Colorado
Related: About this forumColorado's mountain communities grapple with shortages as wealthier neighbors move-in
Set in a box canyon surrounded by 13,000-foot peaks, Telluride has long appealed to adventure-seekers and vacationers. But as the Covid-19 pandemic drags on, a balance has shifted: Out-of-towners working remotely have moved in, forcing longtime locals out.
In Silverton, a remote town in southern Colorado, workers are living in campers or cars because they cant find homes. Others are forced to commute up to 100 miles over mountain passes to get to work or crowd into one-bedroom apartments to afford rent.
In Telluride, only one or two restaurants were open last summer because there werent enough workers to keep the others going, said Hayley Nenadal, a filmmaker who lives in the historic town known for its challenging ski slopes and annual film festival.
You just dont get coffee anymore, or you just dont go to dinner anymore, or you just dont have a place for your friends to gather anymore, Nenadal said. The large impact people feel is a loss of community and the loss of quality of life.
With the pandemic affecting people and institutions across the U.S. in countless ways, housing has become an inflection point for cities struggling to retain their workforces and local businesses. The issue has long been a challenge in Colorados mountain communities, but the pandemic has pushed it into overdrive, residents and experts say.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/locals-are-priced-colorado-mountain-towns-fight-keep-workers-rcna17970
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When I was a kid and teen, we went to Georgetown in the summer. It was ruined by the interstate and Arapahoe Ski Basin. I hate to think what it is now.
likesmountains 52
(4,175 posts)Jilly_in_VA
(10,886 posts)likesmountains 52
(4,175 posts)A-Basin isn't on I-70 and really has no bearing on Georgetown. Maybe you mean Keystone.
Jilly_in_VA
(10,886 posts)for A-basin for a long time. All the kids I knew worked there during the season.
likesmountains 52
(4,175 posts)The thing that destroyed small town life along I-70 was the tunnel. Before that, you had to negotiate either Loveland or Bethoud Pass to get to most ski areas. When the Eisenhower Tunnel was opened in 1973 all of the ski areas west of Loveland Basin along I-70 became much easier to access. That is what started the boom.
WhiteTara
(30,158 posts)and boohoo that they can't go out and have coffee.
Thomas Hurt
(13,925 posts)The "outsiders" got to Telluride decades ago, well, the first wave anyhow. The entrepreneurial types brought in the ski resort, the festivals, hang gliding competitions, etc. Mountain Village CO didn't even exist until then and became a town in 96.
Worker shortages are nothing new to CO ski resorts either. So I am scratching my head at why this article implies this something puzzling to people there. I think they call it progress.
LakeArenal
(29,797 posts)It means quality housing. Big enough housing. Commutable housing. The ability to pay for the real needs of a family. Not just what is affordable.
cilla4progress
(25,901 posts)inequality. It boils down to.
keithbvadu2
(40,100 posts)Boebert could open a restaurant there.
The girls (staff) could live upstairs.
2naSalit
(92,677 posts)Around Yellowstone 15 years ago. Now the tourist traps are complaining that they can't get workers because there's no place for them to sleep.