
Loveland City Council eyes sales tax hike to counter citizen-led food tax repeal
One of the two ballot measures would remove the 3 percent sales tax currently being collected on food.

One of the two ballot measures would remove the 3 percent sales tax currently being collected on food.

Petitioners have until August 9 to collect the signatures of 3,126 registered Loveland voters to place the items on the November ballot.

“The use of URAs and TIFs have expanded from their original intended purpose to a tool that is used more broadly for a wider range of economic development projects”–Larimer County Commissioner Jody Shadduck-McNally

Senate Bill 273 closes a more than decade-old loophole on ag land in Colorado URAs

“The fact is that people who have evil in their heart, select schools for a reason. They are gun free zones. We don’t have the budget to have as many SROs as we should in every single school. I really believe this will help and kind of open the eyes and potential for other paths to expand this further.” — Nancy Rumfelt, Thompson School Board Education member.

They know no other way of campaigning except dishonesty and negativity. And the voters of House District 51 rejected it. — Hugh McKean after his primary victory on Tuesday.

“If you believe in election integrity it doesn’t matter if you won or lost, you should pursue the truth,” McKean said.

“A thorough background check was conducted prior to this individual’s hire. However, the prior conviction did not appear on the background check because the individual was charged as a juvenile.” — Lisa Melby senior director of long-term care for Loveland Village.

The painful reality we saw last April with the governor’s declaration is it empowered him and local health officials to pick winners and losers. — Sen. Rob Woodward, R-Loveland

“The health protocols that restaurants and bars and breweries are under are higher than most businesses. If we get anymore sanitized in here, I could start doing surgery.” — Clay Caldwell, Betta Gumbo owner, Loveland.

“After that first inciteful misrepresentation, his video deteriorated from there. You can never trust what you see or what is said. You have to do your research and verify the facts yourself.” Julie Formby, organizer of Keep Colorado Free and Open.

