
Within the 2024 election, Colorado voters handed a conservative-backed poll measure that directed cash-strapped lawmakers to search out $350 million for police coaching.
Ought to the same proposal come earlier than voters once more, state lawmakers need the general public to know the price range impression the poll measure would have.
The Colorado Home handed a invoice Friday that may require extra data to be included within the poll language of some voter initiatives. In the event that they direct the state to spend cash with out offering a supply, they’d should both determine which present applications can be reduce to pay for it — or checklist the massive pots of state cash which may be affected, like Medicaid or college funding.
Home Invoice 1084 was handed alongside celebration strains, clearing its first chamber. The proposal is geared toward poll measures that search to extend state spending with out an hooked up funding supply, corresponding to a tax enhance.
“By having extra data, we’re offering that transparency, and we’re permitting the residents to have a extra knowledgeable selection as they’re voting for these initiatives,” Rep. Cecelia Espenoza, a Denver Democrat, instructed lawmakers throughout a committee debate final month. She’s sponsoring the invoice with fellow Denver Democratic Rep. Sean Camacho.
Espenoza and Camacho each linked the invoice to the 2024 passage of Proposition 130, the police funding poll measure.
The proposal, backed by the conservative group Advance Colorado, didn’t present a funding supply or determine the place the $350 million ought to come from. Although the poll measure additionally didn’t say the state wanted to offer all of that cash directly, lawmakers have been already bracing for a price range shortfall final yr and groaned below the pressure of discovering any extra funding.
Ought to HB-1084 go and the same poll measure is run once more, the proponents may determine state funding they wish to redirect to pay for his or her thought. But when that cash isn’t sufficient, or if the proponents don’t determine any applications to chop, the poll language must embody a warning that the proposal would probably require cuts to Medicaid and college funding. The language would come with a particular greenback quantity to be diminished, as effectively.
All the Home’s Republican members opposed the invoice.
“This invoice speculates numbers in a approach that frames residents’ initiatives as dangerous,” stated Rep. Brandi Bradley of Littleton. “This isn’t impartial data; that is about authorities shaping the narrative about insurance policies the federal government doesn’t like.”
The invoice now strikes to the Senate, the place it wants a number of votes earlier than it might go to Gov. Jared Polis for consideration.
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