Bill Tracker
based on: Profile: Fiscal & Tax Policy
 Loading... Please Wait
You have 27 bills in your selected Profile
download to spreadsheet
download to pdf
download to docx
Notes about this profile:
LAC Lobbyists: Maud Naroll, Toni Larson, Mary Anne Davitt, Celeste Landry, Janine Reid, Geoff Withers
Bill:
HB23-1006
|
Title: |
Employer Notice Of Income Tax Credits |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/09/2023 | Description | Concerning the notice requirements of employers regarding income tax credits, and, in connection therewith, requiring employers to notify employees of the availability of the federal earned income tax credit, the state earned income tax credit, the federal child tax credit, and the state child tax credit. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: T. Exum Sr. (D) House: M. Young (D) L. Daugherty (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (09/07/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Strongly Support | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Current law requires an employer to provide its employees with an
annual statement showing the total compensation paid and the income tax withheld for the preceding calendar year. The bill requires an employer to also provide, within a week before or after providing the statement and in the same manner as the statement is provided, written notice of the availability of the federal and state earned income tax credits and the federal and state child tax credits. The written notice must be in English and any other language the employer uses to communicate with employees and must include any additional content that the department of revenue prescribes.
| House Sponsors | M. Young (D) L. Daugherty (D) | Senate Sponsors | T. Exum Sr. (D) | House Committee | Business Affairs and Labor | Senate Committee | Business, Labor and Technology | Status | Governor Signed (03/31/2023) | Amendments | - March 09, 2023: Senate Business, Labor, & Technology Committee Report
- March 09, 2023: Senate Business, Labor, & Technology Committee Report
- January 26, 2023: L.001 House Business Affairs & Labor
- January 26, 2023: House Business Affairs & Labor Committee Report
- January 26, 2023: House Business Affairs & Labor Committee Report
- January 10, 2023: H_BUS_2023A_20230126_133045 Committee Report
|
|
Bill:
HB23-1008
|
Title: |
Food Accessibility |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/09/2023 | Description | Concerning tax policies related to the accessibility of food, and, in connection therewith, requiring additions to Colorado taxable income in amounts equal to the business meals federal itemized deduction, creating a tax credit to support the small business recovery and resilience grant program, providing funding for healthy eating program incentives, and making an appropriation. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: R. Fields (D) N. Hinrichsen (D) House: M. Weissman (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (09/05/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Support | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary |
League position on Income Assistance: Support income assistance programs, based on need, that provide decent, adequate standards for food, clothing, and shelter.
HB23-1008 extends the Community Food Access program, set to expire September 1, 2027, five years to September 1, 2031.
The bill authorizes $1M each year till until 2030 to allow Department of Public Health and Environment to partner with state-wide nonprofits to provide incentives for healthy eating among low-income populations.
It includes a tax credit to small retailers and farms who participate in the Community Food Access program equal to 75% of the cost of cold storage, scales, shelving and other capital equipment, 2024-2030.
Colorado will lose $53M in federal funding this year as Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) temporary increases during the pandemic are set to expire now.
The cost of HB23-1008 will be subsidized for the most part by requiring that business meal expenses on federal itemized deductions be added to Colorado taxable income.
Fiscal Note: revenue in the out year is expected to be $4.4M. Total expenditures $6.43M. General fund $954.548. Tabor refund:$4.4M.
All testimony (11) was in support. Lobbyist are all in support or monitoring, the exception being the Colorado Springs Chamber of Commerce and Economic Development Corporation.
Status: the bill passed 7-4 on to the Appropriations Committee. I would expect amendments that may change the funding source.
| Summary | Section 2 of the bill requires the general assembly, for fiscal year
2023-24 through fiscal year 2030-31, to annually transfer $1 million to the prevention services division (division) within the department of public health and environment. The bill requires the division to use this money to partner with a statewide nonprofit organization to provide healthy eating program incentives among Colorado's low-income populations.
Section 3 requires individual taxpayers to add an amount of
federal taxable income equal to their federal deduction for business meals to their state income tax liability for the 2024 through 2030 income tax years. Section 4 requires the same of corporate taxpayers. Section 6 requires the general assembly to transfer the following amounts from the general fund to the department of agriculture to implement the small business recovery and resilience grant program (grant program):
For fiscal years 2023-24 and 2030-31, $2.5 million; and
For fiscal years 2024-25 through 2029-30, $5 million.
Section 6 also extends the repeal date of the grant program from September 1, 2027 to September 1, 2031.
Section 5 creates a tax credit for small food retailers and small
family farms that purchase certain systems or equipment. The tax credit is equal to 75% of the cost of those systems or equipment. Purchasers may assign the tax credit to the seller who sells them the qualifying systems or equipment. The tax credit is available for the 2024 through 2030 tax years.
| House Sponsors | M. Weissman (D) | Senate Sponsors | R. Fields (D) N. Hinrichsen (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (06/02/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1018
|
Title: |
Timber Industry Incentives |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/09/2023 | Description | Concerning incentives to promote the timber industry in Colorado, and, in connection therewith, creating an internship program in the Colorado state forest service and creating a state income tax credit for the purchase of qualifying items used in timber production and forest health. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes- Labor & Employment- Natural Resources & Environment- State Government- State Revenue & Budget | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: C. Simpson (R) House: M. Lynch (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/09/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Wildfire Matters Review Committee. The bill creates the timber,
forest health, and wildfire mitigation industries workforce development program (program) in the state forest service. The program provides partial reimbursement to timber businesses and forest health or wildfire mitigation entities for the costs of hiring interns. The forest service must adopt rules, policies, and procedures for the program, including criteria for an internship to qualify, best practices for recruiting and selecting interns to increase representation of historically underrrepresented communities in the industries, the criteria to use in selecting qualified interns, the required educational experience for an intern, and administrative requirements for the program.
For income tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2023, but
before January 1, 2028, a business involved in forestry, logging, the timber trade, the production of wood and secondary products, or forest health and wildfire mitigation activities in Colorado may claim a credit against state income tax for 20% of the cost incurred by the taxpayer in purchasing certain equipment, vehicles, and equipment infrastructure. The total aggregate credit in any one income tax year is limited to $10,000. Any amount of the credit that exceeds the taxpayer's income tax liability is not refundable but may be carried forward for up to 5 years.
| House Sponsors | M. Lynch (R) | Senate Sponsors | C. Simpson (R) | House Committee | Agriculture, Water and Natural Resources | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on Appropriations Lay Over Unamended - Amendment(s) Failed (05/11/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1047
|
Title: |
Joint Filing Deduction Qualified Tuition Program |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/09/2023 | Description | Concerning the income tax deduction for married persons filing income tax returns jointly pursuant to a qualified tuition program contribution plan. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate:
House: M. Snyder (D) D. Wilson (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/24/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Current law allows a state income tax deduction for payments
made under a qualified state tuition program equal to a maximum of $20,000 for a taxpayer who files an individual income tax return and $30,000 for 2 married taxpayers who file a joint income tax return. The bill increases to $40,000 the maximum deduction for married taxpayers
who file a joint income tax return.
| House Sponsors | M. Snyder (D) D. Wilson (R) | Senate Sponsors | | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on Appropriations Lay Over Unamended - Amendment(s) Failed (05/11/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1054
|
Title: |
Property Valuation |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/09/2023 | Description | Concerning real property valuation, and, in connection therewith, extending the property tax reassessment cycle beginning on January 1, 2021, to a four-year cycle; removing the dollar amount reductions to the actual value used for the valuation for assessment of lodging property, improved commercial property, and residential property; maintaining the same assessment rates for all real property besides residential real property in the 2023 and 2024 property tax years; and capping the increase in property values between the 2022 and 2025 property tax years. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: B. Pelton (R) House: L. Frizell (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/10/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Most real property is reassessed every odd-numbered year. The bill
establishes a one-time exception by making the reassessment cycle beginning on January 1, 2021, a 4-year cycle so that the next reassessment cycle will begin in 2025 instead of 2023.
Under current law, for the 2023 property tax year, the actual value
used for purposes of valuation for assessment is reduced for commercial real property by $30,000 and for residential real property by $15,000. The bill eliminates these reductions.
The bill also sets the assessment rates for nonresidential real
property and multi-family residential real property for the 2024 property tax year, so that they are the same rates as for the 2023 property tax year.
