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LONGMONT, CO - July 23: Keith ...
Andy Cross, The Denver Post
Keith Armintrout walks out of the front door of his home in Longmont with his cat, Sweetness, on July 23, 2020. Armintrout has been out of work since March due to his health conditions, which put him at high risk for COVID-19. He struggled to pay rent, missed payments and was vulnerable to eviction, but has since received temporary help from a local organization.
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Gov. Jared Polis on Thursday announced an executive order banning late fees for Colorado renters through the end of the year, and his office vowed that a statewide eviction moratorium is forthcoming in a separate order.

The governor’s executive order follows the release of a 17-page report by the Special Eviction Prevention Task Force, which met during the late summer and fall. Polis created the task force to address the housing instability crisis brought on by the coronavirus pandemic.

That group made a slew of recommendations, both short and long term. The changes detailed in the new executive order show Polis adopting some of the short-term recommendations.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control ordered a nationwide eviction moratorium six weeks ago that applies to nearly all renters, taking pressure off of Polis to consider reinstituting a statewide moratorium he had allowed to lapse. The task force unanimously recommended that landlords be required to inform tenants of their rights under the order, and Polis weeks ago accepted that recommendation.

Seven of the 10 task force members recommended that Polis should codify the CDC order by putting in place a Colorado-specific eviction moratorium that goes above and beyond the federal one. Polis did not create a state moratorium in his Thursday order. His spokeswoman, Maria de Cambra, said that Polis would codify the CDC order with a statewide eviction moratorium order soon, though she did not specify when.

As a “medium-term” recommendation, the task force unanimously asked Polis to set limits on late fees imposed by landlords on tenants behind on payment. Loose regulation on this front allows landlords to set their own late fee schedules, which vary wildly by property. The task force was split on the degree to which Polis should limit these fees, but the governor decided to suspend the fees altogether through the end of the year.

Colorado’s next legislative session is scheduled to begin in January, and it’s likely that Democrats will pursue a bill to permanently limit late fees, among several other possible housing-related bills.

Also on Thursday, Polis reiterated a recommendation to local governments to relax occupancy limit laws and added a new recommendation that local governments suspend or eliminate limits on the number of consecutive days a person can occupy a hotel room. Both are nudges, not mandates.

Wrote Polis, “Nothing in this Executive Order shall be construed as relieving an individual from their obligation to make rent payments.”