The House adopted several bills and a joint resolution during its March 2, 2026 floor session. Below are the principal items, sponsors (as read on the floor), and the outcomes recorded in the chamber. This is a factual, at‑a‑glance summary of votes and motions taken on the floor.
- Senate Joint Resolution 14 (Rare Disease Day): Declared 02/28/2026 as Rare Disease Day in Colorado. Adopted (machine vote recorded in chamber with 65 present; no opposing votes announced).
- House Bill 10‑58 (protections for minors in digital content): Adopted — floor tally read as 56 yes, 9 no, 0 excused.
- House Bill 10‑98 (modifications to the Colorado Public Trustee Act related to foreclosure procedures): Adopted — floor tally read as 65 yes, 0 no, 0 excused.
- House Bill 11‑44 (prohibiting manufacture of firearms by 3‑D printing): Adopted — recorded vote 40 yes, 25 no.
- House Bill 11‑33 (environmental education pursuant to a traveling animal protection program): Adopted — recorded tally 43 yes, 22 no, 0 excused.
- House Bill 10‑51 (continuation of the micro‑grant community resiliency program): Adopted — recorded tally 59 yes, 6 no, 0 excused.
- House Bill 10‑44 (measures to improve maternal health equity, as amended): Adopted (committee report and amended language passed on the floor).
- House Bill 11‑35 (transparency regarding chemicals in certain hair products): Adopted on the floor after committee report.
- House Bill 11‑34 (parity of municipal court conditions with state court conditions): Adopted as amended.
- House Bill 11‑13 (Elections changes and clarifications): The Committee of the Whole report was adopted and the bill passed as amended.
These outcomes reflect the roll calls and voice votes described on the House floor during the March 2 session; for bills carried forward to the Senate, future action will be tracked by relevant committees and legislative calendars.
Note: Several contested floor amendments were offered and rejected on issues ranging from data‑sharing for voter‑roll maintenance to party primary procedures; the list above focuses on final recorded outcomes rather than the complete amendment history.