Lastly, the bill ensures that the actual value of property used for
purposes of valuation for assessment does not increase by more than 5% between 2022 and 2025, for property that does not have an unusual condition which results in an increase or decrease in actual value.
| House Sponsors | L. Frizell (R) | Senate Sponsors | B. Pelton (R) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on Finance Postpone Indefinitely (03/09/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1063
|
Title: |
Reduction Of State Income Tax Rate |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/19/2023 | Description | Concerning a reduction of the state income tax rate. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate:
House: S. Bottoms (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/24/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Strongly Oppose | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary |
For income tax years commencing on and after January 1, 2024, the bill reduces both the individual and the corporate state income tax rates from 4.40% to 3.5%. The bill also exempts the rate reductions from the existing statutory requirements that tax expenditure legislation include a tax preference performance statement in a statutory legislative declaration and a repeal after a specified period of tax years.
The League supports income as a major tax base in Colorado. This measure would reduce state revenue from individual income taxes and corporate income taxes, for a 20% reduction in revenue from those sources. Without enacting either offsetting sources of revenue or commensurate cuts in spending, this measure is irresponsible on its face.
| Summary | For income tax years commencing on and after January 1, 2024,
the bill reduces both the individual and the corporate state income tax rates from 4.40% to 3.5%. The bill also exempts the rate reductions from the existing statutory requirements that tax expenditure legislation include a tax preference performance statement in a statutory legislative declaration and a repeal after a specified period of tax years.
| House Sponsors | S. Bottoms (R) | Senate Sponsors | | House Committee | State, Civic, Military and Veterans Affairs | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on State, Civic, Military, & Veterans Affairs Postpone Indefinitely (02/09/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1081
|
Title: |
Employee Ownership Tax Credit Expansion |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/19/2023 | Description | Concerning the expansion of the tax credit for conversion costs for employee business ownership. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: N. Hinrichsen (D) House: R. Taggart (R) W. Lindstedt (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/24/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Under current law, a qualified business is allowed a tax credit in
the amount of 50% of the costs to convert the qualified business to a form of employee ownership. The tax credit is capped at $25,000 for converting a qualified business to a worker-owned cooperative or employee ownership trust, and capped at $100,000 for converting a qualified business to an employee stock ownership plan.
The bill:
Increases the cap for converting a qualified business to a worker-owned cooperative or employee ownership trust from $25,000 to $40,000, and increases the cap for converting a qualified business to an employee stock ownership plan from $100,000 to $150,000;
Expands the tax credit to include 50% of the costs of a qualified employee-owned business expanding its employee ownership by at least 20%, not to exceed $25,000;
Expands the tax credit to include 50% of the costs of a qualified business converting to or expanding an alternate equity structure, not to exceed $25,000. An alternate equity structure is a form of employee ownership where an employer grants to employees an employee stock ownership plan, LLC membership, phantom stock, profit interest, profit sharing, restricted stock, stock appreciation right, stock option, or synthetic equity.
Specifies that a qualified business or qualified employee-owned business may apply for and claim only one credit for the conversion or expansion costs per tax year.
| House Sponsors | R. Taggart (R) W. Lindstedt (D) | Senate Sponsors | N. Hinrichsen (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (05/23/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1091
|
Title: |
Continuation Of Child Care Contribution Tax Credit |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/19/2023 | Description | Concerning the income tax credit for a qualifying contribution to promote child care in the state, and, in connection therewith, continuing the credit for three years, requiring the department of revenue to develop recommendations for the expansion of the types of contributions that qualify for the credit, and making an appropriation. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: J. Rich (R) J. Marchman (D) House: C. Kipp (D) R. Pugliese (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (07/17/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | A taxpayer who makes a monetary contribution to promote child
care in the state is allowed an income tax credit that is equal to 50% of the
total value of the contribution. This exemption is currently available for income tax years that commence prior to January 1, 2025. The bill extends the credit for 3 years and increases the types of contributions that qualify for the tax credit to include in-kind donations of real property, which include the value of leasing real property below market value, to promote child care.
The bill adds a statutory legislative declaration to comply with an
existing statutory requirement that any bill that extends a tax expenditure include a statutory legislative declaration. The bill also requires the state auditor to prepare the tax expenditure evaluation report for the credit that is periodically required by current law in the income tax year commencing January 1, 2026.
| House Sponsors | C. Kipp (D) R. Pugliese (R) | Senate Sponsors | J. Rich (R) J. Marchman (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (05/23/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1103
|
Title: |
Severance Tax Revenue Distribution |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/23/2023 | Description | Concerning the distribution of severance tax funds to counties that are economically impacted by the industries on which severance taxes are imposed. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: R. Pelton (R) House: T. Winter (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/11/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | The bill requires the state treasurer to transfer 60% of the
severance taxes paid by an entity that are attributable to the developing, processing, or energy conversion of minerals and mineral fuels subject to taxation in a county in a given tax year to that same county. A county that receives a transfer in accordance with the bill shall use the transferred
funds for building or improving roads, schools, or local infrastructure.
| House Sponsors | T. Winter (R) | Senate Sponsors | R. Pelton (R) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on Finance Postpone Indefinitely (02/13/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1112
|
Title: |
Earned Income And Child Tax Credits |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/23/2023 | Description | Concerning the enlargement of certain income tax credits for low- and middle-income working individuals or families, and, in connection therewith, reducing state income tax revenue by increasing the earned income tax credit and restructuring the child tax credit to allow all low-income taxpayers with income below certain thresholds to claim the credit. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes- State Revenue & Budget | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: C. Hansen (D) C. Kolker (D) House: S. Bird (D) M. Young (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (07/17/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Support | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary |
The state and federal Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and Child Tax Credit CTC) are a boon to low-income tax filers, especially to families with children. Both federal credits and the state child tax credit are refundable, meaning some eligible people can get checks back from both the feds and the state, even if they owe no tax. The state credits are a percent of the federal credit. This bil
- Increases the state EITC from 25% to 40% of the federal credit
- Increases the state CTC
- Changes the child’s age cap for CTC from 5 to the federal limit of 16 (under 6 to under 17)
Because Colorado’s income tax rate is a flat rate for all, and our sales tax takes the largest share of income from those with the smallest earnings, our overall state tax system is regressive, hitting hardest those least able to pay. HB23-1112, by increasing tax credits for those with the lowest incomes, especially those families with children, helps make Colorado’s tax system more progressive.
The League has two studied positions pertinent to this bill:
- The League supports policies and programs at all levels of the community and government that promote the well-being of children [Impact on Issues 2020-2022 p 15]
- The League supports a tax system that is progressive, taking a larger share of income from the richest and the smallest share from those with lowest incomes. In evaluating specific tax preferences, the League will use the following criteria: whether the tax preference promotes equity and progressivity; whether the tax preference effectively furthers League of Women Voters program goals; whether the tax preference is the most efficient means of achieving its purpose; whether the revenue loss from the tax preference is justifiable. [Impact on Issues 2020-2022 pp 126-128]
This bill builds on HB21-1311, which doubled Colorado’s earned income tax credit (EITC) from 10% to 20% of the federal credit and funded the state child tax credit (CTC) for families with children under 6 years old at 30%, 15% or 5%, phasing out the CTC as income rises.
HB23-1112 was recommended by the Legislative Oversight Committee Concerning Tax Policy (LOCCTP). The three bill sponsors were 3 of the 6 members of the LOCCTP.
| Summary | Legislative Oversight Committee Concerning Tax Policy. For
income tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, the bill increases the earned income tax credit that a resident individual can claim on their state income tax return to 40% of the federal credit claimed on the resident individual's federal income tax return. For income tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, the bill changes the definition of eligible child to match the age of eligibility for the federal credit, increases percentages of the federal credit that a resident individual can claim for the child tax credit on their state income tax return by 20%, 10%, or 5% depending on the resident individual's income level, and requires the department of revenue to adjust for inflation the income levels set forth to determine eligibility for the credit.
| House Sponsors | S. Bird (D) M. Young (D) | Senate Sponsors | C. Hansen (D) C. Kolker (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (06/07/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1121
|
Title: |
Repeal Of Infrequently Used Tax Expenditures |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/27/2023 | Description | Concerning the repeal of infrequently used tax expenditures. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: L. Liston (R) C. Hansen (D) House: S. Bird (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/08/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Legislative Oversight Committee Concerning Tax Policy. The
bill repeals the following infrequently used tax expenditures:
The crop hail insurance premium tax exemption (section 1 of the bill);
The in-state investment pre-1959 insurance premium tax deduction (section 1);
The corporate condemnation capital gains income tax deduction (section 2);
The oil shale excess percentage depletion income tax deduction (section 2);
The mining and milling impact assistance corporate income tax credit (section 3);
The oil shale equipment and machinery severance tax deduction (section 4);
The oil shale processing severance tax deduction (section 4);
The oil shale severance tax rate reductions (section 4);
The oil shale noncommercial production severance tax exemption (section 4); and
The mineral and mineral fuels impact assistance severance tax credit (section 5).
