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HomeMy WebLinkAboutMemo - Mail Packet - 11/9/2021 - Legislative Review Committee Agenda - November 5, 2021 City Manager’s Office City Hall 300 LaPorte Ave. PO Box 580 Fort Collins, CO 80522 970.221.6505 970.224.6107 - fax fcgov.com Legislative Review Committee Agenda November 5, 2021 4:00-5:00 PM City Hall, CIC Room 300 LaPorte Ave/Microsoft Teams (Click here to join the meeting) 1. Approval of minutes from October 7, 2021 Meeting a. Attached: October 7, 2021 Minutes 2. Final Legislative Policy Agenda Review 3. Colorado Municipal League (CML) Policy Review a. Attached: CML Policy Summary 4. DC Trip: Highlights/Questions 5. Other Business a. Legislative Breakfast: December 7, 2021 8:00-9:30 a.m. Colorado River room is reserved b. Lobby RFP is out c. Capital Watch – Bill Tracking City Manager’s Office City Hall 300 LaPorte Ave. PO Box 580 Fort Collins, CO 80522 970.221.6505 970.224.6107 - fax fcgov.com Legislative Review Committee Minutes October 7th, 2021 10:00 – 11:00 AM Committee Members Present: Tricia Canonico (Chair) Jeni Arndt Shirley Peel Staff Present: Tyler Marr John Duval Ginny Sawyer DeAngelo Bowden Carrie Dagget Residents Present: Kevin Jones Approval of minutes from Previous Meeting • Unanimous Approval of the minutes Overview Legislative review committee was in support of redline changes to the policy agenda with exception to the items listed below: 1. 2022 Legislative Policy Agenda Review (Attached Redlined 2022 LPA) a. Year and name updates b. Removal of Affordable from the Housing work. (Broadens the conversation) i. HB21 – 1117 Inclusionary Housing Highlighted c. Beer and Liquor i. Sharing Accountability (Individual/Licensee) – Added “Store Clerk” (CM Canonico). d. Child Care i. “Supports regulations that streamline requirements and reduce the complexity and cost of childcare services” - Added (CM Peel). e. Energy i. “Supports efforts and incentives which promote electrification of homes” - Added (CM Canonico) f. Immigration and National Border Conditions i. “Supports local control over how state and federal funding for health care, affordable housing and food security…” - Added Federal funding (CM Canonico). g. Marijuana and Hemp i. “Opposes under-21 access to marijuana and supports increasing penalties to those supplying to underage individuals.” – Added increasing penalties (CM Peel). ii. “…research on the harmful effects of high concentrate THC and Transparency…” – Removed minors to focus more on everyone, specifically adults (CM Canonico). h. Public Health 2 i. “Supports legislation that prohibits the sale or transfer of unregistered firearms.” – Added (CM Canonico). i. Small Business Support i. Would not add caps to delivery fees (CM Peel). j. Water, Wastewater and Stormwater i. More information requested in this section from (CM Canonico). 2. DC Trip Preview and Speaking Points Overview a. Wildfire, Housing, reducing barriers for local government spending federal funding. i. USDA/HUD ii. NLC Meeting (Transportation) 3. Other Business a. Legislative Breakfast (Early December) b. Update on conversation with Chief Judge Jill Hueser – Warrants (Mayor Arndt). 2022 City of Fort Collins Legislative Policy Agenda TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents ........................................................................................................................ 1 Home Rule and Local Control .................................................................................................... 6 Housing ....................................................................................................................................... 7 Air Quality .................................................................................................................................. 7 Beer and Liquor .......................................................................................................................... 8 Broadband and Cable .................................................................................................................. 9 Childcare ..................................................................................................................................... 9 Climate ...................................................................................................................................... 10 Development Review and Land Use Planning ......................................................................... 11 Elections .................................................................................................................................... 12 Energy ....................................................................................................................................... 12 Finance ...................................................................................................................................... 13 Hazardous Materials Management ........................................................................................... 14 Health Care ............................................................................................................................... 14 Human Resources ..................................................................................................................... 15 Immigration and National Border Conditions .......................................................................... 16 Marijuana .................................................................................................................................. 17 Municipal Court ........................................................................................................................ 17 Oil and Gas ............................................................................................................................... 18 Open Records and Data Management....................................................................................... 18 Parks and Natural Areas, And Public Amenities ...................................................................... 19 Public Health ............................................................................................................................. 19 2 Public Safety ............................................................................................................................. 20 Recycling and Solid Waste Reduction ...................................................................................... 22 Risk Management and Liability ................................................................................................ 23 Transportation ........................................................................................................................... 24 Urban Renewal and Downtown Development ......................................................................... 25 Water, Wastewater, and Stormwater ........................................................................................ 26 City of Fort Collins Legislative Contacts ................................................................................. 27 INTRODUCTION Fort Collins is a community of approximately 175,000 residents. Incorporated in 1873, the City has grown to become the commercial, educational and cultural hub of Northern Colorado. The City adopted a home rule charter in 1954 and operates under a Council-Manager form of government. The City is a data-driven municipal organization that strives to fulfill its mission, “Exceptional service for an exceptional community”, through a vision of providing world-class municipal services through operational excellence and a culture of innovation. City leaders seek innovative solutions to issues facing the community and are often willing to leverage emerging technologies. The Fort Collins City Council annually adopts a Policy Agenda ahead of the upcoming Colorado general Assembly session for the purpose of guiding legislators and staff in supporting community goals. The Policy Agenda is broad set of policy statements meant to convey positions on issues that affect the quality of life and the governance of our community. It is structured to address areas of local concern and to also reflect the strategic planning that guides City of Fort Collins organizational resource allocation and decision making. Fort Collins welcomes opportunities to work in partnership to leverage additional resources and participate in regional dialogue to achieve shared outcomes. The City has identified seven outcome areas to ensure appropriate and effective resource allocation supporting the community’s priorities. Outcome areas include Culture and Recreation; Economic Health; Environmental Health; High Performing Government; Neighborhood Livability and Social Health; Safe Community; and 3 Transportation and Mobility. The Policy Agenda identifies this alignment as it is important for City staff to ensure that advocacy supports specific desired outcomes. 