House Bill 25-1146 Rerevised

LLS NO. 25-0062.02 Jacob Baus x2173
First Regular Session
Seventy-fifth General Assembly
State of Colorado

House Sponsorship

Bird and Woog, Caldwell, Clifford, Keltie, Lindstedt, McCluskie, Phillips

Senate Sponsorship

Kirkmeyer and Amabile, Bridges, Bright, Catlin, Coleman, Cutter, Daugherty, Exum, Frizell, Gonzales J., Jodeh, Kipp, Michaelson Jenet, Mullica, Pelton B., Pelton R., Roberts, Snyder, Wallace, Weissman


This Version Includes All Amendments Adopted in the Second House

Senate 3rd Reading Unamended May 2, 2025

Senate Amended 2nd Reading May 1, 2025

House Amended 3rd Reading April 23, 2025

House Amended 2nd Reading April 17, 2025


House Committees

Health & Human Services

Appropriations

Senate Committees

Health & Human Services

Appropriations


Strikethrough:
removed from existing law
Screen Reader Only:
all text indicated as strikethrough will begin as 'deleted from existing statue' and finish with 'end deletion'
All-caps or Bold and Italic:
added to existing law
Screen Reader Only:
all text indicated as all-caps or bold and italic will begin as 'added to existing law' and finish with 'end insertion'
Underline:
Senate Amendment
Highlight:
House Amendment

A Bill for an Act


Bill Summary

(Note: This summary applies to this bill as introduced and does not reflect any amendments that may be subsequently adopted. If this bill passes third reading in the house of introduction, a bill summary that applies to the reengrossed version of this bill will be available at http://leg.colorado.gov.)

For the 2025-26 state fiscal year, and for each state fiscal year thereafter, the bill requires the general assembly to appropriate $1,980,137 from the general fund to the department of human services (department) for youth who are detained and can be placed in environments other than detention. Under current law, the department is required to use $1,359,982 of its annual appropriation for temporary emergency detention beds for juveniles. The bill repeals this requirement.

Under current law, only 215 juvenile detention beds are allowed statewide. The bill:

The cap excludes juveniles who are in detention for committing a delinquent act that would constitute a class 1 felony if it were committed by an adult. The bill requires the division of criminal justice in the department of public safety to include the projection in an existing report.

The bill requires the general assembly to annually appropriate $1,359,982, plus any additional amount necessary to fully fund the projection, to the department for juvenile detention beds.