A final 2024 letter from our Chief Executive Officer, Lydia McCoy.
Recent articles
Poverty, technology and the stories we tell
An interview with Dr. Virginia Eubanks, CAP 2024 keynote speaker
A letter from our CEO: November 2024
A letter from CCLP's CEO on the results of the 2024 elections.
CCLP Policy Forum: Tax credits & you recap
CCLP presented our fourth Policy Forum event discussing tax credits in Colorado.
STATEMENT: Government shutdown is both immoral and unnecessary
The news out of Washington today of an impending shut-down of the federal government is the latest in a series of unnecessary disruptive and irresponsible developments. We are in this situation because political grand-standing has replaced principled governance.
The country stands on the brink of a government shut-down because Congress refuses to resolve the status of undocumented immigrant children, with the health care of thousands of children and pregnant women as collateral damage.
If the lessons from the government shutdown of 2013 are any indicator, tens of thousands of Coloradans and their families could be deprived of the wages they rely on to meet their basic needs. Tribal governments overseeing some of the most impoverished communities in our state and the nation could go without the critical federal resources they rely on to support the needs of their citizens.
Veterans and others awaiting a decision on their disability claims could wait longer. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will have to cease responding to the flu season just as record numbers are being hospitalized. Federal loan processing for mortgages and small businesses will halt and grants that keep Head Start programs operating will begin drying up.
The position of Colorado Center on Law and Policy is unequivocal:
- The future of over 17,000 Coloradan DREAMers should be laid to rest with legal protections that include a pathway to citizenship.
- The health care of over 75,000 kids and pregnant women in Colorado’s CHP+ program should not be a bargaining chip and must instead be protected by a long-term funding bill.
- Congress should stop lurching from deadline to deadline, return to regular order and pass a budget that invests in the future of Colorado’s communities and residents.
As the turmoil continues to unfold at the federal level, CCLP staff will continue working on solutions to improve the lives of low-income Coloradans.
In the meantime, we ask that you take action on your own and contact your elected officials to demand that they fulfill the constitutional, and moral, obligations of their respective offices. Click here to learn how.
–Claire Levy