In celebrating the 20th anniversary of Colorado Center on Law & Policy, we are publishing a series of vignettes about the organization's most significant accomplishments. It’s no secret that Colorado has been one of the fastest-growing states over the past decade....
20th Anniversary Milestones: Report Sharpens Focus on Self-Sufficiency
In celebrating the 20th anniversary of Colorado Center on Law and Policy, we are publishing a series of vignettes about the organization’s most significant accomplishments. For 20 years and counting, Colorado Center on Law and Policy has been an organization that...
Imagine a more meaningful Labor Day
On Labor Day, we celebrate the contribution of workers to our nation’s growth and prosperity. While I was growing up in my home state of Wisconsin, that meant gathering with family on my grandparent’s dairy farm, grilling brats and talking politics. Wisconsin had long...
Report reveals growing income inequality
Income inequality in Colorado has reached historic highs in recent years according to a new report released today by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI). The top 1 percent of earners in Colorado captured 44 percent of all income growth in the last 45 years. In 2015,...
How are we meeting Colorado’s basic needs? The Gap Map has answers
Human service programs ensure that Coloradans have the building blocks for a prosperous future, such as food, health care, child care and financial assistance. Due to a number of reasons, access to these important programs varies from county to county. Wide enrollment...
How and why Colorado must do better
Behind the headlines about Colorado’s prosperous economy lurks the vexing fact that little has changed for most Colorado workers -- particularly workers of color -- over the past seven years. According to Colorado Center on Law and Policy’s newly released 2017 State...
The Fight for Labor’s Collective Legal Power Continues
On March 15th, 1887, Colorado’s Sixth General Assembly recognized Labor Day as a public holiday, making Colorado the second state in the nation to do so. Labor Day is our nation’s tribute to “the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and...
Working Colorado: Six months into the minimum wage increase, job growth is robust
Last November, Colorado voters approved Amendment 70 raising the state’s minimum wage from $8.31 to $12 an hour by 2020. The first step increase occurred on Jan. 1, with an 11.9 percent increase in the minimum wage to $9.30 an hour. According to data from the Colorado...
Working Colorado: When part-time isn’t enough
Colorado is currently enjoying a historically low unemployment rate. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, as of April 2017, the state has the lowest unemployment rate (2.3 percent) in the nation. Unfortunately, the unemployment rate alone does not tell the...
How Colorado’s largest subprime lender has raised the cost of borrowing
In the final frenzied days of the 2015 legislative session, legislators passed a bill raising interest rates on Colorado borrowers accessing certain types of credit. Policymakers were persuaded by the industry sponsor’s story line: an interest rate hike is needed to...









