Rocky Mountain Voice

Tag: Working Families

Big business taxes, small family credits, and a permanent tax on overtime
Rocky Mountain Voice, State, Top Stories

Big business taxes, small family credits, and a permanent tax on overtime

By Shaina Cole | Contributing Writer, Rocky Mountain Voice Rep. Yara Zokaie stood before the House Finance Committee on March 9 and made the case for HB26-1221, a bill targeting executive pay deductions and corporate loss carry-forwards. "Our families are struggling to juggle their rent, groceries, and utilities," she said. The legislature had a choice. It could "choose to protect tax breaks for millionaire CEO salaries" or "allow for a break for our hard-working Coloradan families." Zokaie also co-signed HB26-1289. The reengrossed text of that bill, passed by the House on May 4, contains a provision requiring Colorado workers to add their federally exempt overtime pay back into state taxable income. Congress created a federal income tax deduction on overtime pay — up to $12,500 ...
What tax day looks like in Colorado: A business owner, a paycheck—and what changed this year
Rocky Mountain Voice, State, Top Stories

What tax day looks like in Colorado: A business owner, a paycheck—and what changed this year

By Jen Schumann | Rocky Mountain Voice A mother approached a federal official after a recent event with a simple observation. She said her daughter, who is working through nursing school, saved about $8,000 because of the no-tax-on-tips provision. “That’s three to four months of rent,” U.S. Small Business Administration Regional Administrator Justin Everett said, recalling the conversation. As Americans file their taxes, Everett is part of an effort to highlight what the administration is calling “Working Family Tax Cuts,” a set of federal tax changes aimed at reducing the burden on small businesses and workers. According to White House estimates Everett cited, Colorado families could see between $4,500 and $8,100 in tax savings, with take-home pay rising higher in some ...
Potholes and Broken Promises: Colorado’s Working Class Deserves Better
Rocky Mountain Voice, Approved, Commentary, State, Top Stories

Potholes and Broken Promises: Colorado’s Working Class Deserves Better

By Bobbie Daniel | Guest Commentary, Rocky Mountain Voice Drive a mile in Colorado and you’ll know the truth: our roads are crumbling, and so is the promise that the government would take care of this basic function. Families scrape by to keep their cars running while the same political elite who’ve run this state for twenty years pour billions into pet projects and leave working people holding the bill. Colorado’s highways were built the way a farm is built — ditch by ditch, fence by fence, harvest by harvest. Generations of Coloradans invested billions so our economy could function. From rural to urban, our families could get where they needed to go. But now the ditch and fence are broken, and instead of repairing it, the political class is off buying themselves a BMW. Nice ride, m...
Colorado Sued for for Taxing Overtime Pay Exempted by Trump
State, Approved, Westword

Colorado Sued for for Taxing Overtime Pay Exempted by Trump

By Michael Roberts | Westword The lawsuit challenges a recently passed Colorado law that will continue taxing overtime pay at the state level. As President Donald Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act temporarily cuts federal taxes on overtime pay, some Colorado Republicans are seeking to force the state to follow suit. The conservative advocacy group Advance Colorado filed a lawsuit on Thursday, July 24, challenging a new law that will continue taxing overtime pay at the state level, regardless of federal changes. The lawsuit was filed in Denver District Court against Governor Jared Polis and the head of Colorado’s tax agency. Other plaintiffs attached to the suit include Republican State Senator Barbara Kirkmeyer and Fremont County Commissioner Kevin Grantham. The lawsuit target...
Franz: Climate hawks are facing extinction—realism is taking flight
Real Clear Energy, Approved, National

Franz: Climate hawks are facing extinction—realism is taking flight

By Danielle Franz | Real Clear Energy Once perched atop the climate movement’s moral high ground, the self-anointed “climate hawks” are now watching their influence dwindle, and nowhere is that retreat more visible than in California. Long the epicenter of progressive climate ambition, the Golden State is now backpedaling. Democrats who once championed aggressive environmental mandates are hitting pause, reworking regulations, and distancing themselves from policies that have driven up energy and housing costs. A post-2024 reality check has swept the party: climate may still poll well in theory, but not when it collides with affordability. This shift isn’t isolated. It’s emblematic of the climate hawks’ broader failure — a movement that moralized, catastrophized, and sacrificed w...

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