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COMMERCE CITY, Colo. (AP) - On a Wednesday morning, 30 people white, black and Hispanic, a younger couple holding hands, a silver-haired man in a wheelchair pack a small classroom in the basement of the Adams County Housing Authority, northeast of Denver.
They are here because foreclosure is close behind. A new group has filled the room every two weeks since July.
"This is about choices and sacrifices," housing counselor MaryEllen De Los Santos tells them. "Ask yourself continuously, `Do I want to keep my house?'"
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