Marsha Looper

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Preceded byRichard Decker
Succeeded byAmy Stephens
SpouseLynn
Marsha Looper
Member of the Colorado House of Representatives
from the 19th district
In office
January 10, 2007[1]  January 9, 2013
Preceded byRichard Decker
Succeeded byAmy Stephens
Personal details
PartyRepublican
SpouseLynn
Alma materMesa State College
OccupationAppraiser
Rancher
Realtor

Marsha Looper (born c. 1959[2]) was a Colorado legislator. Elected to the Colorado House of Representatives as a Republican in 2006, Looper represented House District 19, which encompasses eastern El Paso County, Colorado from 2006 to 2012.[3][4][5]

Property-rights activism

Born to a family of Eastern European descent,[6] Looper was raised on Colorado's Western Slope.[7] She graduated from Fruita Monument High School in Mesa County in western Colorado and took coursework at Mesa State College. A systems engineer,[8] Looper certified as an IBM Network Engineer and a Novell Systems Engineer,[9] and worked for ROLM, IBM and the Widefield School District[8] before starting a company of her own, Computing Solutions Group, in 1993.[9]

Looper entered the real estate business in 2004 and has earned Associate Broker and Registered Appraiser credentials.[9] Since 2004, she has been a partner in Big Sky Realty,[10] in addition to operating Phoenix & Associates, a home remodeling company.[9] She is now working at Keller Williams Partners, specializing in Military Relocations, Recreational and Country properties.[11]

Looper and her husband, Lynn,[7] have operated their family's ranch in near Calhan, Colorado for two decades, as well as Waterworks Sales, a water pipe distribution company. After Waterworks' was purchased by Hughes Supply, Inc., Looper remained with the company[9] as a branch manager.[10] She and Lynn have three children.[7]

Within the community, Looper has been a member of the Pikes Peak Firearms Coalition,[8] the National Rifle Association,[7] the El Paso County Republican Women, the Falcon School District Accountability Committee,[8] the Pikes Peak Range Riders, and the El Paso County Soil and Water Conservation Society,[9] and volunteered with St. Michael's Church, the Special Olympics,[8] and local 4-H and YMCA clubs.[7]

Looper was a driving force behind opposition to a proposed toll road project along the Colorado Front Range the Prairie Falcon Parkway Express, or "Super Slab" project a 210-mile (340 km) highway and rail corridor stretching from Pueblo to Fort Collins. The project would have resulted in the condemnation or taking by eminent domain of privately held properties in seven Colorado counties; Looper's land fell within the corridor designated by the toll road's developers, and subsequently dropped in market value.[12][13]

As the founder, in 2004,[14] and chair of the Eastern Plains Citizens Coalition and executive director of Colorado Citizens for Property Rights, Looper led grassroots opposition to the toll road and supported several measures during the 2006 legislative session to tighten the rules regarding eminent domain under which toll roads could be constructed. Among the successful measures lobbied for by Looper and others were rules narrowing the proposed corridor for toll roads from twelve to three miles (19.3 to 4.8 km),[15] and new reporting requirements that property owners be informed that their land lay within that corridor.[16][17]

Looper also led an effort to place a statewide referendum on the 2006 general election ballot[18] to prohibit governments from condemning private property for the purpose of economic development.[19] The citizen initiative gathered over 30,000 signatures, but fell more than 30,000 signatures short of the total required for placement on the statewide ballot.[20]

Legislative career

References

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