Sections 6 and 7 make conforming amendments.
| House Sponsors | S. Bird (D) | Senate Sponsors | L. Liston (R) C. Hansen (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (03/23/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1122
|
Title: |
Tax Credit For Purchase Long-term Care Insurance |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/27/2023 | Description | Concerning the modification of the state income tax credit for purchasing long-term care insurance. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: C. Hansen (D) C. Kolker (D) House: S. Bird (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/24/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Legislative Oversight Committee Concerning Tax Policy. For
income tax years beginning January 1, 2024, the bill both:
Increases the amount of federal taxable income taxpayers may have and still qualify for the state income tax credit for purchasing long-term care insurance and annually adjusts that amount of federal taxable income for inflation; and
Doubles the amount of the credit that a taxpayer may claim and annually adjusts the credit for inflation.
| House Sponsors | S. Bird (D) | Senate Sponsors | C. Hansen (D) C. Kolker (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on Appropriations Lay Over Unamended - Amendment(s) Failed (05/11/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1128
|
Title: |
Income Tax Credits And Deductions Married Taxpayers |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/30/2023 | Description | Concerning certain income tax credits and deductions for married taxpayers. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate:
House: R. Weinberg (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (09/05/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Section 1 makes legislative findings and declarations concerning
the treatment of taxpayers filing individually versus those filing jointly and clarifies that the intent of the bill is to eliminate barriers to certain tax credits and deductions for married individuals.
Section 2 increases the maximum amount of the wildfire
mitigation measures tax deduction from $2,500 to $5,000 for married
taxpayers who file a joint income tax return.
Section 3 increases the qualifying maximum gross adjusted
income threshold for the child care expense tax credit from $60,000 to $120,000 for married taxpayers who file a joint income tax return.
Section 4 raises the qualifying maximum income threshold for the
low-income child care expense tax credit from $25,000 to $50,000 for married taxpayers who file a joint income tax return.
| House Sponsors | R. Weinberg (R) | Senate Sponsors | | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on Finance Postpone Indefinitely (03/06/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1129
|
Title: |
Tax Credit Lifebuoy Apparatus |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/30/2023 | Description | Concerning a state income tax credit for an eligible purchaser's installation of a lifebuoy apparatus. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate:
House: B. Bradley (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/24/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Amend | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | The bill establishes a state income tax credit for the purchase and
installation of a lifebuoy apparatus in a subdivision with a body of water beginning January 1, 2023. The tax credit is for $1,500 per lifebuoy apparatus purchased and installed in the subdivision by an eligible purchaser. The tax credit may be claimed only once per lifebuoy apparatus and is not refundable, but may be carried forward up to 5 years.
An eligible purchaser must certify to the department of revenue each lifebuoy apparatus purchased and installed during each tax year for which the credit is claimed.
| House Sponsors | B. Bradley (R) | Senate Sponsors | | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on Appropriations Lay Over Unamended - Amendment(s) Failed (05/11/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1166
|
Title: |
Repeal Retail Delivery Fees |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 02/02/2023 | Description | Concerning the elimination of retail delivery fees. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Transportation & Motor Vehicles | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: P. Will (R) House: R. Pugliese (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/09/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Oppose | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary |
Recall that TABOR prohibits the CO General Assembly from raising taxes. For years there were attempts to fund transportation infrastructure, including repairing Colorado’s many dangerous bridges. Finally, in 2021, the 163 pages of SB21-260 created many fees to improve transportation, including a number of retail delivery fees, that together will deliver over $200 million/year to preserve, improve, and expand existing transportation infrastructure and expand the electric vehicle charging network. HB23-1166 repeals most or all of the retail delivery fees of SB21-260, driving a tractor trailer through hard-won funding for transportation and the transition to electric vehicles.
One League of Women Voters principle is a belief that efficient and economical government requires adequate financing [Impact on Issues 2020-2022 p 10] . This bill makes financing less adequate.
| Summary | A retail delivery is a retail sale of tangible personal property that
is subject to state sales tax by a retailer for delivery by a motor vehicle to the purchaser at any location in the state. As authorized by current law, retail delivery fees are imposed on each retail delivery by:
The state;
The community access enterprise;
The clean fleet enterprise;
The statewide bridge and tunnel enterprise;
The clean transit enterprise; and
The nonattainment area air pollution mitigation enterprise.
Effective July 1, 2023, the bill eliminates the retail delivery fees
by specifying that they may only be collected for the 2022-23 state fiscal year.
| House Sponsors | R. Pugliese (R) | Senate Sponsors | P. Will (R) | House Committee | Transportation, Housing and Local Government | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on Transportation, Housing & Local Government Postpone Indefinitely (02/21/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1189
|
Title: |
Employer Assistance For Home Purchase Tax Credit |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 02/10/2023 | Description | Concerning an income tax credit for employer assistance to employees in making a home purchase. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes- State Government- State Revenue & Budget | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: R. Zenzinger (D) K. Mullica (D) House: S. Bird (D) R. Weinberg (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (07/18/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | The bill creates a state income tax credit for employers who make
a monetary contribution to an employee for use by the employee in purchasing a primary residence. The amount of the credit allowed is 5% of an employer's contribution to an employee, but the credit is capped at $5,000 per employee per year and an employer cannot receive a credit of more than $750,000 for all contributions made in a year to employees.
The employee must use the money contributed for eligible expenses which include a down payment and closing costs, including fees for appraisals, mortgage origination, and inspections. An employee may authorize their employer to withhold a specified amount of the employee's earnings as an employee contribution into the savings account established by the employer that holds the employer contribution. If an employee ends their employment with the employer or if the employee intends to use the employee contribution in a manner that is not consistent with an eligible expense, the employee forfeits any unexpended amount of the employer contribution and the amount of the credit allowed to the employer for the employer contribution is subject to recapture. In such an occurrence, the employee is entitled to the employee contribution, plus any interest earned. The credit is not refundable but may be carried forward by the employer for a period of not more than 5 years. The amount contributed by the employer may be subtracted by the employee from the employee's federal taxable income for the purpose of determining their state taxable income; except that, if an employee forfeits the employer contribution, then the amount that the employee had subtracted from their federal taxable income is added back to their federal taxable income for the purpose of determining their state taxable income for the subsequent tax year. The executive director of the department of revenue may promulgate rules related to the implementation of the credit.
| House Sponsors | S. Bird (D) R. Weinberg (R) | Senate Sponsors | R. Zenzinger (D) K. Mullica (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (06/07/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1208
|
Title: |
Income Tax Credit For Eligible Teachers |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 02/17/2023 | Description | Concerning a state income tax credit for a licensed teacher who is employed as a teacher in a public school on a full-time basis for at least one-half of an academic year. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: J. Rich (R) House: M. Soper (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/24/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | For income tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2023, but
before January 1, 2027, the bill allows a refundable state income tax credit, which is intended to offset the various expenses that licensed
teachers often incur throughout an academic year for classroom supplies, professional development costs, supplemental educational materials, field trips, and other items that improve the quality of the educational services that they provide, to a licensed teacher who is employed as a teacher in a public school on a full-time basis for at least one-half of an academic year (eligible teacher) during the income tax year for which the credit is claimed. The amount of the credit is $1,000 for an eligible teacher who is employed for the equivalent of an entire academic year and $500 for a teacher who is employed for one-half of an academic year. Two eligible teachers who file a joint income tax return may each claim the credit.
| House Sponsors | M. Soper (R) | Senate Sponsors | J. Rich (R) | House Committee | Education | Senate Committee | | Status | House Committee on Appropriations Lay Over Unamended - Amendment(s) Failed (05/11/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1240
|
Title: |
Sales Use Tax Exemption Wildfire Disaster Construction |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 03/11/2023 | Description | Concerning a sales and use tax exemption for construction and building materials used for repairing and rebuilding residential structures damaged or destroyed by a declared wildfire disaster in 2020, 2021, or 2022, and, in connection therewith, making an appropriation. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: S. Fenberg (D) House: K. Brown (D) J. Amabile (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (07/18/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Section 1 of the bill creates a state sales and use tax exemption for
construction and building materials purchased on or after January 1, 2020,
but before July 1, 2025, to be used directly in rebuilding or repairing a residential structure damaged or destroyed by a declared wildfire disaster in calendar year 2020, 2021, or 2022 (wildfire rebuild exemption).
