Boulder Restaurants: The Med — A Classic Boulder Mainstay

Boulder Restaurants: The Med — A Classic Boulder Mainstay

boulder restaurant the med

As far as Boulder restaurants go, when you’ve got a large amount of people in town that you need to get in one room and you want tasty food at a fair price, it’s difficult to find a better choice than The Med. The Mediterranean Restaurant (referred to by most as “The Med”) is located in the heart of downtown Boulderand offers a wide range of (yes, you guessed it) Mediterranean style cuisine.

Most popular for their tapas menu, particularly the happy hour version, The Med gives diners a wide array of choices, from hot to cold (“frios y caliente”), savory to sweet, meat to vegetarian. The actual menus are huge and when you sit down to a table and the server hands you one, it’s a bit overwhelming at first.

Once you pick up a pencil from the table, however, and start marking off what you want — one of this, two of that, etc, you’ll find yourself building out the perfect series of bites just for your taste. With prices under $6 on the happy hour menu, you can feel good about grabbing at least a few options and a drink without breaking the bank.

If I had to pick 3 choices for my perfect happy hour, I’d go with a glass of the house red and:

  • Datiles Con Ajillo – dates wrapped in bacon and baked. Fatty, creamy, sweet, savory goodness.
  • Insalata Caprese – A caprese salad to keep things bring and fresh. Somehow, they manage to keep fresh tomatoes and basil on the menu year round and the mozzarella is delicious.
  • Pinchon Miruno – Skewered, grilled, local Colorado lamb with tzatziki & pita. I always feel like I am getting away with robbery when I get this. At $3.95 per plate, this is a great deal.

Those who might be looking for a bit more substantial fare can order from the dinner menu which offers a selection of salads, entrees, pizzas, paellas and more. My personal favorite off the dinner menu is and always will be the Speziata Pizza. When I first got it, I thought, “Wow, The Med does pizza?” I gave it a try and I am hooked. The Speziata is topped with roasted garlic, grilled chicken, roasted jalapeños, cilantro, avocado and fontina cheese. The avocado really makes this one pop.

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Pending home sales hit 10-month low, services sector rebounds

Pending home sales hit 10-month low, services sector rebounds

Workers assemble Motorola phones at the Flextronics plant that will be building the new Motorola smart phone ''MotoX'' in Fort Worth, Texas September 10, 2013. REUTERS/Mike Stone

(Reuters) – Contracts to buy previously owned U.S. homes hit a 10-month low in October, but a strong rebound in services sector activity early this month suggested some resilience in the economy as the year winds down.

The National Association of Realtors said on Monday its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed last month, slipped 0.6 percent to 102.1, the lowest level since December.

It was the fifth straight month of declines in contracts and suggested home resales could remain on the back foot for the rest of this year. These contracts become sales after a month or two. Home resales fell in October for a second straight month.

“The data suggest sluggish home sales going into the end of the year and that the tightening of financial conditions this summer did have a negative impact,” said Yelena Shulyatyeva, an economist at BNP Paribas in New York.

Economists, who had expected pending home sales to rise 1.3 percent in October, said the weak home sales trajectory could see the Federal Reserve sticking to its $85 billion monthly bond buying program at least until early next year.

The U.S. central bank has targeted housing as a channel to boost growth and speed up job creation.

The Realtors group said October’s 16-day partial shutdown of the federal government had sidelined potential buyers.

According to the NAR, a survey of realtors found 17 percent of respondents reported delays in signing contracts because they had to wait for the Internal Revenue Service to verify income before the mortgage could be approved.

The Realtors group expected a bounce back in contracts, but it cautioned that lack of inventory remained a constraint.

(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani Additional reporting by Ryan Vlastelica in New York; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Boulder Small Business Saturday: Avoid Black Friday and Buy Local

Boulder Small Business Saturday: Avoid Black Friday and Buy Local

boulder Small Business Saturday

In a week, we’ll all be waking up with turkey hangovers and more leftover stuffing than we know what to do with. More than a few of us will swear off pumpkin anything and everything for another year and still others will be nursing the emotional wounds of football losses.

If that weren’t enough, the day after Thanksgiving is also the biggest shopping day of the year. Some of you will drag your sluggish bodies to the local big box store and wait in line in the freezing cold before dawn with the hopes that you’ll be able to score one of this season’s hottest thingamajigs.

I want to offer you an alternative to mass consumption hysteria and early morning buying binges. This year, why not do something different? Why not make the effort to buy local? You can find wonderful gifts for everyone in your family and support small business owners that give back to the community so much more than those gigantic retailers that have their main offices who knows where.

