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LGBTQ rights in Colorado

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LGBTQ rights in Colorado
Legal statusLegal since 1972
Gender identityState does not require surgery to change gender on official documents
Discrimination protectionsSexual orientation and gender identity/expression are protected categories
Family rights
Recognition of relationshipsDesignated beneficiary agreements since 2009;
Civil unions since 2013;
Same-sex marriage since 2014
AdoptionFull adoption rights since 2014

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) people in theU.S. state ofColorado enjoy the same rights as non-LGBTQ people.[1] In 1972, Colorado became one of the first U.S. states to decriminalize same-sex sexual activity.Same-sex marriage has been recognized since October 2014, and the state enactedcivil unions in 2013, which provide some of the rights and benefits of marriage. State law also prohibits discrimination on account ofsexual orientation andgender identity in employment, housing and public accommodations and the use ofconversion therapy on minors. In July 2020, Colorado became the 11th U.S. state to abolish thegay panic defense.[2]

Colorado is frequently referred to as one of the most LGBT-friendly states in theMountain West. The LGBT think tankMovement Advancement Project ranks Colorado second in the region for LGBTQ rights legislation, behindNevada. 2019 polling from thePublic Religion Research Institute showed that 77% of Colorado residents supported anti-discrimination legislation protecting LGBTQ people.

History and law regarding same-sex sexual activity

[edit]
Two men accused of homosexual sexual activity being punished by wearing female clothing and wheeling heavy rocks,Cañon City, 1900-1910?

TheArapaho, who now live on theWind River Indian Reservation inWyoming, recognize male-bodied individuals who act, behave and live as women, referred to ashaxu'xan. Thehaxu'xan, like women, are traditionally in charge of food preparation and dressing hides to make clothing and bedding. They form a "third gender" in Arapaho society, and can even marry men. The Arapaho believe their gender is "a supernatural gift from birds and animals".[3]

In 1860,sodomy was made illegal in Colorado, then theJefferson Territory, under its first criminal code, which indirectly prohibited sodomy by expressly recognizingcommon law, under which the maximum penalty for sodomy was death. In 1861, theU.S. Congress created theColorado Territory, whose government enacted a criminal code that punished sodomy (as defined by common law) with penalties ranging from one year to life in prison.[4] In 1922, theColorado Supreme Court ruled that the ban did not prohibitfellatio (oral sex), even though the court felt that the behavior was "more vile and filthy than sodomy".[5] The law was revised in 1939 to expressly coveranal intercourse andoral sex, whether heterosexual or homosexual, and the maximum penalty was reduced to fourteen years. In 1953, Colorado enacted a psychopathic offender law that provided for indefinite institutionalization for committing sex crimes, thus putting homosexuals in the same category as rapists and child molesters. The law was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1967 inSpecht v. Patterson, holding that the law was "unconstitutional because the defendants were not afforded basic due process of law in the proceedings". In 1970, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled that the sodomy ban also includedcunnilingus.

In 1971, Colorado revised its penal code and decriminalized sodomy in cases that involved non-commercial, private acts between consenting adults.[6] At the same time, it instituted a public indecency law that banned public displays of affection between same-sex couples. The Colorado Supreme Court struck down that statute in 1974.[7] TheGay Coalition of Denver contributed to the decriminalization of four of the discriminatory laws in the city of Denver. Their City Council Revolt in 1972 was the first time a LGBTQ advocacy organization joined to force law changes.[8]

Recognition of same-sex relationships

[edit]
Main articles:Recognition of same-sex unions in Colorado andSame-sex marriage in Colorado

In 1975, the Boulder County Clerk issued marriage licenses to several same-sex couples after the local district attorney interpreted Colorado's statutes, which used the phrase "any two persons", to be gender-neutral with respect to marriage. State Attorney GeneralJ.D. MacFarlane issued a contrary opinion that those marriages were invalid.[9] When one of those married in Boulder tried to use it to sponsor his husband for immigration purposes, he lost his case,Adams v. Howerton, in federal court.[10] In 2016, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services reversed its decision from 1975 and granted permanent residency status to Anthony Sullivan, based on his marriage to Richard Adams in Boulder on April 21, 1975.[11]

