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SB26-001 • 2026

Workforce Housing & Housing Tax Credit

Currently, the governing body of a home rule county or a municipality may not sell or dispose of a county or municipal public building or real property held for government purposes if the sale or disp

Elections Housing Taxes
Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Sen. J. Bridges, Sen. D. Roberts, Rep. A. Boesenecker, Rep. C. Richardson, Sen. L. Cutter, Sen. J. Gonzales, Sen. I. Jodeh, Sen. C. Kipp, Sen. W. Lindstedt, Sen. K. Mullica, Sen. M. Snyder, Sen. T. Sullivan, Sen. M. Weissman, Rep. J. Bacon, Rep. K. Brown, Rep. J. Caldwell, Rep. S. Camacho, Rep. C. Clifford, Rep. M. Froelich, Rep. L. García, Rep. R. Gonzalez, Rep. E. Hamrick, Rep. J. Jackson, Rep. J. Joseph, Rep. M. Lindsay, Rep. J. Mabrey, Rep. T. Mauro, Rep. J. McCluskie, Rep. K. McCormick, Rep. K. Nguyen, Rep. M. Rutinel, Rep. G. Rydin, Rep. E. Sirota, Rep. L. Smith, Rep. R. Stewart, Rep. T. Story, Rep. B. Titone, Rep. T. Winter, Rep. S. Woodrow, Rep. Y. Zokaie
Last action
2026-03-25
Official status
Governor Signed
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The exact impact on affordable housing development and availability remains uncertain.

Workforce Housing and Housing Tax Credit

This bill allows counties and municipalities to sell or lease public buildings for affordable housing development and permits multijurisdictional housing authority establishment through biennial local elections.

What This Bill Does

  • Allows governing bodies of home rule counties and municipalities to sell or dispose of public property for the purpose of developing affordable housing, as identified in a housing needs assessment.
  • Permits voters in a proposed multijurisdictional housing authority to approve its establishment at biennial local elections.
  • Enables county commissioners to use ad valorem tax revenue from the general fund or other specified funds for workforce housing and housing authorities.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Home rule counties and municipalities
  • Voters in proposed multijurisdictional housing authority areas
  • County commissioners

Terms To Know

Multijurisdictional Housing Authority
An organization established by multiple local governments to address regional housing needs.
Ad Valorem Taxes
Taxes based on the value of property, typically real estate.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify how much tax revenue can be used for workforce housing.
  • It is unclear what happens if a multijurisdictional housing authority fails to meet voter approval conditions.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

L.001

SEN Local Government & Housing

Passed [*]

Plain English: The amendment allows counties and municipalities to sell or dispose of public buildings or real property held for government purposes, except parks, if the sale is intended for developing affordable housing as identified in a housing needs assessment.

  • Counties and municipalities can now sell public buildings or real property they own for government use (excluding parks) if it's to develop affordable housing based on a housing needs assessment.
  • The amendment text does not specify the exact conditions under which these sales must occur, such as financial requirements or community approval processes.
L.002

SEN Local Government & Housing

Passed [*]

Plain English: The amendment allows municipalities in Colorado to enter into long-term rental or leasehold agreements for the development of affordable housing, as identified by a housing needs assessment.

  • Municipalities can now use long-term rental or leasehold agreements for developing affordable housing based on specific assessments.
  • These agreements include an option to purchase and acquire title within thirty years.
  • The amendment does not specify how the affordable housing programs will be funded beyond allowing municipalities to pay rentals from various sources.
L.003

SEN Local Government & Housing

Passed [*]

Plain English: The amendment adds new rules for voter approval of contracts establishing multijurisdictional housing authorities and specifies how elections for these approvals should be conducted.

  • Adds a requirement that the contract creating a multijurisdictional housing authority must be approved by voters in each contracting jurisdiction.
  • Specifies that questions about establishing an authority can be combined with other financial obligation questions, such as taxes or impact fees, during elections.
  • The amendment text does not provide details on how the approval process will work beyond requiring voter consent and specifying election procedures.
L.004

SEN Local Government & Housing

Passed [*]

Plain English: The amendment adds a new exemption for construction and building materials used in workforce housing projects undertaken by counties.

