Bill Tracker
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based on: Nourish Colorado- external download to spreadsheet
Notes about this profile:
Bill No. |
Title |
Sponsors (House and Senate) | Summary | Position | Status |
HB22-1016
|
Voluntary Contribution Check-off Feeding Colorado
|
House: B. McLachlan (D) Senate: R. Fields (D) | The bill creates the Feeding Colorado fund (fund) in the state
treasury. A voluntary contribution designation line for the fund will appear on the state individual income tax return form (form) for the 5 income tax years following the year that the executive director of the department of revenue (department) certifies to the revisor of statutes that
there is space available on the form and that the fund is next in the queue.
Once the fund is placed on the form, the department is directed to
determine annually the total amount contributed to the fund and report that amount to the state treasurer and the general assembly. The state treasurer is required to credit that amount to the fund, and the general assembly appropriates from the fund to the department the costs of administering money designated for the fund. After that amount is deducted, the money remaining in the fund at the end of a fiscal year is transferred to Feeding Colorado.
Following the statutory 2-year grace period for new tax check-offs,
the fund is required to achieve the minimum contribution amount of $50,000 per year to remain on the form.
The fund is repealed on the sixth income tax year following the
year in which the director files the certification, unless it is continued by the general assembly before then.
| cMonitor | Governor Signed: 04/21/2022 |
HB22-1062
|
Expand Sales And Use Tax Exemption For Food
|
House: H. McKean (R) Senate:
| The bill expands the state sales and use tax exemption for food,
which currently exempts most food for domestic home consumption, by also exempting from state sales and use tax most food that is not for domestic home consumption and is instead prepared for on-site consumption at a restaurant, grocery store, or other establishment or to be
carried out and consumed without additional cooking or preparation.
| cMonitor | House Committee on Finance Postpone Indefinitely: 05/02/2022 |
HB22-1202
|
At-risk Student Measure For School Finance
|
House: L. Herod (D) J. McCluskie (D) Senate: R. Zenzinger (D) J. Coleman (D) | Legislative Interim Committee on School Finance. The bill
identifies a new at-risk measure to identify students who are at risk of
Capital letters or bold & italic numbers indicate new material to be added to existing law.
below-average academic outcomes because of socioeconomic disadvantage or poverty in order to allocate resources through the state's public school funding formula to serve those students. The new at-risk measure will include:
The percentage of students certified as eligible for the school lunch program based on documentation of benefit receipt or categorical eligibility, supplemented by the expansion of direct certification to participants in the medical assistance program and the children's basic health plan; and
A neighborhood socioeconomic-status index that weights student needs based on socioeconomic-status index neighborhood factors linked to each student's census block group.
The commissioner of education (commissioner) shall convene a
working group to prepare for the implementation of the new at-risk measure in the 2023-24 budget year. The bill specifies the membership of the working group.
The bill includes issues that the working group may consider in
constructing and implementing the new at-risk measure, including collecting necessary data, constructing a neighborhood socioeconomic-status index linked to students' addresses, and testing the at-risk measure with actual student data, if available.
The commissioner shall report findings and recommendations for
the construction and implementation of the new at-risk measure to the legislative interim committee on school finance, the joint budget committee, and the education committees of the general assembly.
The bill requires the department of education to apply to the
United States department of agriculture to obtain authorization for direct certification of students participating in the medical assistance program and the children's basic health plan.
| bSupport | Governor Signed: 05/03/2022 |
HB22-1230
|
Employment Support And Job Retention Services
|
House: M. Duran (D) Senate: K. Priola (D) R. Fields (D) |
The bill: • Expands the definition of service provider in the Employment Support and Job Retention Services Program (program) to include faith-based organizations and churches, community centers, neighborhood organizations, food banks, outreach providers, and local
entities that provide employment services to community members; • Modifies the eligibility criteria for receiving services and the list of reimbursable services under the program; • Appropriates $500,000 annually to the employment support and job retention services program cash fund (fund) and removes the requirement that the money be subject to annual appropriations and instead continuously appropriates the money in the fund; • Repeals the current repeal date on the program and extends the program indefinitely; and • Modifies the current reporting requirements to require the division of employment and training in the department of labor and employment to report on the efficacy of the program during the department's presentations at the State Measurement for Accountable, Responsive, and Transparent (SMART) Government Act hearings.
| bSupport | Governor Signed: 05/16/2022 |
HB22-1259
|
Modifications To Colorado Works Program
|
House: M. Duran (D) I. Jodeh (D) Senate: D. Moreno (D) | The bill allows the state board of human services (state board) to
utilize eligibility processes from other public assistance or entitlement programs when promulgating rules for redetermining and verifying eligibility for the Colorado works program (works program).
