Featured post

Welcome to AAUW Colorado’s Blog!

To leave a comment:

    • Click “comments” at the end of any post.
    • A new page opens.
    • Enter your name/nickname and email address.
    • Type your comment in the designated box.
    • Scroll to the bottom of the page and select the appropriate images to complete our anti-spam challenge. You’ll do this by hovering over an image and clicking on it if the photo shows a cat. This prevents our blog from receiving automated spam comments.
    • When you are satisfied, click “Post Comment.”

To publish a post on AAUW Colorado’s blog:

    • You must first request a username and password. Click this link to create your account.
    • We will send your login information via email as soon as possible.
    • After you receive this information, scroll to the bottom of AAUW Colorado’s website and click the teal text that says Log In.
    • Enter your username and password.
    • Click the Posts tab on the left side of your screen.
    • Click the Add New button.
    • Fill in the blanks for your post’s title and content.
    • As needed, select a Category on the right side of your screen. This helps you organize your post and lets other readers search for particular topics of interest (ex: Fundraising, Public Policy, etc.).
    • When you are ready, click the blue Publish button on the right side of your screen.

To sort through blog posts by category, please use the following links:

Fall 2019 test registration

  • AAUW Colorado 2019 Fall Leadership Conference
    Friday, August 23 and Saturday, August 24, 2019
    Holiday Inn Denver Lakewood 7390 W. Hampden Ave

    L O D G I N G: To make room reservations, call 855 914-1378 and request the AAUW Conference Rate. Group rates are offered August 23-25 based on availability. Reservations are first come, first served – and should be made as soon as possible due to limited availability. 2 Queen Beds or 1 King for $129.00 per night. Lodging rate deadline noon Tuesday, July 23, 2019

  • Registration Fees

  • Food Options

    You must register for meals at the same time as you register for the conference.
  • $0.00
  • Register online with credit card payment through PayPal (you don’t need PayPal account to register)
    Questions: contact Stormy McDonald, 303-526-8833
    REGISTER BY AUGUST 10, 2019
    ABSOLUTELY NO REFUNDS AFTER AUGUST 10, 2019

PUBLIC POLICY ALERT

The Colorado Springs Public Policy Interest Group learned much during our first foray to the State Capitol!  The purpose of this article is to alert AAUW members about an interesting  political landscape  that is challenging us:

AMERICAN LEGISLATIVE EXCHANGE COUNCIL (ALEC)

With the current  impasse in Congress, we have discovered the highly orchestrated effort  of an organization called ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council) , that is now targeting state legislatures in order to accomplish their agenda.  We need to learn more about them.

Here is a quote from ALEC website’s (www.ALEC.org )   describing what they do:

“ALEC is proud of its work and its limited role. It provides a venue for earnest discussion on important economic issues. ALEC does not lobby in any state. Its model bills and resolutions are public policy resources for state legislators. To the extent any ALEC model bill is successful, it is because it provides legislators and their constituents with the kind of free market, limited government solutions they want.”

However, according to www.ALECexposed.org, , “ALEC is a corporate bill mill.  It is not just a lobby or a front group; it is much more powerful than that. Through ALEC, corporations hand legislators their wishlists to benefit their bottom line.  Corporations fund almost all of ALEC’s operations.  They pay f or a seat on ALEC task forces where corporate lobbyists and special interest reps vote with elected officials to approve “model bills.”

You may want to also check out an article at www.justice.org entitled, Ghostwriting the Law for Corporate America, that states:

“The Koch Brothers, big tobacco, insurance companies, and the drug industry: all behind the shadowy corporate front group known as the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). On the
surface, ALEC is mostly comprised of thousands of state legislators, each paying a nominal fee to attend ALEC retreats and receive model legislation. In reality, corporations pay ALEC a king’s ransom to access legislators to distribute radical legislation that puts corporate interests over American workers and consumers.

So, while the membership appears to be public sector, corporate money dominates ALEC. In fact, public sector membership dues account for only around one percent of ALEC’s annual revenues. ALEC claims to be nonpartisan, but its pro-corporate, anti-consumer mission is clear.”

For an example of ALEC’s model bill on Education, check out  their  Education Savings Account Act that allows parents to use the funds that would have been allocated to their child at their resident school district for an education program of the parents’ choosing.

COLORADO LEGISLATORS ARE INVOLVED WITH ALEC

Many Colorado legislators are active in ALEC, including Senator Bill Cadman of El Paso County, who is listed on their website as a national board member and co-chair of ALEX Colorado.  No complete list of members seems to be available, but there are 11 active Colorado legislators listed at www.sourcewatch.org.  The list may not be current enough to include any of the newly elected  2013 legislators that are participating.