4 CITY OF FORT COLLINS LEGISLATIVE REVIEW COMMITTEE The Legislative Review Committee (LRC) is a representative group of Council members that reviews and reacts to proposed legislation on behalf of City Council and the City. In taking a position on bills, the LRC interprets and applies the various policies that are included in the Legislative Policy Agenda. Council Members presently serving on the Legislative Review Committee are: • Councilmember Tricia Canonico, Chair • Councilmember Shirley Peel • Mayor Jeni Arndt LEGISLATIVE REVIEW PROCESS In 2022, the City of Fort Collins will rely heavily on the Legislative Policy Agenda, the Colorado Municipal League, and the Colorado Communities for Climate Action organizations for the majority of bill tracking and identification. The City currently maintains memberships with the Colorado Municipal League and Colorado Communities for Climate Action – both groups maintain a fulltime presence at the capitol and engage in bill identification and advocacy consistent with their own adopted policy agendas. The City influences both groups’ policy agendas, and while not perfectly consistent with our own, both generally advance and protect the City’s interests. Bills introduced in the Colorado General Assembly, United States Congress and federal, state or county regulations or rulemakings are reviewed by City staff. Bills, regulations and rules that are identified as having a potential impact on the City will be brought to the LRC for discussion. If LRC adopts a position, staff will convey that information to the appropriate state or federal representative and advocate for the adopted position. Due to the time-sensitive nature of the General Assembly, if a bill’s subject matter is addressed in this Policy Agenda, staff will proactively work with state and federal representatives to advance the City’s position as expressed in this legislative policy agenda and other Council-adopted plans and policies. Staff will provide regular updates to the LRC and the full City Council regarding bills of consequence to the City and will consult with the LRC regarding bills for which direction under the adopted policy is unclear. Staff liaisons support the LRC by contributing expertise in various areas of municipal service. The City Attorney’s Office also reviews selected bills and may provide confidential legal analysis. Fort Collins also works with community partners to support local projects and staff collaborates with representatives of other municipalities on mutually-held priorities. Fort Collins actively seeks innovative partnerships to leverage positive outcomes for residents. 5 The City works closely with the Colorado Municipal League (CML) and the National League of Cities (NLC) on many legislative items facing cities. Fort Collins maintains membership with Colorado Association of Municipal Utilities (CAMU) which represents 29 municipal utilities throughout the state on utility issues, Colorado Communities for Climate Action (CC4CA) which represents municipalities on climate issues. In addition, Fort Collins actively participates in various trade organizations which represent specific areas of interest to City operations. 6 2022 LEGISLATIVE POLICY STATEMENTS HOME RULE AND LOCAL CONTROL In order to consider and manage local conditions and desires, community issues and needs should be addressed locally. For this reason, home rule authority is of utmost importance to the City of Fort Collins. The City must be free to regulate local activities that primarily impact the area within the City's boundaries, such as the speed of local traffic or the effects of particular land use developments. The City also understands the accumulative effect of these and other activities have statewide ramifications that may call for statewide regulation, to effectively manage such things as overall growth and development in the state, traffic congestion in major transportation corridors and environmental quality. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports strengthening and preserving home rule authority of municipal governments. 2. Opposes State or Federal intervention in matters of local concern or matters that unnecessarily or adversely affect the City’s ability to manage and operate pursuant to its home rule authority. 3. Opposes changes that increase (and supports changes that lessen) the burdens and limits on municipalities associated with public or other government records, public meetings and establishment of ethics standards and procedures, operation of municipal courts, and other matters of municipal operations or authority. 4. Supports enabling cities to choose the provision of services through private enterprise in a manner that fosters cost effective, sustainable, quality services. 5. Supports local control of the awarding of contracts and the accountability of local officials for those actions. 6. Opposes mandates that increase the complexity and cost of services without improving those services. 7. Supports collaborative regional efforts for the benefit of participating communities. 8. Supports potential legislation to clarify when an email exchange among elected officials constitutes a “meeting” subject to the requirements of the Colorado Open Meetings Law, including possible identification of a safe harbor within which elected officials can communicate by electronic mail without constituting a meeting in order to preserve and enable the use of this effective and now common-place technology within appropriate transparency requirements and other reasonable limitations. 7 HOUSING NEIGHBORHOOD LIVABILITY AND SOCIAL HEALTH The City recognizes that the affordability and availability of quality housing is critical to a vibrant and diverse community. The City’s Housing Strategic Plan establishes a community vision that everyone has stable, healthy housing they can afford. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports enhancing funding for affordable housing throughout Colorado, including expanding the State Low Income Housing Tax Credit program and providing funding for affordable for-sale homes, but not increases to unrelated fees. 2. Supports increasing local government’s ability to regulate, manage or generate alternative sources of funding for affordable housing, including public-private partnerships. 3. Supports maintaining stronger amendments to construction defect laws to promote the construction of owner occupied-attached housing. 4. Supports creating an adequate supply of housing for all income levels and continued public and private sector support for these efforts. 5. Supports exploring expansion of Mobile Home Act to address rent pad stabilization, transparency in utility billing, and other livability issues. 6. Supports consideration of changes that would permit municipalities to adopt rent stabilization policies. 7. Supports consideration of incentives and/or requirements to encourage land use reforms that will increase housing supply statewide, particularly through eliminating zoning barriers to accessible, healthy, affordable housing. 8. Supports policies that intentionally link transportation funding and housing funding so that investment is prioritized where there is policy alignment between multi modal infrastructure and transit supportive housing densities. 9. Supports funding and regional support for homelessness prevention, housing coordination and placement, and supportive services to assist with housing retention. 10. Supports the development of a statewide disparity study, in consultation with local governments, to assess the state and local impacts of systemic racism on multiple indicators, e.g., housing affordability, social inclusion and economic opportunity, educational attainment, mental and physical health, and more. AIR QUALITY ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH 8 The City’s Air Quality Plan reiterates the adopted City Plan strong overall goal “to protect human health and the environment through continuous improvements in air quality.” Therefore, the City: 1. Supports programs and policies that improve public health and air quality, including attainment of National Ambient Air Quality Standards for ozone. 2. Supports local government authority to improve air quality beyond minimum State or Federal requirements. 3. Supports implementation of expanded air quality monitoring programs. 4. Supports adequate authority and resource at all levels of government to enforce air quality regulations. 5. Supports economic incentives, disincentives and other market approaches that promote low emission and zero emission alternatives to carbon-based fuels. 6. Supports strengthening vehicle and fuel efficiency standards, including programs and policies that promote the use of zero and low emission vehicles (e.g., electric) and the development of infrastructure needed to support the use of those vehicles. 7. Supports programs or incentives that reduce vehicle miles traveled, through transit-oriented development and enhanced access to alternative modes (e.g., walking, biking and transit). BEER AND LIQUOR SAFE COMMUNITY The City issues and renews liquor licenses, enforces license rules, and holds hearings for liquor license violations. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports greater local licensing final authority for all types of licensing (New, Transfers, Modifications, and Manager Registration.) 2. Supports a sharing of accountability of serving violations between license holder and individual server or store clerk. 3. Supports permanent ability for licensees to service alcohol on a temporary/permanent basis in non-contiguous areas. 9 BROADBAND AND CABLE ECONOMIC HEALTH Reliable, high-speed, and affordable access to broadband and cable programming throughout the community remains a priority and a long-term goal for the City to ensure our economic vitality and allow for equal access for all residents and businesses. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports maintaining local franchising authority to preserve local governments’ ability to negotiate in the public interest for cable channel space, institutional networks and public education and government (PEG) programming, and to charge franchise and PEG fees to support local programming and compensate for the use of rights-of-way. 2. Supports allowing communities to offer and/or partner to offer high speed internet, Wi-Fi and other enhanced telecommunication services to residents, schools, academic institutions, and businesses. 3. Opposes restrictions on providing telecommunication services within City-owned facilities and on City property, and related restrictions on the manner in which such services may be financed, funded or structured. 4. Opposes infringement on municipalities’ ability to compete in the broadband marketplace. 5. Opposes right of way use contrary to existing aesthetic policies and practices, including the addition of any above ground cabling. 6. Supports revisions to the Colorado Open Meetings Law to allow local jurisdictions that provide or arrange for telecommunications services or facilities to authorize executive sessions for discussion of matters pertaining to competition in the provision of telecommunication services and facilities (such as matters subject to negotiation, strategic planning, pricing, sales and marketing, and development planning), along with any other conforming statutory changes. CHILDCARE ECONOMIC HEALTH, NEIGHBORHOOD LIVABILITY AND SOCIAL HEALTH The City of Fort Collins recognizes the criticality of quality, affordable and accessible childcare for families and businesses in the community. The City’s role is to help reduce barriers, increase capacity, leverage assets, identify and respond to childcare needs, and lead by example as an employer. 10 Therefore, the City: 1. Supports programs and policies that improve the severe shortage of childcare openings with licensed providers, including programs and incentives that promote the expansion of existing childcare centers and development of new centers, particularly those serving low-income families and offering extended hours of operation. 2. Supports regulations that streamline requirements and reduce the complexity and cost of childcare services, including licensing and educational requirements, when those mandates are not clearly benefiting the health and safety of children and the community. 3. Supports increased funding for early childhood education. 4. Supports workforce development in the early care and education field, including scholarships, training programs and simplified credentialing processes. 5. Supports increased and sustainable public subsidization of childcare costs, including proposals to support living wages for providers and those that reduce the cost burden on families. CLIMATE ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH Making communities more resilient to disaster and the effects of a changing climate has become more important to Colorado communities over the last several years as natural disasters have caused significant human and property loss. Fort Collins has adopted aggressive emission reduction goals and supports policies and legislation helping communities and the state to achieve these goals and enhance the environment as detailed in the Our Climate Future Plan. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reduction targets, planning, mechanisms that support the gathering of data to inform greenhouse gas inventories, and implementation at all levels of government. 2. Supports market-based and regulatory mechanisms to reduce emissions, including incentives, enabling legislation, regulations and other mechanisms to achieve emissions reductions and increase resiliency in energy, waste reduction, transportation, and water sectors. 3. Supports protection of the Colorado self-audit law. 11 4. Supports policies that put equity at the center of decision-making to consider systemic inequities in energy and climate impacts, based on race or socioeconomic status, to justly transition and grow a clean energy future. INTEGRATED LAND USE,TRANSPORTATION PLANNING, AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW ECONOMIC HEALTH, NEIGHBORHOOD LIVABILITY AND SOCIAL HEALTH City Plan and the Transit Master Plan guides the City’s long-term decisions on land use and transportation investments and regulations. Fort Collins uses tools such as land use and building code, and well-established development review processes Therefore, the City: 1. Supports requirements for comprehensive land use planning that organizes and directs growth to achieve stated community vision, policies and goals. 2. Supports policies, standards or programs that require the analysis of public health, sustainability, and equity in land use planning and regulation. 3. Supports local governments’ ability to obtain financial compensation for additional work of inspectors through fees or other means. 4. Opposes any unfunded state mandated review, permitting or inspection requirements. 5. Supports local governments’ authority to determine zoning, development review, building and inspection standards, procedures, and timelines. 6. Encourages regional cooperation in land use, transportation planning, utility and water resource planning, and fostering sustainable development. Supports intergovernmental agreements between a municipality and a county to establish boundaries and annexation of a GMA and prohibit any outside parties to annex said GMA. 7. Supports municipal discretion concerning the imposition of building and development fees and requirements. 8. Supports retaining and/or increasing local authority related to the siting, design and regulation of wireless telecommunication facilities, including both small cell and macro sites. 9. Supports local adoption of Building and other related Codes, including addition of local amendments needed to safeguard public health and safety by regulating building construction, structural strength, sanitation, light, ventilation, and energy conservation. 12 10. Supports local control and regulation of Building Department staff including qualifications of Building Inspectors performing plumbing and electrical inspections. ELECTIONS HIGH PERFORMING GOVERNMENT The City of Fort Collins conducts municipal elections in April of odd years and special elections as required by the citizen (or Council) initiative process. The City is committed to conducting a clear, legal, and trustworthy elections process. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports all efforts that assist the City in conducting fair and transparent election processes according to the City’s adopted procedures. 2. Supports process improvements that encourage voter participation. 3. Supports additional mechanisms to prevent election tampering, through increased cyber security around election data and the election processes. ENERGY ECONOMIC HEALTH, ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH As a municipally-owned electric utility, the City is committed to providing affordable, reliable, and clean energy services to residents and businesses, as described in the Our Climate Future plan. Energy issues extend beyond electricity to also encompass the community’s use of natural gas and petroleum. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports efforts that promote energy affordability in general for residents, businesses and institutions and specifically for households with high energy bill burdens. 2. Supports efforts which promote safety in the generation, transmission and distribution of energy. 3. Supports efforts and incentives which promote energy efficiency, conservation, distributed energy resources, electrification and grid flexibility. 4. Supports opportunities for local economic activities related to energy efficiency, clean energy production, and utility operations. 13 5. Supports initiatives to facilitate transition from natural gas and petroleum use to beneficial electrification for thermal and transportation needs. 6. Supports initiatives which reduce barriers to coordinated integrated planning for energy supply and demands. 7. Supports state and federal funding for resilience efforts to mitigate potential energy and climate related disruptions. 8. Supports federal and state incentives for renewable energy production, including wind power, and provide for “State Implementation Plan” credits for renewable energy (excluding residential wood burning and corn-based ethanol) and energy efficiency. 9. Opposes attempts to prevent or inhibit provision of municipal electric service in newly annexed areas. 10. Supports smart grid technology adoption and grid modernization. 11. Supports minimizing the environmental impacts of energy production. 12. Supports efforts which promote the development of regional electricity markets. FINANCE ECONOMIC HEALTH; HIGH PERFORMING GOVERNMENT Strong fiscal planning, prudent debt management and investment policies, and preservation of the City’s revenue base are vital in maintaining and improving the City’s financial health. Considering the known impacts of legislation on the City’s business community can help foster a stronger tax base and retain a strong quality of life. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports expanding municipal authority to establish alternative funding mechanisms, including financing tools such as public improvement fees (PIF) and certificates of participation (COP). 2. Supports increased funding for K-12 and higher education, specifically Colorado State University and Front Range Community College. 3. Encourages the equitable treatment of sales and use taxes to residents and corporations residing or doing business in Colorado by limiting exemptions. 14 4. Supports the equitable distribution sales tax collections on e-commerce transactions. 5. Opposes efforts that inhibit the City’s ability and authority to increase its revenue base (sales, use and property taxes). 6. Supports protections that do not unnecessarily restrict the investments of government entities. 7. Supports programs that provide economic assistance to organizations and individuals impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. HAZARDOUS MATERIALS MANAGEMENT SAFE COMMUNITY; ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH It is an important concern of the City to safeguard Fort Collins’ health and environmental safety by reducing risks from the unauthorized release of hazardous materials or hazardous waste. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports strengthening the enforcement of hazardous materials regulations. 2. Supports increasing diversion of hazardous waste from landfills. 3. Support City’s ability and authority to review and approve locations of facilities that use or store hazardous materials or hazardous waste. HEALTH CARE NEIGHBORHOOD LIVABILITY & SOCIAL HEALTH; ECONOMIC HEALTH; HIGH PERFORMING GOVERNMENT The City recognizes that the rapidly increasing cost of health care and health insurance is a barrier to real wage growth, equitable health outcomes, and economic gains among many residents of Fort Collins. The City further recognizes that employer-sponsored health care and varying state regulations that are not consistent across the United States have resulted in the system we have today. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports health care policy that provides single-payer, not-for-profit health care to all residents. 2. Supports the portability of health care plans across employers and state-lines. 15 3. Supports health care policies that end the practice in the United States of employers being the primary source of health insurance for residents. 4. Supports policies that allocate costs to individuals and their families proportional to their ability to pay. HUMAN RESOURCES HIGH PERFORMING GOVERNMENT The City of Fort Collins is committed to the health, safety, and well-being of its employees. The City works diligently to be efficient and responsible stewards of tax dollars ensuring that employee compensation and benefits are meaningful, equitable, market-based, and competitive. The City believes that its residents, through their elected representatives on City Council, are in the best position to determine appropriate City employee compensation, benefits, appeal rights related to disciplinary action and policies. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports the City’s ability and authority to make decisions on employment issues, including collective bargaining, arbitration, compensation, appeal rights related to disciplinary action and benefits to further an equitable work environment. 2. Supports the development and expansion to the City’s ability to determine how best to manage employee health and benefit programs. 3. Supports current state funding levels for police officers’ and dispatchers’ death and disability benefits made available by Fire & Police Pension Association of Colorado. 4. Opposes proposals that would allow employees and/or retirees with defined contribution or deferred plans to move into defined benefit plans if there is a cost to local government. 5. Opposes proposals that would limit the City’s ability to test job applicants for presence of alcohol or controlled substances or employees at work for impairment due to consumption of alcohol, marijuana, or other controlled substances or to set limits related to such testing. 6. Opposes proposals that expand Colorado and federal anti-discrimination protections to allow individuals other than employees to file claims against public entities for violations, that expand the definition of “hostile work environment” beyond current state and federal protections or that waive a public entity’s sovereign immunity in an action for injuries resulting from a discrimination or unfair employment practice claim brought pursuant to Colorado anti- discrimination law. 16 7. Opposes proposals that require a municipality to collectively bargain with its employees in conflict with a home rule municipality’s authority. IMMIGRATION AND NATIONAL BORDER CONDITIONS NEIGHBORHOOD LIVABILITY & SOCIAL HEALTH; SAFE COMMUNITY; HIGH PERFORMING GOVERNMENT The City recognizes that federal issues pertaining to civil rights at the United States’ borders and immigration law more broadly have wide impacts that can directly impact the day-to-day life of Fort Collins residents. It can also impact those residents’ willingness and comfort with engaging with local public safety agencies and other key service providers. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports the humane treatment of persons who are detained by Immigration Officials and the rapid resolution of legal proceedings to determine their status. 2. Supports pathways to legal immigration into the United States that is sustainable in the long term, including removing financial barriers and increasing access to legal services. 3. Supports regulations and laws that support the use of employment eligibility verification by employers 4. Supports the 2011 ICE memorandum on “sensitive locations” limiting its immigration enforcement actions and arrests at the following locations so as to preserve the health, safety and education of all residents: • Hospitals; • Schools and scholastic bus stops (pre-schools, primary schools, secondary schools, post-secondary schools, colleges and universities, and other learning institutions such as vocational or trade schools); • Churches, synagogues, mosques, or other institutions of worship, such as buildings rented for the purpose of religious services; • The site of a funeral, wedding, or other public religious ceremony; and • Public demonstrations, such as a march, rally, or parade. 5. Supports regulations and laws that add wage and labor protection requirements for workers currently excluded from minimum wages and overtime protections, breaks, and mandatory rest days. 6. Supports de minimus exemptions to Verification of lawful presence CO ST § 24- 76.5-103 by adding a new section (3)(f) to the State law that exempts the City from following the verification process for any particular local public benefit that is valued at less than $500.00, or that is not provided directly to the beneficiary by the City. 17 7. Supports local control over how state and federal funding for healthcare, affordable housing and food security is allocated to meet the needs of all residents and their families regardless of immigration status. MARIJUANA AND HEMP SAFE COMMUNITY After the State’s legalization of medical and recreational marijuana, the City of Fort Collins created local marijuana business licensing programs and adopted ordinances to balance the needs and desires of the community related to legal marijuana. The City also regulates hemp cultivation and extraction. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports communities’ ability to raise necessary funds to maintain public safety and enforce marijuana and hemp possession laws. 2. Supports additional state marijuana and hemp enforcement resources, especially for field enforcement. 3. Opposes under-21 access to marijuana and supports increasing penalties to those supplying to underage individuals. 4. Supports greater education and research on the harmful effects of high concentrate THC and transparency in the spending of dedicated marijuana education dollars. 5. Supports local opt-in provisions regarding new permits and/or licenses or other marijuana-related activities allowed under state law. 6. Supports further development of laws and regulations to stop the proliferation of gray and black-market marijuana while coordinating with the federal level to help address safety through research and legal banking, and to reduce conflict between Colorado and federal laws. MUNICIPAL COURT SAFE COMMUNITY; HIGH PERFORMING GOVERNMENT The Fort Collins Municipal Court is responsible for administering the operations of the judicial branch of City government according to the City Charter and ordinances adopted by City Council. Cases adjudicated in Municipal Court include traffic violations, misdemeanors, civil infractions, and civil cases. Generally, cases are brought to Municipal Court by Fort Collins Police Services, Colorado State University Police Department, Animal Control, other City departments, and private residents. Therefore, the City: 18 1. Opposes limitations on the authority of municipalities to enforce their own ordinances in municipal courts and increased procedural requirements or limitations on municipal court proceedings, such as limitations on bonding requirements related to municipal court warrants and sentencing options. 2. Opposes the imposition of state surcharges on municipal court fines for the purpose of funding state programs. 3. Opposes any unfunded mandates imposed on municipal courts by the state. OIL AND GAS ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH Fort Collins residents have expressed continuing concern about the human and environmental impacts from local oil and gas development. Additionally, community members have expressed concern over transported emissions from oil and gas operations outside of City limits that contribute to local ozone formation. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports local authority to regulate oil and gas operations as granted in 2019 through Senate Bill 19-181, which includes the ability to regulate the siting of new development and surface impacts. 2. Supports scientific studies that evaluate impacts of oil and gas operations on human health, the environment and property values. 3. Supports air pollution monitoring, emission characterization and modeling studies to better understand the contributions of the oil and gas industry to air pollution. 4. Supports the current formula allocation of State Severance Tax and Federal Mineral Lease (FML) revenue to impacted jurisdictions so that they might address impacts from resource extraction. 5. Supports collaboration with operators, state agencies and local governments on oil and gas development within and adjacent to the City’s Growth Management Area, and on City-owned properties outside of City limits. 6. Supports legislation that protects public health, safety, welfare, the environment and wildlife resources in consideration of surface owners and mineral owner rights. OPEN RECORDS AND DATA MANAGEMENT HIGH PERFORMING GOVERNMENT 19 The City is the collector and keeper of hundreds of datasets and recorded information and is legally bound and responsible for responding to Open Record requests. The City supports transparency and open data initiatives. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports clear requirements that allow for reasonable requests and timeframes to provide information that is legally available. 2. Opposes mandates that include unrealistic timeframes and requests that require additional staff time with no means to recover costs. 3. Supports cybersecurity efforts that protect the City, consumers, and infrastructure. 4. Supports data privacy regulations, prohibiting the sharing of residents’ data with federal agencies without a court-authorized subpoena, warrant or other valid order. PARKS AND NATURAL AREAS, AND PUBLIC AMENITIES ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH; CULTURE AND RECREATION The City is committed to providing the community with excellent natural areas, parks, recreation facilities, trails, cultural centers, and engaging programs. Our residents and visitors enjoy improved health, less crime a higher quality of life, and a greater sense of community because of the quality natural areas, parks and recreation programs, and other public spaces. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports maintaining or enhancing funding for parks, trails, forestry, horticulture, natural areas, cultural centers, and recreation services and facilities. 2. Supports local discretion to use Great Outdoors Colorado and other sources for funding municipal government projects addressing local needs and priorities. 3. Supports equal or greater funding levels of Great Outdoors Colorado grants awarded to municipalities 4. Supports maintaining or enhancing tax incentives to private landowners for voluntary land conservation. 5. Supports protection of the Cache la Poudre River and local urban streams. 6. Supports programs and funding for equitable access to public space and services. PUBLIC HEALTH SAFE COMMUNITY; NEIGHBORHOOD LIVABILITY AND SOCIAL HEALTH 20 The City of Fort Collins strives to be a healthy, livable City that is a welcoming and inclusive community for all, including residents who may be experiencing the challenges of homelessness, mental health issues, addiction, depression, and other challenging life situations. The City also supports primary prevention strategies to reduce the injuries and deaths associated with gun violence. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports maintaining or increasing the funds available through the state and federal government for community-focused non-profits to provide human services and housing support. 2. Supports providing communities with resources to address chronic homelessness, supportive housing, mental health, and substance use disorders, including tobacco prevention programs. 3. Supports a standardized statewide approach to addressing homelessness. 4. Supports statewide efforts to enforce retail tobacco sales compliance. 5. Supports legislation or regulatory efforts that restrict and better ensure the prevention of firearm purchases of those individuals convicted of a violent criminal offense and those who have been involuntarily committed to a mental institution or are otherwise suffering from a severe mental condition. 6. Supports public health research and necessary funding related to the root causes and effects of gun violence to better inform prevention strategies. 7. Supports legislation that prohibits the sale or transfer of unregistered firearms. 8. Supports legislation that greatly reduces or eliminates the incidence of smoking and vaping. Specific measures may include the elimination of flavored vaping cartridges, an increase in the legal smoking age, state-wide retail licensing for tobacco and vaping products, and identical treatment of vaping and e-cigarette products to traditional forms of tobacco. 9. Supports funding and/or programs to address disparities in social determinants of health (e.g. housing, income, educational attainment, access to healthcare) to improve community-wide health outcomes. PUBLIC SAFETY SAFE COMMUNITY The Fort Collins City Council recognizes the critical importance of maintaining public safety, providing a safe environment, and protecting the lives and property of the residents of Fort Collins on a daily basis as well as through preparedness and resiliency planning efforts. 21 Therefore, the City: 1. Supports greater protections to victims of crime, regardless of immigration status. 2. Supports the City’s right to use camera enforcement of traffic laws, reduce operational restrictions on the use of camera enforcement, and increases the fines associated with violations. 3. Supports protocols and funding for shared, statewide emergency response communications, including supporting Larimer Emergency Telephone Authority (LETA) and other efforts to resolve 911 diversity (back-up/resilience) issues. 4. Opposes increased 911 provider tariffs without clear documentation of cost needs. 5. Opposes initiatives that have the potential to compromise officer safety. 6. Supports minimum training criteria and professional mediator certification that formally legitimizes the field of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). 7. Opposes municipal liability for prisoners’ self-inflicted wounds while in police custody or detention facilities. 8. Opposes efforts to undermine local control or enforcement of activities on public property. 9. Supports a state adopted fire and building code, the code of choice being the International Fire and Building Code, while allowing municipalities to adopt their own codes and local amendments. 10. Opposes limits to local enforcement of the International Fire Code as adopted with local amendments, imposing inspection requirements or preventing collection of permit or inspection fees as required by the local jurisdiction. 11. Opposes restricting any local jurisdiction from requiring the installation of fire sprinklers. 12. Supports the City’s ability to prohibit the use and sale of fireworks and allow counties and fire districts to prohibit and otherwise control fireworks within City boundaries. 13. Supports efforts to reduce abuse and improper disposal of over-the-counter and prescription drugs. 14. Supports exclusive digital communication networks for public safety personnel during emergencies. 15. Opposes the reduction and loss of qualified immunity for government officials. 22 16. Supports practical standards related to use of force which appropriately balance the rights and safety of Fort Collins residents with the safety of first responders. 17. Supports increased reporting of crimes by refraining from inquiries about legal immigration status unless such inquiry is pertinent to a crime; supports continuation of non-restrictive U-Visa certification policies that allow victims of crime to access important legal protections. 18. Supports continued use of body-worn cameras, protections for public recordings of police, and the maintenance and reporting of such data that does not compromise police operations or public safety. Opposes unfunded legislative mandates in regard to such programs. RECYCLING AND SOLID WASTE REDUCTION ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH The City of Fort Collins endorses a multi-pronged approach to waste minimization that includes recycling, re-use, composting, and source reduction, and which also applies Zero Waste principles such as redesigning systems to reduce pollution and waste. Additionally, the City has adopted a goal of diverting 75 percent of community waste by 2020; 90 percent by 2025, and 100 percent by 2030. Therefore, the City: 1. Encourages integrated, sustainable waste management planning and implementation policy, including but not limited to centralized data collection requirements, local hauler licensing and initiatives to reach statewide diversion targets. 