A bevy of wildfire-related bills aim at insurance, burn scars and awareness in Colorado legislature – The Denver Post

Stephanie Conners, like more than 350 of her neighbors near Grand Lake, didn’t lose her house during Colorado’s traditional fire season.

It was October 2020, and the East Troublesome fire was bearing down on the first home Conners and her fiancé had ever owned, one they had bought just a year earlier. Snow, not ash, should have been falling on their car for that time of year, she said. But in a story that echoes from so many Coloradans, she was facing the reality of a wildfire with little regard for time of year and bearing down to burn away her livelihood.

A slew of bills have been introduced into the state legislature this year in response to the tragedy Conners and thousands of other Coloradans have faced from recent wildfires, with more measures likely to come as the session continues. Most are still being workshopped or waiting their turn in the committee.

With the devastating 2020 fire season and the historically destructive 2021 Marshall fire still fresh in minds, there’s a special urgency in the work, members of the legislature’s standing wildfire committee said.

“(The recent fires) just emphasizes and underlines the fact that we are in a constant wildfire risk period of time, and we have to be acutely aware of it all the time,” state Sen. Pete Lee, D-Colorado Springs and a committee member, said.

Conners, who is now staying near Granby while she wrestles with her insurance company, isn’t sure what can be done. She talks with neighbors about the state removing trees killed by beetles to lessen the tinder in the forests, but appreciates that would take a logistical marvel. She appreciates the efforts by lawmakers, particularly one to address how insurance companies handle claims from declared fire disasters. But overall, she preaches preparedness.

“We’re seeing drier and drier seasons for longer,” Conners said. “Marshall shouldn’t have happened when it did. Ours shouldn’t have happened when it did. But with these extended seasons, and this continuous dry weather, it will happen again.”

Here’s a look at some of what lawmakers hope to accomplish this session for fire preparedness and response.

Research engineer Faraz Hedayati of the ...

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

Research engineer Faraz Hedayati of the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety walks through ruins of a burned house in Superior on Jan. 13, 2022. All structures in this Sagamore development were destroyed in the Marshall firestorm Dec. 30. Insurance industry researchers and consultants conduct post-disaster assessments to build a better understanding of risks and how to re-design communities as the climate warms.

Underscored by Marshall, lawmaker wants to streamline insurance claims for fire disasters

The East Troublesome fire in 2020 laid bare to state Rep. Judy Amabile, D-Boulder, the problem of underinsurance among Colorado homeowners. The fire scorched more than 190,000 acres of land, making it the second-largest by size in state history, and destroyed more than 300 homes.

Fast forward to summer 2021, and Amabile was hearing from constituents, like Conners, still struggling against insurance companies to get paid out, getting tangled in red tape over interim housing costs and feeling like they were reliving the trauma by needing to meticulously inventory the pieces of their lives that had turned to ash in order to submit their insurance claims.

As Conners recalled grabbing a go-bag and staying up all night listening to an emergency services scanner for any hint of her home’s fate, it was only when she started dealing with insurance that “the real nightmare began,” she said.

A bevy of wildfire-related bills aim at insurance, burn scars and awareness in Colorado legislature