When determining income requirements for the works program,
the bill requires the department of human services (state department) to use an income conversion ratio for converting weekly and biweekly income to a monthly amount using the lowest ratio or methodology that
results in the lowest monthly income amount allowable under federal law.
Current law prohibits a person convicted of a drug-related felony
offense from being eligible for assistance under the works program unless the person is determined by a county department of human or social services to have taken action toward rehabilitation. The bill removes the ban on eligibility.
The bill requires the state board to promulgate rules establishing
statewide standards and procedures that require counties to offer an extension:
Beyond the 60-month lifetime maximum for all households that demonstrate good cause, which includes an applicant or participant who is a child-only case, the head of a single parent household and has a child under one year of age, experiencing hardship, or addressing family or medical needs; and
From work requirements to all households that demonstrate good cause, which includes for an applicant or participant who is the head of a single-parent household and has a child under one year of age, experiencing hardship, or addressing family or medical needs.
The bill requires the state department to annually review and
promulgate rules as necessary to update the standard of need to ensure the standard of need is equitable, promotes economic mobility and self-sufficiency, and reflects the current economic status of the state.
The bill requires the state department to disregard any earned
income for at least the first 6 months an applicant or participant is employed while enrolled in the works program. The bill requires that the state department determine the amount of earned income that must be disregarded after the first 6 months and ensure a gradual step down of the amount of earned income disregarded and that the appropriate work supports are made available to the applicant or participant.
Current law requires the state department to ensure the amount of
a basic cash assistance grant that an applicant or participant receives is equal to or exceeds 102% of the need standard for a participant in a similarly sized household on January 1, 2008. By the 2027-28 state fiscal year, and each state fiscal year thereafter, the bill requires the amount of the basic cash assistance grant to equal or exceed 50% of the federal poverty guidelines established by the federal department of health and human services for a similarly sized household for that fiscal year.
No later than January 1, 2023, the bill requires the state department
to begin phasing in the increase in basic cash assistance that is equal to or exceeds 50% of the federal poverty guidelines.
The bill requires a county department to attempt to contact each
participant using each method of communication provided by the participant in order to conduct exit and follow-up interviews upon case
closure. The bill expands the purpose of the exit and follow-up interviews to include evaluating the participant's experience with the works program, how well the program met the participant's needs and assisted the participant in meeting the participant's goals, and informing the state department of any changes to rules that are needed to improve the participant's experience.
The bill requires the state department to monitor impacts to
counties' workload in the works program and consult with counties regarding additional need for money to administer the works program.
Beginning January 2023, and each January thereafter, the state
department is required to submit a report to the general assembly on the effectiveness of the works program.
Current law requires the state board to promulgate rules that
require a percentage reduction in the basic cash assistance grant upon the imposition of a sanction affecting the grant, with the percentage to be specified in the rules but not to be less than 25%. The bill requires the percentage not to exceed one dollar.
No later than September 30, 2022, the bill requires the state
department to develop an outreach and engagement plan to promote access to the works program for eligible persons.
| bSupport | Governor Signed: 06/03/2022 |
HB22-1364
|
Food Pantry Assistance Grant Program
|
House: M. Soper (R) Senate: K. Priola (D) | The food pantry assistance grant program is set to repeal on June
30, 2023. The bill extends the food pantry assistance grant program through July 1, 2028.
For the 2022-23 state fiscal year, the bill appropriates $5 million
from the general fund. For the 2023-24 state fiscal year, the bill appropriates $3.5 million from the general fund. For the 2024-25 state
fiscal year through the 2026-27 state fiscal year, the bill appropriates $2 million annually from the general fund to be used only for the purchase of Colorado agricultural products; agricultural products that hold cultural significance for indigenous first nations people, or for other cultures or subcultural groups, including the ways in which those agricultural products are produced; agricultural products sold by agricultural producers located within 400 miles of the grant recipient; agricultural products sold by indigenous first nations producers located within Colorado and in neighboring states; and technical assistance.
The bill allows up to $100,000 annually of the appropriation to be
used to hire a nonprofit entity to provide technical assistance to a grant recipient to train food pantries and assist in the location and purchase of Colorado agricultural products. The bill also allows a grant recipient to pre-purchase Colorado agricultural products.
| bSupport | Governor Signed: 06/03/2022 |
HB22-1380
|
Critical Services For Low-income Households
|
House: S. Gonzales-Gutierrez (D) Senate: J. Bridges (D) | The bill requires the department of human services to implement
a work management system across all counties to interface with the Colorado benefits management system used to process and approve applications for essential state public assistance programs such as the supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP), medicaid, and
Colorado works.