A homeowner, or a contractor employed by a homeowner, may
obtain a wildfire rebuild exemption certificate from the local government authorized to issue a building permit in the area in which the residential structure to be repaired or rebuilt is located. To be qualified, a homeowner must certify that:
The homeowner was the owner of each residential structure to be repaired or rebuilt at the time the structure was damaged or destroyed by the declared wildfire disaster; and
The replacement cost for each residential structure to be repaired or rebuilt exceeds the homeowner's coverage under any homeowner's insurance policy associated with the structure.
To claim the exemption, the qualified homeowner, or contractor
employed by such homeowner, must provide a copy of the wildfire rebuild exemption certificate to each retailer from which the homeowner or contractor purchases exempt construction or building materials. If a qualified homeowner, or contractor employed by such homeowner, has paid state sales or use tax on the purchase of exempt construction or building materials on or after January 1, 2020, but before July 1, 2025, then the person who made the purchase may apply to the department of revenue for a refund pursuant to existing sales and use tax refund procedures. Alternatively, if the purchaser-contractor has not been granted a refund, the homeowner for whom the exempt materials were purchased may apply for a refund by establishing certain existing statutory requirements are met.
Sections 2 and 3 include the wildfire rebuild exemption among
other exemptions available to state-collected and administered local sales and use tax jurisdictions, including statutory cities and counties, for adoption at their discretion.
| House Sponsors | K. Brown (D) J. Amabile (D) | Senate Sponsors | S. Fenberg (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (05/12/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1260
|
Title: |
Advanced Industry and Semiconductor Manufacturing Incentives |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 03/26/2023 | Description | Concerning tax incentives to maximize investments in semiconductor and advanced manufacturing in Colorado, and, in connection therewith, authorizing the economic development commission to approve refund certificates for certain income tax credits, creating a semiconductor manufacturing zone program, modifying the Colorado job growth incentive tax credit for semiconductor and advanced manufacturing, creating an advanced industries task force, and making an appropriation. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: K. Priola (D) M. Baisley (R) House: A. Valdez (D) M. Soper (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (07/18/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | The bill creates new and modifies existing state tax incentives to
maximize federal government funding for taxpayers engaged in semiconductor and advanced manufacturing in Colorado. Section 1 of the bill creates a refund mechanism, available from fiscal year 2023-24 through fiscal year 2028-29, that allows a taxpayer engaged in semiconductor or advanced manufacturing to apply for conditional approval of one or more types of income tax credits based on a specified project in the state and includes the maximum amount of credit for which the taxpayer may claim a refund of 80% . The income tax credit types that may be the basis for such a refund are:
The three enterprise zone credits for qualified investments, business facility employees, and expenditures for research and experimental activities;
The Colorado job growth incentive income tax credit; and
Three semiconductor manufacturing zone (CHIPS zone) credits for qualified investments, business facility employees, and expenditures for research and experimental activities, which zones are created in Section 5.
Semiconductor and advanced manufacturers must apply to the Colorado economic development commission (commission) for a refund certificate approving their project and setting the maximum amount of income tax credits that the manufacturer may claim as a refund in connection with the project. Approved projects must timely commence and credits must be earned within twelve years of approval by the commission. In reviewing applications, the commission must prioritize taxpayers engaged in semiconductor or advanced manufacturing that have received or applied to receive matching funds under the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, the Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors and Science Act of 2022 (CHIPS Act), or other similar federal legislation.
The total amount of all refund certificates approved by the
commission cannot exceed $15 million per fiscal year; except that, if less than $15 million is approved at the end of any fiscal year, the remaining amount is available for approval in the next fiscal year. The total amount of all refund certificates approved by the commission for all fiscal years from July 1, 2023, through June 30, 2029, cannot exceed $75 million.
Section 2 creates, within the office of economic development
(office), a temporary task force comprised of state legislators, representatives of the office, and citizens with industry experience to study the effectiveness of financial incentives and other resources intended to attract and promote the development of advanced
manufacturing and other science, technology, engineering, or math (STEM) companies in Colorado during the 2023 legislative interim. The task force is required to report its findings to the general assembly and the governor by a specified date.
Sections 3 through 5 amend the enterprise zone income tax
credits for qualified investments, business facility employees, and research and experimental activities to incorporate the refund mechanism created in section 1.
Section 6 creates the CHIPS zone tax credit program. Similar to
the enterprise zone tax credit program, a local government may propose an area for designation as a CHIPS zone, which designation may promote the local economy through incentivizing businesses to locate in the area. A taxpayer located in a CHIPS zone may be eligible to claim an income tax credit under existing enterprise zone statutes for the taxpayer's qualified investments, business facility employees, or research and experimental activities. However, the tax benefits of CHIPS zones are only available to taxpayers engaged in semiconductor manufacturing, as that term is defined under the CHIPS Act.
All CHIPS zone tax credits must be precertified by the CHIPS
zone administrator. All such credits may be used to offset a taxpayer's liability or carried forward for a period not to exceed 12 years. Or, if the credits are included in a refund certificate approved by the commission pursuant to section 1, they may be used to claim a refund of 80% of the total amount of the credits.
CHIPS zones may be modified or terminated in the discretion of
the commission between income tax years 2023 and 2040; however, all CHIPS zones will terminate as a matter of law on December 31, 2040.
Section 7 modifies the Colorado job growth incentive tax credit to
provide for an award of credit to taxpayers engaged in an advanced manufacturing or semiconductor manufacturing project that brings a net job growth of a least 20 jobs with an average yearly wage of at least 75% of the average yearly wage of the county in which the taxpayer is located. Such taxpayers are the only subset of recipients of the Colorado job growth incentive tax credit that may pursue a refund in accordance with section 1.
| House Sponsors | A. Valdez (D) M. Soper (R) | Senate Sponsors | K. Priola (D) M. Baisley (R) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (05/20/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
HB23-1272
|
Title: |
Tax Policy That Advances Decarbonization |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 03/30/2023 | Description | Concerning tax policy that advances decarbonization, and, in connection therewith, extending tax credits for the purchase or lease of electric vehicles; creating tax credits for industrial facilities to implement greenhouse gas emissions reduction improvements, for expenditures made in connection with geothermal energy projects, for production of geothermal electricity generation, for the deployment of heat pump technology, for retail sales of electric bicycles, and for construction of sustainable aviation fuel production facilities; creating a temporary specific ownership tax rate reduction on a portion of the sale of electric medium- and heavy-duty trucks; temporarily decreasing the severance tax credit for oil and gas production, requiring the revenue that is attributable to the decrease be deposited in the decarbonization tax credits administration cash fund, and creating the cash fund; and making an appropriation. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes- State Government- State Revenue & Budget | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: S. Fenberg (D) L. Cutter (D) House: M. Weissman (D) J. Joseph (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (07/18/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Section 2 of the bill extends the innovative motor vehicles income
tax credit for the purchase or lease of electric motor vehicles and plug-in hybrid electric motor vehicles that weigh 8,500 pounds or less through tax year 2028 and adjusts the amount of the credit that may be claimed, including with certain allowances for additional credit amounts for vehicles purchased or leased at a location that allows the credit to be assigned and is assigned to a motor vehicle dealer or financing entity and for vehicles that have a manufacturer's suggested retail price below $30,000.
However, the credit cannot be claimed for vans, sport utility
vehicles, and pickup trucks that have a manufacturer's suggested retail price of $80,000 or more or for any other vehicle that has a manufacturer's suggested retail price of $55,000 or more. Additionally, if for any one of the state fiscal years 2025-26, 2026-27, or 2027-28, the state is not projected to exceed the state fiscal year spending limit imposed by section 20 of article X of the state constitution by 5% then for any income tax year commencing in the calendar year that begins in that fiscal year, the amount of the credit is reduced by 50%, and if the amount of the reduced credit is at or below $500, then no credit is allowed for such a tax year.
Section 3 extends the income tax credit for the purchase or lease
of an innovative truck through tax year 2028 and adjusts the amount of the credit that may be claimed. However, for light-duty trucks, if for any one of the state fiscal years 2025-26, 2026-27, or 2027-28, the state is not projected to exceed the state fiscal year spending limit imposed by section
20 of article X of the state constitution by 5% then for any income tax year commencing in the calendar year that begins in that fiscal year, the amount of the credit is reduced by 50%, and if the amount of the reduced credit is at or below $500, then no credit is allowed for such a tax year.
