Monday, May 9, 2016

Citizens demand new hearings after General Assembly Committee lasts until 5 a.m.


DENVER -- It is considered a new record for the General Assembly – holding a committee meeting that lasts until 5 a.m.

“This is absolutely absurd for this to be happening,” Luanne Flemming said.

Flemming and her sisters were forced to stay at the State Capitol from noon on Thursday until 5am on Friday morning in order to testify for their bill regarding probate reform. The bill was heard in the Democratically controlled House Judiciary Committee.

After nearly 17 hours of being at the Capitol, the bill was voted down with only one lawmaker supporting it.

“We need to have another hearing, this is so unfair to the public,” Flemming said.

“They were yawning and one lawmaker fell asleep,” Flemming added.

Flemming believes that since lawmakers have four months to debate and vote on bills, citizens should not have to endure such late night meetings.

The Flemmings weren’t the only family impacted by the legislature’s actions.

Denny Benton says his 91 year old father could barely speak by the time he was called to testify. Benton says this is a bill that could impact his dad greatly.

“How do you explain to your dad that he might be moved out of his house,” Benton added.

Additionally, the late actor Peter Falk’s daughter – Catherine – was forced to testify out of order because she had to catch a flight. Falk is a national champion for probate reform following a public battle she endured regarding custody and visitation rights for her father.

As for why lawmakers decided to stay late, Rep. Daniel Kagan, the committee’s chair, said he “understands” why witnesses and supporters are upset.

“You don’t have much of a choice,” Kagan told FOX31 political reporter Joe St. George. “We don’t bury bills in Colorado,” Kagan added.

Lamwakers are set to leave town on Wednesday and are under pressure to make sure every bill at least gets a hearing. Officials within the Legislative Council office says the late night sessions had a minimal impact on taxpayers as most of the staff are salaried employees.

Full Article & Source:
Citizens demand new hearings after General Assembly Committee lasts until 5 a.m.

5 comments:

Finny said...

This is outrageous. I can't believe no one on the Committee realized a 91 year-old man was waiting to testify on a bill that dealt with elders.

Valerie said...

It sounds to me like special interest got to the Committee.

StandUp said...

I am proud of those advocates who were treated so badly for speaking up!

Anonymous said...

I think the fix was in. How embarrassing for Colorado to not want this simple reform. It's shameful.

Peter Clemmons said...

What the committee did to these elder citizens was no less than elder abuse itself. I agree with Finny, they knew they were making the elderly gentleman wait and it just didn't matter. Thank heavens for the advocates who raised a stink about it.