“There is a tremendous amount of misinformation out there. I’ve been very outspoken on most of that. But some of the questions were beyond my scope. We are in the middle of enforcing Senate Bill 217, trying to implement change to law enforcement roles, and people want me to deputize every man, woman and child. That is not something wise to be discussing.” — Larimer County Sheriff Justin Smith
Another week, another column about Colorado’s ruling class treating democracy like a state trooper treats the speed limit. It’s for other people.
I swear, I want to write about literally anything else — aliens, sports, lab-grown meat, Bigfoot opening a vape shop in Pueblo.
But Colorado’s legislature has never been more abusive to the citizenry, or hypocritical.
To save time, I won’t rehash the endless “No Kings,” “Trump is destroying democracy,” “our sacred duty is protecting democracy, so be happy you have us” self-promotion constantly ejaculated by Colorado’s ruling class.
But, for the sake of argument, let’s pretend every word of it is true. Let’s assume President Donald Trump wakes every morning and convenes a joint special-forces meeting to steal democracy in Colorado.
If democracy is truly hanging by a thread, then surely Colorado’s Democrat majority is heroically defending it. I mean, they say that’s their job one, next to banning ketchup packets (Senate Bill 146, seriously).
Which leaves me confused.
Because from my tiny little “just-a-citizen” brain perspective, they seem to spend an awful lot of time removing voters’ power, hiding meetings, dodging taxpayer consent and nullifying ballot initiatives.
Maybe I’m missing the advanced theory of democracy taught only in elite government seminars and overpriced Aspen retreats.
Take Senate Bill 150. It strips away two-thirds of RTD’s publicly elected board seats and replaces them with appointees.
Silly me. I thought democracy involved electing people.
But apparently true democracy is when insiders choose insiders to protect the public from the dangerous unpredictability of… the public.
Then there’s House Bill 1326, which exempts the all-powerful Public Utilities Commission from open meetings laws.
Again, I’m sure there’s a sophisticated democracy-enhancing explanation for this.
Perhaps democracy works best when the public cannot actually watch government decisions being made. Sort of a “trust us you peasants” model of self-government.
House Bill 1418 puts a “fee” on games young people play online.
Now, if it walks like a tax, quacks like a tax and drains your wallet like a tax, a normal person might call it a tax. But by labeling it a “fee,” lawmakers can dodge asking voters for permission.
Which is convenient. Because asking permission from citizens can really slow down democracy.
Even more amazing, this fee appears large enough that under existing law it should require voter approval anyway. Yet lawmakers are still trying to skip the vote.
Apparently democracy is strongest when elections are treated as optional.
Then there’s Senate Bill 135, which takes your TABOR refunds. At least this one goes to the ballot. But the ballot language will say the money goes to education.
In reality, only a small fraction actually does.
Maybe I’m old fashioned, but using misleading ballot language to convince voters to surrender their money feels less like defending democracy and more like a used car salesman turning back the odometer on a lemon.
Now comes the cherry on top, House Bill 1430, filed in the final chaotic moments of the session. Its purpose is beautifully simple: invalidate a citizen initiative that might appear on the ballot this fall. Kill what voters might vote for before they vote on it.
I always believed democracy meant if voters approve something at the ballot box, government respects the outcome. Isn’t that what the anger against Trump and Tina Peters is all about?
Here’s the backstory: Colorado used to dedicate sales tax revenue from automobile parts and accessories to roads. Which honestly seems reasonable, given roads are where cars generally go (Man, if I could still get away with a drunk driving joke, this would be a perfect spot).
But the legislature ended that sensible funding stream. We don’t really do road funding anymore. I don’t need to convince you of that. Instead, we currently do incentives for front-end alignment shops.
Now there’s a potential citizen initiative that might restore that road-funding mechanism. Maybe it makes the ballot. Maybe voters approve it. Maybe they don’t.
That’s how democracy is supposed to work.
But HB-1430 essentially says, “That’s cute. Your vote still won’t matter.”
If voters approve returning the road funding, with 1430 lawmakers will reduce road funding by the exact same amount.
Thankfully, Colorado is governed by people who understand democracy far better than voters do.
Thank God Colorado’s one-party rulers are here to save democracy from the voters.
Jon Caldara is president of Independence Institute, a free market think tank in Denver.

Colorado Governor Jared Polis recently discussed the future of Colorado and its energy targets. However, there doesn’t seem to be a path forward without extra resources. Where would this additional funding come from? PowerGab Hosts Jake Fogleman and Amy Cooke discuss this and more.
Show Notes:
SB26-182 CSU keep Ray Nixon open until 2032
SB 102 – Data Center and large load
HB 26 1030 – Data center and Utility Modernization
Jared Polis on Politico Energy Podcast
Pew Research: Americans blame utilities for rising home energy bills
Because the grid could use a backup plan.
Yes, we’re giving away a Predator Generator.
No, this is not a drill.
Yes, it’s because reliability apparently isn’t fashionable anymore.
Starting with the first show of 2026, drop a funny, clever, or pithy comment in the show’s comment section.
That’s it. No forms. No fine print to initial. No ESG questionnaire.
At the end of the session, we’ll select our top 3–5 favorite comments.
Then you vote on the winner.
Democracy still works here. Mostly.
Winner announced on the last show in May 2026.
One comment.
One generator.
Because when the grid wobbles, satire won’t keep your lights on — but a Predator Generator will.

In this conversation, political scientist Lindsey Cormack discusses why America’s civic knowledge crisis may be deeper than most people realize. From students not understanding basic government concepts like federalism, primaries, or even the three branches of government, to broader concerns about self-governance, voter participation, and the growing disconnect between citizens and civic responsibility, the discussion explores what happens when people stop understanding how their own system works. The interview also dives into ranked choice voting, approval voting, local government involvement, the “American experiment,” and why raising informed, engaged citizens may no longer be something schools can handle alone.