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HB 26-1198

signed

Access to Veterinary Care

Plain-English Summary

AI-generated

HB 26-1198, also known as the "Access to Veterinary Care" bill in Colorado, aims to make it easier for out-of-state veterinarians to get licensed in Colorado by reducing unnecessary requirements and speeding up the process. It also protects veterinarians from pharmacy regulations when they provide emergency medical care to animals. Additionally, the bill updates the credentialing process for veterinary technicians and establishes a program allowing pet owners to donate unused prescription medications to licensed veterinarians or animal shelters under certain conditions. Since it has been signed into law, these changes are now in effect, making it easier for both veterinarians and pet owners to access necessary care and resources.

Official Summary

The act requires the state board of veterinary medicine (board) to review and update the existing process by which an individual who has a license to practice veterinary medicine in another state may be licensed by endorsement to practice veterinary medicine in Colorado. The board shall adopt rules with the intent to expedite the licensure by endorsement process, including eliminating duplicative requirements and streamlining the pathway to licensure.     The act clarifies that a veterinarian who administers, dispenses, distributes, or prescribes medicine to a patient in an emergency situation is not acting as a pharmacist or conducting the practice of pharmacy, and, as such, is not subject to discipline by the state board of pharmacy.     The act relocates certain provisions specific to the practice of veterinary medicine from regulation by the state board of pharmacy to regulation under Colorado's veterinary practice act.     Under current law, the board must approve a credentialing organization for the purpose of credentialing veterinary technicians, which credentialing organization must require the completion of an American Veterinary Medical Association accredited program for veterinary technicians. The act updates the requirement to require the completion of an accredited program for veterinary technicians offered by other associations.     The act also establishes a veterinary prescription drug donation program. An owner of an animal may donate unused veterinary drugs that have been prescribed to the owner to a licensed veterinarian or an animal shelter. A licensed veterinarian may use any drugs accepted through donation if the veterinarian and drugs meet certain conditions.(Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)

Details

Chamber
House
First action
2026-04-29
Latest action
2026-02-11
Last action desc.
Introduced In House - Assigned to Agriculture, Water & Natural Resources
OpenStates
View source ↗

Topics

Professions & Occupations

Votes

CONCUR
2026-04-02 · Senate · passYes: · No: · Other:
REPASS
2026-04-02 · Senate · passYes: · No: · Other:
Refer House Bill 26-1198, as amended, to the Committee of the Whole and with a recommendation that it be placed on the consent calendar.
2026-03-25 · Senate · passYes: · No: · Other:
Adopt amendment L.006
2026-03-25 · Senate · passYes: · No: · Other:
BILL
2026-03-09 · House · passYes: · No: · Other:
Refer House Bill 26-1198, as amended, to the Committee of the Whole.
2026-03-02 · House · passYes: · No: · Other:
Adopt amendment L.005
2026-03-02 · House · passYes: · No: · Other:
Adopt amendment L.004, as amended
2026-03-02 · House · passYes: · No: · Other:
Adopt amendment L.002
2026-03-02 · House · passYes: · No: · Other: