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TABOR refunds, abortion rights, mental health more: Here’s what the Colorado legislature did in 2022657 bills. 120 days. 6 big takeaways.
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The program, which starts next year, promises 4-year-olds 10 hours a week of tuition-free preschool in public school classrooms or private settings, such as child care centers, churches, or homes licensed to provide preschool.
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The bill is Democrats' response to Texas and Florida passing laws to restrict abortion access.
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Elizabeth Reiter’s family was not by her side on Mother’s Day in 2020, when she was fighting pneumonia and a blood infection in a Denver hospital. The coronavirus pandemic was just starting to rage, and hospitals were keeping visitors out to limit the spread of the virus.
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Sponsor Sonya Jaquez Lewis, D-Boulder County, said the restrictions were needed because bobcat deaths were “out of control” in recent years.
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Colorado lawmakers have already introduced more than 160 bills in the first two weeks of their legislative session. And starting next week, they will kick off debates on many proposals that could affect your life.
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The first day of the legislative session is marked by three things: handshakes, speeches and bills. Lots of bills.
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After a summer that saw lawmakers from both parties work together to advance a plan to spend hundreds of millions of coronavirus relief dollars on affordable housing and mental health initiatives, it did not take long for the day to devolve into partisan bickering that is common in the Capitol.
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Here’s how to find your lawmakers, testify on bills, stay up-to-date and more