Denver Economy newsletter
Today's top economy stories from The Denver Post
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Colorado restaurants and their suppliers have a new worry this year: tariffs

Restaurants have been testing the breaking point of customers as they cope with higher food and beverage costs, higher labor costs and higher real estate and utility costs.

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Latino-owned small businesses are growing quickly. This Colorado organization is showing them the way.

In Colorado, more than 90,000 small businesses are Hispanic-owned, with Hispanics making up 20% of the state’s workforce and nearly 14% of its business owners.

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Egg prices continue to hit records as Easter and Passover approach, but some relief may be coming

The bird flu continues to run rampant.

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Tenants sue landlord of Denver’s Cedar Run Apartments — site of a recent ICE raid — over “unsafe” conditions

Cedar Run Apartments in Denver has made local headlines in recent years after an ICE raid took place in February and residents organized a protest against poor living conditions in 2023.

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US inflation cooled last month, though trade war threatens to lift prices

Donald Trump’s tariffs are widely expected to keep prices elevated in the coming months.

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Denver Pavilions “in a tenuous situation” with loan coming due

The property’s $85 million loan must be paid off in July.

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Millions of dollars in arts funding for Denver could have dried up. Here’s why it didn’t.

Outgoing SCFD leader Deborah Jordy talks pandemic wins, and the need for constant vigilance.

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Explainer: What’s a recession and why is rising anxiety about it roiling markets?

For now, the economy appears to be stable.

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Anti-price-gouging bill gets watered down, passes Colorado House

The Colorado House passed a bill Monday that would curtail sudden price increases — but only after limiting the measure to when the governor has issued a disaster declaration.

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Meati Foods shutting down its Thornton plant and laying off 150 workers

The company, founded in 2016, blames lenders for taking its cash reserves.

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