
Harmon: Where there’s fire, there’s fuel
There are millions of trees in Colorado affected by the pine beetle, the skeletons tottering on dead root systems until they finally crash to the forest floor.

There are millions of trees in Colorado affected by the pine beetle, the skeletons tottering on dead root systems until they finally crash to the forest floor.
Governor Jared Polis on April 6 signed Senate Bill 26-004, dramatically expanding those eligible to petition courts to confiscate guns under Colorado’s “red flag” law.
DENVER–A series of gun rights restrictions are at various stages in the Colorado’s legislative process, with some bills awaiting action by Gov. Polis, others still in the committee process, and a heavily negotiated gun barrel regulation bill held up in its final reading in the House.
Senate Bill 26-004 ‘Expand List of Petitioners for Protection Orders’ passed third reading in the House on March 20 with a 39-24 vote and is awaiting action by Gov. Polis.
The Democrat sponsored bill dramatically expands those eligible to file for an Extreme Risk Protection Order (ERPO) under Colorado’s so-called ‘red flag’ law, to include teachers, health care providers and “institutional petitioners.’
If signed into law, health care facilities, behavioral health treatment facilities, K-12 schools, and higher education institutions will all be eligible to petition courts to seize the guns of those believed to own firearms and who might possible be a danger to themselves and others.
A University of Colorado School of Medicine study found a high rate of rejection for ERPOS filed by non-law enforcement petitioners under the existing law, with a majority of applications filed by family members or romantic partners eventually being rejected after court scrutiny. In total, the data shows about 20% of Colorado petitions result in wrongful confiscation.
Under existing Colorado law, Federal Firearms Licensees (FFLs) must also have a state permit to sell firearms. House Bill 26-1126 requires dealers to obtain a separate permit to transfer forearms. The bill also extends dealer training requirements and prior license violation laws to ‘responsible persons’ of the dealer. This includes anyone who handles, sells, or has access to a firearm as part of their business duties.
Dealers would be required to keep record of all transactions involving a firearm and requires gun stores to implement new security mandates including extended surveillance and a new comprehensive security plan.
Under this legislation the Department of Revenue can heap a $75,000 fine on dealers upon a second or subsequent offense if any section is violated.
The bill passed the House with 27 amendments on March 20 on a 34-28 vote and is scheduled for it’s first hearing in the Senate on April 7.
House Bill 26-1302 would allow the Colorado Bureau of investigations (CBI) to determine their own hours of operation, rather than functioning every calendar day for 12 hours. Gun rights advocates worry this could lead to a slowdown in transmitting background checks for firearm purchases.
The State, Civic, Military, and Veterans Affairs Committee passed an amendment on March 23 requiring the CBI to process firearm background checks immediately upon obtaining them, despite any waiting periods.
The bill was introduced in late February and passed its third House reading on April 2. The bill now heads to the Senate.
House Bill 26-1144 prohibits the 3D printing of firearms and firearm components. The final bill was watered down to appease Gov. Polis, with a provision to criminalize the selling or distributing of the digital instructions to 3D print a firearm removed.
The bill passed its final reading in the Senate on March 30, with amendments reviewed and approved by the House on April 2.
HB-1144 is awaiting Polis’s signature.
Democrat sponsored Senate Bill 26-043 ‘Record Keeping and Regulation of Sale of Firearm Barrels,’ requires all firearm barrel sales or transfers to be conducted in person, only by a federally licensed (FFL) dealer. The bill criminalizes private or online firearm barrel transactions, or any non-FFL with the ‘intent to offer or sell’ a barrel.
The bill creates a new age restriction and requires all FFLs to keep and maintain record of all barrel transactions for five years.
SB-43 successfully passed the Senate on March 2, and is currently awaiting its third and final reading in the House. However, the final vote has been continuously pushed back since March 20. With 34 amendments thus far, the legislation has been the source of ongoing negotiations under the Gold Dome in an apparent effort to make the bill presentable to Gov. Polis.
Polis’ office did not respond to Complete Colorado’s request for comment on the barrel bill.

The US Department of Energy is looking for states interested in nuclear energy… what are the chances that Colorado is one of them? PowerGab Hosts Jake Fogleman and Amy Cooke discuss this with Matt Solomon, the project manager of the Northwest Colorado Energy Initiative.
Show Notes:
https://agnc.org/economic-development/northwest-colorado-energy-initiative/
Because the grid could use a backup plan.
Yes, we’re giving away a Predator Generator.
No, this is not a drill.
Yes, it’s because reliability apparently isn’t fashionable anymore.
Starting with the first show of 2026, drop a funny, clever, or pithy comment in the show’s comment section.
That’s it. No forms. No fine print to initial. No ESG questionnaire.
At the end of the session, we’ll select our top 3–5 favorite comments.
Then you vote on the winner.
Democracy still works here. Mostly.
Winner announced on the last show in May 2026.
One comment.
One generator.
Because when the grid wobbles, satire won’t keep your lights on — but a Predator Generator will.

What if outside organizations could place their own people inside government? We break down a little-known Colorado scheme where privately funded staff are embedded within the legislative process—raising serious questions about transparency, influence, and who’s really shaping policy behind the scenes. Is this harmless expertise… or something more?