Complete Colorado

Mayors of Colorado’s largest cities push against troubled AI law

DENVER–Artificial intelligence (AI) appears high on the list of legislative priorities for the mayors of Colorado’s three largest cities. That’s according to a joint letter from the trio sent to Governor Polis and Colorado legislators voicing concerns over a highly controversial AI bill passed in 2024.

Yemi Mobolade, mayor of Colorado Springs, along with Denver Mayor Mike Johnston and Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman are urging reforms to Senate Bill 24-205.

Gov. Polis signed ‘Consumer Protections For AI’ into law despite his own grievances about the bill. The law, among other things, sets parameters for AI developers to avoid “algorithmic discrimination” with regard to issues such as housing, banking, hiring, school enrollment, health, insurance, and legal matters.

Yet according to Polis, the new law will “create a complex compliance regime for all developers and deployers of AI” through “significant, affirmative reporting requirements.”

Actual implementation was delayed to June 30, 2026, due to various business and policy leaders in Colorado urging lawmakers to pump the brakes.

The city leaders say the law as written will lead to uncertainty and the death of innovation: “Without reform, the law risks slowing innovation and investment, driving jobs out of Colorado, and imposing millions of dollars in implementation costs at a time of serious budget constraints,” the letter read in part.

Vanessa Rutledge, director of emerging technologies at Independence Institute,* a free market think tank says this bill has gotten pushback from numerous key actors throughout the state.

“The calls to fix SB24-205 aren’t coming from the sidelines—they’re coming from people who know what’s at stake,” Rutledge told Complete Colorado “Mayors Coffman, Johnston and Mobalade have spoken out, and their concerns are echoed by Governor Polis, Attorney General Weiser, members of Colorado’s congressional delegation, and even the bill’s own sponsor, Senate Majority Leader Rodriguez.”

Polis, Weiser, and Rodriguez signed an open letter requesting the bill be amended in June 2024. Additionally, US House Reps. Neguse and Petterson, and Senator Michael Bennet asked the law be amended during the 2025 special legislative session.

Rutledge says compliance costs will continue to grow for state and local governments if this bill stays active as AI will only become more prominent in access to housing, healthcare, education, and other areas,

“When the people who helped pass the bill are now warning about its consequences, it’s a clear sign something’s gone wrong. Lawmakers need to take this seriously and commit to real reform this session,” Rutledge said.

The mayors’ joint letter calls for a “collaborative legislative solution” in the 2026 session.

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