Legislature rejects Jared Polis’ key effort this year to drive down Colorado home insurance costs

A large white building is visible between the burnt limbs of a scrubby tree. The weather is dim and misty.
Hart Van Denburg/CPR News
A view of the burn scar around homes up and down Stone Canyon in the foothills above Lyons after wildfire scorched the area, August 8, 2024.

This story was produced as part of the Colorado Capitol News Alliance. It first appeared at coloradosun.com

State lawmakers Tuesday killed a first-in-the-nation effort by Gov. Jared Polis and one of the top Democrats in the legislature to rein in home insurance premiums in Colorado, which are one of the biggest drivers of increased housing costs.

House Bill 1302 would have imposed a 1% fee on every homeowners insurance policy, with policyholders bearing the cost.

Revenue from the charge, potentially hundreds of millions of dollars over the life of the fee, would have been split between a grant program to help hail-proof roofs and an effort to limit the wildfire-loss risk borne by insurers.

But the measure was rejected Tuesday morning in the Senate Finance Committee by a 2-6 vote, with three Democrats joining the three Republicans on the panel in voting to kill the measure. 

The senators who voted against the bill said they were worried about imposing a new fee on Coloradans, who have been complaining about the cost of living.

“I’ve heard loud and clear from people that they don’t want more fees,” said state Sen. Kyle Mullica, a Thornton Democrat who voted to kill the bill.

Democratic state Sen. Kyle Mullica
Hart Van Denburg/CPR News
Democratic state Sen. Kyle Mullica.

But the sponsors of the measure said the benefit would have far outweighed the cost to homeowners. 

“We’re now opting to do nothing about a runaway freight train,” state Sen. Judy Amabile, a Boulder Democrat and lead sponsor of the bill, told the Senate Finance Committee before it rejected the measure.

The bill sought to reduce insurers’ loss risk by having the state purchase reinsurance coverage for companies that offer policies in wildfire-prone areas. Reinsurance is insurance for insurers that kicks in under extraordinary circumstances, such as when a natural disaster causes enormous losses. 

The concept is borrowed from a health insurance program adopted in Colorado in 2019 that has helped drive down costs — albeit with some caveats. That initiative is funded by fees on insurers and federal funding, not directly by Coloradans.

House Bill 1302 was the latest effort by Polis and the legislature in recent years to rein in rising property insurance costs caused by increased wildfire and hail risks tied to a warming climate. The governor saw the bill as a cornerstone of his wildfire policy push.

Hail and wildfire are the two biggest drivers of home insurance costs in Colorado.

POLIS TOURS ALEXANDER MOUNTAIN WILDFIRE OPERATIONS
Hart Van Denburg/CPR News
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, center, speaks with reporters at Fire Station 7 in Loveland, July 31, 2024, after touring efforts by firefighters to battle the nearby Alexander Mountain fire. The fire started two days previously and has now grown to more than 6,000 acres along and north of Highway 34 in Big Thompson Canyon.

“I think it can be a win-win for everybody,” Polis told The Colorado Sun earlier this year. “There are currently Coloradans that only have access to one insurance product for their home or are being cut off altogether. By reducing risk through reinsurance — a distinct but similar approach to what we took in health care and helped reduce rates — we feel this can help put downward pressure” on the home insurance market.

The governor’s office didn’t immediately respond Tuesday to a request for comment.

The legislature this year has been increasingly willing to buck the governor’s policy goals. In addition to the failure of House Bill 1302, the Senate this week killed his “Yes in God’s Backyard” housing bill and a measure he requested that was aimed at rewriting Colorado’s law regulating the use of artificial intelligence.

The bill’s other lead sponsors were House Speaker Julie McCluskie, D-Dillon; state Rep. Kyle Brown, D-Louisville; and state Rep. Marc Snyder, D-Manitou Springs.

This is a developing story that will be updated.


This story was produced by the Capitol News Alliance, a collaboration between KUNC News, Colorado Public Radio, Rocky Mountain PBS and The Colorado Sun, and shared with Rocky Mountain Community Radio and other news organizations across the state. Funding for the Alliance is provided in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.