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Tag: Colorado special session

  • Colorado Republicans, Democrats disagree on how much progress was made during special session

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    DENVER — Colorado’s special legislative session ended on Tuesday after six days. The success of the session depends on which state lawmaker you ask.

    Governor Jared Polis called the session on Aug. 6 to address the state’s $1.2 billion budget hole, which he said was created by tax changes made in President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Act (H.R.1). According to the governor and fellow Colorado Democrats, Colorado will collect less revenue than expected when lawmakers approved the state budget in May.

    Some of that $1.2 billion revenue loss was absorbed by the state education fund and the affordable housing fund. Around $300 million that the state had in surplus, which would have been refunded to taxpayers, will now be used to help fill the gap. That left lawmakers with a budget gap estimated to be around $783 million.

    To address the budget gap, the Democratic majority focused largely on reining in tax breaks for big corporations. Their strategy also included taking money from state reserves and cutting spending. However, they left it to Polis to determine exactly where to make those spending cuts.

    The governor is expected to present a plan to the Joint Budget Committee on Thursday.

    Denver7 has been following Colorado’s special legislative session. Read our previous coverage below:

    “This has been an incredible session,” said State Senator Jeff Bridges, D – District 26. “The special session accounted for about $250 million of the now $750 million we have to make up for in the general fund.”

    Bridges, who is the chair of the Joint Budget Committee, said Polis’ presentation is expected to address the remaining $500 million of the deficit.

    “We’ll spend about $250 million in reserves, and then there will be about $250 million in revenue reductions. So that’s things like cuts to Medicaid. It’s potentially reductions in higher education support from the state,” Bridges said. “These are going to be cuts that people will see and feel. It’s unavoidable that there will be some pain caused by cutting $250 million from a $16.5 billion budget. It’s a lot less than what we thought we were going to have to cut. It’s less because we closed those loopholes. It’s less because we have such strong reserves, but it’s still going to be really impactful for folks.”

    On the other hand, Colorado Republicans believe the special session was tailored to Democrats.

    “Actually, what we did was make a budget crisis worse,” said Colorado House Minority Leader Rose Pugliese, R – District 14. “I want to say I’m sorry to the people of Colorado that we weren’t able to accomplish what really should have been done, which is looking at how we prioritize our budget and how we keep more money in the pockets of hardworking Coloradans.”

    State Senator Barbara Kirkmeyer, R – District 23, a member of the Joint Budget Committee, told Denver7 she is extremely disappointed in the results of the special session.

    “Not only did we increase taxes, we start trying to figure out how to balance the budget on the backs of small businesses. Now that is wrong,” Kirkmeyer said. “They made our budget problem worse.”

    Kirkmeyer speculated the governor will recommend cuts to Medicaid provider rates and higher education.

    “I’m not anticipating that we’re going to agree. I’m not anticipating he’s going to come in with enough cuts,” Kirkmeyer said.

    Denver7 will follow up on the plan expected from Polis on Thursday.

    Denver7’s Brandon Richard contributed to this article.

    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Colette Bordelon

    Denver7’s Colette Bordelon covers stories that have an impact in all of Colorado’s communities, but specializes in reporting on crime, justice and issues impacting our climate and environment. If you’d like to get in touch with Colette, fill out the form below to send her an email.

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  • State lawmakers return to Colorado Capitol for special session to address massive budget gap

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    DENVER — State lawmakers returned to the Colorado Capitol on Thursday to begin a special session to address a massive budget shortfall.

    Governor Jared Polis blames the budget deficit on the tax changes made in President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Act (H.R.1). According to the governor and fellow Colorado Democrats, Colorado is set to collect less revenue than expected when lawmakers approved the state budget in May.

    Across the aisle, Colorado Republicans say the federal government’s spending bill isn’t to blame.

    Lawmakers will also attempt to tackle other issues during the special session, including a proposal to provide financial support to Planned Parenthood, which was targeted by the OBBA.

