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Senate Journal-8Th Day-January 14, 2015 Page 41 SENATE JOURNAL
Senate Journal-8th Day-January 14, 2015 Page 41 SENATE JOURNAL 1 Seventieth General Assembly 2 STATE OF COLORADO 3 First Regular Session 4 5 6 8th Legislative Day Wednesday, January 14, 2015 7 8 9 10 Prayer By the chaplain, Pastor Vern Rempel, First Mennonite Church, Denver. 11 12 Call to By the President at 9:00 a.m. 13 Order 14 15 Pledge By Senator Sonnenberg. 16 17 Roll Call Present--32 18 Excused--3, Aguilar, Hill, Holbert. 19 Present later--2, Hill, Holbert. 20 21 Quorum The President announced a quorum present. 22 23 Reading of On motion of Senator Garcia, reading of the Journal of Tuesday, January 13, 2015, was 24 Journal dispensed with and the Journal was approved as corrected by the Secretary. 25 26 ___________ 27 28 29 INTRODUCTION OF BILLS -- FIRST READING 30 31 The following bills were read by title and referred to the committees indicated: 32 33 34 SB15-064 by Senator(s) Sonnenberg; --Concerning limits that the basic tenets of Colorado water law 35 place on the ability of certain federal agencies to impose conditions on a water right owner 36 in exchange for permission to use federal land. 37 Agriculture, Natural Resources, & Energy 38 39 40 SB15-065 by Senator(s) Marble, Grantham, Neville T., Woods, Holbert, Cooke, Sonnenberg, 41 Lambert, Scott, Scheffel, Cadman, Baumgardner, Crowder, Lundberg; also 42 Representative(s) Nordberg, Everett, Saine, Joshi, Humphrey, Neville P., Ransom-- 43 Concerning a prohibition on the use of public electronic benefits transfer services at certain 44 establishments. 45 State, Veterans, & Military Affairs 46 47 48 SB15-066 by Senator(s) Ulibarri; --Concerning an expansion of the types of government documents 49 that are legally sufficient as a basis for the department of revenue to issue identification 50 documents to persons who are not permanent lawful residents. -
Senate Journal-1St Day-January 13, 2021 Page 1 SENATE JOURNAL 1
Senate Journal-1st Day-January 13, 2021 Page 1 SENATE JOURNAL 1 Seventy-third General Assembly 2 STATE OF COLORADO 3 Second Regular Session 4 5 6 1st Legislative Day Wednesday, January 13, 2021 7 8 9 10 Prayer By Senator-Elect James Coleman 11 12 Pledge By Senator John Cooke 13 14 Musical By President Leroy M. Garcia and Minority Leader Chris Holbert performing "The Star 15 Presentation Spangled Banner" and "America The Beautiful" 16 17 18 Call to The hour of 10:00 a.m. having arrived, the Senate of the 73rd General Assembly of the 19 Order State of Colorado, pursuant to law, was called to order by President Leroy M. Garcia, 20 President of the Senate of the 72nd General Assembly of the State of Colorado. 21 22 Roll Call The roll call of holdover Senators was called with the following result: Present--Cooke, 23 Coram, Danielson, Donovan, Gonzales, Hisey, Holbert, Lee, Lundeen, Pettersen, 24 Rodriguez Scott, Sonnenberg, Story, Winter, Woodward, President Garcia -- Total: 17. 25 26 ____________ 27 28 COMMUNICATIONS FROM THE SECRETARY OF STATE 29 30 State of Colorado 31 Department of State 32 33 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ss. CERTIFICATE 34 STATE OF COLORADO 35 36 I, Jena Griswold, Secretary of State of the State of Colorado, certify that I have 37 canvassed the “Abstract of Votes Cast” submitted in the State of Colorado, and do state 38 that, to the best of my knowledge and belief, the attached list represents the total votes 39 cast for the members of the Colorado State Senate for the 73rd General Assembly by the 40 qualified electors of the State of Colorado in the November 3, 2020 General Election. -
Colorado 2018 Primary Election Results and Analysis
