The House Education Committee advanced Senate Bill 126 as amended to the Committee of the Whole after sponsors and testimony described the measure as a targeted fix to ease teacher licensure bottlenecks, particularly for rural districts.
Representative Johnson, a bill sponsor, said SB 126 removes an arbitrary seven‑year limit that can block experienced educators who left the profession and later return from qualifying for Colorado licensure. Johnson cited statewide shortages—"For the 2024–25 school year, Colorado had 7,792 open teaching positions," she said—to argue the bill is a narrow step to help districts hire qualified teachers.
A co‑sponsor explained the bill’s second part: while the interstate teacher mobility compact (enacted in earlier legislation cited in the hearing) completes rulemaking, the bill directs the State Board of Education and CDE to use temporary reciprocal procedures so qualified applicants from compact states receive an equivalent Colorado license within 30 days of a complete application. The co‑sponsor said the bill contains a sunset clause that repeals the temporary language once the compact becomes operational.
Frank Reeves, director of operations for the Colorado Rural Schools Alliance, told the committee the bill removes ‘‘arbitrary licensure obstacles’’ and called a 30‑day processing timeline ‘‘a lifeline’’ for rural districts that risk losing applicants who need quick decisions. Chris Celi, superintendent of Meeker School District, said the legislation simplifies hiring for small districts.
Tanya Klein of the Colorado Department of Education, present online for technical questions, said recognizing a qualifying compact state credential would require background checks and minimal documentation and that, with a complete application and background check, CDE could meet a 30‑day issuance target though processing times vary seasonally. Klein said CDE currently has nine licensing consultants who evaluate applications.
During amendment debate, sponsors offered L3 at CDE’s request to remove a requirement that CDE enter into a reciprocal agreement with each compact state—language CDE said could be burdensome and potentially create compliance issues if other states did not reciprocate. Amendment L3 passed without objection. The committee then voted to send SB 126 as amended to the Committee of the Whole; the committee’s roll call was unanimous.
The bill now moves to the Committee of the Whole for further consideration.