    Politics

    Denver7 presses lawmakers on how they plan to address the state’s $1B budget gap

    What caused Colorado’s budget shortfall?

    Despite misinformation on social media, the state’s current budget shortfall was not caused by excessive spending on undocumented immigrants or the state’s spending over the past several years.

    State Rep. Bob Marshall, D-Highlands Ranch, said he’s tired of hearing misinformed arguments about the budget deficit.

    “Well, it’s really irritating,” Marshall said. “I mean, the reason we’re here is because we have a $1.2 billion hole blasted in the middle of our budget.”

    While the federal government can spend more money than it collects, Colorado’s constitution requires state lawmakers to pass a balanced budget each year. Indeed, that’s what lawmakers did earlier this year.

    But that wasn’t the end of the story.

    Colorado is one of a handful of states with “rolling” conformity, meaning that it automatically adopts changes to the federal tax code. So, if Congress passes legislation that cuts or raises federal taxes, Colorado automatically mirrors it.

    Budget analysts say this automatic mirroring has benefits, such as making filing taxes easier for Coloradans. It can also create problems.

    Trump’s bill made a lot of changes to the federal tax code and cut taxes. Because of its automatic mirroring, Colorado adopted those changes. Many provisions from the OBBA will take effect in 2026 and 2027, but several took effect immediately, resulting in less revenue for the state to collect.

    Colorado approved its state budget in May. State lawmakers approved the budget, anticipating no major changes to the federal tax code. But in July, Congress gave approval to the OBBA, and the president signed it into law on July 4.

    “The impacts on Colorado are particularly immediate,” Polis said. “The impact on taxpayers depends on your tax situation. You may benefit; you may not. But there is a significant loss in revenue, largely from the corporate tax changes that are in this bill.”

    Polis called a special session to address the sudden budget shortfall.

    • Political reporter Brandon Richard recaps Day 1 of the special legislative session in the video player below

    Colorado lawmakers conclude first day of special legislative session

    How much is the shortfall?

    According to Mark Ferrandino, Colorado’s budget director, the OBBA created a $1.2 billion budget gap for the current budget.

    Some of that revenue loss was absorbed by the state education fund and the affordable housing fund. Around $300 million that the state had in surplus, which would have been refunded to taxpayers, will now be used to help fill the gap.

    That still leaves lawmakers with a budget gap estimated to be around $783 million.

    How do lawmakers plan to fill the budget gap?

    Democrats, who are in charge of both chambers of the legislature, have proposed a three-pronged approach: end corporate tax breaks, dip into the state’s rainy-day savings, and cut some spending.

    House Speaker Julie McCluskie said on Tuesday that she anticipates closing the corporate tax loopholes would provide $300 to $400 million. She estimates lawmakers will need to take $200 to $300 million from the state’s reserves, which would leave about $300 million in cuts that would need to be made.

    McCluskie said Democrats would make cuts “responsibly.” However, Democrats want the governor to make those cuts for them.

    Democrats have introduced SB25B-001, which would establish procedures for the Joint Budget Committee (JBC) to hold hearings with the governor’s office when the state doesn’t have enough money to provide state services.

    Under current law, the governor can end or pause functions of state agencies for up to three months if the state doesn’t have enough money for state services. The bill will give the legislature, through the JBC, more involvement in those decisions.

    “To come in in the middle of August, and cut the hundreds of millions of dollars that need to be cut, that’s just not something that the budget committee is equipped to do,” said State Sen. Jeff Bridges, the chairman of the JBC.

