Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jul 2014 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2014 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Meredith C. Carroll Page: 23A COLORADO GROWN, COLORADO PROUD ... OR ELSE? Some communities embrace outsiders as insiders from the second they pass Go. Plenty of people are considered real New Yorkers, for instance, the first time a cabbie or landlord overcharges them. Visit Florida, California or Washington, and chances are you'll eat authentic Latin American or Asian cuisine made and served by people not necessarily native to those states but who are still considered a critical part of their fabric and character. In September, I'll celebrate 11 years as a resident of Colorado. I met my husband, who just passed the 17-year mark in the Centennial State, six weeks after I moved here. Our children were born in a hospital 1.3 miles from the house that we own, and our income is earned within state lines. Yet by unspoken Colorado standards, neither he nor I are considered locals. We're not alone, as earning your Colorado-local stripes can be complicated. Some farmers markets across the state will only allow vendors with items made, grown and produced in Colorado to set up stands. The best restaurants here are often judged as such because the menu is based on what's available from nearby ranches. Cities in other parts of the country brag about sophisticated or extensive selections of imported wines and cheese. In Colorado, if it wasn't milked, aged or brewed in state, it's probably not a selling point. The Snowmass Village ski area opened in 1967, making it hardly local by Colorado standards. Today, it's a friendly yet tight-knit community of just a few thousand full-time residents. It's never had a downtown area bubbling with charm like nearby Basalt, Redstone or Carbondale, although that's changed somewhat in recent years as the base of the mountain has expanded exponentially with some fabricated charisma, thanks to the New York based uber-developer Related. Outcry was rampant when the Base Village at Snowmass was being constructed, although there was also a fair share of boo-hooing when the Village Market, the town's sole supermarket for 34 years, closed at the end of the ski season. It wasn't nearly the cleanest, least expensive or most expansive market in the area, but the family-owned and locally operated store had a loyal following among its neighbors nonetheless. Its replacement, Clark's Market, opened last Saturday. A 14,000-square-foot store fresh off a $2 million remodel, it oozes sex appeal from the front door in a Whole Foods kind of way and only gets better as you uncover the abundance of artisan and locally sourced products contained therein. Clark's is also a second-generation family-owned and locally operated market, but perhaps the only thing harder to accept in Colorado than a non-local native is change ("Village Market is where life stands," one former resident lovingly bemoaned in the newspaper last fall). It's not just Snowmass Village that turns its nose up at quasi-carpetbaggers, though. On Monday, the Aspen City Council gave the green light to bar "outsiders" from applying for recreational marijuana licenses until next spring. Some in Eagle County are also keen to keep business all in the family. "It seems that a lot of people from out of town are trying to get licenses. We're proud to be a local business," Jim Comerford, co-owner of The Vail Bud Brewery, told the Vail Daily in May after he and his wife were granted one of a handful of marijuana licenses there. By out-of-towners, Comerford was referring to a few pot shops in Eagle County whose owners are based out of Colorado Springs, Boulder and Denver. The Comerfords, by the way, operate other businesses in the Vail Valley, including Subway sandwich shops and a Qdoba Mexican Grill. There's nothing wrong with being Colorado proud, but as Ralph Nader once said, "when strangers start acting like neighbors ... communities are reinvigorated." It wouldn't kill us to broaden our definition of what it means to be local outside of our own town centers- and some times even within. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt