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Sophomore lawmakers aim to build on lessons

January 8, 2006

Sophomore lawmakers aim to build on lessons learned 
 
 
Sunday, January 08, 2006 
 
By DANIE HARRELSON 
 
The Daily Sentinel 
 
 
They aren’t the new kids on the 200 block of East Colfax 
anymore. 
 
Three Western Slope lawmakers — Democrats Bernie Buescher 
of Grand Junction and Kathleen Curry of Gunnison, and Grand 
Junction Republican Josh Penry — return to the capitol 
building this week with a legislative session under their 
belts and high expectations for their sophomore year. 
 
Buescher and Curry landed key committee assignments shortly 
after voters elected them to their posts in November 2004. 
Buescher joined five lawmakers on the six-member Joint 
Budget Committee, one of the Legislature’s most powerful 
panels. 
 
Curry took the reins of the House Agriculture, Natural 
Resources and Livestock Committee, the first stop for 
legislation dealing with water, grazing and other land-use 
issues critical to rural Colorado. 
 
Curry was the lone freshman legislator appointed to head a 
committee last year after Democrats took control of both 
chambers of the Legislature for the first time in four 
decades. Buescher’s appointment was no less significant; 
freshman lawmakers are not often assigned to the JBC. 
 
House Speaker Andrew Romanoff said he handed Buescher and 
Curry tall orders when he appointed them to such 
high-profile posts. The Denver Democrat said he made the 
appointments with the idea of “de-Denverizing” the capitol. 
 
“The goal is to tap the talent of the state, not just the 
metro area,” he said. “It helped that the Western Slope 
sent to the capitol two extraordinarily smart and 
thoughtful legislators.” 
 
In Curry, Romanoff said, he picked the best person on water 
policy to lead the House Agriculture Committee. In 
Buescher, he said, he found the “biggest brain in the 
building” to work on the budget. 
 
“I had expectations, which they both exceeded,” Romanoff 
said. 
 
Penry’s freshman performance impressed his party’s 
leadership enough to garner him greater responsibilities in 
2006. House Minority Leader Joe Stengel, R-Littleton, last 
month appointed Penry, whom he considers a “rising star,” 
to two legislative panels tasked with evaluating 
legislation with financial and economic implications for 
the state. 
 
Penry traded his post on the House Agriculture Committee 
for seats on the House Appropriations Committee and House 
Business Affairs and Labor Committee. Stengel has high 
expectations for the sophomore legislator. 
 
“I didn’t appoint him to just sit passively by,” he said. 
 
Stengel said the House Business Affairs Committee in 2006 
represents the first stop on Democrats’ way to influencing 
business, insurance and labor in Colorado. 
 
Penry’s minority status on the committee doesn’t afford him 
enough power to block what he considers harmful 
legislation, Stengel said. But he expects Penry to exert 
“his intellect and his strong conservative viewpoint.” 
 
“The challenge of doing business when you’re in the 
minority ... you have to know when to reach across the 
aisle and try to cut a deal and when to hold the line and 
fight for principle,” Penry said. “The only way you learn 
is on the job.” 
 
Buescher’s on-the-job training reinforced the need for 
common ground and compromise. 
 
“The biggest lesson is that you govern best from the 
middle,” Buescher said. “When either party gets too 
partisan ... you don’t make good policy. You turn folks 
off.” 
 
Buescher said he believes last year’s freshman class brings 
to the 2006 legislative session a commitment to civility 
and cooperation. 
 
“The freshman class can make a difference now that we’ve 
got a year behind us,” he said.