  • Adds an exemption to Colorado Revised Statutes section 39-26-708, allowing sales of construction and building materials to be tax-exempt when used for workforce housing projects by counties.
  • The amendment text does not specify the extent or limitations of this new exemption beyond what is stated in the official amendment.
L.012

Second Reading

Passed [**]

Plain English: The amendment changes how Colorado Revised Statutes section 39-22-5405 handles recapture of tax credits for certain developments by adding new requirements for taxpayers to report information about the recaptured credit.

  • Adds a requirement that if any credit is recaptured in a tax year, the return must include the identity of each taxpayer subject to the recapture.
  • Requires the return to also state the amount of credit previously allocated to each taxpayer.
  • The amendment text does not specify what happens if taxpayers do not comply with these new reporting requirements.
L.013

Second Reading

Lost [**]

Plain English: The amendment changes the rules for how counties can use their general funds to support housing authorities and adds new requirements about when they can do so.

  • Removes the option for a governing board to sell or dispose of public buildings without approval, replacing it with a requirement that such actions be repealed.
  • Adds specific dates (before January 1, 2027, and on and after January 1, 2032) when counties can use funds other than property taxes for housing authorities.
  • Allows counties to allocate money from their general fund or other specified funds for workforce housing starting in 2027.
  • The amendment text is somewhat technical and may require further clarification on how the repeal of certain subsections will affect existing laws.
L.014

Second Reading

Passed [**]

Plain English: The amendment adds a new definition for 'TRANSFEREE' in Colorado Revised Statutes and replaces certain phrases to clarify who can acquire housing tax credits from governmental entities.

  • Adds a new definition for 'TRANSFEREE' as someone subject to taxes imposed by Article 22 who acquires credits from a government entity.
  • Replaces references to an individual or other entity with 'TRANSFEREE' in the context of acquiring and transferring housing tax credits.
  • The amendment text does not provide full details on how these changes will affect existing laws or regulations beyond defining 'TRANSFEREE'.
L.015

Second Reading

Passed [**]

Plain English: The amendment changes references to 'section 2' in the bill to 'section 7'.

  • Changes all instances of 'section 2' mentioned on page 8, line 23 and page 9, line 6 to 'section 7'.
  • The amendment text does not provide details about the content or purpose of section 7, making it unclear what specific changes this will affect beyond altering references.
L.016

Second Reading

Lost [**]

Plain English: The amendment changes the rules about how governmental and quasi-governmental entities can use housing tax credits.

  • Governmental or quasi-governmental entities are not allowed to transfer credits allocated by an authority to another entity.
  • A credit allocated under this section can only be claimed by the entity that received it from the authority.
  • The amendment does not specify what happens if these rules are broken or provide details on enforcement.
L.017

Second Reading

Lost [**]

Plain English: The amendment changes the requirement for a county or municipality to appropriate money specifically for workforce housing only after getting approval from voters in a regular election.

  • Adds a new clause (s) that requires voter approval through a regular election before a governing body can allocate funds for workforce housing.
  • The amendment text does not specify what happens if the voters do not approve the allocation of money for workforce housing.
  • It is unclear how this new clause interacts with existing laws or regulations regarding public funding and voter approval processes.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-25 Governor

    Governor Signed

  2. 2026-03-18 Governor

    Sent to the Governor

  3. 2026-03-18 House

    Signed by the Speaker of the House

  4. 2026-03-17 Senate

    Signed by the President of the Senate

  5. 2026-03-11 Senate

    Senate Considered House Amendments - Result was to Concur - Repass

  6. 2026-03-10 House

    House Third Reading Passed - No Amendments

  7. 2026-03-09 House

    House Second Reading Special Order - Passed with Amendments - Floor

  8. 2026-03-04 House

    House Committee on Transportation, Housing & Local Government Refer Unamended to House Committee of the Whole

  9. 2026-02-04 House

    Introduced In House - Assigned to Transportation, Housing & Local Government

  10. 2026-02-04 Senate

    Senate Third Reading Passed - No Amendments

  11. 2026-02-03 Senate

    Senate Second Reading Passed with Amendments - Committee, Floor

  12. 2026-01-29 Senate

    Senate Committee on Local Government & Housing Refer Amended to Senate Committee of the Whole

  13. 2026-01-14 Senate

    Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Local Government & Housing

Official Summary Text

Currently, the governing body of a home rule county or a municipality may not sell or dispose of a county or municipal public building or real property held for government purposes if the sale or disposition is for the development of affordable housing. The bill allows a governing body to sell and dispose of such property if the sale and disposition is to provide property to be used for the development of affordable housing or housing identified in a housing needs assessment conducted pursuant to statute. A municipality is also authorized to enter into a long-term rental or lease agreement for the development of affordable housing.
Currently, the voters in a proposed multijurisdictional housing authority may approve the establishment of the authority only at a general election or any election to be held on the first Tuesday in November of an odd-numbered year. The bill allows for the approval at a biennial local election. The contract establishing the authority may be conditioned upon voter approval. The question of establishing the authority may be combined with a question about a tax, impact fee, multiple-fiscal year debt, or other financial obligation required by statute.
Currently, a board of county commissioners (board) may not appropriate general fund money from ad valorem taxes for multijurisdictional housing authorities or other housing authorities established in statute (housing authorities). The bill allows a board to use revenue generated by ad valorem taxes that is in the county's general fund or in other specified county funds for housing authorities. In addition, the bill allows a board to use county general fund money from ad valorem taxes or money from other county funds for workforce housing.
Currently, a middle-income housing tax credit (credit) may be transferred from a governmental entity or quasi-governmental entity to a qualified taxpayer. A qualified taxpayer must own an interest in a qualified project to claim the credit. The bill entitles an individual, person, firm, corporation, or other entity subject to income tax and transferred a credit by a governmental entity or quasi-governmental entity
(transferee)
to claim the credit without owning an interest in a qualified project.
The bill provides that a credit allocated to a governmental or quasi-governmental entity or transferee thereof is subject to recapture if, as of the last day of any taxable year occurring during a compliance period, the qualified basis of the governmental or quasi-governmental entity is less than the amount of the qualified basis with respect to such entity as of the last day of the prior taxable year. A transferee whose credit is subject to recapture must increase their income tax liability as provided in statute in the same manner and to the same extent as a partner, shareholder, member, or other qualified taxpayer of an owner allocated a credit must increase their tax liability pursuant to statute.
Currently, all sales of construction and building materials to contractors and subcontractors for use in the building, erection, alteration, or repair of structures, highways, roads, streets and other public works (construction) owned and used by the state in the state's governmental capacity only. The bill provides that "governmental capacity" includes the construction of workforce housing projects undertaken by counties.
(Note: Italicized words indicate new material added to the original summary; dashes through words indicate deletions from the original summary.)
(Note: This summary applies to the reengrossed version of this bill as introduced in the second house.)