In 1996, GovernorRoy Romer vetoed legislation which would have banned recognition of same-sex marriages. In his notice to theGeneral Assembly, Governor Romer wrote "It is one thing to believe, as I do, that marriage is for the union of a man and woman. It is quite another to believe that committed same sex relationships do not exist and should not be recognized by society."[12] In 2006, astate referendum added language to theColorado Constitution that restricted marriage and common law marriage to couples of different sexes, without mentioningcivil unions or domestic partnerships.[13] In November 2024, over 64% of Colorado voters calledAmendment J repealed the 2006 anti-gay clause within the state constitution.[14]

In April 2009, Colorado enacted a designated beneficiaries law, effective July 1, that allowed anyone to make a same-sex partner the beneficiary of insurance, inheritance, hospital visitations, funeral arrangements and death benefits, and other important matters.[15]

In 2011 and 2012, state lawmakers attempted but failed to pass an act formally recognizingcivil unions,[16] though GovernorJohn Hickenlooper endorsed the legislation in his 2012 State of the State address.[17] In March 2013, both houses of the Democratic-controlled General Assembly passed legislation establishing civil unions that provide rights comparable to those provided to opposite-sex married couples and Governor Hickenlooper signed the bill into law on March 21, 2013. The law went into effect on May 1, 2013.[18]

Governor Hickenlooper signed a bill permitting joint state income tax filing for civil partners and out-of-state same-sex married couples.[19]

On February 19, 2014, nine same-sex couples, some unmarried and some married in other jurisdictions, filed a lawsuit in state court challenging the state's definition of marriage and arguing that civil unions created a "second-class level of citizenship" for gays and lesbians. The suit,McDaniel-Miccio v. Hickenlooper, named Governor Hickenlooper and the Denver City Clerk as defendants. The clerk expressed support for same-sex marriage.[20] Attorney GeneralJohn Suthers, aRepublican, announced he would defend the state's definition of marriage.[21] On October 6, Suthers asked the Tenth Circuit to dismiss his appeal and lift the stay after the U.S. Supreme Court left in place as binding precedent other Tenth Circuit decisions holding bans on same-sex marriage unconstitutional inOklahoma andUtah.[22] Same-sex marriage became legal on October 7, 2014 after the Colorado Supreme Court lifted the last legal barriers and Attorney General John Suthers told clerks around the state to begin issuing licenses.[23]

In January 2021, theColorado Supreme Court ruled that the state must retroactively recognize common-law same-sex marriages that occurred prior to legalization in 2014.[24]

In December 2024, it was reported that the building that conducted the firstmarriage license to a same-sex couple in the 1970s by Clela Rorex, a Boulder County clerk became officially anational monument.[25]

Adoption and parenting

[edit]

A single LGBT person and same-sex couples can petition to adopt in Colorado.[26] Second-parent adoptions are permitted under state law,[26] though the process is more elaborate and expensive than that required of married couples.[27]

Lesbian couples can access assisted reproduction services, such asin vitro fertilization. State law recognizes the non-genetic, non-gestational mother as a legal parent to a child born via donor insemination, but only if the parents are married.[28] While there are no specificsurrogacy laws in Colorado, the courts have ruled that the practice is legal and surrogacy contracts can be recognized as legally valid. Both gestational and traditional contracts are recognized, though the latter may result in potential legal conflicts and more litigation than the former. The state treats different-sex and same-sex couples equally under the same terms and conditions.[29]

Several Catholic adoption agencies do not place children either with single persons or with same-sex couples.[30][31]

On May 20, 2022, Governor Jared Polis signed "Marlo's Law," a bill to reform adoption and parentage laws that apply to children conceived throughIVF. Non-gestational parents still have to adopt their own children, even when they are biologically related to the child and married to a legal parent, but the process has become simpler.[32] The bill had passed both houses of theColorado General Assembly with amendments to specify that it doesn't apply to children conceived through surrogacy.[33][34][35]