June 27, 2018 Colorado 2018 Primary Election Results and Analysis Colorado held its primary election last night, setting the stage for the November general election where Walker Stapleton (R) and Jared Polis (D) will compete to replace term-limited Gov. John Hickenlooper (D). In all the statewide races, substantially more votes were cast in Democratic primary contests than in Republican races. Figures from the secretary of state’s office indicate that, as of midnight, 1,158,700 voters had returned their mail-in ballots, a number that represents more than 30 percent of the state’s total registered voters. Ballots are still being processed, with July 5 being the last day for military and overseas ballots to arrive and the last day for a voter to cure a missing signature or signature discrepancy. Even without the final numbers, it is clear that voter turnout was up significantly from the 2016 primary election when only 21 percent of the electorate participated—an all-time low. This year’s high primary turnout was due in part to Colorado’s new law allowing unaffiliated voters to participate for the first time. Of the 1,158,700 ballots tallied thus far, 280,958 were cast by unaffiliated voters, 412,411 by Republicans and 465,331 by Democrats. Ballots cast in the Democratic primary for governor exceeded those cast in the Republican primary by more than 100,000. This difference was consistent in congressional and state legislative races as well. In a state with voter registration roughly even among Republican, Democrat and unaffiliated voters, this trend is notable and may reflect intensity. -
Congressional Sportsmen's Foundation 2016 Year in Review
Advancing the interests of America’s sportsmen and women for 27 years... Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation 2016 Year in Review 2015 ANNUAL REPORT Twenty-eight years ago, a dedicated and passionate group of sportsmen in the U.S. Congress came together to form the Congressional Sportsmen’s Caucus (CSC) to protect and advance our outdoor traditions of hunting, angling, recreational shooting, and trapping. The Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation (CSF) was formed shortly thereafter in 1989 to serve as the link between the sportsmen’s community and the CSC. Building upon the success of the CSC, the National Assembly of Sportsmen’s Caucuses (NASC), and the Governors Sportsmen’s Caucus (GSC) were established – in 2004 and 2009, respectively – to extend the policy network from Washington, DC, to states across the country. In 2016, the GSC includes 34 members, and NASC includes 48 state sportsmen’s caucuses. Because of this strong network, sportsmen and women have an organized, bipartisan and passionate group of policy-makers at the federal and state Federal Policy. 3 level that directly champion our interests in the political arena. Sportsmen’s Packages of the 114th Congress. 3 This report highlights the activities of CSF in 2016, including policy successes and CONTENTS Wildlife in the 21st Century: Volume V . 4 events spearheaded by CSF and the Congressional, gubernatorial, and state legislative State Policy . 9 sportsmen’s caucuses we support. This report also provides a look into the future of the organization and at the ongoing work we engage in at all levels of government on Events . 13 behalf of America’s sportsmen and women. -
Citizen Initiatives Teacher Training Gas Taxes
DEFENDING AGAINST SECURITY BREACHES PAGE 5 March 2015 Citizen Initiatives Teacher Training Gas Taxes AmericA’s innovAtors believe in nuclear energy’s future. DR. LESLIE DEWAN technology innovAtor Forbes 30 under 30 I’m developing innovative technology that takes used nuclear fuel and generates electricity to power our future and protect the environment. America’s innovators are discovering advanced nuclear energy supplies nearly one-fifth nuclear energy technologies to smartly and of our electricity. in a recent poll, 85% of safely meet our growing electricity needs Americans believe nuclear energy should play while preventing greenhouse gases. the same or greater future role. bill gates and Jose reyes are also advancing nuclear energy options that are scalable and incorporate new safety approaches. these designs will power future generations and solve global challenges, such as water desalination. Get the facts at nei.org/future #futureofenergy CLIENT: NEI (Nuclear Energy Institute) PUB: State Legislatures Magazine RUN DATE: February SIZE: 7.5” x 9.875” Full Page VER.: Future/Leslie - Full Page Ad 4CP: Executive Director MARCH 2015 VOL. 41 NO. 3 | CONTENTS William T. Pound Director of Communications Karen Hansen Editor Julie Lays STATE LEGISLATURES Contributing Editors Jane Carroll Andrade Mary Winter NCSL’s national magazine of policy and politics Web Editors Edward P. Smith Mark Wolf Copy Editor Leann Stelzer Advertising Sales FEATURES DEPARTMENTS Manager LeAnn Hoff (303) 364-7700 Contributors 14 A LACK OF INITIATIVE 4 SHORT TAKES ON -