The perfect time to get your local shopping spree going is next Saturday, November 30th, on Small Business Saturday; the local answer to Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Downtown Boulder has put together an exceptional collection of locally owned businesses that are participating in Small Business Saturday and a winter sidewalk sale that extends the entire weekend. Hospitality seo involves strategies to enhance online visibility and attract more guests to hotels and hospitality businesses.

Some of the businesses that are participating include: Boulder Furniture Arts, El Loro, Full Cycle, Kidrobot, MadeLife, Seamless Toy Company, Spruce Confections, Weekends and much more. For a full list of the participating businesses, check the Downtown Boulder website.

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Colorado ranked 25th for foreclosures

Colorado ranked 25th for foreclosures

Bank of America foreclosed on this home in Denver.

Bank of America foreclosed on this home in Denver.

Despite a whopping 56.4 percent jump in foreclosure activity in October from September, Colorado ranked 25th in the nation last month for foreclosure activity, according to a national report released today.

The report by RealtyTrac showed that the month-to-month increase for the U.S. was 2.05 percent in October.

On a year-over-year basis, however, foreclosure activity in Colorado is down 61.6 percent, compared with a 28.2 percent drop for the entire country.

One out of every 1,454 households was in some level of foreclosure activity in October, according to RealtyTrac, compared with one out of every 978 household for the nation.

Colorado did move up five places in RealtyTrac’s ranking from September, when it was 30th.

There were a total of 1,512 foreclosure filings in Colorado in Colorado, which is 1.12 percent of the 133,919 filings for the U.S. last month.

Nationally, Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac, said lenders have every incentive to move homes through the foreclosure process as quickly as possible.

Read entire article here

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Foreclosures fall 46%

Foreclosures fall 46%

Foreclosure filings  plummeted 46.1 percent in Colorado during the first nine months of 2013, compared with the first nine months of 2012, according to a state report released today.

The report by the Colorado Division of Housing, showed there were 12,341 foreclosure filings reported from January through September of 2013, compared to 22,894 during the same period of last year.

Foreclosure auction sales, or completed foreclosures, also fell significantly over the same period, dropping 36.9 percent from 2012’s January-September total of 12,143 to this year’s total of 7,667 for the same period.

Both foreclosure filings and foreclosure auction sales during the third quarter of 2013 were at the lowest quarterly totals collected in any quarter since the Division began tracking quarterly totals in 2007.

“This foreclosure cycle has largely wound down,” said Ryan McMaken, economist for the Colorado Division of Housing. “We’re looking at a nine- or ten-year low in foreclosure totals for the year.”

All of the state’s 12 metropolitan counties reported year-over-year declines in both foreclosure filings totals and foreclosure auction sales totals for the first nine months of 2013, when compared to the same period of last year.

The counties with the largest declines in foreclosure filings were Douglas County and Broomfield Countywith drops of 53.4 percent and 51.4 percent, respectively.

Only three of the state’s 64 counties reported year-over-year increases in foreclosure filings so far this year, and they were smaller counties with fewer than 50 total foreclosure filings in each county.

When adjusted for population size, the counties with the highest foreclosure rates were all found outside the metropolitan areas. The top five counties for the proportion of homes that were in foreclosure during the third quarter were Grand, Sedgwick, Saguache, Lincoln, and San Juan counties.

“Forty percent drops in foreclosure filings were typical all along the Front Range this past quarter,” McMaken said. “And the declines in foreclosures have been seen in every region of the state this year.”

RealtyTrac also  released a report an October report on foreclosures today, showing a similar trend. Read entire article here

 

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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DHA gets $500K for Sun Valley

DHA gets $500K for Sun Valley

A look at what Sun Valley could be.

A look at what Sun Valley could be.

The Denver Housing Authority has been awarded a federal grant of $500,000 to help revitalize Sun Valley, Denver’s poorest neighborhood.

The average household income is only $8,000 in the 30-acre, 333-unit project originally constructed in 1950.

U.S. Housing Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan announced on Friday that Sun Valley is one of nine communities across the U.S. that will receive a Choice Neighborhood Grant.

The $4.37 million awarded to all of the communities are to be used to craft comprehensive, community-driven plans to revitalize and transform public or other HUD-assisted housing and distressed neighborhoods.

Sun Valley is the “most isolated and distressed housing asset,” in DHA’s portfolio, the authority said in its application for the HUD grant.

“The residents of Sun Valley Homes and the neighboring federally subsidized housing, Decatur Place, earn the lowest incomes in Denver,” noting that 85 percent of the residents live below the poverty line.

“This neighborhood is also challenged by disproportionately high crime rates and limited access to surrounding communities as it is landlocked by the local professional football stadium, light industrial parks, interstate highways, and the South Platte River,” according to DHA.

