Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-2018
Publication Title
Colorado Lawyer
Abstract
When the 72nd General Assembly commences in January 2019, many researchers will want to follow the developing legislation. In the Second Regular session of the 71st General Assembly, the House considered 441 bills and the Senate considered 280 bills on a wide range of subjects, both controversial and mundane.1 Researchers need a way to sift through this large amount of legislation so they can track legislation pertinent to them through the legislative process. h e General Assembly’s website offers one approach. So too do commercial services, which of er not only access to the status of legislation and documents created in the process, but also methods to track and share the legislation’s progress. h is article examines three commercial services that provide varying levels of free access to their legislative tracking services and compares their offerings with the General Assembly’s website.
Volume
47
Issue
11
First Page
10
Last Page
13
Recommended Citation
Robert M. Linz, Tracking Colorado Legislation, 47 Colo. Law 10 (2018).