Colorado Code § 40-2-108

Rules - legislative declaration
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(1) The commission shall promulgate such
rules as are necessary for the proper administration and enforcement of this title and shall
furnish, without charge, copies of the appropriate rules to each public utility under its
jurisdiction and, upon request, to any public officer, agency, political subdivision, association of
officers, agencies, or political subdivisions and to any representative of twenty-five or more
consumers. The commission shall be governed by the provisions of article 4 of title 24, C.R.S.,
for the promulgation and adoption of rules; except that, notwithstanding any provision of the
said article 4 of title 24, C.R.S., to the contrary, the commission shall issue a decision whenever
it adopts rules in accordance with this section.
(2) Notwithstanding section 24-4-103 (6), C.R.S., any temporary or emergency rule
adopted by the commission shall be effective until a permanent rule that replaces the temporary
or emergency rule is effective but not for more than two hundred ten days after the date of
adoption.
(3) (a) The general assembly finds, determines, and declares that:
(I) Certain communities, both in Colorado and internationally, have historically been
forced to bear a disproportionate burden of adverse human health or environmental effects, as
documented in numerous studies, including the "Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty, 1987-2007"
report by the United Church of Christ Justice & Witness Ministries; the federal environmental
protection agency's annual environmental justice progress reports; and a 2021 report from the
"Mapping for Environmental Justice" project at the Berkeley Public Policy/The Goldman School
that shows how the pollution burden is distributed in Colorado, while also facing systemic
exclusion from environmental decision-making processes and enjoying fewer environmental
benefits; and
(II) The purpose of this subsection (3) is to ensure that the commission, in exercising its
regulatory authority, will take account of and, where possible, help to correct these historical
inequities.
(b) The commission shall promulgate rules requiring that the commission, in all of its
work including its review of all filings and its determination of all adjudications, consider how
best to provide equity, minimize impacts, and prioritize benefits to disproportionately impacted
communities and address historical inequalities.
(c) (I) In promulgating rules pursuant to this subsection (3), the commission shall
identify disproportionately impacted communities. In identifying the communities, the
commission shall consider minority, low-income, tribal, or indigenous populations in the state
that experience disproportionate environmental harm and risks resulting from such factors as
increased vulnerability to environmental degradation, lack of opportunity for public
participation, or other factors. Increased vulnerability may be attributable to an accumulation of
negative or a lack of positive environmental, health, economic, or social conditions within these
populations.
(II) When making decisions relating to retail customer programs, the commission shall
host informational meetings, workshops, and hearings that invite input from disproportionately
impacted communities and shall ensure, to the extent reasonably possible, that such programs,
including any associated incentives and other relevant investments, include floor expenditures,
set aside as equity budgets, to ensure that low-income customers and disproportionately
impacted communities will have at least proportionate access to the benefits of such programs,
incentives, and investments.
(d) Repealed.

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