Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Illinois considers health insurance for all residents

Illinois, home to 1.8 million unisured people, may try to extend medical coverage to all residents.

The current debate began with the passage of the Health Care Justice Act in 2004, which stated that "it is a policy goal of the state of Illinois to insure that all residents have access to quality health care at costs that are affordable."

The Act also started a process to include public comment on health care issues throughout the state and now, a new 29-member task force plans to deliver a report on various reform proposals to the legislature as early as August. The report will comment on a wide range of options, including expanding Medicaid to cover more low-income adults, providing health insurance subsidies or tax incentives to small businesses, and letting the uninsured buy coverage through new insurance pools, several task force members said.

The question now is, can the 'Fighting Illini' avoid the mud-wrestling of competing special interests that have halted health reform efforts in other states and at the federal level?

Read the article in the Chicago Tribune

Monday, February 27, 2006

Wal-Mart unveils plans to expand health benefits

Wal-Mart plans to expand its $11-a-month health care plan to at least half its employees by next year. That plan costs less than half the price of Wal-Mart's other coverage plans, is available only in certain stores and is the result of special deals with medical providers.Additionally, the company said it will shorten the time it takes for part-time workers to qualify for coverage, and will expand those benefits to include their children for 30 cents more per day.

Currently, part-time workers must work two years before qualifying for benefits, and their children are not eligible.

Maryland recently became the first state to require Wal-Mart to
increase its health care spending or pay the difference to the state's
Medicaid fund. The law is being challenged by the Retail Industry
Leaders Association. At least 22 states, including Colorado, are considering similar bills.

Wal-Mart is Colorado and the nation's largest private employer (over 1 million employees).

Read the full article in the Denver Post

Quote of note - Health care

"The soaring cost of health care in America cannot be sustained over the long term by any business that offers health benefits to its employees."



Wal-Mart chief executive Lee Scott
Annual meeting of the National Governors Association

Read full article in Denver Post
Read text of speech

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Cost of living in Aspen 300 percent higher than the national average

A new study, based on a data collected by the American Chamber of Commerce Researchers Association and the city of Aspen, shows that the cost of living in Aspen is more than 300 percent higher than the national average. The study takes into account prices for groceries, housing, utilities, health care, transportation and miscellaneous goods and services.

Housing was by far the greatest expense in Aspen, with costs soaring 951 percent above the national average.That figure was decreased significantly for residents of Aspen's subsidized employee housing, although their housing cost was still 23 percent above the national average and their overall cost of living 32.75 percent higher than the rest of the country.

Aspen's cost of living was about 42 percent higher than Vail's, 156 percent higher than Breckenridge's and 206 percent greater than Steamboat Springs.

As the cost of living in Aspen continues to rise, a community where a permanent, year-round workforce can afford to live becomes increasinly difficult to maintain.

"The critical element to solving the [housing] problem is recognizing the cost," said Pitkin County Commissioner Mick Ireland. "It really has to do with the outside demand for real estate, which you can't control. A larger number of baby boomers have more money and are more inclined to buy second homes, and all that demand pushes up real estate costs. So you don't fix the problem by saying, 'Let's build more housing, then the price will go down.' There are more baby boomers out there than we can feed."

Instead, Ireland points to Aspen's affordable housing program as a successful system that gives the local non-millionaires a way to buy a home.

"That has put a damper on price increase and made some opportunities for people to stay here who we would have otherwise lost," explained Ireland.

Read the full article in the Aspen Daily News

The Steamboat Springs adopts inclusionary zoning

The Steamboat Springs City Council approved an inclusionary zoning ordinance requiring developers in most areas of the city to make 15 percent of residential units affordable.The affordability of the units will come from a deed restriction based on Routt County's annual median income, which was last calculated at $72,700 for a family of four. Affordable units would go to families making 60 percent to 120 percent of the AMI, with an income average of 90 percent.

There is also the option of developers paying a fee in lieu of providing the units at the discretion of the City Council.

The Council will discuss a "no net loss" provision that would require that redevelopments replace demolished affordable units in the coming months.