Additionally, under current law, the innovative motor vehicles tax
credit and the innovative trucks tax credit may be assigned by a purchaser to the entity that finances the purchase or lease of the vehicle. Sections 1 and 2 expand the purchaser's ability to assign the credits to a motor vehicle dealer in addition to a financing entity. For income tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, sections 1 and 2 also allow a tax exempt person or political subdivision of the state to claim or assign the tax credit.
Section 4 terminates an existing heat pump tax credit so that it is
allowed only for income tax years beginning on and after January 1, 2023, but before January 1, 2024.
Section 5 creates a refundable income tax credit allowable in tax
years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, but before January 1, 2033, for the owner of an industrial facility that undertakes a industrial study (study) or puts greenhouse gas emissions reduction improvements (improvements) into service. The credit is administered by the Colorado energy office (office). The amount of credit that can be claimed for an industrial study is 30% of the costs paid for completing the study up to $1 million.
The amount of credit that can be claimed for improvements is 30%
of the capital costs paid by the owner, not including the cost for design; except that for certain improvements that have the potential to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions but are not yet commercially available, the office may approve a higher percentage to be claimed of up to 50%. Owners must apply semi-annually for the credit to the office and the office reviews applications and awards a reservation of credits based on a merit-based review. Upon completion of a study or upon putting the improvements into service, the office issues the owner a tax credit certificate to claim the credit in the amount reserved to the owner. The availability of the credit is subject to an aggregate cap each application period. If the aggregate maximum amount is not claimed in a tax year, the aggregate maximum amount in the next income tax year is increased by an amount equal to the excess amount.
Section 6 creates a refundable tax credit for an expenditure an
eligible taxpayer makes in connection with a geothermal energy project, which is a project in the state that is intended to evaluate and develop a geothermal resource for the purpose of electricity production. The office is required to approve geothermal energy projects that can receive a qualified expenditure made by an eligible taxpayer. The office sets the amount of credit an eligible taxpayer may receive and reserves the amount of credit for the income tax year in which the eligible taxpayer
anticipates making the expenditure. Subject to specified limits on the maximum amount of credits that the office may approve and that an eligible taxpayer may receive, the office issues a tax credit certificate in the reserved amount of tax credit after an eligible taxpayer submits a cost certification of the qualified expenditure.
Section 7 creates a refundable tax credit for income tax years
beginning on or after January 1, 2024, but before January 1, 2033, that is administered by the office and is available to a person subject to income tax or a person or political subdivision of the state exempt from income tax that produces geothermal electricity for sale or for the person or political subdivision's own use. The credit amount is equal to $0.003 per kilowatt hour of geothermal electricity that is produced in the state in the tax year, up to a maximum amount of $1 million.
Section 8 creates a new refundable income tax credit for heat
pump technology for income tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, but before January 1, 2033. The office is responsible for maintaining a list of eligible taxpayers who meet certain industry criteria and who are allowed the credit for the installation of heat pump technology or a thermal energy network if the eligible taxpayer provides a discount from the amount charged for installation, unless the eligible taxpayer installs their own heat pump technology or thermal energy network. The amount of the tax credit is calculated based on the applicable percentage, set annually by the office, of a flat dollar amount which depends on the type of heat pump technology installed and the year the credit is claimed. The calculation of the amount of allowable credit may be modified depending on whether the heat pump technology is installed at a multifamily property, at a nonresidential building, or for a thermal energy network. However, for heat pump technology that is installed in an existing residential building or nonresidential building, if for any one of the state fiscal years 2025-26 through 2032-33, the state is not projected to exceed the state fiscal year spending limit imposed by section 20 of article X of the state constitution by 5% then for any income tax year commencing in the calendar year that begins in that fiscal year, the amount of the credit is reduced by 50%, and if the amount of the reduced credit is at or below $250, then no credit is allowed for such a tax year.
Section 9 creates a refundable income tax credit for income tax
years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, but before January 1, 2033, for the sale of new qualifying electric bicycles in the state. The credit is allowed in the amount of $800 to a qualified retailer who sells a qualifying electric bicycle to a resident of the state and offers a discount equal to the lesser of $700 or the purchase price. However, if for any one of the state fiscal years 2025-26 through 2032-33, the state is not projected to exceed the state fiscal year spending limit imposed by section 20 of article X of the state constitution by 5% then for any income tax
year commencing in the calendar year that begins in that fiscal year, the amount of the credit is reduced by 50%.
Section 10 creates a refundable income tax credit for income tax
years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, but before January 1, 2033, for a percentage of the actual costs incurred to construct, reconstruct, or erect a sustainable aviation fuel production facility in the state. The credit can be claimed by an aviation business, a sustainable aviation fuel producer, or an airport for the income tax year in which the production facility is put in service and is subject to aggregate caps for each income tax year for which the credit can be claimed. Additionally, the credit is subject to recapture if the sustainable aviation fuel production of a facility comprises less than 60% of the total fuel production of the facility in any of the 5 taxable years immediately following the taxable year in which the facility was placed in service.
Section 11 creates a mechanism to allow for advance payment of
income tax credits to a motor vehicle dealer or financing entity that has been assigned the innovative motor vehicle tax credit or innovative truck tax credit, or to a qualified retailer for the electric bicycle tax credit.
Section 12 creates a sales and use tax exemption for a fleet vehicle
that is a heavy-duty truck or a medium-duty truck. For tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, but before January 1, 2028, the exemption amount is equal to 50% of the purchase price of the vehicle, and for tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2028, but before January 1, 2033, the exemption amount is equal to 60% of the purchase price of the vehicle.
Section 13 terminates an existing sales and use tax exemption for
heat pump systems and heat pump water heaters used in commercial or residential buildings so that it is allowed only for income tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2023, but before January 1, 2024.
Section 14 creates a sales and use tax exemption for all sales to an
eligible taxpayer of heat pump technology and equipment necessary for the proper functioning of a thermal energy network and for the storage and use of the same for income tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, but before January 1, 2033.
Section 15 reduces the severance tax credit allowed for oil and gas
production. Under current law, the amount of credit allowed is calculated by applying rate of 87.5% of all ad valorem taxes assessed during the taxable year for accrual basis taxpayers or paid during the taxable year by cash basis taxpayers upon oil and gas, oil and gas leaseholds and leasehold interests, and oil and gas royalties and royalty interests. The bill reduces the rate to 75% for 2024 and 2025. For tax years beginning on and after January 1, 2026, the bill modifies the calculation for the oil and gas tax that otherwise would have been implemented in tax year 2025 by making a parallel downward adjustment so that the amount of credit is derived by multiplying 65.625% of the gross income of the well by the
mill levy fixed in the prior calendar year.
Section 16 requires that for state fiscal years 2024-25 through
2032-33, the revenue collected that is equal to the amount attributable to the decreased amount of severance tax credit allowed for oil and gas production is credited to the general fund; except that on July 1, 2025, the revenue must first be credited to the cash funds used for state fiscal years 2023-24 and 2024-25 by the office for the administration of the tax credits created by the bill and the remaining money is credited to the state general fund. Additionally, the stakeholder group that was required to convene pursuant to HB22-1391 is required to additionally consider long-term changes for the severance tax credit for oil and gas production.
Section 17 creates a partial, temporary, and specific ownership tax
exemption for new class A or class B personal property that is a fleet vehicle and meets the definition of a category 7 truck for purposes of the innovative truck tax credit.
Section 18 and section 19 allow for cities and counties to opt out
of the sales and use tax exemption created for sales of category 7 fleet vehicles that are heavy-duty trucks or medium-duty electric trucks, sales to an eligible taxpayer of heat pump technology and equipment necessary for a proper functioning of a thermal energy network, and for the storage and use of the same for income tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, but before January 1, 2033.
Section 20 gives the office the authority to expend money from the
industrial and manufacturing operations clean air grant program cash fund for state fiscal years 2023-24 and 2024-25 to administer and implement the industrial clean energy tax credit that is created in section 5.
Section 21 gives the office the authority to expend money from the
geothermal energy grant fund for state fiscal years 2023-24 and 2024-25 to administer and implement the tax credit for expenditure made in connection with a geothermal energy project that is created in section 6 and the geothermal electricity generation production tax credit that is created in section 7.