Senate Members
Senate Members First Name Last Name Email Work Phone Committee Membership Party Dist Counties Health & Human Services -- Member Denver Irene Aguilar [email protected] 303-866-4852 Judiciary -- Member Democrat 32 Capital Development -- Chair Garfield, Grand, Jackson, Moffat Transportation -- Chair Rio Blanco, Routt, Summit Agriculture, Natural Resources, & Energy - Randy Baumgardner [email protected] 303-866-5292 Republican 8 - Member Business, Labor, & Technology -- Member Executive Committee of the Legislative El Paso Council -- Chair Bill L. Cadman [email protected] 303-866-4880 Republican 12 Legislative Council -- Chair Senate Services -- Chair Legislative Audit -- Member Arapahoe Morgan Carroll [email protected] 303-866-4879 Democrat 29 Senate Services -- Member Agriculture, Natural Resources, & Energy - Weld - Member John Cooke [email protected] 303-866-4451 Republican 13 Judiciary -- Member Transportation -- Member Health & Human Services -- Vice-Chair Alamosa, Baca, Bent, Conejos, Local Government -- Vice-Chair Costilla, Crowley Local Government -- Member Custer, Huerfano, Kiowa Larry Crowder [email protected] 303-866-4875 Republican 35 Local Government -- Member Las Animas, Mineral, Otero Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Grande, Saguache Agriculture, Natural Resources, & Energy - Chaffee, Delta, Eagle, Gunnison Kerry Donovan [email protected] 303-866-4871 - Member Democrat 5 Hinsdale, Lake, Pitkin Local Government -- Member Agriculture, Natural -
Senate Journal-1St Day-January 10, 2018 Page 1 SENATE JOURNAL 1
Senate Journal-1st Day-January 10, 2018 Page 1 SENATE JOURNAL 1 Seventy-first General Assembly 2 STATE OF COLORADO 3 Second Regular Session 4 5 6 1st Legislative Day Wednesday, January 10, 2018 7 8 9 10 Prayer By the chaplain, Pastor David Almanzar, Cañon Community Baptist Church, Cañon City. 11 12 Presentation Mile High Honor Guard - Technical Sergeant Scott Chambers, 140th Medical Group; 13 of Colors Technical Sergeant Diana Westfall, 140th Force Support Squadron; Airman First Class 14 Jeffrey Harris, 460th Contracting Squadron; and Airman First Class Jordan Kuwada, 15 566 Intelligence Squadron. 16 17 Pledge of By Douglas County Sheriff's Deputy Victor J. Holbert. 18 Allegiance 19 20 Musical By Laura, Kayla, Aria, and Alyssa Saunders of Arvada, performing "The Star-Spangled 21 Presentation Banner". 22 23 Call to The hour of 10:00 a.m. having arrived, the Second Regular Session of the Senate of the 24 Order Seventy-First General Assembly of the State of Colorado, pursuant to law, was called to 25 order by Senator Kevin J. Grantham, President of the Senate of the Seventy-First General 26 Assembly of the State of Colorado. 27 ____________ 28 29 Roll Call Present--35 30 31 Quorum The President announced a quorum present. 32 33 ____________ 34 35 36 Election of On motion of Majority Leader Holbert, Effie Ameen was nominated to serve as Secretary 37 Secretary of the Senate during the Second Regular Session of the Seventy-First General Assembly. 38 The motion was adopted by a unanimous vote. 39 40 Oath of The President administered the oath of office to Effie Ameen, Secretary of the Senate. -
0610 Legislative Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Recovery Committee
University of Denver Digital Commons @ DU Colorado Legislative Council Research All Publications Publications 12-2011 0610 Legislative Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Recovery Committee Colorado Legislative Council Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.du.edu/colc_all Recommended Citation Colorado Legislative Council, "0610 Legislative Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Recovery Committee" (2011). All Publications. 643. https://digitalcommons.du.edu/colc_all/643 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Colorado Legislative Council Research Publications at Digital Commons @ DU. