CatallaxCore
← Back to bills

HB 25-1032

signed

Improving Infrastructure to Reduce Homelessness

Plain-English Summary

AI-generated

HB 25-1032 is a Colorado bill that aims to reduce homelessness by creating an interagency council within the governor's office. This council will coordinate efforts between state and local partners to develop strategies for preventing and resolving homelessness, increase access to supportive resources like healthcare and housing, and improve policies related to homelessness services. The bill also establishes an advisory council with members who have experience working directly with homeless individuals or in homelessness prevention. It has been signed into law, meaning it will now be implemented to help address the issue of homelessness across Colorado by improving infrastructure and support systems for those in need.

Official Summary

The bill creates the Colorado interagency council on homelessness (council) within the governor's office. The council's powers and duties include: Facilitating and coordinating homelessness response, resources, and best practices between state and local partners; Setting statewide strategy for homelessness resolution and prevention; Developing an outreach and education campaign to understand and respond to issues related to homelessness; Increasing access to supportive resources for homeless individuals, including income benefits, food benefits, healthcare coverage, and support related to mental health and substance use; Identifying and maximizing housing resources provided by state agencies; Improving cross-system policies and procedures for state agencies and homelessness service providers; and Organizing other homelessness response measures as the council sees fit. The council is required to meet at least once a month and submit and present an annual report providing a summary of the council's activities and recommendations for legislative action to the general assembly no later than January 26 of each year. The council's membership consists of the directors, or the directors' designees, of the following state agencies: The department of local affairs; The department of education; The department of corrections; The department of health care policy and financing; The behavioral health administration; The department of human services; The department of public health and environment; and The department of public safety. The governor may appoint to the council the directors, or the directors' designees, of other state agencies or individuals to represent political subdivisions as the governor sees fit. The bill creates an advisory council to the council consisting of members who have experience working on the resolution and prevention of homelessness and with homeless individuals, including the following 11 members appointed by the governor: The director, or the director's designee, of a nonprofit organization with a mission related to homelessness; The leader of a faith-based organization that is primarily focused on homelessness resolution and prevention; A homelessness service provider primarily focused on specialized populations; The director, or the director's designee, of a philanthropic organization that supports homelessness service providers; A representative from a continuum of care organization that provides services in an urban area; A representative from a continuum of care organization that provides services in a rural area; An elected local government representative; An individual with lived experience of homelessness; An individual with lived experience navigating affordable housing and housing resources; An owner or operator of permanent supportive housing; and A housing navigator or representative from an organization that administers housing vouchers. The advisory council shall meet at least once a month, shall develop and implement a plan to receive public feedback on statewide strategy related to homelessness prevention and resolution, and shall recommend funding and policies to support homelessness prevention and resolution to the council. The bill requires the office of homeless initiatives within the division of housing in the department of local affairs to, at least once every 4 months, convene the state continuum of care organizations for the purposes of implementing state strategies and identifying best practices to prevent and reduce homelessness in Colorado. The continuum of care organizations shall consider methods and practices to: Improve the implementation of the Homeless Management Information System and data reporting; Improve the implementation of the OneHome coordinated entry system; Coordinate with regional navigation campuses to determine best practices, identify gaps, and make referrals; and Improve data reporting within the regional navigation campuses. The continuum of care organizations are required to submit and present a report to the general assembly providing a summary of the council's activities from the prior year and recommendations for implementing the methods and practices the organizations considered. The bill creates a new type of special district, a regional homelessness response district (district), which is formed by counties and municipalities to reduce and prevent homelessness. The bill details specifics of organizing and dissolving a district, submitting a district service plan, voting in district elections, and the financial and taxing powers of a district. The bill allows a county clerk and recorder to designate money collected from documentary filing fees for granting or conveying real property to be transferred to a housing agency for the purpose of developing, preserving, or acquiring affordable housing aligned with demonstrated community needs and for homeless individuals. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as introduced.)

Details

Chamber
House
First action
2025-05-13
Latest action
2025-01-08
Last action desc.
Introduced In House - Assigned to Transportation, Housing & Local Government
OpenStates
View source ↗

Sponsors