MONUMENTAL IMPACT RECEIVES GRANT FROM BLACK HILLS ENERGY

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


MONUMENTAL IMPACT RECEIVES GRANT FROM BLACK HILLS ENERGY

Money to fund a variety of ongoing programs.


Monument, CO — October 8, 2025 —
Monumental Impact has announced the awarding of a $1,750.00 USD grant from Black Hills Energy.  The funds will be used for a variety of popular programs that members take part in as they build teams to tackle various challenges in the areas of science, technology and engineering. These programs include competition teams, work-based learning, entrepreneurship, makerspace and community services. 


Monumental Impact is a nonprofit that connects youth and community members with career pathways in technology, engineering, and entrepreneurship. We provide programs, equipment, mentorship, workspace, and real-world opportunities that empower people to explore, create, and compete.

“What sets us apart is that we don’t simulate the workplace—we are the workplace.” said Jeanette Breton, Executive Director of Monumental Impact.

Membership in Monumental Impact includes more than students and mentors. Adult professional makers, current entrepreneurs and retired industry experts are also active MITEE members. They engage shoulder-to-shoulder with learners, sharing real-world insights, sparking creativity, and inspiring next-gen innovators.

“Being involved in community programs like Monumental Impact and helping the next generation of innovators and leaders emerge is part of Black Hills Energy’s mission,” said, Tom Henley, Senior Manager of Public Affairs at Black Hills Energy


About Black Hills Energy

Black Hills Energy, a subsidiary of Black Hills Corp, has a long history supplying gas and electric utilities to 1.35 million customers in eight states including Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, South Dakota and Wyoming.

Visit www.blackhillsenergy.com for more information.


 About Monumental Impact

Monumental Impact is a registered 501(c)(3) Colorado nonprofit serving high school students through adults as a community makerspace.  Monumental Impact is also referred to as MITEE, (Monumental Impact for Technology, Engineering and Entrepreneurship) connecting youth and community members with career pathways in technology, engineering, and entrepreneurship. We provide programs, equipment, mentorship, workspace, and real-world opportunities that empower people to explore, create, and compete.

Anyone interested in learning more about becoming a part of Monumental Impact can visit www.monumentalimpact.org


Media Contacts

Monumental Impact                                                 Black Hills Energy

Name: Jeanette Breton                                               Name: Tom Henley
Title: Executive Director                                           Title: Senior Manager of Public Affairs
Email: Jeanette@monumentalimpact.org                 Email: Tom.Henley@blackhillsenergy.com
Phone: 719-387-7414                                                Phone: 720-333-1844
Website: www.monumentalimpact.org                    Website: www.blackhillsenergy.com

Monumental Impact Designated as an Enterprise Zone Contribution Project to Expand Entrepreneurship and Career Readiness in the Tri-Lakes Region

Monumental Impact Designated as an Enterprise Zone Contribution Project to Expand Entrepreneurship and Career Readiness in the Tri-Lakes Region

Palmer Lake, CO — Monumental Impact, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to empowering high school students, college students, and adults in technology, engineering, and entrepreneurship, has been officially approved as an Enterprise Zone Contribution Project in El Paso County.

This designation recognizes Monumental Impact’s role in driving regional workforce and business development through its Entrepreneurship and Career Readiness Programs — programs that equip participants with hands-on experience, mentorship, and real-world problem-solving skills in a collaborative makerspace environment.

“Our community makerspace is where innovation happens,” said Jeanette Breton, Executive Director of Monumental Impact. “It’s a place where students, professionals, and entrepreneurs come together to design, prototype, and launch ideas that strengthen our local economy and create new opportunities.”

Through these programs, participants gain access to advanced fabrication tools — including 3D printers, CNC machines, and laser engravers — as well as professional mentors and business incubation support. Monumental Impact’s hands-on learning model not only builds technical and entrepreneurial capacity but also fosters self-confidence, collaboration, and life-long learning.

As an approved Enterprise Zone Contribution Project, individuals and businesses who contribute to Monumental Impact may receive Colorado state income tax credits for qualifying donations. These contributions directly support the nonprofit’s mission to expand career-connected learning, small business incubation, and innovation pathways within the Tri-Lakes Enterprise Zone.

“Being part of the Enterprise Zone program allows our donors to multiply their impact,” Breton added. “Every contribution fuels opportunities for the next generation of makers, entrepreneurs, and community leaders.”