Discrimination protections

[edit]
PrideFest in Denver, June 2008

It has been illegal to discriminate on the basis ofsexual orientation andgender identity or expression in employment, housing, public accommodations, education, and credit since the category "sexual orientation" was added to the state's anti-discrimination law in 2008.[36] The bill was controversial and following its passage by the General Assembly opponents waged a media campaign that failed to persuade GovernorBill Ritter to withhold his signature.[37] State statutes define "sexual orientation" as "an individual's orientation toward heterosexuality, homosexuality, bisexuality, or transgender status or another individual's perception thereof."[38]

Moreover, the state's anti-bullying law prohibits bullying on the basis of disability, race, creed, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, religion, ancestry, or need for special education services.[39] The law, which also includes cyberbullying, applies to all school districts, and requires them to "adopt a safe school plan and conduct and discipline code that contains a specific policy addressing bullying prevention and education", including regular surveys of students' impression, character building, the designation of a team of persons at each school to advise the school administration concerning the severity and frequency of bullying incidents, and requirements for how the conduct and discipline code must by publicized.[40]

On November 3, 1992, Colorado voters approved Initiative 2, aninitiated constitutional amendment, which added language to theState Constitution that prohibited the state and all of its subdivisions from allowing "homosexual, lesbian or bisexual orientation, conduct, practices or relationships" to provide the basis for any "claim any minority status, quota preferences, protected status or claim of discrimination." In 1994, theColorado Supreme Court found the amendment unconstitutional.[41] In 1996, the U.S. Supreme Court held inRomer v. Evans that the amendment, because it "allows discrimination against homosexuals and prevents the state from protecting them", was "motivated by animus towards homosexuals" and violated their rights under theequal protection clause of theFourteenth Amendment.[42]

In June 2012, a gay couple who had married inMassachusetts tried to purchase a wedding cake at a bakery inLakewood, and were refused. They sued to force the bakery to provide them with the same services as other customers,[43] and on December 6 Administrative Law Judge Robert N. Spencer ruled for the plaintiffs inCraig v. Masterpiece Cakeshop. He dismissed the bakery's claim that requiring the business to provide the service violated its owner's rights to free speech or religious expression.[44] In June 2018, this ruling was thrown out by the U.S. Supreme Court on a 7 to 2 ruling in favor of the defendant, inMasterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission.

In July 2021, Colorado implemented strong legislation - a first for the United States - to explicitly ban both sexual orientation and gender identity biased algorithms within high-tech companies and industries.[45]

In December 2022, SCOTUS decided it would "take up the case" under theFirst Amendment and hear arguments of a Colorado website designer - that discriminates, opposes and refuses to serve individuals within same-sex marriages.[46]

In May 2025, GovernorJared Polis signed theKelly Loving Act into law, strengthening anti-discrimination protections against transgender Coloradans.[47]

Hate crime law

[edit]

The state'shate crime law has provided protections based on both sexual orientation and gender identity or expression since 2001.[48] In 2009, in a case thought to be "the first in which a hate crime law was applied in a murder trial where the victim was transgender", a jury inGreeley convicted a man of first-degree murder and found that it was a hate crime under Colorado law.[49] The law provides penalty enhancements if a crime is motivated by the victim's actual or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity, amongst other categories.

In November 2022, inColorado Springs a mass shooting at a gay bar occurred. The Governor ordered all flags within Colorado to be a lowered. The headquarters ofFocus on the Family an anti-gay hate group since 1977, is based in Colorado Springs. Up until the 1990s, Colorado was informally well known as "the hate state".[50][51] Two patrons at the establishment prevented more lives from being taken or lost, by stopping the gunman immediately.[52] The shooter is the grandson of a high-profile Californian Republican lawmaker it was reported - "who has extreme and out there views on various social, economic and political issues".[53]

It was reported within Colorado, that hate crimes on individuals based on sexual orientation alone have increased by 380% since 2018.[54]

In December 2022, it was reported thatColorado Springs Police Department have charged the gay bar shooter and perpetrator within Colorado Springs is facing 305 charges and ongoing court trials. TheFBI law enforcement Colorado team is also investigating all the websites as well (both visited and created) by the perpetrators (himself and possibly others) - in the connection to the shootings at Colorado Springs.[55][56] In April 2023, several “emergency clause” bills on restricting and toughening up guns and firearms - was signed into law effective immediately and implemented by theGovernor of Colorado, that passed theColorado General Assembly in March 2023.[57][58] In June 2023, alawsuit against the Sheriff's Department was filed - because Colorado was meant to enforce the infamous 3 year old "red flag law", that was invalidated and declared null and void by a federal judge in Oklahoma (part of theUnited States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit), because a criminal got too easy access to a firearm (immediately just before the Club Q shooting happened).[59]

Transgender rights

[edit]
Further information:Transgender rights in the United States

Between January 1, 1984 to February 13, 2019, changing the gender marker on abirth certificate required undergoingsex reassignment surgery.

