Colorado Code § 26-11-101

Commission on the aging - created - definition
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(1) (a) There is created in
the state department the Colorado commission on the aging, referred to in this article 11 as the
"commission", for the purpose of coordinating and guiding the implementation of the strategic
action plan on aging, developed pursuant to section 24-32-3406, as that section existed prior to
June 30, 2022, and other strategies the commission may identify that support older Coloradans.
The commission is a type 2 entity, as defined in section 24-1-105. The commission shall consist
of nineteen members who must be appointed as follows:
(I) One member from the Colorado senate, appointed by the president of the senate;
(II) One member from the Colorado house of representatives, appointed by the speaker
of the house of representatives; and
(III) Seventeen members appointed by the governor, with the consent of the senate, as
follows:
(A) One member from each congressional district of the state;
(B) One member who is a representative of higher education or the Colorado community
college system;
(C) One member who is a director of an area agency on aging, as described in section
26-11-204;
(D) One member with extensive knowledge of workforce issues impacting older
Coloradans;
(E) One member who represents a long-term residential care setting;
(F) One member who represents Coloradans living with dementia;
(G) One member who represents an organization providing home- and community-based
services;
(H) One member with extensive knowledge of or experience with transportation
infrastructure and services;
(I) One member who represents the housing sector; and
(J) One member of the public policy or elder law community with extensive knowledge
of and experience with aging policy or elder rights issues.
(b) In making appointments pursuant to subsection (1)(a)(III) of this section, the
governor shall appoint no more than a minimum majority of commission members affiliated
with the same political party. In making appointments, the governor shall select:
(I) Members who represent diverse racial, cultural, socioeconomic, gender, and ability
groups, and individuals receiving community-based social or medical services that support
independent living;
(II) For the congressional district members, at least one member who is sixty years of
age or older, or who is a person living with a disability, or who has a family member living with
a disability;
(III) At least one member who represents rural or frontier areas of the state;
(IV) At least one representative from a local government; and
(V) At least one representative of the business community in order to consider the
potential for initiatives developed in the private, for-profit sector.
(c) Appointments to the commission must comply with the rules promulgated by the
United States department of health and human services pursuant to the federal "Older Americans
Comprehensive Services Amendments of 1973", Pub.L. 93-29, as amended.
(2) (a) A minimum majority of the commission members shall be appointed for an initial
term of two years each, and the remaining commission members shall be appointed for an initial
term of three years each. The governor shall indicate whether the appointed person is serving a
two-year term or a three-year term. Appointments made after the expiration of the initial term
are three-year terms. If a vacancy on the commission occurs, the governor shall appoint a new
member from the appropriate representative group to serve the remainder of the member's term.
No member may serve more than two full consecutive terms.
(b) The terms of present members appointed pursuant to this section expire on August
31, 2022. The governor shall appoint new members pursuant to subsection (1)(a) of this section,
and the appointments are effective September 1, 2022.
(3) As used in this section, "minimum majority" means the lowest number of members
that is more than half of all commission members.

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