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Publications by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ DU. For more information, please contact [email protected],[email protected]. Report to the Colorado General Assembly Legislative Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Recovery Committee Prepared by The Colorado Legislative Council Research Publication No. 610 December 2011 Legislative Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Recovery Committee Members of the Committee Representative Mark Waller, Chair Representative Joe Miklosi, Vice-Chair Senator Betty Boyd Senator Nancy Spence Ms. Marilyn Eddins Ms. Debbie Haskins Mr. Todd Herreid Mr. Manish Jani Ms. Cindi Markwell Mr. Jonathan Trull Mr. John Ziegler Legislative Council Staff Raegan Robb, Senior Researcher Kristen Johnson, Researcher Office of Legislative Legal Services Troy Bratton, Staff Attorney December 2011 COLORADO GENERAL ASSEMBLY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE COMMITTEE Sen. Brandon Shaffer, Chairman Sen. Betty Boyd Rep. Frank McNulty, Vice Chairman Sen. Kevin Grantham Sen. Bill Cadman Sen. Mary Hodge Sen. John Morse Sen. Jeanne Nicholson Rep. Mark Ferrandino Sen. Scott Renfroe Rep. Amy Stephens Sen. Mark Scheffel Rep. Jim Kerr STAFF Rep. Claire Levy Mike Mauer, Director Rep. -
Colorado Municipal Guide 2017-18
COLORADO MUNICIPAL GUIDE 2017-18 Municipalities by County State and Regional Contacts State House of Representatives State Senators U.S. Congress COLORADO MUNICIPAL GUIDE 2017-18 TABLE OF CONTENTS Municipalities by County .................................2 2017 STATE 2018 STATE State and Regional Contacts ............................22 HOLIDAYS HOLIDAYS State House of Representatives ........................23 State Senators ...................................................28 New Year’s Day* New Year’s Day Monday, 1/2/2017 Monday, 1/1/2018 U.S. Congress...................................................30 Martin Luther Martin Luther King, Jr. Day King, Jr. Day Monday, 1/16/2017 Monday, 1/15/2018 The information in this publication is supplied by: Presidents’ Day Presidents’ Day Content Providers, LLC P.O. Box 5425 Monday, 2/20/2017 Monday, 2/19/2018 Austin, TX 78763-5425 Memorial Day Memorial Day Please email changes, corrections or requests for additional copies to: Monday, 5/29/2017 Monday, 5/28/2018 [email protected] Please email all other inquiries to: Independence Day Independence Day [email protected] Tuesday, 7/4/2017 Wednesday, 7/4/2018 Published by: Labor Day Labor Day Municipal Publishing, LLC Monday, 9/4/2017 Monday, 9/3/2018 1148 Pulaski Highway, Suite 107-341 Bear, DE 19701 Columbus Day Columbus Day ©2017 Municipal Publishing, LLC. All rights reserved. Monday, 10/9/2017 Monday, 10/8/2018 Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher is strictly prohibited. Municipal Veterans’ Day* Veterans’ Day* Publishing, LLC is a privately-owned business entity, that Friday, 11/10/2017 Monday, 11/12/2018 is not affiliated with any city, village, town, county or other governmental entity. -
Colorado AFL-CIO 2018 Endorsements
Colorado AFL-CIO The Colorado AFL-CIO is the federation of more than 180 local and international unions, representing more than 130,000 workers 925 S. Niagara St #600, Denver, CO 80224 303-433-2100 | [email protected] Working people in Colorado need to know that their elected leadership is working hard for them. That is why we are thrilled to endorse a slate of union champions that have demonstrated their commitment to our members by expanding collective bargaining rights, raising wages, and making our workplaces safer. We believe that if these candidates win, our state will be more equitable and fair for all families. U S C O N G R E S S Congressional District 1 – Diana DeGette Congressional District 2 – Joe Neguse Congressional District 3 – Diane Mitsch Bush Congressional District 4 – Karen McCormick Congressional District 5 – Stephany Rose Spaulding Congressional District 6 – Jason Crow Congressional District 7 – Ed Perlmutter G O V E R N O R Jared Polis S T A T E T R E A S U R E R A T T O R N E Y G E N E R A L S E C R E T A R Y O F S T A T E Dave Young Phil Weiser Jena Griswold S T A T E S E N A T E SD 3 - Leroy Garcia SD 20 - Jessie Danielson SD 5 - Kerry Donovan SD 22 - Brittany Pettersen SD 11 - Pete Lee SD 24 - Faith Winter SD 13 - Phil Kelley SD 30 - Julia Varnell-Sarjeant SD 15 - Rebecca Cranston SD 32 - Robert Rodriguez SD 16 - Tammy Story SD 34 - Julie Gonzalez C U R E G E N T Lesley Smith aam/opeiu30/aflcio Colorado AFL-CIO The Colorado AFL-CIO is the federation of more than 180 local and international unions, representing more than 130,000 workers 925 S. -
