Colorado House Bill 1326
Session 2026A
Sunset Public Utilities Commission
Active
Passed Senate on May 12, 2026
Sponsors
9 Sponsors
M. Duran
J. Willford
L. Cutter
R. Rodriguez
L. Goldstein
J. Joseph
A. Paschal
L. Smith
E. Velasco
First Action
Mar 9, 2026
Latest Action
May 13, 2026
Origin Chamber
House
Type
Bill
Bill Number
1326
State
Colorado
Session
2026A
A. Paschal
grade
Sponsor
E. Velasco
grade
Sponsor
J. Joseph
grade
Sponsor
J. Willford
grade
Sponsor
L. Cutter
grade
Sponsor
L. Goldstein
grade
Sponsor
L. Smith
grade
Sponsor
M. Duran
grade
Sponsor
R. Rodriguez
grade
Sponsor
A. Boesenecker
Cosponsor
A. Valdez
Cosponsor
B. Marshall
Cosponsor
C. Clifford
Cosponsor
C. Kipp
Cosponsor
C. Simpson
Cosponsor
J. Bacon
Cosponsor
J. Bridges
Cosponsor
J. Coleman
Cosponsor
J. Gonzales
Cosponsor
J. Jackson
Cosponsor
J. Mabrey
Cosponsor
J. Marchman
Cosponsor
J. McCluskie
Cosponsor
K. Brown
Cosponsor
K. McCormick
Cosponsor
K. Nguyen
Cosponsor
K. Stewart
Cosponsor
K. Wallace
Cosponsor
L. García
Cosponsor
L. Gilchrist
Cosponsor
M. Ball
Cosponsor
M. Lindsay
Cosponsor
M. Snyder
Cosponsor
N. Ricks
Cosponsor
R. English
Cosponsor
T. Exum
Cosponsor
T. Mauro
Cosponsor
T. Sullivan
Cosponsor
W. Lindstedt
Cosponsor
Motion Text
AMD (L.045)
House Roll Call Votes
Bacon
Yes
Barron
No
Boesenecker
Yes
Bottoms
No
Bradfield
No
Bradley
No
Brooks
No
Brown
Yes
Caldwell
No
Camacho
Yes
Carter
Yes
Clifford
Yes
DeGraaf
No
Duran
Yes
English
Yes
Espenoza
Yes
Feret
Yes
Flanell
No
Froelich
Yes
Garcia
Yes
Garcia Sander
No
Gilchrist
Yes
Goldstein
Yes
Gonzalez R.
No
Hamrick
Yes
Hartsook
No
Jackson
Yes
Johnson
No
Joseph
Yes
Keltie
No
Lieder
Yes
Lindsay
Yes
Luck
No
Lukens
Yes
Mabrey
Yes
Marshall
Yes
Martinez
Yes
Mauro
Yes
McCluskie
Yes
McCormick
Yes
Nguyen
Yes
Paschal
Yes
Phillips
Yes
Richardson
No
Ricks
Yes
Rutinel
Yes
Rydin
Yes
Sirota
Yes
Slaugh
No
Smith
Yes
Soper
No
Stewart K.
Yes
Stewart R.
Yes
Story
Yes
Suckla
No
Taggart
No
Titone
Yes
Valdez
Yes
Velasco
Yes
Weinberg
No
Willford
Yes
Winter T.
