Colorado’s Political and Regulatory Climate Faces Questions as Major Firms Relocate
By Jon Caldara | Commentary, The Denver Gazette
At this point, if you hear beeping downtown, it’s not a construction crew. It’s a company backing out.
And look, I get it. Businesses relocate for all sorts of reasons: taxes, regulations, labor costs, office space, crime, commute times, the haunting feeling your chief executive is one City Council meeting away from being declared a single-use plastic. But Colorado’s political class has been turning “headquarters” into an endangered species.
Take TIAA, the financial services giant whose name has for decades been glowing atop a downtown Denver skyscraper like a Bat-Signal for retirement funds. They’re relocating to Frisco, Texas.
Texas? Of course, Texas. If Colorado is the place where we hold hearings on the carbon ...










