Kurt has the plan.
As your current State Representative for House District 43 and after serving the last four sessions as a legislative volunteer at the State Capitol, Kurt Huffman is the only candidate with the experience and connections to make an immediate impact once elected this November.
Kur’ts highest legislative priority is focused on Colorado's economy including inflation, unemployment, rising consumer prices, high cost of energy and gasoline, supply shortages, homeless, crime, drugs, and many other symptoms of economic recession.
Legislation Kurt Has Worked On
As a legislative volunteer working with Representative Mark Baisley for the last four sessions, Kurt has worked on 13 bipartisan house bills, 10 of which passed and were signed into law.
The 10 bills that are now law include:
HB22-1306, Broadband Deployment Board Grant Processes
HB21-1296, Limited Gaming Codify Executive Orders
HB21-1292, Report Revenues From Sports Betting Activity
HB21-1289, Funding For Broadband Deployment
HB21-1236, State Information Technology
HB21-1230, Create User-friendly State Internet Rules Portal
HB21-1132, Local Government Limited Gaming Impact Fund
HB21-1095, 811 Locate Exemption For County Road Maintenance
HB20-1297, Immunization Status and Child Abuse Neglect
HB20-1039, Transparent State Web Portal Search Rules
Legislation Kurt Is Working On
As your State Representative for HD43 serving on the Transportation Legislation Review Committee, Kurt just recently drafted and is the prime sponsor of the committee bill “Move Over or Slow Down Stationary Vehicle",” which strengthens the current Colorado “slow-down, move-over” laws.
Additionally, he became the co-sponsor of the following bills: "Registration of Motor Vehicles in Fleets," "Yield to Larger Vehicles in Roundabouts," and "Commercial Motor Carrier Enforcement Safety Laws." Read all of the draft bills on Colorado.gov
Kurt’s Legislative Plans
Kurt is also currently planning his first legislative session with proposed bipartisan legislation including five house bills in areas of improving our economy, ensuring community safety, guaranteeing criminal justice, and preserving community standards.
Kurt is looking at one of his first bills being the “In God We Trust” license plate. As a legislative volunteer during the 2022 session, he ran it with Rep. Baisley and it was killed at committee, although six other license plate bills passed. This bill, originally proposed by a disabled veteran in our district, has been pre-filed for the next session. This means it will be entered onto the floor on the first day of the session, so we have the entire session to make sure it gets through this time.
As an expert on community association management, I have already been contacted from across the aisle to work on legislation that we want to run on community associations in the state to make sure they are run fairly, that our vote counts, and that we have an opportunity for good community associations.