Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, TANF, is the block-grant created by Congress in the 1996 welfare reform legislation. Designed “to end welfare as we know it,” TANF replaced Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) which had provided cash assistance to...
Working Colorado: Is college-level earning power flattening?
The conventional wisdom that college grads earn more than those with less education still holds true today. According to 2016 data, annual median earnings for college graduates were nearly $24,000 greater than for Coloradans who stopped at high school. What’s changed,...
Letter: To The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
The following letter was sent on March 6, 2017 to Patrick Conway, Acting Administrator for Centers for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health & Human Services. PDF version available here....
Working Colorado: Where are the men?
It’s one of the most compelling questions about our modern labor market. While jobs have returned since the recession and unemployment is low, it is clear that not all workers have returned to work. And the people most prominently missing from the labor force are men....
News Release: Colorado Health Policy Coalition urges Congress to develop a comprehensive health care framework
GOP healthcare plan: what it would mean for Colorado On March 6, 2017, House Republicans’ unveiled a healthcare proposal, the “American Health Care Act,” that would radically reduce the ability of middle- and lower-income Coloradans to access affordable healthcare...
Statement: CCLP statement on the 2016 election results
Claire Levy, Executive Director of the Colorado Center on Law and Policy, issued the following statement about the 2016 election results. PDF version available here. The 2016 election generated both good news and bad news for the low-income families who the Colorado...
Raising the wage: Good for business and Colorado
In 2006, opponents warned that jobs would be lost and the state’s economy would suffer if voters approved a ballot initiative to raise Colorado’s minimum wage from $5.15 to $6.85. But the sky did not fall. In fact, in the two years after Coloradans approved the...
Raise the wage for rural Colorado
Statistics show that low-wage workers in rural Colorado need a raise. Underscoring that point is the fact that household income is lower and poverty rates are higher in rural counties of Colorado compared to urban areas. Meanwhile, the economic gap between urban and...
Ballot measure would help Colorado women
Raising Colorado’s minimum wage to $12 by 2020 would lift many of the state’s working women and their children out of poverty. That’s according to a new study published by the Women’s Foundation of Colorado on Tuesday. Both the full report and an executive summary are...
The truth about raising the wage
Claims from a study about the negative effects of raising the minimum wage are dubious if not outright misleading, according to a recent brief issued by Chris Stiffler, an economist with the Colorado Fiscal Institute with help from the Colorado Center on Law and...