    2025 special session bills authorized by sponsor for pre-release

    House Bills

    • Artificial Intelligence Systems (25B-0004)
    • Sale of Tax Credits (25B-0005)
    • Insurance Premium Tax Rate for Home Offices (25B-0006)
    • Eliminate State Sales Tax Vendor Fee (25B-0007)
    • Corporate Income Tax Foreign Jurisdictions (25B-0008)
    • Qualified Bus Income Deduction Add-Back (25B-0009)
    • Prescription Drug Benefit Information Transparency (25B-0011)
    • Consumer Protections for AI Interactions (25B-0013)
    • Continuity of Care for Impacted Communities (25B-0018)
    • Improve Affordability Private Health Insurance (25B-0021)
    • Health Ins Affordability Enter Board Appointment (25B-0023)
    • Voter Approval for State Vendor Fee Reductions (25B-0024)
    • Prohibit Certain Cash Fund Use Against Fed Action (25B-0025)
    • Additions to Definition Federal Taxable Income (25B-0028)
    • Health Insurance Affordability Fund Allocation (25B-0033)
    • Spending Reduction Procedures (25B-0034)
    • Transfer of Money in Refinance Discretionary Account (25B-0036)
    • Health Providers Practice Scope Preventive Care (25B-0037)
    • Limit Subsidies Health Ins Affordability Enterprise (25B-0042)
    • Retention of Vendors Fees for Collecting Sales Tax (25B-0043)

    Senate Bills

    • State-Only Funding for Certain Entities (25B-0001)
    • Healthy School Meals For All (25B-0002)
    • Processes to Reduce Spending During Shortfall (25B-0003)
    • Reallocate DNR Wolf Funding to Health Ins Enterprise (25B-0010)
    • Tech-Neutral Anti-Discrimination Clarification Act (25B-0012)
    • Increase Transparency for Algorithmic Systems (25B-0017)
    • Voter Approval Additions to Federal Taxable Income (25B-0031)
    • Tax Credit for Health Savings Accounts (25B-0032)

    Courtesy of Colorado General Assembly website

    Republicans call special session ‘premature’

    While Polis and Democratic lawmakers say the special session is necessary, Republicans aren’t so sure about the timing.

    “I think the special session is very premature,” said Colorado House Minority Leader Rose Pugliese. “I think that the impacts of the bill really should have gone through the Joint Budget Committee process, and then once the Joint Budget Committee can understand what the implications of the budget are, then we can come in for a special session or during a regular session to get this budget issue dealt with.”

    Republicans said the special session fails to address the state’s structural budget challenges and believe Democrats plan to raise taxes.

    “For years, Democrats at the Capitol have spent beyond their means and ignored Republican solutions. Now, they want taxpayers to bail them out,” Pugliese said. “Republicans will protect your right to vote on tax increases, defend your refunds, and not give Democrats a blank check. Our bills repeal hidden tax hikes, protect small retailers, and preserve Medicaid for the most vulnerable. These are real solutions for Colorado families.”

    Republicans have introduced bills that they say would provide “common-sense solutions,” but the proposals are not expected to pass the Democratic majority.

    Politics

    How common are special sessions in Colorado? Here are all 52 that’ve been called

    Lawmakers will address other issues

    The OBBA made reproductive clinics like Planned Parenthood ineligible for federal reimbursements. Colorado Democrats have introduced a bill, SB25B-002, which would authorize state funding for those clinics until they become eligible for federal reimbursements again.

    “We are irreplaceable,” said Jack Teter, the vice president of government affairs for Planned Parenthood. “And I’m very grateful that the legislature and the governor’s office recognize that and that they’re acting during special session to preserve access for our patients.”
     
    Lawmakers will also consider SB25B-003, a bill to ask voters to provide more money for the SNAP food assistance program.

    “Republicans in Congress made unprecedented cuts to SNAP in their federal budget, which slashed millions from nutrition programs that helped Coloradans feed their families,” said State Sen. Dafna Michaelson Jenet, D-Commerce City.

    Lawmakers will also consider changes to Colorado’s artificial intelligence law.

    The special session is expected to last into the first part of next week.

    Denver7

    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Brandon Richard

    Denver7 politics reporter Brandon Richard closely follows developments at the State Capitol and in Washington, and digs deeper to find how legislation affects Coloradans in every community. If you’d like to get in touch with Brandon, fill out the form below to send him an email.

