| Candidates for  Denver mayor take to campus for debateCU Denver School of Public Affairs co-sponsored Tuesday event By Diane Carman 
   
    Six of the 10 candidates vying to be Denver's next mayor  faced off Tuesday, April 12, at the Tivoli Center in what has become an almost  daily routine of debates and joint public forums in the crowded race to the May  3 election. The event was co-sponsored by the University of Colorado Denver  School of Public Affairs.
      |  Photos by Karl Gehring of the Denver Post
 |  
      | Paul Teske, dean of the School of Public Affairs |  The candidates – City Councilwoman Carol Boigon, attorney  Theresa Spahn, former state Sen. Chris Romer, city councilmen Michael Hancock  and Doug Linkhart, and James Mejia, former CEO of the Denver Preschool Program  – focused intently on the need for greater efficiency and new revenue sources  for the city, which faces another tough budget this year. "We have to build the retail tax base," Romer said. "We need to diversify the revenue base," Linkhart countered,  suggesting imposing trash-hauling fees on residents and "leveraging parking  meter fees to generate more revenue." Mejia called for aggressive action to "bring in grant money"  from foundations and the federal government, while Spahn proposes a new retail  sales plan and an initiative to "get behind tourism and be very aggressive  about it." 
    
      |  Photos by Karl Gehring of the Denver Post
 |  
      | Denver mayoral candidates gathered Tuesday on the CU Denver campus for a debate. |  Boigon wants line-by-line review of the city budget to  eliminate unnecessary spending, and Hancock contends the best way to address  the budget problem is through economic development and job growth. The debate, co-sponsored by the School of Public Affairs,  the Denver Post, Denver 8 TV, the  League of Women Voters of Denver, Historic Denver and Inter-Neighborhood  Cooperation, revealed subtle differences among the leading contenders. About  200 people attended the event, which will be broadcast on Channel 8 this week  and available on its website. While Romer said he would look for opportunities to lure  big-box retailers to the city because it's "very frustrating" that Denver  shoppers flock to Target in Glendale instead of boosting the city's tax  revenues by shopping here, Linkhart said he'd rather see locally owned retailers thrive. "I don't like Walmart," he said. As for public safety, all the candidates expressed concern  about the police department and each offered different ideas about how to address the various problems. "We need to streamline the discipline process," Mejia said. Boigon called for modernizing the internal affairs bureau, and Hancock proposed a greater commitment to community policing. Danny F. Lopez, Jeff Peckman, Kenneth Simpson and Thomas  Wolf also are running for mayor.   |