DENVER—A diverse group of technology and public policy organizations, led by a Denver-based think tank, is urging the legislature to “pause and improve” Colorado’s controversial artificial intelligence (AI) law as the special session kicks off.
Senate Bill 24-205, ‘Consumer Protection for Artificial Intelligence’ was signed by Governor Polis in May 2024 despite his own grievances about the bill’s potential impacts on Colorado’s status as a technology innovation-friendly state.
The bill sets parameters for both AI developers and users to avoid algorithmic discrimination in “consequential decisions” over such things as hiring, banking, housing, school enrollment, insurance, health and legal matters. Competing measures to address issues in the law were introduced as part of the special session, with several versions advancing out of committee on Thursday.
The Independence Institute, a free-market think tank in Denver (also the publisher of Complete Colorado), sent a letter to Governor Polis and the Colorado legislature, signed by representatives of 18 other organizations from around the country with a strong interest in emerging technology policy, asking policymakers to, at the very least, push the original implementation date of February 1, 2026, to August 2027/
The letter points out that Colorado officials, including Gov. Polis and Attorney General Phil Weiser, have already urged updates to the law, and highlights the statewide, and potentially nationwide, impacts the law could have if put into effect as planned on February 1.
“SB24-205 tries to solve every problem at once, and in doing so, it risks strangling Colorado’s AI software industry before it can even take off,” said Vanessa Rutledge, director of emerging technologies at Independence Institute. “By writing such vague and sweeping rules, the bill would bury small developers and startups in red tape while concentrating enormous discretion in the Attorney General’s office.”
Rutledge told Complete Colorado the AI law as currently written will clip Colorado’s wings before it can even fly.
“Lawmakers need to postpone the implementation of this bill to August 2027. Colorado can both foster innovation and protect consumers.”

