ’21

    Robert G. Moore, senior vice president for Finance and Administration, chief financial officer, and chief operating officer, will retire in Spring 2023.

    “It has been a privilege to serve CC, its students, and employees throughout the past 14 years,” Moore says. “Colorado College is a rare place where the dedication and drive of the entire campus community make it possible to achieve, solve, and innovate every day. I am grateful for the opportunities I’ve had to build on CC’s strengths and to have a part in creating the unparalleled experience we provide for CC students.”

    Photo of the Week

    ID: gothic building in twilight, lite up, grass on either side of the pathway toward the building.

    Cutler Hall, Dec. 7.
    Photo by Lonnie Timmons III 
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