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HB26-1326

Sunset Public Utilities Commission

Type Bill
Session 2026 Regular Session
Subjects
Energy Transportation & Motor Vehicles

Concerning the continuation of the public utilities commission, and, in connection therewith, implementing recommendations in the 2025 sunset report by the department of regulatory agencies and making an appropriation.

Bill Summary:

     The act implements recommendations of the department of regulatory agencies (department) in its 2025 sunset review of the public utilities commission (commission) as follows:

  • Sections 1 and 3 of the act continue the commission for 7 years to September 1, 2033;
  • Sections 4, 8, 10, 11, 16, and 17 authorize the commission to send communications by email;
  • Sections 20 through 22 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 targets and removing the requirements for municipally owned utilities to submit an annual compliance report to the commission regarding renewable energy standard requirements and for qualifying wholesale utilities that comply with electric resource planning to also demonstrate compliance with electric resource standards;
  • Directing the commission to perform a study to identify any barriers to joint procurement by electric utilities with regard to advanced technology generation resources;

  • Section 23:

  • 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 or equally or more effective technology, as approved by the commission, to prevent driver impersonation in accordance with rules adopted by the commission. The periodic check requirement does not apply to a TNC that predominantly contracts to serve public or private schools or the government and complies with at least 90% of the commission's rules regarding safety standards for TNCs that contract with schools or school districts.
  • Requires a TNC to provide information about the commission, including information about how a rider may contact the commission to file a complaint using a TNC's digital network, to a rider in accordance with rules adopted by the commission; and
  • Requires commission staff who process TNC customer complaints to receive training in trauma-informed practices;

  • Section 25 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 28 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 29 and 30 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 31 through 36 and 38 update the state railroad regulation requirements to mirror current federal law and to repeal obsolete provisions;
  • Section 39 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;
  • Section 41 authorizes the commission to administratively assess a filing fee schedule for filings related to communication services, telecommunications services, and basic emergency services to help finance the commission's telecommunications-related work and exempts members of the public filing complaints and public utilities subject to certain revenue-based fees imposed by the commission from paying the filing fees;
  • Section 43 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 44 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 44 also authorizes the commission to adopt rules requiring penal communications service providers to report outages and imposing penalties for penal communications service providers' failure to comply with commission requirements. Section 44 also requires:

  • Penal communications service providers to cooperate with commission staff when the staff is performing biannual testing of penal communications services;
  • The commission to develop flyers informing the public how to file complaints to the commission about penal communications services; and
  • Correctional facilities to post the flyers;

  • Section 45 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;
  • Section 46 directs the commission to perform a study identifying all privately owned water utilities in the state and assessing their financial conditions and needs;
  • Section 47 requires investor-owned electric utilities to provide interconnection information and certificates to taxpayers requesting the information for purposes of claiming the federal clean electricity investment credit; and
  • Section 48 requires the commission, on or before December 1, 2026, to open one or more miscellaneous proceedings to investigate ways to streamline energy planning proceedings, to integrate gas and electric system planning, and to make customer programming more efficient. The commission shall solicit stakeholder feedback in its investigation and, on or before November 30, 2027, shall submit a report of its findings and recommendations to legislative committees with jurisdiction over energy matters.

     The act also implements the following changes regarding the commission and its work:

  • Section 2 requires electric and gas investor-owned utilities, including combined utilities, to file annual summaries of anticipated regulatory filings with the commission starting in 2027 and requires the commission to make the filings publicly available on its website, hold informational meetings regarding the filings, and submit annual reports to the general assembly summarizing the commission's major adjudicated cases and rule-makings from the previous year. Starting September 1, 2026, the commission is required to include in each of its decisions a summary of public comments received on the matter.
  • Sections 4 through 8 concern commission authority, personnel, and management functions, with section 4 stating that the commission, acting through its director, has authority over the commission's budgeting, purchasing, planning, and related management functions, including human resources, and section 7 requiring the director of the commission to hire or designate an equity analyst to assist the commission's work regarding equity impact proceedings and to staff an equity task force appointed by the director;
  • Section 4 also requires the governor to consider appointing commissioners with knowledge of the regulated industries and with a diversity of experience and understanding of public interest considerations. Finally, section 4 authorizes the commission to hold weekly meetings and, beginning July 1, 2027, requires a majority of the commissioners attending the weekly meetings to attend in person.
  • Sections 9 and 12 provide that, with certain exceptions, adjudications must first be heard by an administrative law judge. Section 12 also requires the commission, by March 31, 2027, to adopt rules regarding the format of en banc commission and hearings and meetings presided over by a single hearing commissioner with respect to whether the hearings are held in person, virtually, or a hybrid of in-person and virtual participation.
  • Section 13 requires that commission rules regarding review of an application must prescribe that an application may only be deemed incomplete if it does not meet the commission's application requirement. Section 13 also provides that the commission's failure to act upon an application within 120 days, or within an extended time granted by the commission not to exceed an additional 130 days or, under extraordinary conditions, not to exceed an additional 90 days, constitutes an approval of the application by operation of law. An unopposed permissive motion for intervention is deemed approved if the commission does not deny the motion within 30 days after its filing.
  • Section 14 increases the maximum civil penalty applicable to public utilities for intentional violations of public utilities law from $2,000 to $7,500, applies such civil penalties to a public utility's violation of a tariff, and requires the commission to consider factors such as utility size, harm caused, and mitigating circumstances or actions in assessing the civil penalties. Section 14 also requires that civil penalties assessed against and collected from electric and gas utilities be credited to the public utilities commission fixed utility fund (fixed utility fund) to be used for affordability programs or outreach and engagement of income-qualified customers and disproportionately impacted communities.
  • Section 15 provides guidance for intervenor compensation in commission proceedings by authorizing the commission to award an intervenor compensation if the commission determines that the intervenor made a unique substantial contribution that provided material assistance to the commission in developing the record in a proceeding and incurred reasonable costs in the proceeding. The commission may adopt rules regarding intervenor compensation, including rules for intervenor petitions for compensation and guidelines for determining reasonable costs incurred and material assistance.
  • Under current law, money in the legal services offset fund is continuously appropriated to the department to offset its costs of legal representation in matters involving public utilities law. Section 18 shifts the appropriation to the commission to offset its costs of legal representation in such matters.
  • Section 21 removes verification of municipally owned utilities' voluntarily filed clean energy plans by the division of administration in the department of public health and environment;
  • Section 22 requires the commission, on or before December 31, 2027, to adopt rules establishing minimum quality-of-service metrics for investor-owned electric and gas utilities in the state;
  • Section 24 requires the department to consult with the director of the commission regarding annual TNC permit fees and increases the maximum annual TNC permit fee to $161,250. Likewise, section 26 requires the department to consult with the director of the commission in setting certain administrative fees on motor carriers, and section 40 requires the department to consult with the director of the commission on computation of revenue-based fees owed by utilities.
  • Section 27 provides that a person may apply to a court for enforcement of a commission order, decision, or rule regarding noncompliance by a motor carrier without having first exhausted administrative remedies; and
  • Section 37 requires the commission to engage an independent third-party consultant to conduct a study on how the commission may modernize its personnel, organizational, and budgetary structures, which study must include an evaluation and recommendations regarding the commission's size, compensation, and funding mechanisms for equity objectives. On or before November 1, 2026, the commission shall submit an initial report, and on or before November 1, 2027, a final report, on the study's findings and recommendations to legislative committees with jurisdiction over energy matters.

     For state fiscal year 2026-27, section 49 appropriates $298,448 to the department with:

  • $232,712, including $157,712 from the fixed utility fund and $75,000 from the motor carrier fund, for personal services;
  • $16,048 from the fixed utility fund for operating expenses; and
  • $49,688 of the amount appropriated from the fixed utility fund for reappropriation to the department of law for legal services.

    (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)