The 2016 filmGrowing Up Coy[60] documented a landmark 2013 case in which the Colorado Civil Rights Division ruled in favor of allowing transgender six-year-old Coy Mathis to use the girls' bathroom at her elementary school inFountain, Colorado. The case has been credited with setting off a wave ofbathroom bills across the United States in the years following.[61]

In February 2019, the requirement to undertake surgical procedures was removed by a unanimous vote by the board of theColorado Department of Public Health and Environment. The applicant for a gender change can simply do so by request, to the Division of Motor Vehicles (by completing a "Change of Sex Designation" form) if the change concerns a driver's license or a state ID, or to the Department of Health (by completing a "Birth Certificate Correction Form" and a "Sex Designation Form") if the change concerns a birth certificate. Minors are also permitted to change legal gender, but require the consent of a parent or guardian and a medical or mental health professional.[62]

Birth certificates have four sex descriptor; "M" (male), "F" (female), "Intersex" and "X". State IDs and driver's licenses have three descriptor; male, female and X.[63][64][65][66]

In October 2021, it was announced that beginning in 2023, basic health insurance coverage within Colorado must legally and explicitly includesexual reassignment surgery as a human right for individuals as a basic policy — a legal first for the United States.[67][68]

In April 2023, both theColorado General Assembly and theGovernor of Colorado passed and signed into law respectively - implemented legislation that protect, defend and guarantee gender-affirming healthcare services within Colorado and "safe passage of transgender individuals from interstate".[69]

From the end of 2024, theColorado Department of Corrections will implement policies for transgender inmates - regarding gender-affirming healthcare and other related issues. This was bought about with a court "settlement" from alawsuit.[70]

Sports

[edit]

In April 2025, theD49 school board voted 3-2 to advance thePreserving Fairness and Safety in Sports policy banning biologically male students from female sports and vice versa.[71] In JuneThe D-11 Board of Education voted 6-1 to approve a similar policy[72] andAcademy District 20 followed suit.[73]

Conversion therapy

[edit]
See also:List of U.S. jurisdictions banning conversion therapy

On March 10, 2015, theColorado House of Representatives approved 35–29 a bill banningsexual orientation change efforts (conversion therapy) with minors.[74] However, the bill failed to pass theColorado Senate.

On March 17, 2016, the House voted 35–29 in favor of a bill sponsored by RepresentativeDominick Moreno which would have outlawed the use of conversion therapy on LGBT minors.[75][76][77][78] The bill waspostponed indefinitely in a Senate committee in a 3–2 vote on April 11, 2016.[79][80]

In March 2017, theColorado House of Representatives passed for the third time a ban on conversion therapy on minors, but got blocked for the third time in three years in theColorado Senate.[81][82]

In December 2018,Denver introduced an ordinance banning conversion therapy on LGBT minors. The proposal passed council committee and floor votes unanimously by a vote of 13–0 on January 7, 2019. The ordinance took effect immediately after signature fromMayorMichael Hancock a week later.[83][84] Denver became the first jurisdiction in the state to implement a ban on conversion therapy on LGBT minors.[85][86]

On February 19, 2019, the House passed a bill to ban the use of conversion therapy on minors, with a 42–19 majority.[87] The Senate approved the bill on March 25 with a 21–13 majority.[88] The bill was amended in the Senate, and sent back to the House for another vote, which voted in favor of the amended version.[89] On May 31, 2019, GovernorJared Polis, the United States' first openly gay governor, signed the bill into law.[90] Colorado became the 17th U.S. state (plus theDistrict of Columbia) to ban the use of the discredited practice on minors.[91] Upon challenge, the law was upheld by the10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver. However, on March 10, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a challenge. The question before the Supreme Court will be whether Colorado's law unconstitutionally restricts the speech of therapists or whether it appropriately regulates the behavior of licensed professionals.[92]

Gay panic defense

[edit]

In June 2020, theColorado General Assembly passed a bipartisan bill to abolish thegay panic defense.[93] In July 2020, the bill was signed into law byGovernorJared Polis, and went into effect immediately.[94][95]

Veteran benefits

[edit]

In April 2021, theColorado General Assembly passed a bill, by a vote of 47–16 in the House and 34–0 in the Senate, to restore benefits to LGBT veterans who had received adishonorable discharge underDon't Ask, Don't Tell.GovernorJared Polis signed the bill into law on April 19, 2021.[96][97]

Freedom of expression

[edit]

In February 2021, a gay man filed a lawsuit in federal district court against his metropolitan district's rules banning rainbow flags. TheAmerican Civil Liberties Union argues the rules breach theFirst Amendment of the United States Constitution.[98][99][100] In March 2021, a federal district court ordered that the city stop enforcing the rule which prohibited the Pride flag.[101]

In July 2021, theUnited States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuitdismissed a case from a web designer who refused to offer her services to same-sex couples and originally started thelawsuit inDenver. In February 2022, it was formally announced that the Christian web designer case would have gone straight to theSCOTUS.[102] In June 2023, the Christian web designer won the case along with the baker case precedent - by a 6-3 vote at theSCOTUS.[103]

Bathroom gender protection law

[edit]

In 2023, Colorado implemented a law allowing full access to bathroom facilities for all genders - to increase public health and safety protections. Similar legislation was implemented in California, Vermont, Illinois, New Mexico, and New York State.[104]

Public opinion

[edit]

A 2017Public Religion Research Institute poll found that 71% of Colorado residents supported same-sex marriage, while 21% were opposed and 8% were unsure.[105]

Public opinion for LGBT anti-discrimination laws in Colorado
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
% support% opposition% no opinion
Public Religion Research InstituteJanuary 2-December 30, 20191,065?77%18%5%
Public Religion Research InstituteJanuary 3-December 30, 2018880?72%21%7%
Public Religion Research InstituteApril 5-December 23, 20171,210?74%19%7%
Public Religion Research InstituteApril 29, 2015-January 7, 20161,346?73%23%4%

Summary table

[edit]
Same-sex sexual activity legalYes (Since 1972)
Equal age of consent (17)Yes (Since 1972)
Anti-discrimination laws in all areasYes (Since 2008 for sexual orientation and gender identity)
Same-sex marriagesYes (Since 2014; constitutional ban repealed in 2024, codified in state statues in 2025)[106][107][108]
Recognition of same-sex couples (e.g. civil union)Yes (Since 2013)
Joint and stepchild adoption by same-sex couplesYes (Since 2014)
Lesbian, gay and bisexual people allowed to serve openly in the militaryYes (Since 2011)
Transgender people allowed to serve openly in the militaryX (Banned since 2025 via Executive Order and SCOTUS decision)[109][110]
Intersex people allowed to serve openly in the militaryX (Current DoD policy bans "hermaphrodites" from serving or enlisting in the military)[111]
Right to change legal gender withoutsex reassignment surgeryYes (Since 2019)
Third gender optionYes
Conversion therapy banned on minorsYes (Since 2019)
Gay and trans panic defense bannedYes (Since 2020)[94]
LGBTanti-bullying law in schools and collegesYes
All-gender bathroom facilities access protectionYes (Since 2023)[112]
Bothsurrogacy andIVF available for same-sex couplesYes
MSMs allowed to donate bloodYes (Since 2023 – on the condition of being monogamous)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  85. ^"Proposed Denver LGBT conversion therapy ban for minors advances to City Council". December 19, 2018.
  86. ^"Denver to consider banning gay conversion therapy on minors".The Denver Post. December 18, 2018.
  87. ^Goodland, Marianne (February 20, 2019)."Colorado House approves ban on conversion therapy".coloradopolitics.com.
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