The Denver Post

Puerto Ricans came for jobs, but found homes

- By John Russell

When Carlos Acosta arrived in Steamboat Springs in December 2016, he knew he would have a job, a steady source of income to support himself and a little extra to send back to his family in Puerto Rico.

But it’s the things he never expected that have made Steamboat feel like home.

“It’s the feeling that the people here in Steamboat have reached out, and even before this happened, they have reached out to us and made us feel at home,” Acosta said. “They have just been very helpful and very welcoming here in Steamboat. It’s uplifting that we can arrive at a place and be totally unknown, and then within a couple of months, we are knee deep in the community.”

He says the support he has received in the wake of Hurricane Maria, which devastated the island he calls home, has been overwhelmi­ng. Those feelings are shared by many in Steamboat’s Puerto Rican community, which has grown the past several years as the hospitalit­y industry reaches beyond the city limits to fill positions.

Acosta, who used to work in the film industry in Puerto Rico, and his friend Efrain Candelaria are employed by Resort Group. Last year, Resort Group recruited about 25 people to come to Steamboat, and Acosta estimates the Puerto Rican community in Steamboat at around 100 people.

Candelaria left Puerto Rico three years ago to find work here in Steamboat Springs. He has spent the last three years earning money to support his family back home and saving as much as possible with hopes of returning to Puerto Rico when the economy there recovers.

“Luckily, I have had communicat­ion with my family, and everyone is OK,” Candelaria said through an interprete­r.

But when Hurricane Irma made its way past Puerto Rico Sept.5, followed by Hurricane Maria a few weeks later, Candelaria said he was unable to communicat­e with his family for seven weeks.

Family members sent Candelaria photograph­s of his home, which was ravaged by flood waters.

“It’s been hard because I want to visit my family, but there is nothing that I can do if I go back,” he said

The two men are thankful for the support they have found here.

“A lot of people, if not all the people in the company (Resort Group), and in the community, have really reached out even if to just give emotional support,” Acosta said. “That has been big.”

When Carla Von Thaden and a committee of employees at Mountain Resorts heard about the devastatio­n in Puerto Rico, they immediatel­y looked for ways to help.

“We wanted to do something to help Puerto Rico and Mexico with their devastatio­n from the recent natural disasters,” Von Thaden said. The group held a fundraiser at the Depot Art Center Nov. 10, which included a silent and live auction of art.

 ?? John F. Russell, Steamboat Pilot & Today ?? Carlos Acosta, seated, and Efrain Candelaria came from Puerto Rico to find work in Steamboat Springs, but have discovered in the wake of Hurricane Maria that Steamboat has more to offer than just a paycheck.
John F. Russell, Steamboat Pilot & Today Carlos Acosta, seated, and Efrain Candelaria came from Puerto Rico to find work in Steamboat Springs, but have discovered in the wake of Hurricane Maria that Steamboat has more to offer than just a paycheck.

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