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The Recorder - The Mountain Called: A New Englander finds a home in New Mexico
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Gail Golden and David Anderson, owners of Golden Anderson Studios. The studio was one of the businesses selected to participate in Taos Business Alive, which helps Taos County businesses develop e-commerce platforms. Photo courtesy of Gail Golden.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Like a lot of small businesses a year ago, the Arroyo Seco jewelry studio Golden Anderson Studios had a website, but no way to sell its products online.
Because of that, when the COVID-19 pandemic hit and Taos’ normal steady stream of visitors dried up, co-owner Gail Golden said the studio’s revenue plummeted.
“We were hurting for a few months there,” Golden told the Journal.
02/17/2021
| By Snowsports Journalist Daniel Gibson |
This week we sit down with Taos Ski Valley’s CEO David Norden to talk about how the pandemic is affecting them, their future development plans, their relationship with the Village of Taos Ski Valley, his concerns over global warming, and other issues. Plus, we take a look at regional conditions at the end of the story hugely improved after this week’s multiple storms.
David Norden, CEO of Taos Ski Valley, has plenty of reasons to smile atop Highline Ride; Kachina Peak rises behind him. Courtesy TSV. (Top image) John Rane takes flight off the cornice of Highline Ridge at Taos Ski Valley. Photo by Mo Kaluta, courtesy TSV.
Corrections appended.
When the COVID-19 pandemic began in early March, the Taos Community Foundation saw a crisis in the making and opened an emergency action fund. I set a goal of $1 million to raise to meet the needs of our community, not even knowing what the needs were going to be at that time, said Lisa O Brien, director of the Taos Community Foundation.
She created a campaign â The Fund For Taos â and began bringing in donations from private and corporate donors. The first wave of funding went to meet immediate needs at Taos area food pantries and community shelters.
The fund was designed to provide money to nonprofits, not individuals. O Brien said she wanted to see how organizations were pivoting in their work due to the pandemic and reward systemic changes that would have a lasting impact on the community.
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