2. Supports a regulatory authority role for local government to ensure the efficient management of recyclable material and solid waste, including application of laws that prescribe the use of county-funded disposal facilities for certain types of wastes, and other local bans on landfill disposal for certain types of debris. 3. Encourages “buy recycled” or “environmentally preferable purchasing” policies for government agency procurement. 4. Supports incentives and funding for programs that promote waste reduction, reuse and recycling, and development of related infrastructure. 5. Supports continued or increased funding for programs to collect and monitor data on trash volumes, rates of diversion from landfill disposal and economic impacts of recycling. 6. Supports extended producer responsibility initiatives that fund recycling programs and incentivize products to be designed for reuse, recycling, or composting and maintain local control of recycling programs. 23 7. Opposes CRS Section 25-17-104, which currently limits local authority to regulate packaging materials (e.g., single-use plastic bags). 8. Supports establishing a refundable deposit fee on beverage containers to increase recovery rates and pay for recycling programs. 9. Supports state and regional economic tools for existing and new businesses that provide end markets for recycled materials in support of a domestic, circular economy. 10. Supports incentives and programs to encourage the use of compost, developing end markets to help divert organic material from landfills (food and yard waste), and developing composting infrastructure. 11. Supports incentives and programs to develop end markets for construction and demolition waste materials and other potentially recyclable materials. RISK MANAGEMENT AND LIABILITY HIGH PERFORMING GOVERNMENT The City of Fort Collins recognizes the dual purpose of the workers’ compensation system – providing benefits promptly to injured employees in a cost-effective manner and minimizing costly litigation. The City also recognizes that the City’s self-insurance program is a cost-efficient method to insure workers’ compensation and that government intervention or taxation can negatively impact the City. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports improving administrative efficiency of the Division of Workers’ Compensation. 2. Opposes increased insurance premium costs to employers. 3. Opposes administrative burdens or taxes to self-insurance programs. 4. Supports limits to insurance claim litigation. 5. Opposes limiting the City’s options and ability to manage workers’ compensation claims; including actions like removing existing offsets to workers’ compensation benefits or limiting the City’s ability to designate treating physicians. 6. Opposes efforts to presumptively expand workers’ compensation coverage to illnesses or injuries that are not work related. 7. Opposes efforts to reduce or weaken protections against liability through governmental immunity or other statutory provisions. 24 SMALL BUSINESS SUPPORT ECONOMIC HEALTH; HIGH PERFORMING GOVERNMENT The COVID pandemic has further underscored the need for strong and stable small businesses in every community in the State. The City of Fort Collins actively supports small businesses throughout their stages of formation and growth. Changing consumer habits and increased online competition threaten to disrupt the faltering recovery for small businesses. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports efforts to reduce the cost of food delivery for small businesses by managing third-party delivery fees and encouraging statewide licensing of these service providers. 2. Supports continued efforts to enable municipalities to consider local minimum wage policies. 3. Supports efforts to enhance state-wide funding for small business support – including enhanced services to support new business formation owned by women, minority, low-income and veteran individuals. TRANSPORTATION INVESTMENT TRANSPORTATION AND MOBILITY The City actively promotes transportation infrastructure that facilitates the safe and efficient movement of people, goods and services regardless of mode. Infrastructure improvements will be in concert with land use development while being respectful of community values and the environment. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports alternative methods of funding transportation infrastructure needs. 2. Support funding the analysis and implementation of inter- and intra-regional transit linkages, including future commuter rail connectivity. 3. Encourages flexibility in federal funding and regulations in order to better meet the needs of small to medium-size communities. 4. Supports guaranteed levels of federal funding for transportation and allocation of all federal motor fuel taxes and other federal transportation trust funds for their intended transportation purposes. 25 5. Supports funding for the build out of Interstate 25 improvements. 6. Supports additional funding options and availability for active transportation modes. 7. Supports broadening the definition of the gasoline tax to a “fuel tax” that encompasses other fuel options as they become more prevalent. 8. Opposes reductions to the present allocation formula of 60 percent state, 22 percent counties, and 18 percent municipalities for Highway User Tax Fund (HUTF) or any appropriations from the state using the same formula. 9. Supports enhanced ability to implement railroad quiet zones in municipalities, further options in pursuing various degrees of quiet zones, and an overall reduction in train horn decibel and duration requirements. 10. Opposes divesting highway roads in urban areas from the state and making them the sole responsibility of local jurisdictions without adequate compensation for ongoing maintenance. 11. Supports safe operation of railroads through timely track inspections, joint training and communication between railroad and emergency personnel, and the use of safe equipment. 12. Supports local regulatory and design standard control of public roads, pedestrian paths, and bike lanes to address all modes of transportation. URBAN RENEWAL AND DOWNTOWN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC HEALTH The state of Colorado has empowered local authorities to use Urban Renewal Authorities (URA) and Downtown Development Authorities (DDA) to encourage downtown revitalization and the elimination of blight. The main funding tool for URAs and DDAs is Tax Increment Financing (TIF) generated through property taxes. In its best intention, urban renewal and downtown revitalization restores economic vitality and improves the safety of a designated area, with limited financial impact to other government jurisdictions. Therefore, the City: 1. Opposes limitations on municipalities’ ability to utilize financing mechanisms such as TIF. 2. Opposes efforts to increase influence of non-City jurisdictions over the use of TIF within City limits. 3. Supports maintaining the ability of downtown development authorities to utilize the full offering of tools and powers provided in the DDA Act. 4. Supports maintaining the ability of Urban Renewal Authorities to utilize the full offering of tools and powers provided for in state statute. 26 WATER, WASTEWATER, AND STORMWATER ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH; SAFE COMMUNITY The City operates a water utility, a wastewater utility, and a stormwater utility in a financially sound, reliable, safe, and environmentally responsible manner. The availability of adequate water supplies is critical to the City and is managed by the Water Supply and Demand Management Policy, the Water Efficiency Plan, and other water-related codes, rules, regulations, plans, and policies. Therefore, the City: 1. Supports expanding the authority delegated to the state to administer federally mandated water, stormwater, and wastewater environmental regulatory programs. 2. Supports reasonable water quality regulations that are cost effective and can show identifiable benefits. 3. Supports municipal flexibility to manage instream flows to preserve or improve the natural environment, while protecting the integrity of Colorado’s appropriation doctrine, protecting the City’s water supplies, and preventing injury to other water users. 4. Opposes unfunded mandates. 5. Opposes barriers to financing for water conservation projects. 6. Supports funding for the recovery and treatment of the Fort Collins water supply, its watershed, and other waterways impacted by natural disasters and human-caused events, including fires. 7. Supports enhanced municipal authority to protect and increase the flexibility and resiliency of the City’s water supplies under Colorado’s appropriation doctrine, without causing injury to other water users and without adversely affecting instream flows or the natural environment. This includes potential bills related to treated water providers being able to more easily share treated water supplies between their distribution systems. 8. Supports reducing legal barriers and clarifying legal ambiguities related to water reuse and greywater projects, while protecting the integrity of Colorado’s appropriation doctrine, protecting the City’s water supplies, and preventing injury to other water users. 9. Supports streamlining federal and state permitting requirements for water development projects that increase coordination between permitting agencies, reduces administrative and financial burdens on permit applicants, and ensures robust and enforceable environmental protections. 