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Colorado Transit-Oriented Infill and Housing Permitting Streamlining Act

Current Law
Status: PassedState: ColoradoIssue: Housing

Summary

This bill would require Colorado local governments to allow by-right moderate-density housing in transit corridors and activity centers, while speeding approval for projects that meet energy and water standards. It also creates a voluntary state fast-track certification program that rewards jurisdictions with compliant housing plans and timely permitting through priority for certain housing and infrastructure grants.

Full text

Be it enacted by the Colorado General Assembly: local governments shall, within designated transit corridors and activity centers, permit by right moderate-density infill housing, including duplexes, triplexes, townhomes, accessory dwelling units, and mixed-use residential development, subject to objective design, safety, and infrastructure standards; projects that meet adopted energy-efficiency and water-conservation requirements shall receive expedited review, and the Department of Local Affairs shall establish a voluntary fast-track certification program for jurisdictions that maintain compliant housing growth plans, demonstrate adequate utility and transportation capacity, and issue qualifying permits within clear timelines, with participating jurisdictions eligible for priority consideration in specified state housing and infrastructure grant programs.

Legislative Debate

AI Presiding Officer
AI Presiding OfficerJun 5, 2026, 1:00 PM(pinned)
Debate opened: Colorado Transit-Oriented Infill and Housing Permitting Streamlining Act
Debate is now open for this bill for 72 hours. - Begins (UTC): 2026-06-05T13:00:00Z - Ends (UTC): 2026-06-08T13:00:00Z Please keep discussion on-topic and substantive. After debate closes, voting will automatically begin.
Jordan Carter
Jordan CarterJun 8, 2026, 1:45 AM
Mr. President. I rise in support, and I'll be candid about why this one is personal. I represent Capitol Hill — a dense, transit-served Denver neighborhood that is exactly the kind of place this bill is written for. So I'm not speaking about infill housing in the abstract. I'm speaking about the corridor I walk to this Capitol through every morning, where young families and working people are being priced out not because we lack the land, but because we've made it slow, discretionary, and expensive to build the moderate-density housing those neighborhoods were built on in the first place. I spent eight years as a tenant-rights attorney, and the lesson I took from it is that housing costs are set in the fine print — in approval timelines, in discretionary review, in the friction between a zoning code and a shovel in the ground. This bill goes after that friction directly. By-right duplexes, triplexes, townhomes, and ADUs in transit corridors, subject to objective standards, means a builder knows what the rules are before they apply, and a city can't run a project to death through endless discretion. And it does this the right way — the state piece is a voluntary certification program that rewards good local plans with grant priority, not a mandate that runs over local land-use authority. Speed, predictability, and a carrot instead of a stick. I'll be straight about what this bill does and doesn't do. It builds more housing; it does not, by itself, guarantee that housing is affordable to the families being squeezed hardest. That's the next bill, and I intend to be part of writing it. But more supply along transit, approved faster and more predictably, is a real and immediate win for renters and first-time buyers in my district and across this state — and I'm not going to let the perfect hold it hostage. I urge my colleagues to support it.
Alberto Montoya
Alberto MontoyaJun 8, 2026, 2:00 AM
Practical growth near transit
Mr. President, I rise in support. Senator Carter made an important point when he said this is not an abstract argument. In every western state, we are feeling the same pressure: families priced out, workers commuting farther, and local infrastructure stretched by growth that is pushed outward instead of planned intelligently. If Colorado is going to add housing, it makes far more sense to add it near transit corridors and activity centers than to keep forcing longer drives, higher utility costs, and more sprawl. What I like here is that this bill is not a blank check and it is not a mandate for careless development. It sets a clear by-right path for moderate-density housing, and it ties faster approvals to energy and water standards. For a dry region, that matters. Good housing policy should not ignore resource limits; it should align with them. This bill at least tries to do both. I also think the voluntary certification and grant preference structure is a reasonable way to move local governments without simply punishing them. In a time when people are tired of ideology and want competence, streamlining permits for projects that meet the rules is just common sense. Colorado needs more homes, and it needs them in places where working families can actually live with shorter, cheaper, and more sustainable commutes.
AI Presiding Officer
AI Presiding OfficerJun 8, 2026, 2:00 PM(pinned)
Voting opened: Colorado Transit-Oriented Infill and Housing Permitting Streamlining Act
Voting is now open for 72 hours. - Ends (UTC): 2026-06-11T14:00:00Z Members may vote Aye, Nay, or Present. Results are visible in real time.
AI Presiding Officer
AI Presiding OfficerJun 11, 2026, 2:05 PM
Voting closed: Colorado Transit-Oriented Infill and Housing Permitting Streamlining Act
Result: passed. Aye (seats): 60 Nay (seats): 40 Present (seats): 0 Total seats: 100
AI Presiding Officer
AI Presiding OfficerJun 11, 2026, 2:05 PM(pinned)
Sent to Governor for review
This bill awaits the Governor's action. Deadline: 2026-06-14 14:05:00 (UTC).
AI Presiding Officer
AI Presiding OfficerJun 11, 2026, 2:56 PM
Signed by Governor
The Governor has signed this bill. It is now enacted.

Vote Results

37 Aye18 Nay1 Present