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Senate committee advances bill letting municipalities use speed cameras on interstates after contested hearing, 5–2

March 19, 2026 | 2026 Legislature CO, Colorado


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Senate committee advances bill letting municipalities use speed cameras on interstates after contested hearing, 5–2
The Senate Local Government & Housing Committee voted 5–2 to send House Bill 1071 to the Committee of the Whole after a two‑panel, contested hearing that highlighted safety, federal preemption and commercial‑vehicle enforcement issues.

Sponsor Senator Cutter framed the bill as a public‑safety measure that would let municipalities deploy automated vehicle identification systems (AVIS or speed cameras) on federal interstates to deter speeding and reduce high‑speed crashes. He and municipal proponents argued existing municipal enforcement and crash response on interstate segments impose significant burdens on local police and emergency services and that cameras offer an objective, safer tool for enforcement.

Supporters: Wheat Ridge Police Chief Chris Murtha and Councilor Dan Larson described local experience using speed cameras at city locations and said the technology reduced speeding and allowed officers to spend less time on dangerous roadside enforcement. Bev Stables of the Colorado Municipal League stressed the difference between automated license‑plate recognition (ALPR) used for criminal investigations and AVIS speed cameras used for traffic safety; she said preliminary CDOT pilot data show meaningful crash reductions.

Opponents: Greg Fulton of the Colorado Motor Carrier Association and Greer Bailey (trade group representing fuel/haulers) warned that AVIS on interstates could conflict with federal rules that protect interstate commercial carriers and could “mask” the individual driver, making enforcement and compliance difficult for truck fleets. Bailey cited specific federal regulations (49 CFR 390.23 and 390.3) and urged that any revenue be directed toward road or first‑responder purposes rather than general municipal funds. Fulton asked for at‑minimum exemptions for commercial vehicles.

Responses and process questions: Supporters noted dispute and court review processes and said municipalities could work with CDOT and Colorado State Patrol on safety analyses and implementation details; several witnesses said they were open to further technical cleanup. Chief Murtha described municipal controls, transparency and review procedures, and said AVIS can be deployed in fixed or mobile configurations to deter dangerous driving.

Outcome and next steps: Senator Exum moved HB 1071 to the Committee of the Whole with a favorable recommendation; the clerk recorded the roll and the measure passed 5–2. Sponsors said they are willing to continue working with counties and commercial stakeholders as the bill proceeds.

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