27 10. Supports the enlargement of Halligan Reservoir as a common-sense, cost-effective, and environmentally-beneficial approach to meet Fort Collins Utilities’ future water supply needs. CITY OF FORT COLLINS LEGISLATIVE CONTACTS Legislative Review Committee Name District/Title Email Phone Councilmember Tricia Canonico District 3 tcanonico@fcgov.com 970-305-6296 Mayor Jeni Arndt Mayor jarndt@fcgov.com 970-413-3146 Councilmember Shirley Peel District 4 speel@fcgov.com 970-217-5817 Kelly DiMartino City Manager kdimartino@fcgov.com (970) 416-2028 Carrie Daggett City Attorney cdaggett@fcgov.com (970) 416-2463 Tyler Marr Ginny Sawyer Legislative Staff tmarr@fcgov.com gsawyer@fcgov.com (970) 416-4205 (970) 224-6094 Legislative Staff Liaison Members Topic Area Name Title Email Phone Affordable Housing and Social Sustainability Meaghan Overton Beth Yonce Housing Manager, Social Sustainability Director moverton@fcgov.com byonce@fcgov.com (970) 221-6752 Air Quality Cassie Archuleta Air Quality Program Manager carchuleta@fcgov.com (970) 416-2648 Broadband Chad Crager Broadband Director ccreager@fcgov.com (610) 224-6001 28 Cable Television Franchise Carson Hamlin Cable Television Manager chamlin@fcgov.com (970) 221-6510 Childcare Adam Molzer City Grants and Community Partnerships Coordinator amolzer@fcgov.com (970) 221-6757 Climate Honore Depew Climate Program Manager hdepew@fcgov.com (970) 224-6143 Environmental Protection Lindsay Ex Environmental Services Director lex@fcgov.com (970) 224-6085 Elections, Liquor and Marijuana Licensing Tammi Pusheck Interim City Clerk tpusheck@fcgov.com (970) 416-8025 Energy Tim McCollough, John Phelan Light and Power, Deputy Utilities Director Energy Services, Senior Manager tmccollough@fcgov.co m jphelan@fcgov.com (970) 416-2622 (970) 416-2539 Finance Travis Storin Interim Chief Financial Officer tstorin@fcgov.com (970) 221-6795 Economic Health Josh Birks Economic Health Director jbirks@fcgov.com (970) 221-6324 Fire Protection and HAZMAT Mgmt Derek Bergsten Division Chief, Poudre Fire Authority derek.bergsten@poudr e-fire.org (970) 566-7274 Human Resources Teresa Roche Chief Human Resources Officer troche@fcgov.com (970) 221-6717 Natural Areas, Open Lands and Cache la Poudre River Issues Zoe Shark Interim Natural Areas Director zshark@fcgov.com (970) 221-6263 Building Services Russ Hovland Interim Chief Building Official rhovland@fcgov.com (970) 416-2341 Parks and Recreation Mike Calhoon, Aaron Harris Director of Parks, Interim Director of Recreation mcalhoon@fcgov.com aharris@fcgov.com (970) 416-2079 (970) 416-2225 Planning and Land Use Paul Sizemore, Rebecca Everette Community Development and Neighborhood Services Director, Planning Manager psizemore@fcgov.com reverette@fcgov.com (970) 224-6140 (970) 416-2625 Public Safety Greg Yeager Deputy Chief of Police gyeager@fcgov.com (970) 416-2185 Recycling and Solid Waste Reduction Caroline Mitchell Environmental Program Manager cmitchell@fcgov.com (970) 221-6288 Risk Management Claire Goodwin Safety, Security, and Risk Management Director cgoodwin@fcgov.com (970) 221-6774 29 Stormwater Theresa Connor, Andrew Gingerich Interim Utilities Director, Water Field Operations Director tconnor@fcgov.com agingerich@fcgov.com (970) 221-6671 (970) 221-6232 Transportation Dean Klingner Planning, Development and Transportation Deputy Director dklingner@fcgov.com (970) 416-2029 Utilities Customer Connections and Water Conservation Gretchen Stanford Interim Deputy Director, Customer Connections gstanford@fcgov.com (970) 416-2627 Water Supply and Quality Theresa Connor Interim Utilities Director tconnor@fcgov.com (970) 221-6671 1 Member Proposal s Request for Policy Position– City of Aurora The request is for CML to support a policy proposal for the buildout of a state database to allow for information sharing between municipal and state courts. Under the current system municipal court staff must directly contact individual courts to request copies of relevant files or cases. This results in municipal resources being devoted to a tedious process that can be streamlined with a shared statewide system. Further, with the current trend of courts digitizing official records and information, a statewide information system makes logistical sense. Staff would like to note that the fiscal impact of this type of legislation may be significant. Lobbyist: Meghan MacKillop. POLICY COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION: SUPPORT POLICY POSITION Request for CML-initiated Legislation– City of Cherry Hills Village Currently, municipalities must pay for any ungrounding projects using internal funds or create a local assessment district to cover the costs of the project. This method prevents regulated utility providers from paying for the project by passing on the cost of the project to rate-payers statewide. This method, utilized, by regulated utility providers prevents competitive bidding for undergrounding overhead power/utility/cable lines and results in increased costs and delays for municipalities seeking to place utility lines underground. This bill proposal would modify the statute and shift the costs of ungrounding and undergrounding projects to the regulated utility provider to reduce the municipal fiscal financial burden. Request: CML-initiated Legislation. Lobbyist: Beauclarine Thomas. POLICY COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION: SUPPORT CML -INITIATED LEGISLATION Request for CML-initiated Legislation– City of Glenwood Springs The City of Glenwood Springs has requested CML-initiated legislation to refer a question to voters to amend TABOR and remove the prohibition on real estate transfer tax. The legislation would be a concurrent resolution and needs 2/3 vote of each chamber to pass. The intent is to create a funding source for affordable housing that 2 local governments can create and directly access at the local level. Request: CML- Initiated Legislation. Lobbyist: Meghan Dollar. POLICY COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION: SUPPORT CML -INTIATED LEGISLATION Request for Policy Position– City of Glenwood Springs The City of Glenwood Springs is requesting CML take a policy position to support treating short term rentals as commercial property for taxation purposes. Currently, short-term rentals are taxed as residential property. Initially, the City requested CML- initiated legislation, however, staff suggested the request be a policy position as legislators are already likely to run legislation on the issue in 2022 legislative session. The intent is that the additional revenue would go to support the creation of workforce and affordable housing. Additionally, short-term rentals are more prevalent in many communities than workforce housing. Taxing these rentals at a commercial rate may encourage property owners to long-term rent rather than short-term. Policy Position: Support. Lobbyist: Meghan Dollar. POLICY COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION: NOT APPROVE POLICY POSITION Request for CML-initiated Legislation– City of Gunnison The City of Gunnison has requested CML-initiated legislation to amend the Mobile Home Park Act to require for property owners of mobile home parks to engage in discussions with residents, public service officials, municipalities, and/or appropriate government agencies. The intent is to add to the process created in HB20-1201 which allows residents to potentially buy the park in which their home is located. At this time, there is no recourse or action government regulators or residents can take if the property owners ignore their questions and concerns about the property. Request: CML-initiated Legislation. Lobbyist: Meghan Dollar. POLICY COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION: SUPPORT CML -INTIATED LEGISLATION Request for CML Policy Position– City of Gunnison The City of Gunnison has requested CML-initiated legislation to amend the nuisance statute to allow a local government to temporarily take control of structures for repair when the structures are substandard, and the owner of the property is noncompliant with the municipality’s requests to remedy. The municipality would not be allowed to 3 evict or remove residents or renters. The goal is to refurbish current housing structures within communities to keep residents in their homes. The City of Gunnison initially sought CML-initiated legislation, but in discussions with CML staff a policy position was recommended as this is an issue that staff could work through the Affordable Housing Transformational Task Force. The Task Force is tasked with creating policies that cause transformational change in housing and creating a process to remedy dilapidated housing in communities could meet that requirement. Policy Position: Support. Lobbyist: Meghan Dollar. POLICY COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION: SUPPORT POLICY POSITION Action Items Criminal Justice: Statewide Text Message Municipal Court Reminder Program House Bill 21-1314 repealed the Department of Revenue's discretionary and mandatory authority to cancel, deny, or deny reissuance for a driver’s license or minor driver’s license for having any of the following: an outstanding judgment for a violation related to the regulation of motor vehicles or traffic; having a bench warrant for failure to appear to answer for a traffic situation: or an outstanding judgement for failing to present a valid transit pass or coupon. This repeal created a gap in municipal law that leaves localities without an enforcement mechanism for individuals that break the law. During the legislative