Michael Garcia | |
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Member of the Colorado House of Representatives from the 42nd district |
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In office January 10, 2001 – February 1, 2008 |
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Preceded by | Bob Hagedorn |
Succeeded by | Karen Middleton |
Personal details | |
Born | January 11, 1974 [1] Fort Bragg, North Carolina |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | none |
Religion | Catholic[2] |
Michael Garcia (born January 11, 1974) is a former Colorado legislator. Elected to the Colorado House of Representatives as a Democrat in 2000, Garcia was re-elected three times to represent House District 42, which includes central Aurora, Colorado.[3]
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Born in Fort Bragg, North Carolina[1] to a U.S. Army veteran, Garcia's family settled in Aurora, Colorado, where he attended Aurora Public Schools and graduated from Aurora Central High School in 1992. He then earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Colorado in 1996 and a master's degree from the University of Arizona in 1998. After graduation, Garcia received a fellowship from the Congressional Hispanic Caucus to serve as a legislative assistant to Texas U.S. Representative Solomon P. Ortiz;[4] he worked in Washington, DC until 1999 before returning to Colorado.[1]
From May 2003 to December 2007, he was as Coordinator for the Youth Council for Public Policy at the University of Colorado at Boulder. While working at CU, he taught college courses on American government, including a course titled "Civic Engagement: Using the Electoral Process as a Tool for Social Change. He has also served on the Board of Directors of Spirit of Aurora, the Aurora Education Foundation, and the Aurora Museum Foundation.[1] In 2006, Garcia was named one of the Denver Business Journal's "40 under 40" list of young achievers.
Garcia is unmarried and has no children, but is close to his nieces, Alex and Sophia, and nephew, Christopher.[2]
Garcia returned to Colorado and launched his first legislative campaign in 2000, winning a seat in the Colorado House of Representatives[4] after defeating three other opponents in a contested Democratic party primary. His election at the age of 26 made him the youngest legislator in the state of Colorado. He was subsequently re-elected three times to the state house, winning handily each time in the solidly Democratic district.[3]
In 2004, after Democrats gained control of the state house, Garcia was elected Assistant Majority Leader, a post he held through 2008.[2]
In 2006, Garcia sponsored legislation to create a Denver Broncos specialty license plate.[5]
Bills Introduced in 2007 by Rep. Garcia (for which Rep. Garcia is the primary originating sponsor) |
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BILL | TITLE | OUTCOME |
HB07-1072 | Concerning the elimination of requirements for a vote ratifying an all-union agreement. | Vetoed by Gov. Ritter |
HB07-1147 | Concerning the confidentiality of witness protection materials. | Signed by Gov. Ritter |
HB07-1157 | Concerning real estate foreclosures. | Signed by Gov. Ritter |
HB07-1230 | Concerning claims practices for bodily injury to a third-party claimant arising out of the use of a motor vehicle. | Postponed indefinitely in House committee |
HB07-1376 | Concerning the date on which precinct caucuses are held. | Signed by Gov. Ritter |
In the 2007 and 2008 legislative sessions, Garcia sat on the House Appropriations Committee and the House Finance Committee.[6][7]
During the 2007 legislative session, Garcia sponsored a measure[8] to lower the age of legislative candidacy in Colorado, currently set at 25.[9] The referendum, an amendment to the Colorado Constitution to lower the age limit to 21, (Garcia's original proposal would have set the age at 18[10]) passed the General Assembly and will be on the statewide general election ballot in 2008.[11]
Garcia also sponsored contentious legislation during the 2007 session to amend Colorado's labor laws to ease restrictions on the formation of closed shop unions.[12] Although it passed the legislature, the bill was vetoed by Democratic Gov. Bill Ritter.[13] Following the veto, Garcia stated that he would not seek to overturn the veto or re-introduce the legislation.[14]
Garcia was the House sponsor of a measure introduced in the Colorado State Senate to require that passage of an English competency test be required for high school graduation. The measure died in a Senate committee.[15] Garcia introduced legislation which revised rules surrounding real estate foreclosures, including forbidding consensual liens on foreclosed properties.[16] Garcia also sponsored revisions to House rules to limit the number and type of introductions that could be given by members on the House floor.[17]
Between the 2007 and 2008 legislative sessions, Garcia chaired the Interim Committee on Long-term Care Services and Supports for Persons with Developmental Disabilities.[18][19] As a result of his work with this committee, he proposed a half-cent sales tax increase to fund services for several thousand Colorado residents with developmental disabilities currently on waiting lists,[20][21] but withdrew the proposal amid criticism.[22]
Garcia resigned from office on February 1, 2008 amid a scandal in which he was accused of sexual misconduct with a female lobbyist at a bar. Garcia responded, "The other party and I engaged in consensual conduct that was inappropriate given my position in the legislature and the fact that the other party is a lobbyist," though the other party contradicts this.[23]