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
SENATE BILL 26-001
BY SENATOR(S) Roberts and Bridges, Cutter, Gonzales J., Jodeh, Kipp,
Lindstedt, Michaelson Jenet, Mullica, Snyder, Sullivan, Weissman
also REPRESENTATIVE(S) Boesenecker and Richardson, Bacon, Brown,
Caldwell, Camacho, Clifford, Froelich, Garcia, Gonzalez R., Hamrick,
Jackson, Joseph, Lindsay, Mabrey, Mauro, McCormick, Nguyen, Rutinel,
Rydin, Sirota, Smith, Stewart R., Story, Titone, Winter T., Woodrow,
Zokaie, McCluskie.
CONCERNING HOUSING, AND, IN CONNECTION THEREWITH, AUTHORIZING A
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS TO APPROPRIATE MONEY TO
SUPPORT SPECIFIED TYPES OF HOUSING AND MAKING THE
MIDDLE-INCOME HOUSING TAX CREDIT AVAILABLE TO TRANSFEREES
WHO DO NOT OWN AN INTEREST IN A QUALIFIED DEVELOPMENT.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Colorado:
SECTION 1. In Colorado Revised Statutes, 30-35-202, add (l)(d)
as follows:
30-35-202. Power to sell public works -sell or lease property.
(1) The governing body shall have the following additional powers:
Capital letters or bold & italic numbers indicate new material added to existing law; dashes
through words or numbers indicate deletions from existing law and such material is not part of
the act.
(d) NOTWITHSTANDING SUBSECTIONS (l)(a) AND (l)(b) OF THIS
SECTION, TO SELL AND DISPOSE OF, BY ORDINANCE, ANY PUBLIC BUILDING OR
REAL PROPERTY OWNED BY A COUNTY THAT IS HELD FOR GOVERNMENT
PURPOSES, OTHER THAN PARK PURPOSES, IF THE SALE AND DISPOSITION OF
THE PUBLIC BUILDING OR REAL PROPERTY IS FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROVIDING
PROPERTY TO BE USED FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING OR
HOUSING IDENTIFIED IN A HOUSING NEEDS ASSESSMENT CONDUCTED
PURSUANT TO SECTION 24-32-3703 OR24-32-3704. THE GOVERNING BODY
SHALL DETERMINE THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE SALE AND
DISPOSITION AT A REGULAR OR SPECIAL MEETING.
SECTION 2. In Colorado Revised Statutes, 31-15-713, add (l)(d)
as follows:
31-15-713. Power to sell public works - real property.
( 1) The governing body of each municipality has the power:
(d) NOTWITHSTANDING SUBSECTIONS (l)(a) AND (l)(b) OF THIS
SECTION, TO SELL AND DISPOSE OF, BY ORDINANCE, ANY PUBLIC BUILDING OR
REAL PROPERTY OWNED BY A MUNICIPALITY THAT IS HELD FOR GOVERNMENT
PURPOSES, OTHER THAN PARK PURPOSES, IF THE SALE AND DISPOSITION OF
THE PUBLIC BUILDING OR REAL PROPERTY IS FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROVIDING
PROPERTY TO BE USED FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING OR
HOUSING IDENTIFIED IN A HOUSING NEEDS ASSESSMENT CONDUCTED
PURSUANT TO SECTION 24-32-3703 OR 24-32-3704. THE GOVERNING BODY
SHALL DETERMINE THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE SALE AND
DISPOSITION AT A REGULAR OR SPECIAL MEETING.
SECTION 3. In Colorado Revised Statutes, amend 31-15-801 as
follows:
31-15-801. Agreements -ordinance -financing.
In order to provide necessary land, buildings, equipment, and other
property for governmental or proprietary purposes, INCLUDING FOR THE
DEVELOPMENT OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING OR HOUSING IDENTIFIED IN A
HOUSING NEEDS ASSESSMENT CONDUCTED PURSUANT TO SECTION
24-32-3703 OR 24-32-3704, or for financing of forest health projects, as
defined in section 3 7-95-103 ( 4.9), any municipality is authorized to enter
PAGE 2-SENATE BILL 26-001
into long-term rental or leasehold agreements. but in no event shall this be
constt ued as authorizing the use by any municipality of leasehold
agreements to finance residential housing. Such agreements may include an
option to purchase and acquire title to such leased or rented property within
a period not exceeding the useful life of such property and in no case
exceeding thirty years. Each such agreement and the terms thereof shall be
concluded by an ordinance duly enacted by the municipality. No such
ordinance shall take effect before thirty days after its passage and
publication. The governing body of any municipality is authorized to
provide for the payment of said rentals from a general levy imposed upon
both personal and real property included within the boundaries of the