Section 22 gives the office the authority to expend money from the
community access to electric bicycles cash fund for state fiscal years 2023-24 and 2024-25 to administer and implement the electric bicycle tax credit created in section 9 for state fiscal years 2023-24 and 2024-25.
Section 23 gives the office the authority to expend money from the
electrifying school buses grant program cash fund for state fiscal years 2023-24 and 2024-25 to administer and implement the changes made to the innovative motor vehicles and innovative trucks tax credits set forth in sections 2 and 3.
| House Sponsors | M. Weissman (D) J. Joseph (D) | Senate Sponsors | S. Fenberg (D) L. Cutter (D) | House Committee | Energy and Environment | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (05/11/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
SB23-011
|
Title: |
Minor Driver's Education Requirements |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/10/2023 | Description | Concerning the regulation of processes associated with the licensing of a minor to drive a motor vehicle on a roadway. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Transportation & Motor Vehicles | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: F. Winter (D) House: A. Boesenecker (D) M. Lindsay (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (05/24/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Transportation Legislation Review Committee. For 10 income
tax years, section 1 of the bill creates a refundable income tax credit for purchasing driver education and training for a minor. The amount of the credit is the amount spent on driver education and training, but cannot exceed $1,000 per student. To claim a credit, an individual must provide
the department of revenue (department) with a receipt for the amount paid if the department requests the receipt.
Currently, a minor who is under 18 years of age may be issued a
driver's license or temporary driver's license if the minor has held an instruction permit for 12 months and has completed 50 hours of supervised driving, including 10 hours of night driving. Section 2 adds the requirements that the applicant must:
Complete a 30-hour driver education course, which may include an online course, approved by the department; and
Receive at least 6 hours of behind-the-wheel driving training with a driving instructor or, for minors who live in rural areas of the state, 12 hours of behind-the-wheel training with a parent, a legal guardian, or an alternate permit supervisor.
Additionally, section 2 eliminates the current instructional
requirements for minors under 16 and one-half years of age to hold an instruction permit for 12 months, complete 50 hours of supervised driving, including 10 hours of night driving, and receive 6 hours of behind-the-wheel driving training with a driving instructor or, if the minor lives more than 30 miles from a business offering driving instruction, at least 12 hours of training from a parent, legal guardian, or responsible adult to be eligible for issuance of a driver's license.
Section 2 also adds a requirement that a minor who is 18 years of
age or older and under 21 years of age must successfully complete a 4-hour prequalification driver awareness program approved by the department to be issued a driver's license or temporary driver's license.
Current law authorizes the department to issue an instruction
permit to a minor if the minor meets one of the following conditions:
A minor who is 16 years of age or older need not complete a driver education course;
A minor who is at least 15 and one-half years of age but under 16 years of age must have completed a driver education course or a 4-hour driver awareness course; or
A minor who is 15 years of age or older but under 15 and one-half years of age must have completed a driver education course.
Sections 2 and 3 eliminate the tiered system and require all minors
who are under 18 years of age to complete a 30-hour driver education course and minors who are 18 years of age or older but under 21 years of age to complete a 4-hour driver awareness course.
Section 5 prohibits a person who has been convicted of certain
violent or sexual crimes from providing behind-the-wheel driving instruction to minors. A commercial driving school is prohibited from employing such a driving instructor to provide behind-the-wheel driving instruction to minors. Each instructor employed by a commercial driving
school must obtain a fingerprint-based criminal history record check to verify that the instructor has not committed a disqualifying crime.
| House Sponsors | A. Boesenecker (D) M. Lindsay (D) | Senate Sponsors | F. Winter (D) | House Committee | | Senate Committee | Transportation and Energy | Status | Senate Committee on Finance Refer Amended to Appropriations (02/02/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
SB23-107
|
Title: |
Senior And Veterans With Disabilities Property Tax Exemption |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 01/31/2023 | Description | Concerning the expansion of existing property tax exemptions for certain owner-occupied primary residences. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: L. Liston (R) House:
| Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (09/06/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | For property tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2023, the
bill specifies that a senior is deemed to be a 10-year owner-occupier of a primary residence that the senior has owned and occupied for less than 10 years and therefore qualifies for the senior property tax exemption for the residence if:
The senior would have qualified for the senior property tax exemption for the senior's former primary residence but a medical necessity required the senior to stop occupying the former primary residence;
The senior has not previously received the exemption for a former primary residence on the basis of medical necessity; and
The senior has not owned and occupied another primary residence since the senior first stopped occupying the senior's former primary residence due to medical necessity.
Medical necessity is defined as one or more medical conditions
of a senior that a physician licensed to practice medicine in Colorado has certified on a form developed by the state property tax administrator as having required the senior to stop occupying the senior's prior primary residence.
When applying for an exemption on the basis of medical necessity,
a senior must provide the form establishing proof of medical necessity.
For property tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2023,
but before January 1, 2028, the bill increases the maximum amount of actual value of the owner-occupied residence of a qualifying senior or veteran with a disability that is exempt from property taxation from $200,000 to $300,000.
For property tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2028, the
bill increases the maximum amount of actual value of the owner-occupied residence of a qualifying senior or veteran with a disability that is exempt from property taxation from $300,000 to $500,000.
| House Sponsors | | Senate Sponsors | L. Liston (R) | House Committee | | Senate Committee | State, Veterans and Military Affairs | Status | Senate Committee on State, Veterans, & Military Affairs Postpone Indefinitely (02/09/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
SB23-143
|
Title: |
Retail Delivery Fees |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 02/08/2023 | Description | Concerning the administration of the existing retail delivery fees collected by the department of revenue, and, in connection therewith, making and reducing an appropriation. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Natural Resources & Environment- Transportation & Motor Vehicles | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: K. Van Winkle (R) S. Fenberg (D) House: M. Soper (R) C. Kipp (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (07/18/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Amend | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary |
In 2021, the 163 pages of SB21-260 created many fees to improve transportation, including a number of retail delivery fees, that together will deliver over $200 million/year to preserve, improve, and expand existing transportation infrastructure and expand the electric vehicle charging network. SB23-143 modifies SB21-260 by exempting businesses with under $500,000 in sales and new businesses (until they’ve made $500,000 in sales) from the retail delivery fee. Currently the retail delivery fee must be shown separately, just like sales tax. This would let the retailer include the fee, twenty seven cents ($.27) per delivery, in the delivery price or charge, or continue to show it separately.
The League believes in progressive personal and business taxes, grounds for supporting this bill’s exemption from the retail delivery fees for small businesses. [LWVCO 2022-2023 Impact on Issues p 30]
The Fiscal Note assumes retailers with sales under $500,000 will remain constant at 1.5 of total retail delivery fees collected, resulting in a $1.4M decrease in state revenue in 2023-24 and an estimated
Status: on 2/21/22 the Finance referred the bill to Appropriations on a vote of 7-0.
The Revenue Team recommends an amendment: that out-of-state retailers with less than $100,000 in Colorado sales be exempt from collecting Colorado’s retail delivery fee, to be consistent with their exemption to collect sales tax if their sales are less than $100,000.
| Summary | Currently, the state and several state enterprises impose fees on
retail sales of taxable tangible personal property delivered by motor vehicle to a location in the state. These fees are collectively known as the retail delivery fee (RDF), and a retailer who makes a retail delivery is required to add the RDF to the price of the retail delivery, collect it from the purchaser, and pay the RDF revenue to the department of revenue
(department), which distributes the revenue to the appropriate cash funds.
The department generally administers the RDF in the same manner
as the state sales and use tax. The bill modifies this administration by permitting a retailer to pay the RDF on behalf of the purchaser. If the retailer elects to pay the RDF, then the retailer is:
Not required to add the RDF to the price of the retail delivery, separately itemize the RDF, or collect the RDF from the purchaser, who is not liable for the amount nor eligible for a refund of an erroneously paid RDF; and
Required to remit the RDF on the date that would be required if the RDF had been received from the purchaser on the date of the retail delivery.
The department is required to waive any processing costs for a
retailer's electronic payment by automated clearing house (ACH) debit of the RDF if the charges would exceed the amount of the RDF revenue being remitted.
The bill creates an exemption from the RDF for a retail delivery
by a qualified business, which is a business that has $500,000 or less of retail sales in the prior year or is new, that applies retroactively to when RDFs were first imposed. A purchaser is not eligible for a refund of any RDF that is collected and remitted to the department by a qualified business prior to the effective date of the bill.
