Of the original six bills concerning homeowners’ associations, four have been acted upon and either passed into law or postponed, leaving three bills left. Yes, I know the math doesn’t work unless you add HB 22-1314 which is not titled as an HOA bill but does impact common interest communities (more on thisGo to Resource
Category: Legislative Miscellaneous
Three of the bills aimed at common interest communities are all scheduled to be heard on March 9, 2022, in the afternoon session of the House Committee on Transportation and Local Government. The three bills are HB22-1239, which is the regulation of community association managers and, more appropriately, the regulation of community associationGo to Resource
With the new legislative session comes the desire to recreate a COVID era restriction and make it permanent. Hence, we have SB22-086. If signed into law as currently written, SB22-086 would greatly limit an association’s ability to collect delinquent assessments. The two main ways associations can collect involuntarily are through either a bankGo to Resource
Two more bills have been introduced aimed at addressing owner concerns with Common Interest Communities. As of now, this bill has no listed co-sponsors in either chamber and is not scheduled for a hearing. Please do not hesitate to contact an Altitude attorney at 303-432-9999 or [email protected] and stay tuned to our Legislative Tracker for more updatesGo to Resource
The Colorado Legislature gaveled into session on January 12, 2022, and it did not take long to introduce the first three Common Interest Community Bills. The topic of the three bills relate to access to the common elements and the use of proxies in association operations. As of now, this bill has noGo to Resource