municipality; by imposing rates, tolls, and service charges for the use of
such property or any part thereof by others; from any other available
municipal income; or from any one or more of the said sources. The
obligation to pay such rentals shall not constitute an indebtedness of said
municipality within the meaning of the constitutional limitations on
contracting of indebtedness by municipalities.
SECTION 4. In Colorado Revised Statutes, 29-1-204.5, amend
(7.5)(c); and add (7.5)(d) as follows:
29-1-204.5. Establishment of multijurisdictional housing
authorities.
(7 .5) ( c) The questions proposed to the registered electors under
parngtaphs (a) and (b) of this subsection PURSUANT TO SUBSECTIONS
(7.5)(a) AND (7.5)(b) OF THIS SECTION shall be submitted at a general
election, BIENNIAL LOCAL ELECTION, or any election to be held on the first
Tuesday in November of an odd-numbered year. The action shall not take
effect unless a majority of the registered electors voting thereon at the
election vote in favor thereof. The election shall be conducted in
substantially the same manner as county elections and the county clerk and
recorder of each county in which the election is conducted shall assist the
authority in conducting the election. The authority shall pay the costs
incurred by each county in conducting such an election. No moneys MONEY
of the authority may be used to urge or oppose passage of an election
required under this section.
(d) THE CONTRACT ESTABLISHING THE AUTHORITY MAY BE
CONDITIONED UPON VOTER APPROVAL BY THE INDIVIDUAL CONTRACTING
PAGE 3-SENATE BILL 26-001
JURISDICTION AS SUCH TERMS MAY BE DEFINED IN THE CONTRACT. THE
QUESTION OF ESTABLISHING THE AUTHORITY MAY BE COMBINED WITH A
QUESTION ABOUT A TAX, IMPACT FEE, MULTIPLE-FISCAL YEAR DEBT, OR
OTHER FINANCIAL OBLIGATION REQUIRED BY SUBSECTIONS (7.5)(a) OR
(7.5)(b) OF THIS SECTION.
SECTION 5. In Colorado Revised Statutes, 30-11-107, amend
(l)(s) as follows:
30-11-107. Powers of the board.
( 1) The board of county commissioners of each county has power
at any meeting:
( s) To appropriate moneys ft om sottt ces othet than ad v alot em taxes
to- MONEY FOR WORKFORCE HOUSING, HOUSING PROGRAMS,
multijurisdictional housing authorities, or housing authorities established
under part 5 of article 4 of title 29 C.R.S., from the county general fund OR
OTHER SPECIFIED FUNDS ESTABLISHED BY THE BOARD;
SECTION 6. In Colorado Revised Statutes, 39-22-5402, add (15)
as follows:
39-22-5402. Definitions.
As used in this part 54, unless the context otherwise requires:
(15) "TRANSFEREE" MEANS A TAXPAYER SUBJECT TO THE TAXES
IMPOSED BY THIS ARTICLE 22 THAT ACQUIRES CREDITS FROM A
GOVERNMENTAL OR QUASI-GOVERNMENTAL ENTITY PURSUANT TO SECTION
39-22-5404.
SECTION 7. In Colorado Revised Statutes, 39-22-5404, amend
(l)(b) and (l)(c) as follows:
39-22-5404. Qualified development owned by governmental or
quasi-governmental entity.
(1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this part 54:
PAGE 4-SENATE BILL 26-001
(b) (I) A governmental or quasi-governmental entity may transfer
credits allocated to it by the authority to any qualified taxpayer A
TRANSFEREE.
(II) Such a governmental or quasi-governmental entity shall invest
in the qualified development any compensation received in connection with
a transfer of credits to a qualified taxpayer TRANSFEREE.
(III) A qualified taxpayer TRANSFEREE to which a credit is
transferred pursuant to this subsection ( 1 )(b) is entitled to claim the credit
in the same manner and subject to the same conditions and allocation rights
as an owner of a qualified development to which the authority has allocated
a credit.
( c) (I) A credit allocated to a governmental or quasi-governmental
entity or a transferee thereof is subject to recapture pursuant to section
39-22-5405 IF, AS OF THE LAST DAY OF ANY TAXABLE YEAR DURING THE
COMPLIANCE PERIOD, THE AMOUNT OF THE QUALIFIED BASIS OF SUCH
GOVERNMENTAL OR QUASI-GOVERNMENTAL ENTITY IS LESS THAN THE
AMOUNT OF THE QUALIFIED BASIS WITH RESPECT TO SUCH GOVERNMENTAL
OR QUASI-GOVERNMENTAL ENTITY AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE PRIOR
TAXABLE YEAR.
(II) If a credit transferred to a qualified taxpayer TRANSFEREE by a