session, CML successfully amended the bill to include the creation of a study group to utilize evidence-based policy to design new equitable accountability tools. This bill proposal would create a statewide municipal court text message reminder program. Text message reminders are an evidence-backed method to get people to show up to the court dates. This policy also has support from a variety of stakeholders, including, the Colorado State Patrol. The bill would create a state level text message reminder program for municipal courts to opt into. It would also provide funding for municipalities to administer this program and add staff capacity. Lastly, there would also be an evaluation component to ensure that the program is continuously approved. Staff Recommendation: CML-initiated legislation. Lobbyist: Beauclarine Thomas. POLICY COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION: SUPPORT CML -INTIATED LEGISLATION Transportation: Statewide Regulation of Controlled Intersections In 2018, the General Assembly passed a “Safety Stop” law, giving municipalities the authority to pass ordinances allowing cyclists to “roll” through stop signs rather than 4 coming to a complete stop. There are currently six municipalities that have passed this ordinance, as well as Summit County. The Transportation Legislation Review Committee is proposing legislation that would create a statewide “Stafety Stop” for cyclists. The bill would supersede any conflicting local ordinance or resolution and would expand the safety stop to traffic lights. Sponsors maintain that a statewide law would create clarity for cyclists and decrease incidents between cyclists and vehicles. However, the bill would override local control of traffic stops and lights, and by expanding allowable stops to traffic lights, cities and towns could actually see increased incidents between cyclists and motor vehicles or pedestrians. There may also be associated costs of installing signage indicating that a safety stop is allowed at stop signs and traffic lights. Staff recommendation is to oppose this legislation. Staff recommendation: Oppose. Lobbyist: Meghan MacKillop. POLICY COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION: OPPOSE Information items Housing: Affordable Housing Transformational Task Force Created by HB21-1329, the Affordable Housing Transformational Task Force is made up of legislators and members of the Governor’s cabinet who are tasked with issuing a report with recommendations to the General Assembly and the Governor on policies to create transformational change in affordable housing using $500 million of federal coronavirus state fiscal recovery fund. There is also a sup-panel made up of local governments, non-profits, housing advocates, and developers. Mayor Adam Paul of Lakewood is the municipal representative. Currently, the discussion is being narrowed to four pillars that will make the most amount of change with the $500 million. Lobbyist: Meghan Dollar. Economic Development: Task Force on Economic Recovery and Relief Cash Fund SB21-291 directed the Executive Committee of Legislative Council to create a task force to meet during the 2021 interim to make recommendations to the General Assembly on policies that use money from the state Economic Recovery and Relief Cash Fund that provide a stimulative effect to the state’s economy, provide necessary relief for Coloradans, or address economic disparities resulting from the pandemic. The task force consists of eight members, including three Senate members, three House Members, a representative from the Office of Economic Development and International Trade (OEDIT), and a representative from the Office of State Planning and Budgeting 5 (OSPB). SB21-291 also allows the Executive Committee to designate a subpanel to assist the task force in making recommendations. The subpanel is comprised of five economists, appointed by Senate and House Leadership, the Governor, and OEDIT. The task force had its initial meeting on September 24, 2021, and the Subpanel had its initial meeting on September 30, 2021. The next task force meeting is scheduled on Ocotber 18, 2021. Staff will monitor this task force closely. Lobbyist: Meghan MacKillop Public Health: Behavioral Health Transformational Task Force Created by SB21-137, the Behavioral Health Transformational Task Force is made up of elected officials and members of the Governor’s cabinet who are tasked with issuing a report with recommendations to the General Assembly and the Governor on policies to create transformational change in behavioral health using $450 million of federal coronavirus state fiscal recovery fund. The task force is not subject to Joint Rule 24A and does not have the authority to introduce committee bills. The Task Force’s recommendations will be guided by a subpanel of experts who will craft and examine policies that improve access to mental health and substance use disorder services. Currently, the subpanel is finalizing the overarching pillars the recommendations will fall under. Below is a preliminary list of overarching recommendations that may support local government behavioral health needs: • Local control of funds for programming that is specific to the needs of the community and reduces travel time to access services in more rural and remote areas. • Additional funding for municipalities to get access to naloxone and fentanyl testing strips. • Additional funding for local governments to get behavioral health outreach staff in schools and in city halls. • Increase local access points (outreach, services, and beds) to avoid reaching crisis levels of substance abuse • Fund additional criminal justice diversion opportunities such as co-responder, LEAD, and drug court • Fund additional local drop-in crisis centers in rural areas Beauclarine Thomas will be the local government representative on the subpanel. Please contact her at bthomas@cml.org if you have additional recommendations. The recommendations must be finalized before January 2022. Lobbyist: Beauclarine Thomas. Taxation: Sales Tax Simplification Task Force The Sales Tax Simplification Task Force was continued in 2020 and is currently meeting. CML has several members that serve on the Task Force. The legislative 6 members of the Task Force may ask for ten bills to be drafted and pass up to five bills through as committee bills. One of the pieces of legislation is regarding business licensing for remote sellers that have no physical presence within a municipality. Legislators are concerned that remote sellers must apply for business licenses in multiple municipalities and potentially pay multiple licensing fees. It is CML’s position that home rule municipalities are not subject to the legislature when it comes to taxation as it is a matter of local concern, however, the CML Sales Tax Simplification Committee has been meeting and discussing simplification for remote sellers. In good faith, we are working with the legislature and the proponents to find compromise. CML staff will likely request a position on the legislation in December. Lobbyist: Meghan Dollar. Transportation: Division of Illumination and Other Maintenance Duties For the past two years, CML staff has been involved in conversations with the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) regarding the division of duties and costs as it relates to street illumination on state highways. Some cities, such as Morrison and Centennial, have state highways that run through the town, and the cost to illuminate the streetlights typically falls on those cities, regardless of ability to pay the bill. In 2020, CML staff-initiated conversations concerning the division of authority statute, Section 42-3-135, C.R.S., with a specific request that CDOT take on the cost of illuminating state highways. However, due to COVID-19 and other difficulties of recent legislative sessions, the discussions were put on pause. This past interim, staff had two meetings with CDOT staff to discuss a path forward on this issue. In those meetings CDOT indicated that they would be open to taking over the costs associated with street illumination maintenance along interstates but requested that local governments take responsibility in other areas, such as cleanup of water quality ponds and landscaping. As it stands now, CDOT has put forward a proposed amendment to the relevant section of law, which is attached for your review. CML staff is requesting input on this issue to determine whether CML should proceed with legislation amending the division of authority between CDOT and municipalities. Lobbyist: Meghan MacKillop Wildfire: Land Use and Building Codes Recently, Governor Polis sent a letter to the Colorado Fire Commission asking the Commission to evaluate local land use and building codes for purposes of mitigating wildfire damage. The Fire Commission is an entity that was created to develop policies and best practices regarding firefighting in Colorado. CML has two representatives on the Commission. CML is concerned that the Governor of Colorado has taken an interest in local land use and building codes, and we have advocated directly and through our representatives on the Fire Commission that local governments must maintain control 7 of local land use and building codes. Currently, the discussion is leaning toward incentivizing local governments to update their codes or adopt Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) codes. CML will advocate to continue that path. Lobbyist: Meghan Dollar.