Read the full article in the Steamboar Pilot

Friday, February 17, 2006

Garfield County a seller's market

Many locals know the challenges of finding an affordable home in the Roaring Fork Valley. Now it looks like the traditional stock of affordable housing in the Colorado Valley is in short supply as well. Houses less than $200,000 are sparse at best in Rifle, Parachute and Battlement Mesa, and it's rare for those homes to be on the market more than a week.

Garfield County is close to completing a housing needs assessment that will offer more details on the housing market in the county and examine options for fostering affordable housing.

Read the full article by Bobby Magill
in the Post Independent [January 19, 2006]

Legislating health benefits from large corporations

State Rep. Judy Solano, D-Brighton has introduced a bill that would force large Colorado employers to pay 11 percent of wages toward health care costs hand over the difference to Medicaid.The bill is an adaptation of Maryland's recently adopted law requiring employers with over 10,000 employees to spend at least 8% of payroll costs on employee health benefits

House Bill 1316 maybe targeting target Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, which employs 25,380 in Colorado, but all businesses firms with 3,500 or more workers would also have to comply -- including King Soopers, Centura Health, Safeway, HCA- HealthOne, Exempla Health, IBM and the University of Denver. All government agencies would be exempt.

Similar bills are being considered in 30 states.

Read Rachel Brand's article in the Rocky Mountain News
[February 9, 2006]

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Denver goes solar

The city of Denver is seeking out companies to build a new municipally-owned solar power plant that would generate enough electricity to provide power to more than 1,000 homes.

The plant would be built at an industrial portion of the new urbanist Stapleton development. The plant will be one of the first municipally-owned power plants in an urban area in the nation. Revenue from selling energy to Xcel Energy will provide more than enough money to pay for construction and maintenance of the plant.Read the full article

Be a ski mogul for only $50 million

Sunlight Mountain Resort, just southwest of Glenwood Springs, is for sale and the potential for change to the small ski area and the surrounding area is enormous. Sunlight sits up a windy, close to capacity, two-lane road outside of town . It is one of Colorado's most affordable ski areas, with daily lift tickets that cost $39 this winter, compared with $78 at nearby resorts like Aspen. Although a narrow, rural valley, the land at Sunlight's base is zoned for up to 780 residential units and a retail village (small Snowmass Village anyone?). An adjacent 1,317-acre parcel is also for sale, along with water rights for substantial development.

Sunlight also holds U.S. Forest Service permits that would allow it to add 2,000-plus acres of skiable terrain.The ski area has been owned by a group of 32 investors since 1992. They decided last fall to sell the property instead of investing the more than $10 million needed to update its infrastructure. The listing price is $50 million.

Read the full article

There goes the neighborhood

A moose is on the loose in Garfield County - again.

Given the number of sightings in the area recently, either moose like what they see in the county or someone is giving them muffins. The most recent moose sighting is of an animal that is part of the population reintroduced to the Grand Mesa (hence yellow tag with number 12 on its ear). The reintroduction program began early last year. Read the full article

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

To annex or not to annex? That is the question

More than 1,000 Telluridians(?) took their flowers and chocolate to the polls on Valentine's Day and voted 603-439 not annex but to move toward condemnation and purchase of the Valley Floor at the entrance to town.

The annexation option was to continue into further annexation proceedings with the San Miguel Valley Corporation, the current owner of the 793 acre property. The Telluride Town Council, had unanimously supported a "Yes" vote to continuing negotiations since the preliminary annexation agreement would have preserved 91% of the property in a conservation easement ensuring public access.But the proposal also included development of a parcel along the highway into town and the large meadow would be split in two by 22 multi-million dollars homes - a sore spot with many voters. The community now faces a fundraising effort to purchase the property (recently valued at $48 million) after a valuation trial . Telluride has already raised about half that amount.

Read the full article . . .

Monday, February 13, 2006

La Plata health district takes final step toward ballot

La Plata County Commissioners approved placing a question to form and fund a county-wide health district. The district would serve as a funding agency to increase access to primary care, enhance mental-health services,and improve preventive-care services. The ballot question would include a 1.7 mill levy to fund the district and the election of a seven-member board of directors. A district judge will set the election date in the coming weeks.

Read the full article in the Durango Herald

Thursday, February 9, 2006

Land rush for affordable lots in Aspen

The last official land rush in the U.S. took place in Oklahoma in 1893, but the tradition lives, albeit in a more organized fashion, in some western communities.