The bill integrates eligibility and enrollment for SNAP with
eligibility criteria for the Colorado low-income energy assistance program to increase access.
The bill creates a community food access program (food program)
in the department of agriculture (department). The purpose of the food program is to improve access to and lower prices for healthy foods in low-income and underserved areas of the state by supporting small grocery retailers. The small food business recovery and resilience grant program (grant program) is established, to be overseen by the food program. An advisory committee is established to assist the department with the grant program. One-time grants not to exceed $25,000 will be provided to small grocery retailers to help support infrastructure and other necessary items to make fresh, healthy food more accessible to low-income and underserved communities. The department is granted authority to promulgate rules as necessary to implement the food program.
The food program is repealed, effective September 1, 2027.
| bSupport | Governor Signed: 06/03/2022 |
HB22-1411
|
Money From Coronavirus State Fiscal Recovery Fund
|
House: L. Herod (D) J. McCluskie (D) Senate: D. Moreno (D) | In 2021, the state received $3,828,761,790 from the federal
coronavirus state fiscal recovery fund as part of the federal American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. For purposes of complying with the
requirements established by the United States department of the treasury (treasury), the general assembly established administrative requirements related to the expenditure of this federal money. Section 1 of the bill modifies these requirements by:
Establishing deadlines for a subrecipient, which is a person that carries out a program or project on behalf of the state, to expend or obligate this money, and if not, to return this money to the state for the state to either expend or return to treasury, depending on the timing;
Requiring the state controller to transmit to treasury any money that was obligated by December 31, 2024, but not expended by December 31, 2026;
Requiring the department of revenue to provide the state controller with any information about any increases in the state's net tax revenue, which is necessary for calculating the state's revenue reductions for 2022 and 2023;
Clarifying that the compliance, reporting, record-keeping, and program evaluation requirements established by the office of state planning and budgeting and the state controller apply to a person regardless of whether the person is a beneficiary or a subrecipient and regardless of whether the person receives the money directly from a department or from a subrecipient; and
Permitting the state controller to report any expenditures to treasury as a government service to the extent of the reduction in the state's revenue due to the COVID-19 public health emergency relative to the revenues the state collected for the state fiscal year 2018-19. Sections 3 through 6 make conforming amendments related to this change.
The bill also substitutes money from the general fund or from a
cash fund that included money that originated from the general fund for money that was allocated in 2021 legislation from the federal coronavirus state fiscal recovery fund, as follows:
$29.5 million from the housing development grant fund (section 7);
$36.5 million from the highway users tax fund that was distributed to counties, cities, and incorporated towns, which is accomplished by replenishing and reclassifying the federal funds that were initially used (section 8);
$10 million from the Colorado startup loan program fund (section 9), with the freed up federal funds being transferred to the revenue loss restoration cash fund (section 6); and
$98.5 million from the affordable housing and home
ownership cash fund (section 10).
Sections 2 and 6 include conforming amendments related to the
reclassification of the money paid to the counties, cities, and incorporated towns.
| cMonitor | Governor Signed: 05/27/2022 |
HB22-1414
|
Healthy Meals For All Public School Students
|
House: D. Michaelson Jenet (D) S. Gonzales-Gutierrez (D) Senate: R. Fields (D) |
The bill creates the healthy school meals for all program (program) in the department of education (department) to: • Reimburse school food authorities that choose to participate in the program (participating school food authorities) for free meals provided to students who are not eligible for free or reduced-price meals under the federal school meals programs; • Provide local food purchasing grants to eligible participating school food authorities; • Provide funding to participating school food authorities to increase the wages or provide stipends for individuals employed to prepare and serve food; and • Provide assistance to participating school food authorities through the local school food purchasing technical assistance and education grant program. The portion of the program that provides reimbursement for school meals begins operating in the 2023-24 budget year. The remaining portions of the program begin operating in the first full budget year after the state of Colorado begins participating in the federal demonstration project to use medicaid eligibility to identify students who are eligible for the federal school meals programs (demonstration project). A participating school food authority must: • Provide free meals to all students enrolled in the public schools that the participating school food authority serves and that participate in the national school lunch program or national school breakfast program; • Provide to the department annual notice of participation; and • Maximize the amount of federal reimbursement by participating in the federal community eligibility provision to identify students who are eligible for the federal school meals programs. The amount of reimbursement distributed pursuant to the program is equal to the federal free reimbursement rate multiplied by the total number of meals served minus any other federal or state reimbursement the school food authority receives for providing meals. The bill requires the department to: • Participate in the federal community eligibility provision for the state as a whole, if that option is available; and • Apply to participate in the demonstration project. Under the bill, a participating school food authority that creates a parent and student committee to