The bill also creates a primary definition for retail delivery that
is cross-referenced in other RDF provisions, and related to this change, a definition of retail sale is repealed where the cross reference makes it unnecessary.
| House Sponsors | M. Soper (R) C. Kipp (D) | Senate Sponsors | K. Van Winkle (R) S. Fenberg (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (05/04/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
SB23-175
|
Title: |
Financing Of Downtown Development Authority Projects |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 03/02/2023 | Description | Concerning the use of tax increment financing by downtown development authorities. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Local Government | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: J. Rich (R) S. Jaquez Lewis (D) House: A. Boesenecker (D) R. Taggart (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/22/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Currently, the governing body of any municipality in the state may,
with voter approval, establish a downtown development authority (authority) to assist the municipality in the development and redevelopment of its central business district. An authority may, if approved by the voters, use tax increment financing (TIF) to generate capital by dedicating growth in property tax or sales tax revenue to finance projects within the boundaries of the authority. The tax increment is the amount of additional tax revenue represented by the difference between the actual amount of tax revenue collected after the TIF is established and the base year tax revenue within the boundaries of the authority. The revenue that is attributed to the growing tax base is the incremental revenue used to finance the redevelopment projects within the boundaries of the authority (incremental revenue).
Currently, an authority may use a TIF arrangement for a period of
30 years with the option for one 20-year extension. For property tax revenue only, the bill creates automatic and recurring additional 20-year extension periods during which an authority may use a TIF arrangement, unless the governing body of the municipality opts out of the extensions. The first additional extension period begins upon the expiration of the original 50-year period.
During the 20-year extension period allowed pursuant to current
law, 50% of the incremental revenue is allocated to a special fund of the municipality that created the authority (special fund), to be used to finance projects within the boundaries of the authority. The other 50% of the incremental revenue is allocated to the other governmental entities that levy property taxes within the boundaries of the authority, unless the municipality and all of the other governmental entities reach an alternative agreement. For the automatic and recurring 20-year extension periods, the bill continues the default split of the incremental revenue unless the municipality and all of the other governmental entities reach an alternative agreement.
During the last 10 years of a 20-year extension allowed pursuant
to current law, the base year revenue for the TIF is recalculated every year. For an automatic and recurring 20-year extension period, the bill requires the base year revenue to be recalculated every year.
Pursuant to current law, the governing body of a municipality must
incur any debt to be used to finance the projects of the authority. The bill allows a municipality and an authority to enter into an intergovernmental agreement through which the municipality may delegate to the board of the authority the power to incur debt and to pledge money in a special fund of the municipality for the payment of the debt. The bonds issued by the board must be authorized by a resolution of the board and must be issued by the authority acting on behalf of the municipality.
1
| House Sponsors | A. Boesenecker (D) R. Taggart (R) | Senate Sponsors | J. Rich (R) S. Jaquez Lewis (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (06/02/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
SB23-207
|
Title: |
Sales And Use Tax Refund For Data Center Purchases |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 03/20/2023 | Description | Concerning a refund of the state sales and use tax paid on certain items purchased in connection with an eligible data center. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - State Government | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: J. Buckner (D) House:
| Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/22/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Oppose | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary |
The bill allows a data center business or a data center operator (taxpayer) to claim a refund of all state sales and use tax that the taxpayer paid for construction materials or data center equipment that is for the construction or operation of an eligible data center. The bill does require 10 employees and an investment of $25 million to qualify.
Purpose: This bill is a proposal to essentially expand the state manufacturing exemption to the data centers, but also exempt the costs of the physical building from sales and use tax.
Fiscal Note
The fiscal note for SB23-207 has not yet been produced.
League position:
The League of Women Voters believes responsible government should maintain an equitable and flexible system of taxation, with minimal tax preferences. LWVUS Impact on Issues 2022-2024 pp 134-135
LWVCO has supported simplified tax codes that still require as many people as possible to participate in funding state needs, commensurate with ability to pay.
Reasons For Opposing:
This bill dilutes the tax base. While there is no fiscal note yet on this bill, we do know how the statute that it is attempting to imitate, diluted the tax base. When the manufacturing exemption bill was passed, it was projected to cost the first year, one million dollars. It actually cost ten million dollars and the costs have climbed vertical since that time. This bill will be very expensive, because of the minimum investment of $25 million dollars; each $25 million invested in a data center will lose well over a quarter million from state revenue.
LWVCO Opposes this bill.
| Summary | For the state fiscal year beginning July 1, 2025, and for each state
fiscal year thereafter through the state fiscal year beginning July 1, 2034, the bill allows a data center business or a data center operator (taxpayer) to claim a refund of all state sales and use tax that the taxpayer paid for construction materials or data center equipment that is for the
construction or operation of an eligible data center.
To be eligible to claim a sales and use tax refund, the taxpayer is
required to obtain certification from the Colorado office of economic development (office) stating that the data center is an eligible data center and that the taxpayer may claim a refund of state sales and use tax (certification). An eligible data center is defined as a data center that creates a specified number of jobs, generates a specified amount of revenue, and requires a specified amount of power. The sales and use tax refund is allowed only for the sale, storage, or use of construction materials or data center equipment that occurs on or after the date that the taxpayer obtains certification from the office.
When a taxpayer believes that the data center that will be identified
in a sales and use tax refund application satisfies the criteria to be an eligible data center, the taxpayer may apply to the office for the certification. The taxpayer must demonstrate in the certification application that the data center is an eligible data center and the taxpayer is required to submit any documentation or proof that the office deems necessary to determine whether a data center satisfies the criteria to be an eligible data center.
If, based on the information provided to the office and after
consultation with the economic development commission, the office determines that a data center satisfies the criteria to be an eligible data center, the office is required to notify the department of revenue (department) and issue a certification to the taxpayer.
To claim a sales and use tax refund, a taxpayer must submit a
refund application and a copy of the certification from the office to the department. A taxpayer is required to submit certain documentation with the application.
The bill allows a taxpayer to assign a certification to specified
types of parties after it is awarded.
The bill requires the office and the department to prepare an
annual report including information regarding eligible data centers and state sales and use tax refunds allowed. The office is required to submit the report to the finance committees of the house of representatives and senate.
| House Sponsors | | Senate Sponsors | J. Buckner (D) | House Committee | | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Senate Committee on Finance Refer Amended to Appropriations (04/11/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
SB23-303
|
Title: |
Reduce Property Taxes And Voter-approved Revenue Change |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 05/01/2023 | Description | Concerning a reduction in property taxes, and, in connection therewith, creating a limit on annual property tax increases for certain local governments; temporarily reducing the valuation for assessment of certain residential and nonresidential property; creating new subclasses of property; permitting the state to retain and spend revenue up to the proposition HH cap; requiring the retained revenue to be used to reimburse certain local governments for lost property tax revenue and to be deposited in the state education fund to backfill the reduction in school district property tax revenue; transferring general fund money to the state public school fund and to a cash fund to also be used for the reimbursements; eliminating the cap on the amount of excess state revenues that may be used for the reimbursements for the 2023 property tax year; referring a ballot issue; and making an appropriation. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes- Local Government- State Revenue & Budget | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: C. Hansen (D) S. Fenberg (D) House: M. Weissman (D) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (08/08/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Section 3 of the bill requires the secretary of state to refer a ballot
issue to voters at the November 2023 election that asks voters whether property taxes should be reduced and that seeks voter approval to retain and spend excess state revenues that will be used to backfill some of the reduced property tax revenue. Most of the bill only becomes effective if the voters approve the ballot issue.
Local government property tax revenue limit. Beginning with
the 2023 property tax year, section 6 establishes a limit on specified property tax revenue for local governments, excluding those that are home rule and school districts, that is equal to inflation above the property tax revenue from the prior property tax year (limit). A local government may establish a temporary property tax credit, which does not change the gross mill levy, that is up to the number of mills necessary to prevent the local government's property tax revenue from exceeding the limit. Alternatively, the governing board may approve a mill levy that would cause the local government to exceed the limit, if the governing board approves the mill levy at a public meeting that meets certain criteria.
Valuation changes. The valuation for assessment (valuation) of
nonresidential real and personal property, excluding producing mines and lands or leaseholds producing oil or gas, is based on an assessment rate of 29% of actual value, but currently, there are temporary reductions in the valuation for certain subclasses of property. Section 8 creates the additional temporary reductions. For the 2023 property tax year:
For lodging property, property listed under any improved commercial subclass code, and all other nonresidential property, excluding agricultural property and renewable energy production property, the assessment rate is reduced from 27.9% to 27.85%;
For renewable energy agricultural land, which is a newly created subclass of agricultural property that is valued under section 7, the assessment rate is reduced from 26.4%
to 21.9%.
