Comments about ‘Food prices threaten Salt Lake bakery’

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Published: Monday, July 7 2008 12:09 a.m. MDT

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Avenues

$11K a month seems to be a bit steep for that building. No wonder the other businesses who have been there haven't lasted. Ah well--at the rate they charge, the landlords may get someone to be in there for a few weeks at a shot.

JR

maybe the Gov could bail these folks out like he did the soccer stadium

bub

Who's Kidding Who?

Landlord Problems

I have a problem with my landlord, could I have some politician, or government official, stop worring about what they were voted in for & work on my financial issues.
Keep government out of areas that they have no buisness being in.

Dave Swenson

I'm a landlord in Salt Lake and when I have a tenant who adds value to my property...I lower the monthly rent. I bend over backwards to keep good tenants. This sounds like a good tenant. I would urge the landlord to renegotiate the lease, lower the monthly payment and go the extra miles to keep a good tenant in place.

Bob G

Don't know who came up with this CPI for consumers but it is far from reality. Who buys jeans every week? The gocery list is minimal and unrealistic. This report on living in Utah is about as redicoulous as a report can get. Their shopping basket is not based what people are buying and can afford, it is based on items I wouldn't feed a pet. Buying inferior products is also buying inferior health. They should factor health and nutrition values in this shopping basket, cheapest is in many cases unhealthy and a poor value. They should look at store sales rather than a restricted product price comparison. Then store locations factors very much in the CPI and what it costs to consumers. Then the biggest factor not covered is cost to income, which Utah has the smallest of margins with its substandard well below poverty wages. Try averaging incomes below the $60K level and exclude government employees and workers. They are on a differnt labor standards than the private business employees that are subject to discrimination, abuse, threats, and job loss without cause or representation. It's the employers Right to Work laws protecting private businesses with employee abuse.

Headline is wrong

Based on a recent report to the UN Food Program, it should read "Ill-advised government ethanol subsidy programs threaten Salt Lake bakery" because that's the real reason prices are so high. An estimated 75% of the recent increases in global food costs are due to these subsidies.

Poor people worldwide are starving so rich corporations such as Cargill and Archer Daniels Midland can get paid big taxpayer bucks for making corn into ethanol, because wealthy US senators can get more campaign contributions from them.

Re: JR

The Gov. and the Soccer Stadium comment is off topic and should be removed from this Forum.

Sean

Keep it up and good luck, Kathy and Paul! The best thing any of us can do is sit down at one of thier tables and order some wonderful food, which I'll be doing tomorow!

Anonymous

To the person who "Re"-ed JR:

Is this your first time on a web forum? Sounds like it. People go off-topic quickly, and sometimes even have interesting things to say. Sorry you've got a single-track mind.

GK from England

Let's hope they can find the dough to keep the business going...excuse the pun!

Cherubgirl

I do hope that this bakery will continue to pull thru even in the worse of times. It is too bad that the rent is that expensive. That is grossly uncall for in my opinion. Anyway, best of luck to Kathy and Paul.

ST. George

Everyone should get used to the future effects of the 8 GWB and GOP years, possibly more if the GOP energy policies prevail.

Anonymous

You can thank the Democrat lead congress for your high gas prices and high food prices. Without them pushing corn ethanol wouldn't these prices be cheaper? While I'm at it I'll also blame the Democrats for me being 50lbs. overweight. Oh wait or maybe that's GWB's fault too.

But is it good, yet?

I've tried this hip, trendy joint several times over the past few years and am always disappointed. The food and service are very mediocre. I choose to spend my money at places much more deserving of it, instead of going with the hip and trendy crowd. Maybe that's what is really going on with this place: the thrill is gone, baby.

Ema

Well this explains my trip to the Avenues Bakery last month when I discovered that they are no longer selling pastries (I was there for a muffin) on the weekends. How very sad. I hope they will be able to work something out with their landlord. I hate to see local businesses suffer.

Luckily a new bakery is coming

Hagermann's will open on South Temple at about 15 West in about a month. It is too bad when a business is unable to continue or has to move for whatever reason but there are others that can fill the void. I do like the Avenues Bakery. I ate there plenty of mornings on my way to work... but I think Hagermann's is better.

Another bakery

Luckily a new bakery is coming: Sounds like you have a financial interest in new bakery.

Riley

Is this landlord for real? The man/woman seriously has his/her greedy head in the sand (to put it politely). Forgoe your new mercedes and let good people stay!

Chris

Eleven thousand censored dollars per month? Holy censored censored! I know these people signed a lease with their eyes open, but there is something seriously wrong with a rental price that high, and with the people that are exacting it.

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