However, the enclave in the shadow of Sports Authority Field, already is benefitting from the opening of the FasTracks West Corridor light rail line earlier this year, which links it to Denver and western suburbs.

“Sun Valley Homes and its surrounding community hold enormous potential for redevelopment,” DHA noted.

Map showing the Sun Valley area.

Map showing the Sun Valley area.

The goal of DHA is three-pronged:

  • Housing: Replace distressed public and assisted housing with high-quality mixed-income housing that is well-managed and responsive to the needs of the surrounding neighborhood.
  • People: Improve educational outcomes and intergenerational mobility for youth and supports delivered directly to youth and their families;
  • Neighborhood: Create the conditions necessary for public and private reinvestment in distressed neighborhoods to offer the kinds of amenities and assets, including safety, good schools, and commercial activity, that are important to families’ choices about their community.

DHA will be the master developer and Design Workshop is the planning coordinator.

Bringing mixed-use developments to Sun Valley is a goal of the DHA.

Bringing mixed-use developments to Sun Valley is a goal of the DHA.

The total project cost is $1.3 million.

The nine winning communities were chosen from 52 applicants.

“Through this investment, HUD is providing the resources for local leaders to transform neighborhoods into thriving communities where families will choose to live,” said Donovan.

The Choice Neighborhoods Initiative represents the next generation in a movement toward revitalizing entire neighborhoods by providing critically needed funding to support locally-driven economic development solutions in these areas.”

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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AG’s office sues air-duct cleaning operation

 

AG’s office sues air-duct cleaning operation

Colorado Attorney General John Suthers

Colorado AttorneyGeneral John Suthers

Colorado Attorney General John Suthers announced today that a civil lawsuit was filed and obtained a temporary restraining order against the owners of  duct-cleaning companies and the companies themselves, which operated under several different name.

Suthers took the actions again Andre Shatyko, 27, Alexander Kurdyukov 26 and their air duct cleaning companies: Seabreeze Air, LLC;  Seabreeze Air; Quality Air; Quality Air “LLC”; and Fresh Air, LLC.

They are accused of advertising their cleaning services for very low prices, only to significantly increase their prices once inside a customer’s homes. This business model violates the Colorado Consumer Protection Act.

“Along with misrepresenting their prices, the defendants also perform shoddy, incomplete work using inadequate tools that leaves dust and debris in consumers’ ductwork and sometimes causes damage to homes,” Suthers said.

“Based on consumer complaints, defendants sometimes leave homes in worse shape than before service was performed,” Suthers continued.

According to the complaint, Shatyko and Kurdyukov advertised their companies’ services for as little as $34.95 in coupon books such as ValPak and online sites such as Groupon and Living Social.

By marketing their services through Groupon and Living Social, consumers paid for vouchers upfront.

This matter will be heard in Denver District Court.

Consumers should be wary of companies whose promises seem too good to be true and are encouraged to file complaints if they feel they’ve been victimized with the Office’s Consumer Protection Section.

Consumers may report issues by calling 800-222-4444 or by clicking:www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov/complaints.

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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The Benefits of Home Ownership

The Benefits of Home Ownership

Plain and simple, owning a home can improve your quality of life, provide stability and give you a sense of control you just can’t get from renting. You have a place to live when you rent, but buying is something much deeper – and better.

The intangibles are tough to measure, but there are other benefits you can quantify:

Financial investment:
Your monthly mortgage payment creates equity for you, not your landlord.

The interest on your mortgage is a tax deduction:
While this isn’t a reason in itself to buy a home, it’s nice to get a break at tax time.

Fixed monthly housing payment:
If you opt for a fixed-rate mortgage, the monthly rate of your mortgage won’t change for the length of the term.

Look for a house you can stay in long-term; one that will “grow” with your family and needs. The financial benefits of owning increase over time.

Tax-free gain:
When it’s time to sell your home, you don’t pay taxes on the proceeds of the sale that are above what you paid (with some restrictions – see information on capital gains).

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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RE/MAX CEO bullish on housing

RE/MAX CEO bullish on housing

 

Margaret Kelly

Margaret Kelly

Margaret Kelly, CEO of Denver-based RE/MAX, is bullish on housing.

“Overall, we are in the early stages of a multi-year sustainable housing recovery which is based on an improving economy, increase in job growth, decrease in the unemployment rate, pent up demand for housing from all four generations, and an increase in household formation and immigration,” Kelly told Wall Street analystson a conference call last week, the first since the company, founded in Denver, went public in October.

“So with home sales rising, affordability in check, supply starting to normalize and mortgage rates still well below the 40-year average, we believe we will continue to see positive momentum in the real estate market,” she said.