2020 Abstract of Votes Cast
2020 Abstract of Votes Cast Office of the Secretary of State State of Colorado Jena Griswold, Secretary of State Christopher P. Beall, Deputy Secretary of State Judd Choate, Director of Elections Elections Division Office of the Secretary of State 1700 Broadway, Suite 550 Denver, CO 80290 Phone: (303) 894-2200, ext. 6307 Official Publication of the Abstract of Votes Cast for the Following Elections: 2019 Odd-Year 2020 Presidential Primary 2020 Primary 2020 General Dear Coloradans, It is my privilege to present the biennial election abstract report, which contains the official statewide election results for the 2019 coordinated election, 2020 presidential primary, 2020 statewide primary, and 2020 general election. This report also includes voter turnout statistics and a directory of state and county elected officials. The Colorado Secretary of State’s Election Division staff compiled this information from materials submitted by Colorado’s 64 county clerk and recorders. Additional information is available at Accountability in Colorado Elections (ACE), available online at https://www.sos.state.co.us/pubs/elections/ACE/index.html. Without a doubt, the 2020 election year will be remembered as one of our state’s most unusual and most historic. After starting with the state’s first presidential primary in 20 years, we oversaw two major statewide elections amidst a global pandemic and the worst forest fires in Colorado’s history. Yet, despite those challenges, Colorado voters enthusiastically made their voices heard. We set state participation records in each of those three elections, with 3,291,661 ballots cast in the general election, the most for any election in Colorado history. -
Nnual Report 16 a 2016 $122.7 11,945 Colorado Million Sbdc Totals $95.9 1 = $1,000,000 1 = 100 1 = 50 Compared to 2015 Million $88.7 Million 6,233 3,771 3,094
’ NNUAL REPORT 16 A 2016 $122.7 11,945 COLORADO MILLION SBDC TOTALS $95.9 1 = $1,000,000 1 = 100 1 = 50 COMPARED TO 2015 MILLION $88.7 MILLION 6,233 3,771 3,094 451 CAPITAL SALES CLIENTS TRAINING JOBS JOBS NEW FORMATION INCREASE CONTRACTS CONNECTED ATTENDEES CREATED RETAINED BUSINESSES WHAT IS THE ABOUT THIS REPORT COLORADO SBDC? The Colorado Small Business Development Center Network’s 2016 annual report The Colorado Small Business Development Center (SBDC) Network is dedicated to highlights the cooperation among community organizations that support small helping existing and new businesses grow and prosper in Colorado by providing free, businesses. Academic institutions, economic development organizations and local confidential consulting and no- or low-cost training programs and workshops. The governments, as well as corporate partners, all play a part in the success of the SBDC. SBDC strives to be the premier, trusted choice of Colorado businesses for consulting, The participation of these entities is crucial to the support given to businesses around training and resources. the state. participation of these entities is crucial to the The sbdc is dedicated to helping small and mid-sized businesses throughout the state achieve their goals. support given to businesses around the state. This report contains success stories of SBDC clients from across the state, as well The SBDC is dedicated to helping small and mid-sized businesses throughout the as financial impact numbers, all organized by center and congressional district. state achieve their goals of growth, expansion, innovation, increased productivity, management improvement and overall success. The network combines the resources As a result of its one-on-one consulting and free or low-cost training programs, the of federal, state and local organizations with those of the educational system and Colorado SBDC was able to assist in the generation of $19.58 in capital formation for private sector to meet the specialized and complex needs of the small business every federal grant dollar obtained by the state.