No
Woodrow
Yes
Woog
No
Zokaie
Yes
Summary
Sunset Process - House Energy and Environment Committee. The bill implements recommendations of the department of regulatory agencies in its 2025 sunset review of the public utilities commission (commission) as follows: Sections 1 and 2 of the bill continue the commission for 11 years to September 1, 2037; Section 3 permits the commission members to engage in nonpublic communications regarding adjudicatory matters after the close of the evidentiary record if prior notice of the communications is provided and the final reasoning and determinations of the matter are later made at a public hearing; Sections 4 through 9 authorize the commission to send communications by email; Sections 10 through 13 modernize certain processes, provide additional transparency, and clarify inconsistencies in certain energy statutes by:Aligning the renewable energy standard with the statutes governing clean energy plans;Directing the commission to perform a study to identify any barriers to joint procurement by electric utilities with regard to advanced technology generation resources;Authorizing the commission to require a commission-regulated utility to contract with one or more third parties to administer certain customer-facing programs; andClarifying that a municipally owned utility, cooperative electric association, independent transmission developer, or independent power producer may appeal to the commission a local government's decision to deny a land use permit or application for a major electrical or natural gas facility owned by the municipally owned utility, cooperative electric association, independent transmission developer, or independent power producer; Sections 14 through 19 authorize the commission to direct investor-owned electric utilities to use securitization through the 'Colorado Energy Impact Bond Act' as an alternative means of financing and recovering costs; Section 20 requires the commission to:Adopt rules standardizing the implementation of the various income-based energy assistance programs provided by commission-regulated utilities in the state; andConduct a study into commission-regulated utilities' income-based energy assistance programs to determine whether funding access and equity can be improved in the state; Section 21 :Prohibits an individual from impersonating a transportation network company (TNC) driver (driver). An individual who violates the prohibition commits a class 2 misdemeanor. An individual who impersonates a driver during the commission of a felony offense commits a class 6 felony. A TNC is required to conduct periodic checks utilizing facial recognition software to prevent driver impersonation in accordance with rules adopted by the commission.Requires a TNC to anonymize data reported to the commission concerning driver refusals to provide service to a rider and the commission to make the anonymized reports available to the public;Requires a TNC to provide information about the commission, including the commission's contact information, to a rider in accordance with rules adopted by the commission; andRepeals the burden to prove that a driver's violation was reported to the TNC for the TNC to be held liable for the violation and raises the fine for a violation from $550 to $1,100; Section 22 requires TNCs to annually submit to the commission a report, redacted to protect personal identifying information, that contains all safety-related incident reports made to or created by the TNC in the preceding calendar year. The commission shall make the reports publicly available. Section 23 expands the types of drivers who need to have criminal history record checks performed to include drivers who are employed by any motor carriers and contract carriers; Section 24 requires the commission to perform a market study to determine if the current systems of regulating intrastate contract and common carriers optimally balance consumer protections with industry and regulatory efficiency and to report its findings and recommendations based on the study to the general assembly by January 1, 2028; Sections 25 and 26 replace the current inspection requirements for a charter bus, children's activity bus, fire crew transport, luxury limousine, off-road scenic charter, and large-market taxicab with a requirement that these vehicles be inspected on a schedule and to a standard set by rules adopted by the commission; Sections 27 through 33 update the state railroad regulation requirements to mirror current federal law and to repeal obsolete provisions; Section 34 removes the $500 fee cap paid by companies to access the Colorado no-call list, replaces it with a $1,000 fee cap, and requires conforming list brokers, which are companies that purchase the no-call list and sell it to other companies, to pay a fee established by the commission by rule; Sections 35 through 39 apply the fees that the commission assesses on public utilities on intrastate telecommunications and voice service providers to help finance the commission's telecommunications-related work; Section 40 aligns the usage of money collected from charges related to the provision of 911 services with federal requirements by clarifying that the money may be expended for public safety radio equipment outside of a public safety answering point only if the equipment is used for dispatching emergency service providers to respond to 911 calls; Section 41 authorizes the commission to adopt rules that establish caps on rates charged by penal communications service providers on intrastate penal communications services provided for intrastate communications with individuals in correctional facilities and to enforce the intrastate rate. Section 41 also requires penal communications service providers to cooperate with commission staff when the staff is performing biannual testing of penal communications services. Section 42 exempts small operators of natural gas pipelines from the minimum $5,000 civil penalty required for violations of pipeline safety laws and authorizes the commission to impose a lesser civil penalty against a small operator; and Section 43 directs the commission to perform a study identifying all privately owned water utilities in the state and assessing their financial conditions and needs.(Note: This summary applies to this bill as introduced.)
Committee Report for Appropriations on 05/11/2026
Committee Report for Finance on 05/11/2026
Committee Report for Appropriations on 05/04/2026
Committee Report for Finance on 04/30/2026
Committee Report for Energy & Environment on 04/23/2026
Sort by most recent
05/13/2026
House
House Considered Senate Amendments - Result was to Concur - Repass
05/12/2026
Senate
Senate Third Reading Passed with Amendments - Floor
05/11/2026
Senate
Senate Second Reading Special Order - Passed with Amendments - Committee
05/11/2026
Senate
Senate Committee on Appropriations Refer Amended to Senate Committee of the Whole
05/11/2026
Senate
Senate Committee on Finance Refer Amended to Appropriations
05/11/2026
Senate
Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Finance
05/11/2026
House
House Third Reading Passed with Amendments - Floor
05/09/2026
House
House Second Reading Special Order - Passed with Amendments - Committee, Floor
05/06/2026
House
House Second Reading Laid Over Daily - No Amendments
05/04/2026
House
House Committee on Appropriations Refer Amended to House Committee of the Whole
04/30/2026
House
House Committee on Finance Refer Amended to Appropriations
04/23/2026
House
House Committee on Energy & Environment Refer Amended to Finance
03/09/2026
House
Introduced In House - Assigned to Energy & Environment
Sources
CO Legislature
Record Created
Mar 10, 2026 1:15:49 AM
Record Updated
May 13, 2026 10:16:03 PM