(1)The general assembly finds and declares that:
(a)Throughout our nation's history, over three million women have
volunteered to serve our country by providing military service to the United States
of America. Women have courageously served and historically trailblazed
throughout the years, including disguising themselves as male soldiers during the
American revolution and civil war; serving in the United States Army nurse corps,
signal corps, and in clerical positions during world war I when women did not have
the right to vote; and serving as mechanics, clerical workers, truck drivers, ferry and
shuttle pilots, and in air combat tactics during world war II.
(b)There are currently over eight thousand five hundred Colorado women
serving in the six branches of the armed forc
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
(1)
The general assembly finds and declares that:
(a) Throughout our nation's history, over three million women have
volunteered to serve our country by providing military service to the United States
of America. Women have courageously served and historically trailblazed
throughout the years, including disguising themselves as male soldiers during the
American revolution and civil war; serving in the United States Army nurse corps,
signal corps, and in clerical positions during world war I when women did not have
the right to vote; and serving as mechanics, clerical workers, truck drivers, ferry and
shuttle pilots, and in air combat tactics during world war II.
(b) There are currently over eight thousand five hundred Colorado women
serving in the six branches of the armed forces and over forty-seven thousand
Colorado women veterans. On March 1, 2013, the first female major general was
chosen to be the superintendent of the United States Air Force academy, and in
2016, the United States Army enlisted a Colorado female into the infantry for the
first time. In 2020, Governor Jared Polis appointed the first female adjutant general
of Colorado.
(c) There are currently twenty-one states and United States territories that
recognize June 12 as a day to recognize women veterans, including Alaska,
California, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Michigan, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island,
South Carolina, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Utah, and Wisconsin;
(d) Women veterans have long fought for equal recognition of their
contributions to the safety and security of our nation;
(e) After service, women veterans face higher rates of unemployment and
homelessness than their male counterparts;
(f) Women veterans, especially those with dependent children, face higher
rates of poverty than their male counterparts;
(g) Women veterans face rates of post-traumatic stress as much as three
times higher than their male counterparts;
(h) As many as one in twelve women are sexually assaulted while on active
duty;
(i) Women veterans die by suicide at six times the rate of their civilian
counterparts;
(j) Despite the disproportionate impacts that military service has had on the
women who served, their needs have yet to be fully recognized by national, state,
and local veterans service organizations;
(k) Women veterans continue to be denied access to services otherwise
available to their male counterparts, including access to shelters that
accommodate women or their dependent children, reproductive and other health-care services, mental health services specializing in sexual trauma, and other
resources that recognize the challenges faced by women veterans;
(l) Despite these sometimes overwhelming challenges, women continue to
volunteer to serve and are the fastest growing segment of United States military
and veteran populations; and
(m) In order to honor the courage and sacrifice of women veterans, bring
attention to the unique challenges they face, and affirm the state of Colorado's
commitment to meeting the needs of our women veterans and their families, the
general assembly finds it necessary to establish a women veterans appreciation
day, and this day shall be used not only as an occasion to honor their service, but as
an annual call to veterans organizations statewide to review their programs and
work towards improving outcomes for women veterans.
(2) The twelfth day of June in each year is known as Women Veterans
Appreciation Day, and appropriate observance may be held by the public and in all
public schools of the state in tribute to the service and sacrifice of women veterans.