The climate-change lawsuit launched in state court against ExxonMobil and Suncor Energy by the city of Boulder, along with San Miguel and Boulder counties, is the wrong complaint in the wrong forum, panelists said Thursday at a Colorado Association of Commerce & Industry (The Colorado Chamber) event. Read the complete article by Mark Jaffe at ColoradoPolitics.com.
Supreme Court Decision Resounds with Business Leaders, Republicans Who Sought Reform to Commission
Groups like the Colorado Association of Commerce and Industry, argued that reform was needed in order for companies to get a fair shake going forward. Read the Complete Article by Ed Sealover in the Denver Business Journal.
Ballot Wars: Competing Transportation Funding Measures May Be on November Ballot
A Strong Legislative Session Makes for a Bright Future for Businesses in Colorado
This year, the Colorado Chamber of Commerce and the statewide business community worked diligently to support bills that would offer greater transportation funding, minimize employer mandates, and increase natural gas and oil production, while fighting against bills that threatened opportunity in our state. Read the complete Guest Column by Tracee Bentley and Loren Furman in […]
Disingenuous Lawsuit Over Climate Change is a Drain on Colorado’s Economy
While new to many, Colorado celebrates a long history of collaboration to tackle the big challenges our state has faced. Colorado thrives because people from across our state work together, and our energy and natural resource development is a chief example. Here, some of the strictest government oversights of oil and gas production and energy […]
2018 Colorado Legislature: Progress for Business in a House Divided
“All of the employer-mandate bills that were adverse to the growth and operational interests of Colorado businesses were soundly defeated,” said Loren Furman, senior vice president of state and federal relations for the Colorado Chamber of Commerce. Read the complete article in Colorado Politics by Dan Njegomir
Last-Minute Compromise Saves Contentious Bill to Reauthorize Civil Rights Commission and Division
Business Issues Aplenty Addressed–and Accomplished–During 2018 Legislative Session
The Colorado Chamber’s Loren Furman said the bill that approved a plan to close the $32 billion unfunded liability in the public-pension system may have been the biggest of the session because of its broad effect. Read the complete article by Ed Sealover in the Denver Business Journal.
