Bethany Pray provided testimony on Senate Bill 26-138, Reducing Administrative Burdens on Health Care. CCLP is in an amend position because we prioritize reducing administrative and economic burdens for patients.
Recent articles
CCLP public comment on housing assistance for mixed status families
A public comment was submitted by Chris Nelson, MSW, on behalf of CCLP on April 20, 2026, to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, regarding housing assistance for mixed status families.
Skills2Compete CO testifies against repealing career support services
Laura Ware provided written testimony on behalf of the Skills2Compete Coalition against House Bill 1383, which would eliminate the Employment Support Job Retention program that provides emergency employment support and job retention services to eligible individuals in the state.
CCLP testifies to protect Colorado farmworkers
Charles Brennan provided testimony in opposition to Senate Bill 26-121, Overtime Threshold for Agricultural Employees. The bill would raise the overtime threshold to a staggering 56 hours a week, which would damage worker health and increase economic inequality.
Building the Community Investment System in Colorado

A bike ride through Denver’s diverse neighborhoods and communities tells a story of radically different levels of investment. In our most affluent neighborhoods, investment is in ample supply. New developments, large shopping centers, expensive restaurants, all seem to pop up in record time due to the abundance of available capital.
Just blocks away in some cases, we see a different story. We see communities experiencing chronic disinvestment (or in some cases now, experiencing rapid gentrification and displacement pressures). These communities often have a lack of grocery stores, dilapidated community centers, housing that is inadequate – if not unsafe/unhealthy – for the needs of families, and infrastructure that was built in the 1950’s.
The difference in these two stories has everything to do with the choices that we make as a society about how money should be invested. At Mile High Connects, we have been working to change the community investment system by helping to catalyze new investment that benefits low and moderate income communities. With our many partners, including the Colorado Housing Finance Authority (CHFA), we are working to create a new financial instrument that will help investors (impact investors, foundations, banks, and others) to bring more capital to affordable housing (new construction and preservation); mixed use developments in low and mixed-income communities; and commercial facilities that meet the needs of local communities.
Planning for the Community Investment Platform is guided by the following goals:
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- Align impact-focused capital with the growing need for community development
- Preserve neighborhoods, communities, and culture while reversing involuntary displacement of low-to moderate-income families
- Build opportunities in communities of greatest need and greatest opportunities
- Build assets and wealth in low-to moderate-income communities
- Increase the ability of middle-wage workers to purchase homes
Over the next few months we will continue to work with our partners and community groups to meet these goals through the deployment of capital that works on behalf of all of our communities.
For more information about the Community Investment Platform, contact Brad Weinig, bweinig@enterprisecommunity.org.
Written By: Katherine Pease
