This Week in Longmont: May 25-31, 2026
If you are making plans around town this week, there are a few important schedule changes and several community events worth putting on your calendar. From Memorial Day closures and adjusted trash pickup to free wellness programming, live music downtown, genealogy help at the library, and a brand-new city newsletter, there’s a full week of Longmont eve ahead.
This roundup is here to make it easy to stay on top of what is happening in Longmont, Colorado, and to help you avoid missing the practical details that matter most.
Table of Contents
- Memorial Day city closures and service changes
- Free wellness activity at the library on Friday, May 29
- Live music returns with Longmont’s Free Summer Kickoff Concert
- Free genealogy help at the library on Saturday, May 30
- A new city newsletter is launching: This Is Longmont
- Youth golf lessons, pool openings, and powerline safety
- Where to find the latest Longmont updates
- What this week says about summer in Longmont
- Quick weekly summary
- FAQ
Memorial Day city closures and service changes
The first thing to know this week is that most City of Longmont facilities will be closed on Monday, May 25 in observance of the Memorial Day holiday.
Holiday closures can affect everything from in-person service counters to recreation schedules and other city operations, so if you need to take care of city business, it is a good idea to plan ahead and handle it before the holiday or wait until facilities reopen.
Memorial Day is, of course, more than a date on the calendar. It is a time set aside to remember and honor those who died while serving in the United States military. Across the country, communities mark the day in different ways, but at the local level it often also means adjusted public service schedules. For Longmont residents, the key operational detail this year is simple: many city buildings will not be open on Monday.
If you are unsure whether a specific facility is open, it can help to check the city website before heading out. Municipal holiday schedules commonly affect places such as:
- Administrative offices
- Public service counters
- Select recreation or cultural facilities
- Library and program schedules
Because service levels can vary by department, checking ahead is always the safest move, especially on holiday weeks.
Trash pickup will be delayed by one day
Along with facility closures, trash collection will shift one day later than normal. If your usual pickup day falls on or after Memorial Day, expect service to happen one day later during the week.
That is a small change, but it is one of the easiest details to overlook. Setting carts out on the wrong day can lead to missed pickup and a frustrating wait until the following collection cycle. A quick reminder on your phone or calendar can save a hassle.
If you are new to holiday collection schedules, here is the basic pattern:
- Monday routes typically move to Tuesday
- Tuesday routes typically move to Wednesday
- Wednesday routes typically move to Thursday
- Thursday routes typically move to Friday
- Friday routes may shift to Saturday, depending on local operations
For the most current local service information, residents can always check official city updates at longmontcolorado.gov.
Free wellness activity at the library on Friday, May 29
Longmont Public Library will host a free wellness activity with staff from Clinica Family Health & Wellness on Friday, May 29. This is the kind of community offering that reflects what local public spaces do best: they bring together trusted organizations, accessible programming, and practical support in a welcoming setting.
Libraries today are far more than places to check out books. They are community hubs, learning centers, and gathering places where people can explore new interests, build skills, and connect with local resources. Partner events with healthcare and wellness organizations are a natural extension of that role.
Clinica Family Health & Wellness is known throughout Colorado for providing healthcare and related services to communities across the region. If you want to learn more about the organization itself, you can visit Clinica Family Health & Wellness.
This activity is a low-pressure way to:
- Learn something useful about personal or family well-being
- Take part in a healthy activity close to home
- Connect with community-based health resources
- Spend time at the library in a new and engaging way
Live music returns with Longmont’s Free Summer Kickoff Concert
Ready for live music? Friday also brings one of the most energetic items on the calendar: Downtown Longmont’s Free Summer Kickoff Concert at Fourth and Kimbark on May 29.
The featured acts are Jakarta and Face Vocal Band, a pairing that promises a lively evening in the heart of downtown. Free community concerts like this are more than entertainment. They help define the season, bring people together outdoors, and remind everyone just how much energy downtown Longmont can hold once summer starts to settle in.
