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.
ACTION ALERT: Stop the AHCA Redux

There they go again.
The American Health Care Act (AHCA) fizzled in March after the Congressional Budget Office predicted bleak outcomes, including an increase of 24 million in the number of uninsured Americans over the next 10 years and untenable cuts in federal funding to states.
Unfortunately, the AHCA is back with its plan to scrap Medicaid coverage for millions of adults and slash funding to state programs. Worse, this new version includes amendments that would allow Colorado to opt out of protections for the estimated 1.2 million Coloradans with pre-existing conditions, or to drop the requirement that plans provide the full slate of benefits. If state plans no longer had to meet the essential health benefits requirement, consumers would no longer have the protections of annual and lifetime limits. Costs for people with serious health needs would skyrocket.
A majority of Coloradans support retaining the ACA, consistent with national views, but those in Congress who ran on repeal can’t seem to leave it alone. A vote by the U.S. House of Representatives on the AHCA could come as soon as tomorrow. As was true regarding the last version of the AHCA, if the bill were to pass, a wealthy few would benefit at the expense of our Colorado communities, and all of us with identified health conditions could pay much more.
Call your representative – especially Reps. Coffman and Buck, who are key players – to tell them to vote no on the AHCA. Let’s put this issue to rest: Coloradans want affordable access to health care, whatever their health needs, and the AHCA would take us in the opposite direction.
– Bethany Pray
