Colorado Landlord Legislative Coalition 2021
Colorado Legislative Sessions
Investor Wrap-Up
Whew! Thank goodness that’s over!
The COVID 19 pandemic, along with Federal and State eviction moratoriums, became a new reality for Colorado housing providers, and the 2021 legislative session was one of the most challenging in many years for housing organizations. State and national policies around COVID 19 gave tenants’ rights advocates and organizations a new opening, arguing a national mandate for permanent changes to landlord-tenant laws, lasting well beyond the pandemic.
With this legislative environment, there was an unprecedented number of bills affecting CLLC members where we engaged in major calls to action of our membership, in addition to direct advocacy at the Capitol with our members, leadership, and our contract lobbyist.
Early in the legislative session, through the CLLC lobbyist, we reached out to legislators and housing organizations on both sides of the landlord/tenant issues to ensure CLLC was included as a stakeholder and at the table for important legislative negotiations. As the legislative session progressed, proposals from several drafts were combined into two major bills involving evictions and landlord/tenant legal process, and there were intensely hard-fought battles around four major pieces of legislation that involved countless hours of stakeholder meetings, testimony, meetings with legislators, and legislative outreach from our lobbyist. A summary of these four bills is below:
Proposed Eviction Moratorium Legislation – Continuing prohibitions & restrictions on evictions until 2022
NOT INTRODUCED
While we were not able to win every battle and stop every piece of legislation, we did have substantial victories. Most notable among them was proposed legislation extending the eviction moratorium until September 2021, with an additional period of regulated repayment and forbearance plans for landlords that would have lasted until January 2022. Thankfully, this bill was NOT introduced! CLLC had many meetings with Rep. Woodrow and the other legislative proponents stressing the impacts such a moratorium would have on CLLC members, and this pressure from CLLC, in coordination with other housing provider organizations, resulted in this bill being dropped from the 2021 legislative agenda.
CONCERNING PROTECTIONS FOR RESIDENTIAL TENANTS RELATED TO ACTIONS BY LANDLORDS.
THIS BILL HAS PASSED THE LEGISTATURE AND IS EXPECTED TO BE SIGNED BY THE GOVERNOR
The final version is linked here:
https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2021A/bills/2021a_1121_enr.pdf
As introduced, this bill included modified time-periods for evictions and other legal procedures with unreasonable time frames and prohibitions on posted notices. The most problematic provisions were removed or limited through amendments adopted through an intense stakeholder, lobbying, testimony, and member outreach program. This bill was amended 5 times through the legislative process.
Later in the process, an additional amendment was added removing exceptions to some landlord/tenant laws for landlords who own five or fewer rental properties. This amendment was stripped out, with the exemption restored by the Senate. You can see this amendment below for reference to the win involved in having this amendment removed:
https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/leg.colorado.gov/2021A/amendments/HB1121_L.011.pdf
Even though the legislation was improved through the process, the CLLC remained opposed due to the prohibition on rent increases, included below:
A LANDLORD SHALL NOT INCREASE RENT MORE THAN ONE TIME IN ANY TWELVE-MONTH PERIOD OF CONSECUTIVE OCCUPANCY BY THE TENANT, REGARDLESS OF: (a) WHETHER THERE IS A WRITTEN RENTAL AGREEMENT FOR THE TENANCY; (b) THE LENGTH OF THE TENANCY; AND (c) WHETHER THE TENANT’S RENTAL AGREEMENT IS FOR A FIXED TENANCY, A MONTH-TO-MONTH TENANCY, OR AN INDEFINITE TERM.
HB 21-1117 – CONCERNING THE ABILITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS TO PROMOTE THE DEVELOPMENT OF NEW AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNITS PURSUANT TO THEIR EXISTING AUTHORITY TO REGULATE LAND USE WITHIN THEIR TERRITORIAL BOUNDARIES.
SIGNED BY THE GOVERNOR
Link to the final version included here:
https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/2021a_1117_signed.pdf
This legislation involves “inclusionary-zoning”, which has been a long-sought goal of Colorado local governments, to obtain legislative authorization to require a certain number of affordable units as part of local government land use approvals.
The CLLC opposed this legislation arguing it is de facto rent control and will increase housing prices for those who are not beneficiaries of the units designated affordable. While the legislation did pass and has been signed by the Governor, improvements were made to the bill – the first noting that the legislation would not overturn Colorado’s prohibition on rent control, and the second a list of provisions a local government must initiate (such as higher-densities and reducing fees on developers) before they can impose affordable housing requirements.
Here are links to the amendments:
https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/leg.colorado.gov/2021A/amendments/HB1117_L.006.pdf
https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/leg.colorado.gov/2021A/amendments/HB1117_L.007.pdf
https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/leg.colorado.gov/2021A/amendments/HB1117_L.008.pdf
SB 21-173 – RESIDENTIAL RENTAL AGREEMENT RIGHTS
THIS BILL HAS PASSED THE LEGISLATURE AND IS EXPECTED TO BE SIGNED BY THE GOVERNOR
https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2021A/bills/2021a_173_rer.pdf
SB 21-173 was amended 27 times during its journey through the legislative process, with many of these either advocated by the CLLC or supported by the CLLC through the stakeholder process as most of these resulted in positive changes to the bill.
While this will have negative consequences for Colorado landlords, the original version of SB 21-173 was much worse, and it included provisions such as trials by jury for evictions, private rights of action against landlords under the Colorado Consumer Protection Act, and other very punitive changes for landlords. Due to the action of CLLC members and our lobbying program, these additional sections were removed from the legislation, leaving mainly these last two sections that were not amended to our satisfaction.
The first relates to the section on late fees which is included here, and the CLLC believed this was too much of a restriction on late fees and would make late fees ineffective as a tool to enforce on-time rental payments:
(a) CHARGE A TENANT OR HOMEOWNER A LATE FEE UNLESS A RENT PAYMENT IS LATE BY AT LEAST SEVEN CALENDAR DAYS; (b) CHARGE A TENANT OR HOMEOWNER A LATE FEE IN AN AMOUNT THAT EXCEEDS THE GREATER OF: 2 (I) FIFTY DOLLARS; OR 3 (II) FIVE PERCENT OF THE AMOUNT OF THE PAST DUE RENT PAYMENT
The other problematic section of the legislation involves bonds for warranty of habitability claims brought by tenants against landlords. The final version of the legislation includes exceptions for posting of the bonds if the tenant is indigent, and the indigent language is too broad as it allows those with higher rents and incomes to qualify as indigent.
For the CLLC’s first active session at the Capitol, this was an extremely intense and busy session. We tracked 24 bills affecting CLLC members and investors and engaged in 7 bills. One issue we will continue to track over the legislative interim will be HB 21-1329 which includes a task force on affordable housing strategies. The link to this bill can be found here: https://www.statebillinfo.com/bills/bills/21/2021a_1329_enr.pdf
We could not have done any of this without the support of our members. We thank you all so much for your interest in being involved. We know that this legislation affects independent landlords as much as it affects Property Managers, and we look forward to many years of partnership. We will continue to update you on our progress!