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KUNC is a member of Capitol Coverage, a collaborative public policy reporting project, providing news and analysis to communities across Colorado for more than a decade. Fifteen public radio stations participate in Capitol Coverage from throughout Colorado.

Session's End In Sight, Which Bills Have A Chance At The Capitol?

Jim Hill
/
KUNC

The state budget has cleared both legislative chambers but still needs to head to a conference committee to iron out differences. The end of the budget process means lawmakers will shift their attention to other bills before the end of the session. With that May 6 deadline rapidly approaching, what's in store for some of the outstanding legislation?

In the roundtable are reporters Peter Marcus with The Durango Herald and Megan Schrader with the Colorado Springs Gazette.

Capitol Conversation Highlights

On School Testing

Megan Schrader, Colorado SpringsGazette: "The devil's in the details on this. Everyone seems to agree that there needs to be a reduction in the number of standardized test students are taking. Now between kindergarten and graduation they take around 30, but no one seems to agree what tests should be reduced."

Peter Marcus, Durango Herald: "What we've seen is frustration building over PARCC exams, and exams in general and it sort of boiled over. And now the frustration has led to a mandate on the legislature to get something done. Unfortunately they've stalled, so you would have to think in the next few weeks they're really going to feel the pressure to get something over the finish line."

On Law Enforcement Reforms

Marcus: "When the package was unveiled there was all this talk of support from the law enforcement community and within the legislature and somewhere along the way the bills got the hearing we found out there wasn't universal support from the law enforcement community and all the stakeholders. "

Schrader: "Some of them are non-starters for Republicans when they look at these issues."

Bente Birkeland is an award-winning journalist who joined Colorado Public Radio in August 2018 after a decade of reporting on the Colorado state capitol for the Rocky Mountain Community Radio collaborative and KUNC. In 2017, Bente was named Colorado Journalist of the Year by the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), and she was awarded with a National Investigative Reporting Award by SPJ a year later.
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