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Also known as: Centennial State

Constitutional framework

In 1875 a convention drew up the constitution for the prospective state, which was admitted to the union the following year. Because Colorado’s admission occurred 100 years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence, it became known as the Centennial State.

The executive branch is made up of a governor, a lieutenant governor, a secretary of state, an attorney general, and a state treasurer, who are elected to four-year terms. Numerous commissions, boards, and examiners are appointed to discharge the executive functions of state government. At the county level the constitution provides for several kinds of officers.

The legislative branch consists of a bicameral legislature known as the General Assembly, which meets annually. It comprises a Senate of 35 members elected to four-year terms and a House of Representatives of 65 members elected to two-year terms. By a rule adopted in 1977 to streamline the legislative process, members of the assembly may introduce no more than five bills per year. The Legislative Council, created by statute in 1953, is a nonpartisan fact-finding agency of the General Assembly. The Joint Budget Committee, established in 1959, is the General Assembly’s permanent agency for fiscal and budgetary review.

Local governments in Colorado have a jurisdictional balance with the state government. Counties can opt for either a home-rule charter or a constitutional government with offices and powers outlined by the state legislature. Several of the counties have home-rule charters. Constitutional local governments generally consist of the following officers (variations depending on population): commissioners, clerk, sheriff, coroner, treasurer, surveyor, assessor, and attorney. Most terms are for four years. Property taxes are levied by local governments, especially school districts, and not by the state; such taxes are subject to frequent rebates and credits.

The Colorado judiciary comprises the seven-member state Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals, district courts encompassing one or more counties, and county courts. The chief justice of the Supreme Court is the head of the state’s judicial branch. In addition, the constitution calls for juvenile and probate courts as well as municipal courts, which provide the grassroots core of the judicial system. The judiciary also comprises seven special courts that adjudicate conflicts over water resources.

Since World War II each state political campaign has involved the issue of extension of federal activities, with Democrats generally committed to extension and Republicans opposed. Since the 1920s each of the two parties has won control of the legislature in about half of the elections, which indicates a fairly even balance within the state. Colorado trended decidedly conservative and Republican in the late 20th century, but Democrats made gains in the early 21st century. Democrats tended to have relatively greater success in local elections than in congressional ones, but several Colorado Democrats have achieved national prominence; among them were Sen. Gary Hart and Rep. Patricia Schroeder.

Health and welfare

Colorado’s income per capita is well above the national average, as is its expenditure on public assistance. There is considerable income disparity between the rural counties and the urban counties of the Front Range corridor. For example, Arapahoe’s per capita income, the highest among the area’s urban counties, is more than three times that of Conejos, the lowest among the area’s rural counties. Provision of health, education, and other services is affected by the disparity, although the state government attempts to equalize services.

Education

Education is mandatory between ages 7 and 16. Publicly supported primary education began in 1862, and secondary schools opened in the following decade. Population increases in the late 20th century created problems in funding and instructional space; even so, Colorado ranks favourably nationally in terms of levels of educational attainment and standardized test scores. The high-school-graduation rate was about three-fourths in the early 21st century.

Colorado ranks among the top states in terms of number of college and university graduates. The people of the Colorado Territory created the University of Colorado in 1861, although the school did not open until 1877. It has its main campus in Boulder, with branches in Colorado Springs and Denver. The Colorado School of Mines (1869), in Golden, and Colorado State University (1870), at Fort Collins, were founded before statehood, and the State Normal School of Colorado (later Colorado State College of Education; now University of Northern Colorado), in Greeley, was established in 1889. Colorado Mesa University (1925), in Grand Junction, serves the westernmost part of the state. Another public institution, Fort Lewis College (1964), in Durango, grew from an Indian school founded in 1911 into a liberal arts college whose mission includes providing tuition-free education for Native Americans.

In all, Colorado has more than 40 colleges, junior colleges, and universities, of which more than two dozen are publicly supported. Among the state’s noteworthy private higher educational institutions are the University of Denver (1864), Colorado College (1874), in Colorado Springs, and Naropa University (founded as the Naropa Institute in 1974), in Boulder, which provides “contemplative” education based on a fusion of Eastern and Western pedagogical traditions. Of special note is the U.S. Air Force Academy, authorized by Congress in 1954. In 1958 it moved into its campus just north of Colorado Springs.