governmental or quasi-governmental entity is recaptured pursuant to section
39-22-5405 SUBSECTION ( 1 )( c )(I), the governmental or quasi-governmental
entity shall notify the department of the identity of the qualified taxpayer
TRANSFEREE to which it transferred a credit AND SUCH TRANSFEREE MUST
INCREASE THEIR INCOME TAX LIABILITY PURSUANT TO SECTION 39-22-5305
IN THE SAME MANNER AND TO THE SAME EXTENT AS A PARTNER,
SHAREHOLDER, MEMBER, OR OTHER QUALIFIED TAXPAYER OF AN OWNER
ALLOCATED A CREDIT PURSUANT TO SECTION 3 9-22-5403 ( 6) MUST INCREASE
THEIR INCOME TAX LIABILITY PURSUANT TO SECTION 39-22-5405.
SECTION 8. In Colorado Revised Statutes, 39-22-5405, amend
(1), (4)(b), and (4)(c) as follows:
39-22-5405. Recapture.
(1) As of the last day of any taxable year during the compliance
PAGE 5-SENATE BILL 26-001
period, if the amount of the qualified basis of a qualified development with
respect to a qualified taxpayer is less than the amount of the qualified basis
with respect to a qualified taxpayer as of the last day of the prior taxable
year, then the amount of a relevant QUALIFIED taxpayer's state income tax
liability for that taxable year is increased by the credit recapture amount.
(4) If recapture of any credit is required in any tax year, the return
submitted for that tax year to the department must include the following
information:
(b) The identity of each QUALIFIED taxpayer subject to the recapture;
and
( c) The amount of credit previously allocated to the QUALIFIED
taxpayer.
SECTION 9. In Colorado Revised Statutes, 39-26-708, add
(l)(a)(III) and (2)(a)(III) as follows:
39-26-708. Construction and building materials - legislative
declaration -definition.
( 1) There shall be exempt from taxation under part 1 of this article
26 all sales of construction and building materials to contractors and
subcontractors for use in the building, erection, alteration, or repair of
structures, highways, roads, streets, and other public works owned and used
by:
(a) (Ill) As USED IN THIS SUBSECTION (l)(a), "GOVERNMENTAL
CAPACITIES" INCLUDES THE BUILDING, ERECTION, ALTERATION, OR REPAIR
OF STRUCTURES FOR WORKFORCE HOUSING PROJECTS UNDERTAKEN BY
COUNTIES;
(2) There shall be exempt from taxation under part 2 of this article
26 the storage, use, or consumption by a contractor or subcontractor of
construction and building materials for use in the building, erection,
alteration, or repair of structures, highways, roads, streets, and other public
works owned and used by:
(a) (III) As USED IN THIS SUBSECTION (2)(a), "GOVERNMENTAL
PAGE 6-SENATE BILL 26-001
CAPACITIES" INCLUDES THE BUILDING, ERECTION, ALTERATION, OR REPAIR
OF STRUCTURES FOR WORKFORCE HOUSING PROJECTS UNDERTAKEN BY
COUNTIES;
SECTION 10. Act subject to petition - effective date. Section
39-22-5404, Colorado Revised Statutes, as amended in section 7 of this act,
takes effect January 1, 2027, and the remainder of this act takes effect at
12:01 a.m. on the day following the expiration of the ninety-day period after
final adjournment of the general assembly; except that, if a referendum
petition is filed pursuant to section 1 (3) of article V of the state constitution
against this act or an item, section, or part of this act within such period,
then the act, item, section, or part will not take effect unless approved by the
people at the general election to be held in November 2026 and, in such
case, will take effect on the date of the official declaration of the vote
thereon by the governor; except that section 39-22-5404, Colorado Revised
PAGE 7-SENATE BILL 26-001
Statutes, as amended in section 7 of this act, takes effect January 1, 2027,
or on the date of the official declaration of the vote thereon by the governor,
whichever is later.
James Rashad Coleman, Sr.
PRESIDENT OF
THE SENATE
Esther van Mourik
SECRETARY OF
THE SENATE
APPROVED O\'\ W
Jared S. Polis
GOVERNO OF
PAGE 8-SENATE BILL 26-001
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SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE
OF REPRESENTATIVES
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CHIEF CLERK OF THE HOUSE
OF REPRESENTATIVES
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