🗣️ Community Voices on Monumental Impact’s Enterprise Zone Designation

Town of Palmer Lake

“Monumental Impact’s makerspace and mentorship programs prepare youth and adults for career pathways and serve as a launchpad for new and growing businesses in our region.”

Tri-Lakes Chamber of Commerce

“A unique and powerful contributor to our economic ecosystem, Monumental Impact is preparing the next generation of innovators and small business owners.”

Pikes Peak Business & Education Alliance (PPBEA)

“Monumental Impact’s makerspace creates a dynamic hub where learners engage directly with industry professionals and community volunteers.”

To learn more about the Enterprise Zone program and how to make a qualifying contribution, visit:
🔗 https://monumentalimpact.org/monumental-impact-approved-as-an-enterprise-zone-contribution-project/

To contact us you can email enable@monumentalimpact.org or call us at 719-387-7414.

COMP2025: Perspectives on Manufacturing, Workforce, and Global Growth

COMP2025: Perspectives on Manufacturing, Workforce, and Global Growth

At the Colorado Manufacturing Partners 2025 Expo (COMP2025), industry leaders came together for an insightful panel on the future of manufacturing, workforce development, and global competitiveness. The discussion brought perspectives from global trade, workforce strategy, contract manufacturing, consumer-facing products, and large-scale operations.

Here are the highlights:


Colorado in the Global Economy – Karen Gerwitz, World Trade Center Denver

Karen set the stage with a macro perspective: Colorado’s economy ($553B GDP) ranks among the top 30 worldwide, comparable to Austria and Singapore. Despite this, Colorado ranks only 35th in exports of goods and 34th in imports, showing there’s untapped potential.

Opportunities ahead include positioning Colorado as:

  • A centralized transportation hub for North America.
  • A quantum innovation and R&D hub leveraging national labs.
  • A global commerce hub beyond tourism and lifestyle branding.

Yet, uncertainty from tariffs, supply chain duplication, and workforce shortages are dampening growth. Her message was clear: Colorado can—and should—think globally, not just locally.


Workforce: The Biggest Challenge – Traci Marques, Pikes Peak Workforce Center

Traci brought the focus down to people. The top three challenges for manufacturers? Talent, talent, and talent.

Key points included:

  • Too many postings require unnecessary bachelor’s degrees—companies must shift toward skills-based hiring.
  • Locally, there are 733 open manufacturing positions (as of Aug. 2025).
  • The Workforce Center supports employers through job description reviews, job fairs, and Employee Development Funds for reskilling staff.

She emphasized the importance of early talent pipelines, starting as early as middle school, and stronger integration of military transitions. Her call to businesses: share your required certifications, skills, and career pathways so workforce leaders can align the supply with your demand.

A memorable phrase she used to describe career pathways was:

“Stackable, rackable, and trackable.”

That means building entry-level opportunities where employees can stack new skills, rack them into logical career progressions, and track their growth through certifications and measurable achievements.

“When you look at talent, you need to start manufacturing your own homegrown talent.” – Traci Marques


Resilience and the Customer Treadmill – Grady Cope, Reata Engineering

Grady offered a candid view from contract manufacturing: the economy is uneven—some sectors are booming (defense), while others slow (medical equipment after COVID stockpiling).

His lessons learned:

  • Treat business like a treadmill—you can’t step off customer development without consequences.
  • Don’t stop looking for new customers during good times.
  • In downturns, survival comes down to resilience, persistence, and putting customer service first.

As Grady put it: “When everything’s going good, all vendors look the same. When times get tough, that’s when the true partners show their colors.”


Balancing Costs and Opportunities – Jackie Sopko, Burro

Jackie spoke from a consumer-facing perspective. Her company imports raw materials, making them vulnerable to tariffs and fluctuating shipping costs. Pricing stability has been a constant challenge.

On the opportunity side, demand is growing thanks to the “Make America Healthy” movement, which has boosted interest in Burro’s personal water filtration systems. To stay competitive, they’ve leaned into AI tools for customer service and market strategy.

Her focus: balancing cost structure with long-term growth while maintaining customer trust.


Leadership, Accountability, and Culture – Dan Grady, Hercules Industries

Dan closed the panel with a leadership perspective. What keeps him up at night? Not tariffs or logistics—but leadership and accountability.

He stressed that:

  • Culture is more powerful than strategy: “Culture eats strategy for lunch.”
  • Retention isn’t about foosball tables or free lunches; it’s about meaningful work and strong leadership.
  • Leaders must model accountability—even saying “I screwed up” can strengthen trust.

His bottom line: Employees stay when they feel valued, productive, and proud of what they do.


Takeaways

Across perspectives, a few common themes emerged:

  1. Global Opportunity – Colorado has the scale to compete globally, but needs stronger export performance.
  2. Workforce Crisis – Talent pipelines, skills-based hiring, and culture are key to long-term success.
  3. Resilience Matters – Customer service and adaptability define which companies endure downturns.
  4. Tech as a Lever – AI and automation are reshaping even small manufacturers’ ability to compete.

The COMP2025 panel underscored that while challenges are real, the future of manufacturing in Colorado is one of opportunity—if companies are willing to adapt, lead with accountability, and think beyond borders.


Monumental Impact’s Role

At Monumental Impact, we see these insights as a call to action. Our mission is to enable local entrepreneurs and innovators to bring their product ideas to life by providing access to prototyping equipment, technical mentoring, and a supportive community of peers.

We want to empower entrepreneurial makers like Gino DePolo—who brings unique creative products to life (read his story)—as well as entrepreneurs aiming to take their products toward eventual batch production.

We welcome others to get involved and join us in our mission of building opportunities for innovation, collaboration, and community growth in the Pikes Peak region.


Personal Connections and Thanks

A special thank you to Ken Rayment and Ben Helmreich of Better Process for taking time to indulge me in a conversation about my own maker project — a LEGO sorter. Conversations like these capture the spirit of COMP2025: sharing ideas, solving problems, and connecting across industries.

We also extend gratitude to Doug Rhoda (LinkedIn) for his keynote insights on mentoring, internships, and company culture — and to Christian Atkins, one of the first interns with Doug’s team and who is now a full-time employee with them at Vectis Automation. Their story illustrates the power of cultivating talent and investing in people.

Finally, a big thank you to Batina Aloisi and her team for organizing COMP2025. Their work in bringing together manufacturers, economic development, and community leaders made these conversations — and the connections that will follow — possible.

Monumental Impact to Attend COMP2025 — Exploring Local Manufacturing to Empower Future Innovators

Monumental Impact to Attend COMP2025 — Exploring Local Manufacturing to Empower Future Innovators

Palmer Lake, CO – September 29, 2025 – Monumental Impact is excited to announce our attendance at the inaugural COMP2025 – Colorado Manufacturing Partners Expo, taking place Wednesday, October 1, 2025, at the DoubleTree by Hilton in Colorado Springs. Organized by Batina Aloisi, this premier event will gather manufacturers, suppliers, and industry leaders from across Colorado for a full day of connection and collaboration.


Building Stronger Ties Between Makers and Manufacturers

While we won’t have a booth at the event, members of the Monumental Impact team will be on-site to visit manufacturers, build relationships, and explore local capabilities that could benefit our growing community of students and entrepreneurial members.

Our goal? To better understand what Colorado-based manufacturers and suppliers offer — and how those services and capabilities can support student innovation, community projects, and entrepreneurship programs based out of Monumental Impact.


Discovering Collaboration Opportunities Through Programs

Monumental Impact’s internship and entrepreneurship programs give high school and college students hands-on experience in real-world environments. At COMP2025, we look forward to learning how our community members might contribute to the local manufacturing ecosystem — and how we can bring real value to companies through:

  • CAD design and prototyping support
  • Light fabrication and 3D printing
  • Content creation and digital services
  • Project-based collaboration and documentation

We’re excited to meet companies interested in tapping into young talent and community-driven innovation. Even small projects can make a big impact!


Join the Conversation at COMP2025

If you’re attending COMP2025, we’d love to connect — whether in a breakout session, at your booth, or simply while walking the floor. Our team is eager to hear about your work, share what we do at Monumental Impact, and explore how we can support each other’s missions.

We believe in building partnerships that fuel creativity, foster hands-on experiences, and strengthen the future of local manufacturing.


📍 Event Details:

  • Event: COMP2025 – Colorado Manufacturing Partners Expo
  • Date: Wednesday, October 1, 2025
  • Time: 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Location: DoubleTree by Hilton, Colorado Springs
  • Website: comfgpartners.com

Let’s connect, collaborate, and make something monumental — together.