Status

Became Law

Introduced

Passed

Became Law

Related Documents & Information

Date Version Documents
05/29/2026 Signed Act PDF
05/28/2026 Final Act PDF
05/12/2026 Rerevised PDF
05/11/2026 Revised PDF
05/11/2026 Reengrossed PDF
05/09/2026 Engrossed PDF
03/09/2026 Introduced PDF
Date Version Documents
05/11/2026 Senate Appropriations Preamend PDF
05/11/2026 Senate Finance Preamend (4) PDF
05/05/2026 House Appropriations Preamend PDF
05/05/2026 House Finance Preamend PDF
04/27/2026 House Energy & Environment Preamend PDF
Date Version Documents
05/11/2026 Fifth Revised Fiscal Note PDF
05/10/2026 Fourth Revised Fiscal Note PDF
05/01/2026 Third Revised Fiscal Note PDF
04/29/2026 Second Revised Fiscal Note PDF
04/16/2026 First Revised Fiscal Note PDF
04/30/2026 Fiscal Note Memorandum PDF
03/24/2026 Initial Fiscal Note PDF
Date Version Documents
05/11/2026 SA2 PDF
05/01/2026 SA1 PDF
Activity Vote Documents
Adopt amendment J.002 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Refer House Bill 26-1326, as amended, to the Committee of the Whole. The motion passed on a vote of 5-2. Vote summary
Activity Vote Documents
Adopt amendment L.093 (Attachment J). The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.097 (Attachment K). The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Refer House Bill 26-1326, as amended, to the Committee on Appropriations. The motion passed on a vote of 8-1. Vote summary
Activity Vote Documents
Adopt amendment J.001 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Refer House Bill 26-1326, as amended, to the Committee of the Whole. The motion passed on a vote of 8-3. Vote summary
Activity Vote Documents
Adopt amendment L.014 (Attachment B) The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.019 (Attachment C) The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.021 (Attachment D) The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.020 (Attachment E) The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Refer House Bill 26-1326, as amended, to the Committee on Appropriations. The motion passed on a vote of 6-3. Vote summary
Activity Vote Documents
Adopt amendment L.003 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.005 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.006 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.007 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.008 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.009 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.011 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Adopt amendment L.012 The motion passed without objection. Vote summary
Refer House Bill 26-1326, as amended, to the Committee on Finance. The motion passed on a vote of 9-4. Vote summary
Date Calendar Motion Vote Vote Document
05/13/2026 Senate Amendments REPASS
43
AYE
22
NO
0
OTHER
Vote record
05/13/2026 Senate Amendments CONCUR
65
AYE
0
NO
0
OTHER
Vote record
05/11/2026 Third Reading BILL
43
AYE
22
NO
0
OTHER
Vote record
05/11/2026 Third Reading AMD (L.045)
43
AYE
22
NO
0
OTHER
Vote record
05/11/2026 Third Reading PERM
55
AYE
8
NO
2
OTHER
Vote record
Date Calendar Motion Vote Vote Document
05/12/2026 Third Reading BILL
25
AYE
10
NO
0
OTHER
Vote record
05/12/2026 Third Reading AMEND (L.106)
35
AYE
0
NO
0
OTHER
Vote record
Date Amendment Number Committee/ Floor Hearing Status Documents
05/12/2026 L.106 Third Reading Passed PDF
05/11/2026 L.097 SEN Finance Passed [*] PDF
05/11/2026 L.093 SEN Finance Passed [*] PDF
05/11/2026 J.002 SEN Appropriations Passed [*] PDF
05/11/2026 L.045 Third Reading Passed PDF
05/09/2026 L.043 Second Reading Lost [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.026 Second Reading Lost [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.025 Second Reading Lost [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.041 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.037 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.040 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.042 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.038 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.036 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.029 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.028 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.027 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.001 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.033 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.024 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.018 Second Reading Lost [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.002 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.017 Second Reading Lost [**] PDF
05/09/2026 L.034 Second Reading Passed [**] PDF
05/04/2026 J.001 HOU Appropriations Passed [*] PDF
04/30/2026 L.020 HOU Finance Passed [*] PDF
04/30/2026 L.021 HOU Finance Passed [*] PDF
04/30/2026 L.019 HOU Finance Passed [*] PDF
04/30/2026 L.014 HOU Finance Passed [*] PDF
04/23/2026 L.012 HOU Energy & Environment Passed [*] PDF
04/23/2026 L.011 HOU Energy & Environment Passed [*] PDF
04/23/2026 L.009 HOU Energy & Environment Passed [*] PDF
04/23/2026 L.008 HOU Energy & Environment Passed [*] PDF
04/23/2026 L.007 HOU Energy & Environment Passed [*] PDF
04/23/2026 L.006 HOU Energy & Environment Passed [*] PDF
04/23/2026 L.005 HOU Energy & Environment Passed [*] PDF
04/23/2026 L.003 HOU Energy & Environment Passed [*] PDF
Date Location Action
05/29/2026 Governor Governor Signed
05/28/2026 Governor Sent to the Governor
05/28/2026 Senate Signed by the President of the Senate
05/28/2026 House Signed by the Speaker of the House
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
Effective Date Chapter # Title Documents
08/12/2026 210 Sunset Public Utilities Commission PDF