The Iowa House Commerce Committee advanced the Local Generation Act (HSB 629) by a strong vote of 19-4, sending the legislation to the full House for consideration. The bill aims to provide families, farmers and small businesses with access to locally controlled community energy projects that lower electric bills, strengthen the reliability of the electric grid and keep energy investments rooted in Iowa communities.
The committee vote marks important momentum for the legislation, which has received broad support from landowners, rural communities and voters across party lines concerned about rising electricity costs and growing economic opportunity in rural Iowa.
Republican Rep. Shannon LundgrenHouse sponsor of HSB 629, welcomed the committee vote.
“Today’s vote shows that Iowa lawmakers recognize the need for practical, local solutions to rising electricity costs,” said Rep. Lundgren. “The Local Generation Act gives communities more control, supports family farmers and expands energy choices – all while respecting existing service areas and private property rights. I look forward to advancing this bill on the House floor.”
A January 2026 national survey of registered voters in Iowa found:
- 69% support for locally controlled, small-scale community energy projects, including strong support from Republicans and independents;
- Only 7% oppose such policies;
- 69% say lawmakers should do more to address rising energy bills; And
- 62% say they are more likely to support a lawmaker who votes “yes” on a community energy bill.
Voters cited lower electricity bills, rural economic growth and expanded opportunities for farmers and landowners as the top reasons for support.
“When energy dollars stay local, everyone benefits: landowners, schools and counties. The Local Generation Act helps us pay our bills and preserve our land, while also strengthening the community we live in. It’s a win-win,” said Angie Mohs, a landowner from Clayton County, Iowa.
“This is about choices. The Local Generation Act gives landowners another voluntary option to make their land financially viable without selling or subdividing it. That kind of flexibility is critical for families looking to pass farms on to the next generation,” said David Weaver, a landowner from Boone County, Iowa.
The legislation would allow locally controlled, small-scale community energy projects to serve households and businesses that cannot install rooftop systems, while maintaining existing utilities and respecting local land use decisions. Projects covered by the bill are designed to be implemented at the community level, be market-driven, and focused on delivering measurable bill savings to subscribers.
Importantly, the bill explicitly preserves existing exclusive service areas for rural electric cooperatives and ensures that only projects approved by the cooperatives can operate on cooperative territory.
Jason Holsman, director of government affairs for the Coalition for Community Access to Solar Energy (CCSA)said the committee vote reflects growing momentum for the local generation.
“A 19-4 committee vote sends a clear message that Iowans want more tools to reduce energy costs and preserve investments in their communities,” Holsman said. “The Local Generation Act provides farmers, small businesses and working families with a voluntary, market-based solution that strengthens rural economies and increases the reliability of the electric grid. We look forward to working with lawmakers to secure passage in the full House.”
News item from CCSA
