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CCLP testifies in support of community integration plan for individuals with disabilities

On Tuesday, February 18, 2025, Bethany Pray, CCLP’s Chief Legal and Policy Officer, provided testimony to the House Health & Human Committee in support of House Bill 25-1017, Community Integration Plan Individuals with Disabilities. CCLP is in support of HB25-1017.
Chair Brown and members of the committee:
I’m Bethany Pray, and I am speaking on behalf of the Colorado Center on Law and Policy, in support of HB1017. CCLP is a statewide anti-poverty organization that advances the rights of all Coloradans. This bill will codify and systematize how we ensure, as a state, that people with disabilities can live, work, and access services in the community, and it is urgent that we pass it this session.
Significant gains have been made nationally and in Colorado in the last 35 years, since George H.W. Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities Act into law, and the 25 years since the Supreme Court decision known as Olmstead established that involuntary institutionalization of people with disabilities is discrimination.
In addition to the successes, there have also been struggles in Colorado. It is admittedly challenging work, but doing it will help the state avoid the high cost of institutional care – and I think Colorado genuinely wants to rise to that challenge.
And that’s because we know the benefits. This legislative body has benefited enormously from the contributions of electeds and staff with disabilities, as well as the leadership in this building of advocates and community members who live with disabilities. My own understanding of Medicaid and more generally, of advocacy, has expanded enormously due to the willingness of those advocates to partner with me and CCLP.
Over the past several years, the legislature has consistently passed, on a bipartisan and often unanimous basis, bills that support community integration, providing property tax breaks for veterans with disabilities, supporting employment and training in integrated settings for people with disabilities, and more.
Those bills were passed in a world where we could count on federal law – on the ADA and the Olmstead decision — to uphold the principle that it is wrong to warehouse people. Does that really need to be said? Sadly, we are now at a political moment where the ideas enshrined in federal law are under attack. So it is up to this committee, this legislature, this Governor, to pass this bill, to demonstrate that we can be consistent and stand up for our colleagues, our family members, our communities and live and work together.
Please vote yes on 1017.
Bethany Pray, Esq.
Chief Legal and Policy Officer
Colorado Center on Law and Policy
Update: HB25-1017 passed the House Health & Human Services Committee on 2/18/2025 and is onto House Appropriations.