Check out this free concert for all kinds of summer moments:
- Meeting up with friends after work
- Taking the family out for an evening downtown
- Discovering local and touring performers
- Supporting activity in the city center
- Enjoying a festive community atmosphere without the cost of a ticket
If you are not familiar with the acts, Face Vocal Band is widely recognized for high-energy a cappella performance. The group has built a strong following in Colorado and beyond. More about the group is available at facevocalband.com.
Even if you come mainly for the atmosphere, events like this serve a bigger purpose in city life. Downtown performances invite residents into shared space. They support nearby businesses. They add rhythm to the civic calendar. And they create those simple seasonal memories that tend to stick, like hearing music float down the street on a warm Friday night.
For anyone exploring local business and event activity in the area, downtown districts often play a major role in community identity and economic vitality. Organizations like the International Downtown Association offer a bigger-picture look at why public events and active downtown spaces matter so much.
Free genealogy help at the library on Saturday, May 30
If your idea of a good weekend includes uncovering family stories, solving local history puzzles, or finally making sense of a branch in the family tree, there is something on the calendar for you too. On Saturday, May 30, from 10 a.m. to noon, the library will offer free genealogy help.
This kind of assistance can be incredibly useful whether you are a complete beginner or someone who has already spent hours digging through names, dates, and records. Genealogy research often starts with a few simple facts and quickly becomes more complicated. Library support can help point people toward the right tools and save time.

Researching family history has become increasingly popular because it offers something both personal and practical. It can help people:
- Understand family connections across generations
- Preserve stories before they are lost
- Locate public records and archival resources
- Learn more about migration, heritage, and local history
- Build a documented family tree with greater confidence
Free genealogy help at the library is especially valuable because it combines expert guidance with access to community resources. Libraries often provide research databases, local archives, trained staff or volunteers, and a quiet place to work through complicated searches. A short conversation with someone experienced can unlock the next step in your research much faster than trying to figure everything out alone.
If you want to brush up on genealogy basics before attending, the FamilySearch Wiki is a helpful free reference, and the U.S. National Archives genealogy page provides guidance on common records and search strategies.
Even for people who are only mildly curious, genealogy has a way of becoming unexpectedly meaningful. One record leads to another. A name becomes a story. A date turns into context. A branch of the family you barely knew starts to feel real. That is part of what makes these library sessions so appealing. They are not just about data. They are about connection.
A new city newsletter is launching: This Is Longmont
One of the biggest updates this week is the launch of This Is Longmont, a new city email newsletter described as colorful and shaped by community survey input.
The goal of the newsletter is to help residents stay current on services, events, safety information, recreation opportunities, and seasonal changes without having to search across multiple pages or platforms.
Based on the rollout details, This Is Longmont will be a place to find updates on topics including:
- Drop-in youth golf lessons
- Activity pool openings
- Powerline safety
- Other city news and community information
Why the city newsletter is worth paying attention to
If you have ever found out about a program too late, missed a service update, or learned about an event only after it happened, you already know the value of a consistent local newsletter. It creates a regular rhythm of communication.
In practical terms, subscribing to city updates can help with:
- Tracking holiday schedule changes
- Finding free and low-cost events
- Learning about youth activities and recreation programs
- Staying aware of safety messages
- Understanding what is changing in your community week to week
Youth golf lessons, pool openings, and powerline safety
The new newsletter will also be the place to learn more about several specific topics highlighted this week: drop-in youth golf lessons, activity pool openings, and powerline safety.
Even in a quick weekly update, these subjects stand out because they touch on very different parts of community life. Together, they show how broad local information needs can be.
Drop-in youth golf lessons
Programs like youth golf lessons offer families flexible ways to get kids involved in recreation. The phrase “drop-in” is especially encouraging because it suggests a lower barrier to entry than a long-term class commitment. For parents juggling summer schedules, that kind of flexibility can make a real difference.