Thereafter, the assessment rate for lodging property and all
nonresidential property, excluding agricultural property and renewable energy production property and property that is not under a vacant land subclass, is reduced from 29% to:
27.85% for the 2024 through 2026 property tax years;
27.65% for the 2027 and 2028 property tax years;
26.9% for the 2029 and 2030 property tax years; and
25.9% or 26.9% for the 2031 and 2032 property tax years, depending on the increase in the valuation in the 32 counties with the smallest increases from the 2030 to 2031 property tax years (revenue increases).
The assessment rate for agricultural property, excluding renewable
energy agricultural land, and renewable energy property is reduced from 29% to:
26.4% for the 2025 through 2030 property tax years; and
25.9% or 26.4% for the 2031 and 2032 property tax years, depending on the increase in the valuation in the 32 counties with the smallest revenue increases.
The assessment rate for renewable energy agricultural land is
reduced from 29% to 21.9% for the 2024 through 2032 property tax years.
Beginning with the 2033 property tax year, all of the temporary
valuation reductions expire and the valuation of all nonresidential real property is 29% of the actual value of the property.
The valuation of residential real property is based on an
assessment rate of 7.15% of actual value, but currently, there are temporary reductions in the valuation. Section 9 further reduces the valuation of residential real property. For the 2023 property tax year, the valuation is reduced from 6.765% of the amount equal to the actual value minus the lesser of $15,000 or the amount that causes the valuation to be $1,000 (alternate amount) to 6.7% of the amount equal to the actual value minus the lesser of $40,000 or the alternate amount.
For the 2024 property tax year, the valuation is reduced as follows:
For multi-family residential real property, the valuation is reduced from 6.8% of the actual value to 6.7% of the amount equal to the actual value minus the lesser of $40,000 or the alternate amount; and
For all other residential real property, the valuation is reduced from an estimate of 6.98% of the actual value to 6.7% of the amount equal to the actual value minus the lesser of $40,000 or the alternate amount.
For the 2025 through 2032 property tax years:
For multi-family residential real property and primary residence real property, including multi-family primary
residence real property, the valuation is reduced from 7.15% of the actual value to 6.7% of the actual value minus the lesser of $40,000 or the alternate amount;
For qualified-senior primary residence real property, including multi-family qualified-senior primary residence real property, the valuation is reduced from 7.15% of the actual value to 6.7% of the amount equal to the actual value minus $140,000 or the alternate amount; and
For all other residential real property, the assessment rate is reduced from 7.15% to 7.1%.
Beginning with the 2033 property tax year, all of the temporary
valuation reductions expire and the valuation of all residential real property is 7.15% of the actual value of the property.
The bill also establishes that all of the temporary reductions in
valuation for residential and nonresidential property created in the bill are contingent on the state's ability to retain and spend state surplus up to the proposition HH cap. If, for any reason, excluding a legislative enactment by the general assembly, the state is not permitted to retain and spend this money, then the temporary reductions in the bill do not apply.
Section 11 creates the residential subclass of primary residence
real property for owner-occupiers and establishes administrative procedures related to the classification that are based on the procedures for the homestead exemption, with those procedures expanded to treat civil union partners like spouses. Section 11 also creates the residential subclass of qualified-senior primary residence real property, which is a property with an owner-occupier who previously qualified for the senior homestead exemption for a different property and who does not qualify for the exemption for the current property tax year.
Sections 1, 12, 13, 15, and 16 delay deadlines as necessary due to
the valuation changes for the 2023 property tax year.
The state is currently required to reimburse local governmental
entities for property tax revenue lost as a result of the reductions in valuation enacted in Senate Bill 22-238. Section 14 modifies this backfill mechanism by:
Specifying that the amount of revenue lost for a property tax year is based on a local governmental entity's mill levy for the 2022 property tax year, excluding specified mills;
Including the additional property tax revenue reductions that result from the bill in the backfill for the 2023 property tax year;
Eliminating the maximum amount of the backfill for the 2023 property tax year that is a refund of excess state revenues;
Extending the backfill for the 2024 through 2032 property tax years for the valuation reductions in the bill, but making
a local governmental entity that has an increase in real property total valuation of 20% or more from the 2022 property tax year ineligible for the backfill;
Creating the local government backfill cash fund, which includes a $128 million general fund transfer, and requiring the money from the fund to be used to backfill revenue to local governments beginning with the 2024 property tax year; and
Beginning with the 2024 property tax year, proportionally reducing the amount that each eligible local government receives, if necessary to avoid exceeding the total amount that is available for the backfills statewide.
Section 14 also modifies the backfill mechanism to treat cities and
counties as counties instead of municipalities, and this change is not contingent on voter-approval of the ballot issue. Section 18 requires the department of revenue to calculate the amount of excess state revenues that will be refunded for the fiscal year 2022-23 with and without the changes from the bill.
Voter-approved revenue change. If the voters approve the
referred ballot issue, then the state will be authorized to retain and spend revenues up to the proposition HH cap, created in section 3. For the 2023-24 fiscal year, the proposition HH cap is equal to the excess state revenues cap for the prior fiscal year, adjusted for inflation plus 1% and population changes. Thereafter, the proposition HH cap is equal to the proposition HH cap for the prior fiscal year, adjusted for inflation plus 1% and population changes. The proposition HH cap is also annually adjusted for the qualification or disqualification of enterprises and debt service changes.
If the general assembly does not enact assessment rates for the
2033 property tax year that are the same or lower than the assessment rates for the 2032 property tax year described above, then the proposition HH cap is reduced to be equal to the excess state revenues cap, and the state will retain $0 under this authority beginning with the 2031-32 fiscal year. Thereafter, the general assembly may partially or wholly restore the proposition HH cap without additional voter approval if the general assembly enacts valuation reductions equal to or greater than those for the 2032 property tax year.
The amount retained under this authority is first used in the
following fiscal year to backfill certain local governments for the reduced property tax revenue as a result of the property tax changes in the bill and Senate Bill 22-238, and the remainder is transferred to the state education fund to offset the revenue that school districts lose as a result of the property tax changes. Section 5 requires the state controller to include the new voter-approved revenue change in the annual report on TABOR revenues.
Sections 2, 4, 10, and 17 make conforming amendments related
to the valuation changes and related procedures and the voter-approved revenue changes.
| House Sponsors | M. Weissman (D) | Senate Sponsors | C. Hansen (D) S. Fenberg (D) | House Committee | Appropriations | Senate Committee | Appropriations | Status | Governor Signed (05/24/2023) | Amendments | |
|
Bill:
SB23-304
|
Title: |
Property Tax Valuation |
Votes | Votes all Legislators | Hearing Date | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Room | | Intro Date | 05/01/2023 | Description | Concerning changes to property tax valuation practices, and, in connection therewith, requiring property tax assessors to consider certain information when valuing real property, requiring certain counties use an alternative protest and appeal procedure in any year of general reassessment of real property that is valued biennially, and clarifying that data that a property tax assessor is required to provide at the request of a taxpayer must include certain information. | History | Bill History | Save to Calendar | | Bill Subject | - Fiscal Policy & Taxes | Bill Docs | Bill Documents | Sponsors (House and Senate) | Senate: C. Hansen (D) S. Fenberg (D) House: S. Bird (D) L. Frizell (R) | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (07/17/2023) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Position | Monitor | Category | | Comment | | Custom Summary | | Summary | Section 1 of the bill specifies that when a property tax assessor
values real property, the property tax assessor must consider:
The current use;
Existing zoning and other governmental land use or environmental regulations and restrictions;
Multi-year leases or other arrangements affecting the use of or income from real property;
Easements and reservations of record; and
Covenants, conditions, and restrictions of record.
Beginning January 1, 2024, section 2 requires certain counties to
use an alternative procedure to determine objections and protests of property tax valuations in any year of general reassessment of real property that is valued biennially.
Currently, at the request of a taxpayer, a property tax assessor is
required to provide the taxpayer with certain data that the assessor used to determine the value of the taxpayer's property. Section 3 clarifies that the data the assessor is required to provide must include the primary method and rates the assessor used to value the property.
| House Sponsors | S. Bird (D) L. Frizell (R) | Senate Sponsors | C. Hansen (D) S. Fenberg (D) | House Committee | Finance | Senate Committee | Finance | Status | Governor Signed (05/24/2023) | Amendments | |
|
|