Steve Balcerovic and Tim Coleman, the district's lobbyists, briefed the Pueblo West Metropolitan District board on Jan. 12 about the coming 2026 Colorado legislative session and the district's process for reviewing bills. They outlined state budget shortfalls, likely debates over housing affordability, data center incentives, energy and wildfire mitigation bills, and ongoing open‑records reform that affects local staff workloads.
Coleman described the mechanics: the session runs roughly 120 days and can see 650–700 bills introduced; the lobbyists recommended the district maintain a legislative review committee that meets every other Thursday at 10 a.m. to process bills and make recommendations. Balcerovic and Coleman also discussed how fiscal notes and committee referrals shape whether a bill can pass and urged directors to participate in the review process.
Directors discussed an emergency‑authorization clause in the proposed legislative guidance policy (situations when staff may need to take interim positions because of short timelines for committee action). The board debated safeguards to avoid circumventing board oversight while enabling staff to act quickly in the final days of session.
A motion to approve the 2026 legislative guidance policy carried by voice vote. The board also appointed two members to the legislative review committee and confirmed the committee cadence. Directors asked staff to return updated approval/effective dates and to circulate the guidance for regular review.