Youth recreation programs do more than fill time. They help build confidence, coordination, social skills, and comfort with lifelong activities. Golf, in particular, can be a great introduction to patience, focus, and outdoor movement.
If this is something your family is interested in, keeping an eye on city recreation updates is the best next step.
Activity pool openings
As the weather warms up, pool opening information quickly becomes some of the most useful seasonal news a city can share. Families planning summer routines, kids eager for time in the water, and anyone looking for ways to stay active all benefit from clear schedules and opening dates.
Public pools are more than just a way to cool off. They are major summer gathering places and an important community resource. Knowing when activity pools open helps families plan around camps, work schedules, and weekend outings.
Powerline safety
Powerline safety may not sound as festive as concerts and pools, but it is exactly the kind of information that belongs in a useful city newsletter. Seasonal activity often means more time outdoors, more yard work, more ladders, and more recreation near infrastructure. Timely reminders can help prevent accidents.
For general powerline safety guidance, Safe Electricity offers practical tips, and the Electrical Safety Foundation International is another strong resource for household and outdoor electrical safety information.
This combination of recreation and safety content is exactly why a well-curated local newsletter matters. It keeps the city conversation balanced between fun opportunities and essential awareness.
Where to find the latest Longmont updates
To get more details this week, the city directs residents to longmontcolorado.gov/news and then to scroll down to This Week in Longmont.
That page is the best starting point if you want the official source for current local updates, especially on items that may include changing times, service notes, or extra details not covered in a short weekly summary.
You can visit it directly here: longmontcolorado.gov/news.
It is a smart page to bookmark if you like having one reliable place to check for city announcements. In any given week, that could include:
- Holiday operations information
- Public event reminders
- Library and recreation programming
- Community safety messages
- Announcements tied to seasonal services
Municipal communication works best when it is both centralized and easy to scan. A weekly update page gives residents that quick snapshot without forcing them to dig through multiple departments for basic information.
Weekly Longmont Events Summary
If you want the short version, here is the week at a glance:
- Monday, May 25: Most City of Longmont facilities are closed for Memorial Day.
- Trash service: Pickup happens one day later than usual.
- Friday, May 29: Free wellness activity at the library with Clinica Family Health & Wellness.
- Friday, May 29: Free Summer Kickoff Concert in Downtown Longmont at Fourth and Kimbark featuring Jakarta and Face Vocal Band.
- Saturday, May 30, 10 a.m. to noon: Free genealogy help at the library.
- This week: Launch of the new email newsletter This Is Longmont.
- More info: Visit longmontcolorado.gov/news and scroll to This Week in Longmont.
FAQ
Are City of Longmont facilities open on Memorial Day?
No. Most city facilities will be closed on Monday, May 25, in observance of Memorial Day.
Will trash pickup change during the Memorial Day week in Longmont?
Yes. Trash will be picked up one day later than normal during the holiday week.
What is happening at the Longmont library on May 29?
Staff from Clinica Family Health & Wellness will host a free wellness activity at the library on Friday, May 29.
What live music event is happening in Downtown Longmont on May 29?
Downtown Longmont’s Free Summer Kickoff Concert will take place at Fourth and Kimbark on Friday, May 29, featuring Jakarta and Face Vocal Band.
Is there free genealogy help in Longmont this week?
Yes. The library is offering free genealogy help on Saturday, May 30, from 10 a.m. to noon.
What is This Is Longmont?
This Is Longmont is a new city email newsletter launching this week. It was developed using community survey input and will include updates on topics such as youth golf lessons, activity pool openings, powerline safety, and other city news.
Where can I find official updates for This Week in Longmont?
Visit longmontcolorado.gov/news and scroll down to This Week in Longmont.
Longmont’s week of May 25 through May 31 is a good reminder that local information is most useful when it is timely, practical, and connected to everyday life. This week brings all three. There is important holiday scheduling to note, but there is also plenty to enjoy and explore across the city.