advise on food purchasing (advisory committee) is eligible to receive a local food purchasing grant (grant) to purchase Colorado grown, raised, or processed products for school meals. Each eligible participating school food authority must comply with reporting requirements. The bill establishes the amount of the grants, limits on how the grant money may be spent, and the required membership of the advisory committee. The department must annually review a sample of the invoices for purchases made using grant money to ensure compliance with purchasing requirements. The bill creates the local school food purchasing technical assistance and education grant program (grant program) under which a statewide nonprofit organization distributes grants to promote the purchase of Colorado grown, raised, or processed products by participating school food authorities and to assist participating school food authorities in preparing meals using basic ingredients rather than processed products. The nonprofit organization must report annually to the department concerning implementation of the grant program. The department must submit to committees of the general assembly a biennial report concerning implementation of the program. The department must contract with an independent auditor to conduct a biennial financial and performance audit of the program. The report and the audit must include implementation of the program, implementation of the local food purchasing grants, use of the additional amount for increasing wages or providing stipends, and implementation of the grant program. The bill directs the general assembly to appropriate annually, by line item in the annual appropriation bill, the amount necessary to implement the program, including a specified amount for the grant program. Current law caps state income tax itemized deductions for taxpayers who have federal adjusted gross income of $400,000 or more at $30,000 for single filers and $60,000 for joint filers. The bill applies the cap to both itemized and standard income tax deductions for taxpayers who have federal adjusted gross income of $300,000 or more and lowers the cap to $12,000 for single filers and $16,000 for joint filers. The amount of revenue generated by the changes to the cap must be appropriated to fund the program. If the program is repealed, the changes to the cap no longer apply. The bill takes effect only if it is approved by the voters at the November 2022 general election. This approval is a voter-approved revenue change that allows the state to retain and spend all revenue generated by the changes to the cap on state income tax deductions.
| cMonitor | Governor Signed: 06/06/2022 |
SB22-087
|
Healthy Meals For All Public School Students
|
Senate: R. Fields (D) House: D. Michaelson Jenet (D) S. Gonzales-Gutierrez (D) | The bill creates the healthy school meals for all program (program)
in the department of education (department) to reimburse school food authorities for free meals provided to students who are not eligible for free or reduced-price meals under the federal school meals programs. The program begins operating in the 2023-24 budget year, subject to the state being selected to participate in the federal demonstration project to use
medicaid eligibility to identify students who are eligible for the federal school meals programs (demonstration project).
A school food authority that chooses to participate in the program
(participating school food authority) must:
Provide free meals to all students enrolled in the public schools that the participating school food authority serves;
Provide to the department annual notice of participation; and
Maximize the amount of federal reimbursement by participating in the federal community eligibility provision to identify students who are eligible for the federal school meals programs.
The amount of reimbursement distributed pursuant to the program
is equal to the federal free reimbursement rate multiplied by the total number of meals served, minus any other federal or state reimbursement the school food authority receives for providing meals.
The bill requires the department to:
Participate in the federal community eligibility provision for the state as a whole, if that option is available; and
Apply to participate in the demonstration project.
Under the bill, a participating school food authority that creates a
parent and student committee to advise on food purchasing (advisory committee) is eligible to receive a local food purchasing grant (grant) to purchase Colorado grown, raised, or processed products for school meals. Each eligible participating school food authority must comply with reporting requirements. The bill establishes the amount of the grants, limits on how the grant money may be spent, and the required membership of the advisory committee. The department must annually review a sample of the invoices for purchases made using grant money to ensure compliance with purchasing requirements.
Under the bill, a participating school food authority may receive
an additional amount to increase the wages for individuals employed to prepare and serve food.
The bill creates the local school food purchasing technical
assistance and education grant program (grant program), under which a statewide nonprofit organization distributes grants to promote the purchase of Colorado grown, raised, or processed products by participating school food authorities and to assist participating school food authorities in preparing meals using basic ingredients rather than processed products. The nonprofit organization must report annually to the department concerning implementation of the grant program.
The department must submit to committees of the general
assembly a biennial report concerning implementation of the program. The department must contract with an independent auditor to conduct a biennial financial and performance audit of the program. The report and
the audit must include implementation of the program, implementation of the local food purchasing grants, use of the additional amount for increasing wages, and implementation of the grant program.
The bill directs the general assembly to appropriate annually, by
line item in the annual appropriation bill, the amount necessary to implement the program, including a specified amount for the grant program.
| bSupport | Senate Committee on Appropriations Postpone Indefinitely: 05/10/2022 |
|