Key Takeaways from the 2021 Legislative Session
Co-author, Law Week Colorado, June 11, 2021
The 2021 Colorado legislative session has finally drawn to a close. After briefly convening on the usual January start date, the General Assembly recessed until mid-February in hopes that COVID-19 and the economy would stabilize. By adjournment on June 8, legislators were without masks and broadly in agreement on how to spend the $3.8 million coming to the state through the American Rescue Plan Act. As they do every year, the legislature introduced hundreds of bills.
Here is a summary of several of the most high-profile pieces of legislation this session, some of which passed, some were heavily amended and some were defeated during the process.
Click here to read the full article.
Recent Insights
Read MorePills, Pricing, and Policy: USTR Ignites German Trade Dispute
Article | June 23, 2026Tampa Bay region emerges as key player in federal policymaking as Florida’s influence grows
Client Alert | June 22, 2026Colorado Supreme Court Expands Public-Policy Exception to At-Will Employment
Presentation | June 22, 2026Data Hunger, Enterprise Risks: Biomedical Data and Cybersecurity in the AI Era
Client Alert | June 18, 2026NCUA and OCC Take Action to Preempt Illinois’ Interchange Law
Client Alert | June 17, 2026DOJ Opines that EEOC’s Title VII Disparate Impact Framework Is Unconstitutional
You have chosen to send an email to Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck or one of its lawyers. The sending and receipt of this email and the information in it does not in itself create and attorney-client relationship between us.
If you are not already a client, you should not provide us with information that you wish to have treated as privileged or confidential without first speaking to one of our lawyers.
If you provide information before we confirm that you are a client and that we are willing and able to represent you, we may not be required to treat that information as privileged, confidential, or protected information, and we may be able to represent a party adverse to you and even to use the information you submit to us against you.
I have read this and want to send an email.