Colorado: Miklosi

May 21, 2009 - 10:21 am
NEWS FEED: Denver Post

Children's safety net tightened

Two years ago this month, 7-year-old Chandler Grafner starved to death in the bottom of a linen closet in a case of child abuse that outraged Coloradans and shone a light on holes in the state's child-welfare safety net.

The deaths of 12 other children that came to public attention a year later underscored those flaws.

A new law that took effect Tuesday is aimed at mending holes in that safety net by requiring every new social worker in Colorado to attend state training on how to better recognize and document cases of child abuse.

The law requires state training and certification for county and city workers, some of whom may not have received standardized on-the-job education at the local level, according to Gov.

March 26, 2009 - 01:03 pm
NEWS FEED: Denver Post

Click of the mouse may sign up new voters

You use it to go shoe shopping in your bare feet. You use it to book your vacation while at work.

Why not also use the Internet to register to vote?

You just might be able to, under a bill chugging through the state legislature.

House bill 1160 would allow people to register to vote, request a mail-in ballot or change their voting address online through what bill proponents say will be a highly secure website run by the Colorado secretary of state's office. The bill would not allow people to cast votes online.

The bill won final approval, with broad bipartisan support, in the state House on Monday and next faces at least three votes in the state Senate.

January 28, 2009 - 09:14 pm

Initiative could boost jobs, energy

Coloradans may be able to vote on a November ballot initiative that combines the current push for job creation with the renewable-energy focus of the past two years.

Rep. Joe Miklosi, D-Denver, will introduce a ballot measure this week seeking voter permission to sell $2 billion in bonds to fund renewable-energy system installation or energy-efficiency upgrades on about 133,000 homes. It will be the first proposed referred measure introduced in 2009.

Under the freshman legislator's plan, residents could apply for loans of as much as $15,000 to install solar, wind or geothermal renewable energy systems or energy- efficiency improvements. They could repay the loans in installments of between 10 and 30 years.