Kelly said typical agent at RE/MAX has an average of 13 years in the business and they handle an average of 17.1 transactions per agent, “by far the highest of the national brands,” Kelly said.

RE/MAX last week reported $7.7 million drop in net income in the third quarter, a 37.9 percent drop from the $12.4 million in the third quarter of 2012.

Snapshot of net income at RE/MAX.

Snapshot of net income at RE/MAX.

Dave Metzger, the chief operating officer and chief financial officer, said there were a number of one-time costs such asrefinancing debt.

A snapshot of RE/MAX.

A snapshot of RE/MAX.

“Since there were a number of onetime expenses and non-cash items this quarter, it’s important for us to look at adjusted net income,” he said, which at $9.4 million was flat from a year earlier.

Kelly noted that the number of Realtors nationally peaked at about 1.4 million and now stands at about a million.

In the “heat of the market,” (prior to the Great Recession) “quite honestly, anybody thought they could sell a home and make a commission,” she said. “And I think people who jumped into the real estate business really didn’t understand it.”

The remaining real estate associates “are the survivors,” she said.

Kelly said that the biggest growth areas for RE/MAX recently have been Texas, Florida and California.

“Interestingly, most of those were some of the hardest hit in the recession and we are seeing the most growth come from that. Those three areas are also company-owned,” Kelly said

RE/MAX was founded in Denver 40 years ago by David and Gail Liniger. RE/MAX, with a market cap of about $850 million, trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol RMAX.

To read the entire transcript, please go to Seeking Alpha.

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

Search all Boulder homes for sale 

Nine indicted for Foreclosure fraud

Nine indicted for Foreclosure fraud

A statewide grand jury in Colorado has indicted nine individuals for targeting distressed homeowners as part of an alleged fraudulent short-sale scheme that allowed the defendants to ultimately defraud the banks and lenders who held the mortgages for the distressed homeowners, officials announced today.

Eight of the nine named defendants are being charged under the Colorado Organized Crime Control Act for a pattern of manipulating homeowners who were facing foreclosure, creating and processing forged and fraudulent documents relating to the properties, and ultimately using these forged documents and other actions to defraud the lenders and subsequent buyers.

The announcement was made by Colorado Attorney General John Suthers; Ronald Sloan, Director of Colorado Bureau of Investigation; Inspector General David Montoya of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development-Office of Inspector General; Acting Inspector General Michael P. Stephens of the U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency-Office of Inspector General, and Marcia Waters, Division Director of the Colorado Division of Real Estate.

“It is unconscionable that this group would target financially distressed and vulnerable homeowners by fraudulently taking control of and selling their properties, with the ultimate goal of defrauding the homeowners’financial institutions and the subsequent homeowners.” Suthers said.

“Nine indicted for fraud by fraudulently taking control of and selling their properties, with the ultimate goal of defrauding the homeowners’ financial institutions and the subsequent homeowners,” Suthers continued. “This group took advantage of multiple homeowners, using deception and forged documents, to create illegal profits on the sale of various properties.”

The basic premise of the scheme focused on identifying distressed homeowners who were in pre-foreclosure status.

Once a property was zeroed in on by members of this scheme, the goal was to obtain control and ownership over the property through a series of deceptive tactics.

These tactics included manipulating the homeowners to sign over ownership and control of the property to the enterprise. At the same time, the enterprise would file forged paperwork with the lenders misrepresenting that the original homeowners still owned the house. Another tactic used in support of the scheme was the enterprise’s “flopping”of the pre-foreclosed properties.

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation is committed to combating organized white collar crime including schemes such as this short sale mortgage fraud scam,” said CBI Director Ronald Sloan. “While fraudulent schemes continually evolve, we believe active monitoring and investigation, along with aggressive prosecution that holds offenders accountable for their actions, combined with efforts to educate the public, will result in fewer victims in the future.”

“The nine individuals named in this indictment have allegedly committed fraud against individual victims and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,” said Acting Inspector General Michael P. Stephens. “This behavior is unacceptable and anyone found guilty will be held accountable to the full extent of the law.”

Wendy Thomas, 42, of Chicago, previously of Thornton; Cristina Nicole Smith, 42, of Thornton, Kurt Smith, 58, of Thornton; Sheila Gaston, 59, of Elizabeth; Sheila Giberti, 46, of Broomfield; Duane Thomas, 44, of Thornton; Christopher Consol, 43, of Englewood; and Janice Gardner, 46, of Brighton, were charged with multiple offenses, including violating the Colorado Organized Crime Control Act. Under COCCA, if convicted, each could be sentenced up to 24 years per count.

 

The best resource available to consumers facing foreclosure, according to the attorney general’s office, is the Colorado Foreclosure Hotline, which can be reached at 1-877-601-HOPE (4673).

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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