Stand with Colorado's Homeowners

Colorado's State Legislature

Big developers and builders promise homebuyers looking at new construction condos or houses that their new home is built right and made to last. But too frequently, construction defects risk their family's safety.

From water damage, to leaky roofs, to bad foundations, to moldy drywall and deteriorating building materials, shoddy construction impacts Colorado's communities - draining our time, energy, and resources. When construction defects happen, we expect to be able to hold the builders and developers accountable for their shoddy product -- and in Colorado, right now, we can.

But for several years, big builders and developers have been waging a war against Colorado's construction defects laws, which protect our communities from shoddy construction. And they've been getting their way so far.

NOW IS THE TIME TO RAISE OUR VOICES! We must tell our elected officials to stand up to big builders & developers for the sake of Colorado's safety.

Add your name to the growing list of Coloradans who are standing up for each other. Coloradans are making our voices heard in the face of the building industry's scare tactics and lobbyists who are trying to take away our rights as homeowners. Sign the petition to our city councils and State Legislature TODAY >>

To: Colorado's State Legislature
From: [Your Name]

As a Colorado resident, I believe homeowners should be protected from developers who sell shoddily built homes – and I expect you, my elected officials, to protect Coloradans against a powerful and well-funded construction industry and not give them an unfair advantage against homeowners.

Please vote no laws that would:
--- Force homeowners to accept home repairs from a builder who built it wrong the first time
--- Make homeowners pay for mandatory, binding arbitration, a biased process that may not even result in adequate fixes
--- Take away homeowners' right to a jury trial for construction defects, under any circumstances
--- Force homeowners to wait until someone gets hurt in order to take legal action to fix the defect.