Charles Brennan provided testimony in support of HB26-1012, which would have required sellers to provide consumers with the prices of the delivered goods and the goods available at the store for price transparency and fairness. It also would have prohibited unfair or deceptive trade practices by charging unreasonably excessive prices for goods and services.
Recent articles
CCLP testifies in support of worker protections
Chris Nelson provided testimony in strong support of House Bill 26-1054, which would allow Colorado to step in to address declining workplace safety standards due to federal rollbacks and decline in enforcement, and allows for individual workers and labor unions to enforce their rights through private right of action.
CCLP testifies against HOAs requiring “proof of need” for language access
Morgan Turner provided testimony against HB26-1201 which would require owner's to provide "proof of need" prior to HOAs providing correspondence and notices in a language other than English.
CCLP testifies in support of ITINs for non-educational opportunities
Milena Tayah provided testimony in support of HB26-1143, which addresses the background check barrier for educational opportunities. It would require that an ITIN be allowed in lieu of a SSN when required for these background checks.
Solving Problems: How CCLP Gets Stuff Done

What if you only had seven days to find a different place to live, pack up and move all of your possessions, relocate your family and enroll your kids in a new school? Unfortunately, in parts of Colorado where landlords know they can get higher rent from wealthier tenants, people with fewer resources find themselves in this predicament every day.
Before CCLP took action, landlords in many circumstances were only required to give tenants seven days’ notice before they raised the rent or terminated their lease. Those surviving on low wages and fixed incomes faced a high risk of homelessness under such arrangements.
An organization that represents low‐income Coloradans brought this problem to Colorado Center on Law and Policy’s attention last year after an elderly client on a fixed income received notice that rent for her apartment was increasing to an amount she could no longer afford. After doing some research, CCLP determined there was nothing to prevent this from happening to this client and thousands of other Colorado renters. Later, CCLP suggested legislation addressing the issue to Rep. Dan Pabon, D‐Denver, who was looking for ideas to mitigate the destabilizing effects of gentrification in Colorado neighborhoods.
Before starting the process of developing a bill, CCLP Executive Director Claire Levy asked CCLP Policy Associate Jack Regenbogen to look into landlord‐tenant laws in all 50 states. After spending a full week researching rental‐ notification statutes, Jack found that Colorado was among only three states that had such a short period of notice. That tidbit ended up being a major talking point in building support for legislation.
CCLP then began working on a bill to extend the notification period on month‐to‐month tenancies, but the bill was killed in a Senate committee. Gearing up for the 2017 session, Jack and other CCLP staff began building a diverse coalition, which included veterans, disability and senior advocates, members of the faith‐based community, the City and County of Denver and even a property‐management company. Jack woke up early many mornings to make the case for the bill to numerous organizations.
While developing the 2017 Notice to Quit bill, CCLP convinced the Colorado Apartment Association to go “neutral” on the proposal by compromising on the new notice period. Instead of requiring 28 days, which would have been far more desirable, we agreed just to require 21 days’ notice – still a three‐fold increase. Having averted opposition from the powerful apartment lobby, Sen. Kevin Priola, R‐Henderson, agreed to sponsor the legislation and was able to avoid having the bill sent to the “kill committee” in the Senate.
As a result of this collaborative effort, Senate Bill 245 passed with broad bipartisan support in the Colorado Senate. It also cleared the state House and was signed into law by Gov. John Hickenlooper. As the story of SB 245 illustrates, getting legislation passed requires hard work, thorough research, ingenuity, strong relationships within the community and compromise. SB 245 is just one of several policy successes that CCLP cultivated this past session, each of which required similar effort.
-By Bob Mook
