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Marshall highlights his top bills in freshman session

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Public Notices

Public Notices

BY HALEY LENA HLENA@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

State Rep. Robert Marshall, D-Highlands Ranch, hosted a couple postsession town halls last week, speci cally highlighting ve bills that he brought to the Colorado General Assembly.

With lawmakers introducing over 600 bills in the 2023 session, Marshall was the prime sponsor for a handful of them.

“Once you see how the sausage is made, the stu I was able to get was actually, I think, pretty impressive,” said Marshall.

One of the bills was HB23-1208 Income Tax Credit for Eligible Teachers, which made it out of the education and nance committees but died in appropriation as he was told there was not enough money, according to Marshall.

Rep. Matt Soper, R-Mesa County, and Sen. Janice Rich, R-Mesa County, joined Marshall in sponsoring the bill. If passed, the bill would have given state income tax credit for a licensed teacher who is employed as a full-time public school teacher for at least half of an academic year.

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