summary
Introduced
04/07/2026
04/07/2026
In Committee
04/24/2026
04/24/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
Potential new amendment
2026 Regular Session
Bill Summary
The bill creates the strengthen Colorado homes enterprise (enterprise), which is a government-owned business created in the division of insurance (division) in the department of regulatory agencies. The enterprise is governed by a 7-member board (board), including the commissioner of insurance (commissioner), or their designee; members with expertise in home hardening and resilient roof systems; and members representing the interests of insurance companies, consumers, and counties. The primary purpose of the enterprise is to impose and collect an annual fee (fee) from an insurance company that offers multiperil homeowner's insurance policies in the state (insurer) to reduce risks and losses to insurers that pay the fee by using fee revenue to provide grants to homeowners (grants) to defray the cost of retrofitting residential property by purchasing and installing resilient roof systems. In awarding grants, the board shall prioritize homes that are the homeowner applicant's (applicant) primary residence and shall consider other criteria, including applicant income, the age of the roof, the size of the home, the number of grant applicants, and whether the applicant lives in a location that has historically had a higher susceptibility to extreme weather events. In order to ensure the necessary workforce, fee revenue may also be used to award grants to defray the costs of training and certification related to installing and certifying resilient roof systems. A contractor that is awarded bids and receives money from a grant is prohibited from waiving homeowner's insurance deductibles. In addition, fee revenue shall be used for contracting with the division to conduct or contract for a study to analyze insurance risk in high-risk wildfire areas of the state, including an analysis of market competition in those areas and the impact of a high risk program on the potential losses and the availability of homeowner's insurance in those areas. Beginning in the 2027 calendar year, the amount of the insurer fee imposed and collected by the enterprise is an amount equal to 0.5% of the total premium collected by an insurer on multiperil homeowner's insurance policies in the state in the immediately preceding calender year. The insurer shall not surcharge the fee amount to policyholders. The enterprise may lower or cease collecting the fee from an insurer in any calendar year if the commissioner determines that the insurer paying the fee would become insolvent and notifies the board. The board shall adopt rules and policies for the regulation of the enterprise's affairs and the conduct of enterprise business, including standards for resilient roof systems and standards for contractor-specialized training in the installation of impact-resistant roof systems. Beginning with rate filings submitted on and after January 1, 2027, an insurer offering multiperil homeowner's insurance for property or risks located in the state shall demonstrate in the insurer's rate filings that savings from the installation of resilient roof systems are passed through to homeowners through the application of discounts or reduced premiums on homeowner's insurance policies.
AI Summary
This bill establishes the Strengthen Colorado Homes Enterprise, a government-owned business within the Division of Insurance, to address the increasing risks and losses faced by insurance companies due to extreme weather events in Colorado. The enterprise will be overseen by a seven-member board, including the Commissioner of Insurance, and will collect an annual fee of 0.5% from insurers offering multiperil homeowner's insurance policies. This fee revenue will be used to provide grants to homeowners for retrofitting their homes with resilient roof systems, prioritizing primary residences and considering factors like income and location susceptibility to extreme weather. Additionally, the fee revenue can fund training and certification programs for installing these resilient roof systems, and a portion will be used to study insurance risks in high-risk wildfire areas. Insurers will be required to demonstrate that savings from resilient roof systems are passed on to homeowners through discounts or reduced premiums starting in 2027, and contractors receiving grant money are prohibited from waiving homeowner's insurance deductibles.
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (3)
Last Action
Senate Second Reading Calendar (00:00:00 4/28/2026 Senate Floor) (on 04/28/2026)
Official Document
bill text
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