The Rocky Mountain Partnership is committed to advancing the economic and social mobility of the individuals and families who live and work in our community. This work complements regional economic development efforts by focusing on innovative, collaborative projects in areas that impact community members’ ability to thrive.
This email blast provides a one-stop-shop for key updates and news around policy and legislation that impacts the Rocky Mountain Partnership’s shared goals.
State Legislative Session Updates
Below you will find any updates related to state legislation impacting RMP’s shared goals.
By the Numbers
377
Total Bills Introduced |
62
Bills in the RMP Tracker |
10
Of These Bills Passed First Chamber |
New Bills We Are Keeping An Eye On
|
Bills Being Heard in Committee This Week
These are bills that legislators are taking a deeper dive into, making amendments to, hearing from the public about, and figuring out if they should be sent back to the larger group to vote on.
Monday, February 131:30 PM
|
Tuesday, February 14Upon Adjournment
1:30 PM
|
x | |
Wednesday, February 151:30 PM
|
Thursday, February 161:30 PM
|
Click the button below to learn how you can listen in and/or participate in these hearings.
Bills Out of Committee and Headed to the Floor
These are bills that a committee of legislators said should go back to the larger group to discuss and vote on.
Monday, February 13
10:00 AM
- HB23-1093: Higher Education Staff Sabbaticals
- HB23-1099: Portable Screening Report For Residential Leases
Bills That Passed Their First Chamber
To send a bill to the Governor to sign into law, bills have to be heard in and pass both the House and the Senate. The bills below have passed either the Senate or the House and are headed to the other chamber.
- SB23-046: Average Weekly Wage Paid Leave Benefits
- SB23-115: Department of Education Supplemental
- SB23-118: Department of Higher Education Supplemental
- SB23-136: Adjustments To School Funding Fiscal Year 2022-23
- SB23-140: Fentanyl Study Deadline And Appropriation
- HB23-1064: Interstate Teacher Mobility Compact
Keep an Eye on State Legislation Using RMP’s Legislative Tracker
Over 370 bills have been introduced since the kickoff of the state legislative session.
As in past years, the RMP Backbone Team is keeping an eye on legislation impacting the network’s shared goals through our state legislative tracker. Relevant legislation will be lifted to RMP’s leadership tables to determine where education and awareness is needed to support decision makers.
Check out some of the bills introduced so far impacting these areas below.
Click the button to view RMP’s state legislative tracker in a new window.
Additional News and Updates Updates
Below you will find additional news and updates impacting RMP’s shared goals.
Goal 2: Employers improve how they hire, retain, and promote diverse talent
AI used for hiring and recruitment can be biased. But that’s changing. |
Artificial intelligence is commonly used in automated recruitment programs. It helps narrow down large pools of applicants using algorithms to match job seekers to open positions.
But there are growing concerns that this technology is disproportionately excluding certain groups, like women, people of color or those who don’t have college degrees, even when they’re perfectly qualified. |
Learn More |
Goal 3: Increase availability and accessibility of attainable housing
Colorado cities would get first right of first refusal when apartment buildings sell in new affordable housing plan |
Colorado cities and counties would have the ability to snap up apartment complexes and convert them to affordable housing, rather than be sold to private bidders, under a new bill set to be introduced in the House in the coming days.
The bill applies to any development with three or more units in rural-resort settings or five or more units in urban areas. There are exemptions, like for the transfer of property to spouses or family, and local governments could waive the right entirely if the private buyer agrees to keep the units affordable. |
Learn More |
Goal 4: Distribute funds to reduce the impact of the opioid crisis
Denver wanted to open safe drug-use sites four years ago. Will the legislature finally let it? |
When Denver’s city council cleared the way for a supervised drug-use site to open here in late 2018, it left one roadblock in place: The state legislature had to give its blessing first. More than four years later, a group of Colorado lawmakers are preparing a bill that would clear that obstacle.
The proposal, which is being drafted in the House, would let local governments decide whether to allow such sites to open in their jurisdiction. It wouldn’t set aside any money to fund any facilities, and cities would still have to provide their own approval. State drug laws also wouldn’t change; any illicit substances brought into a sanctioned site would have to be acquired elsewhere. |
Learn More |