175 people recently submitted applications to be one of seven lot owners in Aspen-Pitkin County Housing Authority's upcoming lottery. Five resident-occupied lots are priced at $150,000 and two are are priced at $119,400. Lot buyers can begin construction in July. Houses may be up to 2,200 square feet, plus a 500-square-foot garage. Construction costs for each of the five resident-occupied lots cannot exceed $640,000, and costs for the Category 6 lots are capped at $428,100.

The 2003 median sales price for home in aspen in 2003 was $3.18 million.

Read the full article in the Aspen Times

Next developer please?

The Bair Chase golf development south of Glenwood Springs has gone belly up again and this time it took a historic barn and elk winter haunt with it. PlainsCapital Bank of Austin, Texas, which holds the deed of trust to the land, has filed for foreclosure and sale of the property.The 280-acre property has been mired incontroversy since it come before the Garfield County Planning Commission as a 500 houses / 18-hole golf course / 700,000 square feet of commercial development PUD. That plan was eventualy denied by the County Commissioners at a late meeting after dozens of citizens had spoken against the project. The property then changed hands to a company the eventually filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

The most recent approval for the property included 62 single-family lots and 168 multifamily units surrounding an 18-hole golf course. Earthwork began on the ranch last summer, leveling the historic barn and tearing up the hay field that a couple hundred elk used during the winter, apparently before the permanent financing became permanent. Recently a Bull elk was a seen standing on top of a man-made hill on the property, apperently wondering what is going on.

Read the full article in the Post Independent

Wednesday, February 8, 2006

Just exactly are we going?

With the economy returning to flex its muscle like it did during the mid-1990s, many of Colorado' mountain communities are concerned about where grwoth is taking them and want more clarity of vision. To wit, Our Future Summit is hosting a forum on "Creating a Common Vision: What Is Your Preferred Future for Summit County?" from 7-9 p.m. Thursday, February 9th at the Summit County Community and Senior Center near Frisco.In preparation for the forum, the group seeks viewpoints from a broad spectrum of the community and would appreciate the benefit of your perspective. You can submit your vision for the future of Summit County by logging on to http://www.ourfuturesummit.org/Misson%20Survey.html

Read the full article in the Summit Daily News

Pitkin County caps size of McMansions

Pitkin County officials clamped down on monster homes Tuesday, agreeing to limit mansions to 15,000 square feet.The decision came at the land-use code revision meeting between the Board of County Commissioners and the Planning and Zoning Commission, and means that the construction of compounds the size of Saudi Arabian Prince Bandar's 55,000-square-foot palace will be forbidden once the new law takes effect later this year.

According to Cindy Houben, the community development director, one to two submittals are made annually for homes exceeding 15,000 square feet, which is roughly the size of the Pitkin County Courthouse.

The maximum square footage permitted for a home in Pitkin County, precluding the purchase of transferable development rights (TDRs) or meeting growth management requirements, is 5,750 square feet. Before the revision adoption, there was no cap on the size of a house.

The land-use code revision is an ongoing process between the BOCC and P in an effort to update current code.

Revision meetings will continue into March, and dates and times can be found on the county Web site at aspenpitkin.com.

Read the full article in the Aspen Daily News

Real estate records fall in 2005

A record $725 million in real estate changed hands in Tellluride last year -- $100 million more than in 2004 (a 17 percent jump despite the number of transactions in the county only increasing from 855 to 884, an increase of 4 percent).The average price for a single-family home in Telluride was $1.49 million; in Mountain Village, the average price was $3.2 million,

Read the article in the Telluride Daily Planet

Friday, February 3, 2006

Melbourne plans to "drive" cars from city centre



Under Melbourne City Council's draft strategy, cars will be "driven" out of the city in favour of public transport and bicycles under a radical new council strategy that abandons plans for a multibillion-dollar cross-city tunnel and suggests slashing speed limits in the central business district.The strategy calls on the State Government to invest heavily in improved train, tram and bus routes, as well as lobbying for off-peak tolls on major roads to spread peak-hour demand.

An average of 640,000 people visit the city each weekday, with that number forecast to rise to 1 million by 2014. Almost half of those commuters travel into the city by car.

Read the full article . . .