The Denver Post

VICE PRESIDENT VISITS DENVER

Vice president visits empanada shop while talking about stimulus package

- By Justin Wingerter Justin Wingerter: jwingerter@ denverpost.com or @JustinWing­erter

Vice President Kamala Harris, right, and second gentleman Doug Emhoff say hello to Gaston Cantarovic­i, 13, left, and his brother Ivan, 14, while arriving at Maria Empanada, 1298 S. Broadway, on Tuesday. The Cantarovic­i family owns the restaurant. Harris is on a threestate tour to promote the American Rescue Plan, the recent stimulus bill signed by President Joe Biden.

Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, sat down at a table at Denver’s Maria Empanada restaurant on Tuesday afternoon. It wasn’t for a bite to eat, but instead part of a national public relations push by the White House to talk about the $1.9 trillion stimulus package signed last week.

“We want to make sure you can stay open,” Harris told three small-business owners who were part of the roundtable discussion with the vice president, Emhoff, Gov. Jared Polis and a nonprofit executive.

“There is no better way to understand what’s going on in our country, our communitie­s and our small businesses, than by listening,” Emhoff said.

The stimulus and pandemic relief package, called the American Rescue Act, includes money for small businesses such as Maria Empanada, which is owned by Lorena Cantarovic­i. She grew up poor in Argentina, immigrated to Denver and became an American citizen in 2009. Her shop has three locations — two in Denver and one in Aurora.

The vice president’s office reached out directly to Cantarovic­i and asked her to host the discussion at the recommenda­tion of Polis and Colorado’s U.S. senators.

“I’m speechless! And that’s hard to do to me,” she said of the honor.

Cantarovic­i said in an interview that it was “a very tough year,” adding “tomorrow is the one-year anniversar­y of the day we had to shut down our restaurant­s.”

“One-third of small businesses in Colorado have gone out of business, perhaps even permanentl­y,” Harris told The Post in an interview after the roundtable. “So, this is about making sure people know what’s in the American Rescue Plan that can help them, so we get everybody back on their feet.”

Gabriela Salizar, owner of the Colorado Artisan Center, told Harris and Emhoff about the hardships the Colorado artists it partners with have gone through. Lalitha Chittoor, owner of Eco All Trading, talked about how she started her business, which trades sustainabl­e products such as bamboo, at the behest of her daughter.

“Our small businesses are really part of the heartbeat of every community,” Harris said. “Our small business leaders are not only business leaders; you are civic leaders, community leaders, role models. It is our small businesses that hire from the community, that uplift the community.”

Jack Briggs, president and CEO of Springs Rescue Mission in Colorado Springs, told of the many hardships faced by people experienci­ng homelessne­ss and how the stimulus package has helped.

Outside of the restaurant at the corner of Broadway and Louisiana, Harris supporters stood in the cold, some for several hours, to see the vice president from a distance. They cheered loudly as she came and went.

Harris had planned to go to a Fort Lupton vaccinatio­n clinic, Plan De Salud Del Valle, before coming to Denver, but plane maintenanc­e caused her to miss the event. She instead spoke to the director and head nurse via videoconfe­rence.

“They’re getting shots in arms,” Harris said. “They are committed to making sure that no one is left behind, no one is overlooked. This is the kind of work the president and I have been supporting and encouragin­g.”

Harris also was noncommitt­al on keeping the Bureau of Land Management headquarte­rs in Grand Junction. Some critics of the move, performed during former President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, have urged the Biden administra­tion to reverse it.

“Deb Haaland just got confirmed as secretary of the interior. I know this is on her plate, to take a look at it and do an assessment,” Harris told The Post. “We haven’t made any decisions yet.”

The Colorado Republican Party criticized Harris’ visit in a statement, saying the stimulus plan is “a partisan bill that looked more like an expensive, liberal wish list” than a relief package.

“Harris’ visit to Colorado to sell this costly boondoggle won’t make Coloradans forget that Bennet, Hickenloop­er, and the entire Colorado Democrat congressio­nal delegation chose to follow Schumer and Pelosi in wasting their tax dollars on things that have nothing to do with COVID relief,” GOP spokesman Joe Jackson said.

 ?? Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ??
Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post
 ?? Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ?? Andrew Prickett, 7, and his best friend Eliza Meyer-Yokley, also 7, hold up a Biden Harris sign as they wait outside Maria Empanada at 1298 S. Broadway in Denver in hopes of seeing the arrival of Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday.
Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post Andrew Prickett, 7, and his best friend Eliza Meyer-Yokley, also 7, hold up a Biden Harris sign as they wait outside Maria Empanada at 1298 S. Broadway in Denver in hopes of seeing the arrival of Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Harris speaks to local business owners as they take part in a roundtable discussion at the popular Denver eatery.
Harris speaks to local business owners as they take part in a roundtable discussion at the popular Denver eatery.

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