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  • Ahead of special session, Denver7 presses lawmakers on how they plan to address the state’s $1B budget gap

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    DENVER — In nearly 12 hours, state lawmakers will convene at the Colorado Capitol for a special legislative session.

    Governor Jared Polis called the session in order to address the state’s $1.2 billion budget hole.

    Politics

    Polis calls special session, hiring freeze to address $1.2B loss of revenue

    Polis blames the budget deficit on the tax changes made in President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Act (H.R.1). According to the governor and fellow Colorado Democrats, Colorado is set to collect less revenue than expected when lawmakers approved the state budget in May.

    “The whole reason for the special session is the ‘big, beautiful bill,’” said State Senator Judy Amabile, a Democrat representing District 18.

    Across the aisle, Colorado Republicans say the federal government’s spending bill isn’t to blame.

    “I think this is a very complicated issue,” said House Minority Leader Rose Pugliese, who represents District 14. “It was not caused by H.R. 1.”

    Pugliese said the state was already dealing with a budget shortfall before H.R. 1 was signed into law, and some changes outlined in the legislation won’t take effect for another year.

    • Below is the state’s estimated revenue impact

    Denver7 sat down with both parties ahead of the special session to listen to their proposed solutions for the shortfall.

    Amabile said her party will focus on drawing down the state’s budget reserve and raising revenues. To do that, Colorado Democrats will push to close corporate tax loopholes.

    The party has introduced a handful of bills aimed at closing such loopholes, like 25B-008, which would crack down on companies that may be hiding their income taxes in other countries.

    In addition, Amabile said Democrats will attempt to amend the language on upcoming ballot questions involving the Healthy School Meals For All program.

    Colorado voters approved the Healthy School Meals For All program in 2022, which offers every student, regardless of their family’s income, free breakfast and lunch. The program is funded by capped charitable tax deductions for those making $300,000 or more.

    During this year’s legislative session, Colorado lawmakers passed a bill that added two ballot measures to the November ballot. One will ask voters for permission to keep the excess revenue the state collected during the program’s first year. The other will ask voters to raise taxes for wealthier Coloradans to pay for the program.

    The hope, according to Amabile, is to amend the ballot language so that increased tax revenue will be directed to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).

    • Read our previous coverage about the ballot questions in the story below

    Politics

    CO lawmakers consider asking voters for more funding for school lunch program

    During our interview on Wednesday, Denver7 asked Amabile if Coloradans can expect any cuts to services in order to fix the budget gap.

    “No. We’re not going to see that in the special session, but we do expect that the Governor will make some spending cuts,” she said.

    Across party lines, Pugliese said Colorado Republicans are focused on reigning in waste.

    One example she gave would be redirecting funds from reproductive and immigrant health benefits to rural health providers. That alone would save more than $34 million, according to the GOP.

    Colorado House Republicans

    Colorado’s GOP provided Denver7 with a list of its proposed solutions to address the state’s budget gap.

    “We are going to be bringing forward solutions that help protect the voices of the people, especially against tax increases,” Pugliese said.

    She said her party will also zero in on finding out what federal COVID-funded programs can be cut.

    “Is there an opportunity to maybe eliminate some of these new offices that were created?” Pugliese said.

    State lawmakers will be working to find solutions and reach a compromise as quickly as possible. The longer the special legislative session lasts, the more it will cost taxpayers.

    “Yes, the session does cost money, but that amount pales in comparison to the thing that we’re trying to fix,” Amabile said when asked about the cost.

    Both parties told Denver7 they’re hopeful to find bipartisan solutions.

    “My message to the taxpayers is that we’re going to continue to fight to make sure that we cut back on regulations and taxes and fees and do not put that on the burden on the backs of hardworking Coloradans,” Pugliese said.

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    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Claire Lavezzorio

    Denver7’s Claire Lavezzorio covers topics that have an impact across Colorado, but specializes in reporting on stories in the military and veteran communities. If you’d like to get in touch with Claire, fill out the form below to send her an email.

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