During the special session, the legislature passed a bill ceding the responsibility of cutting the budget to the governor’s office

Gov. Jared Polis said Thursday he will reverse the state’s plans to increase reimbursement rates for health care providers who see Medicaid recipients to help address a roughly $750 million hole in the state budget caused by the Republican federal tax and spending bill.

That will save the state about $38 million by forgoing a planned 1.6% rate hike. That’s the single biggest cut made by the governor.

Polis also said he will slash spending on higher education (by some $12 million) and grants (like $2 million to tackle health disparities) as part of $252 million in total cuts and redirected spending to help balance the budget this fiscal year, which began July 1. The governor said he is making changes to about 20 budget line items.

“My two commitments in managing these cuts — we’ve kept them both,” he said. “We are not cutting our public schools one dime. K-12 funding is held harmless. We also have zero cuts to public safety.”

The governor told reporters of his budget-cut plans Thursday morning and is set to present to the legislature’s Joint Budget Committee later in the day. Lawmakers wrapped up a special legislative session Tuesday to partially close the hole by increasing the taxes paid by businesses and business owners.

The General Assembly also passed a bill letting the state sell tax credits to raise $100 million to offset the deficit. The credits, which will effectively let the companies that buy them prepay their taxes through 2033 at a discount, will be sold at least 80 cents on the dollar.

The governor’s office also told the JBC on Thursday that the budget situation is even worse than they previously thought because of higher than expected Medicaid enrollment. As a result, Polis plans to tap about $325 million of the state’s budget reserves to make up the difference.

“We will have a reserve north of 13% after all these actions are done,” Polis said, “and that is more than twice the reserve than when I took office.”

During the special session, the legislature passed a bill ceding the responsibility of cutting the budget to the governor’s office, saying the executive branch was best positioned to slash spending quickly. But the move also had the political benefit of handing a hot financial potato off a lame-duck governor in Polis, who is term-limited and leaves office in early 2027.

The legislation requires the governor to notify the JBC of his spending cuts, but it gives him unilateral authority to slash the budget. The cuts start to take effect Monday.

  • ileftreddit@piefed.social
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    5 days ago

    I thought CO had tons of surplus revenue due to the recreational cannabis market, has the extra cash from sales of cannabis already been kind of earmarked/spent/used up already ? Genuinely asking, I live in NY

    • DancingBear@midwest.social
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      4 days ago

      By law Colorado has to give back taxes when there is a surplus,

      They’ve been trying to pass legislation to stop this, because of situations like this, but voters keep saying no

      • skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de
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        4 days ago

        Don’t start that old tired TABOR argument.

        In Colorado, citizens get to vote when the state tries to increase taxes.

        Colorado’s congress always drafts bills with language like, “we want to fix school roofs, and also give superintendents Bentleys, and we can increase this percentage whenever we want.”

        The bills that don’t have the nonsense scams, voters pass, as it turns out Colorado voters are intelligent.

        One of the State congress’ recent gambits, was to fund a firearms safety training program with money from Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Why this route? Because they’d have to ask voters to approve the money needed, and rather than do that, they decided to poach vehicle registration revenue from the state parks department, just to pass a rushed bill in a year when America is on the brink of no longer existing.

        Time and again, they haven’t shown voters they can be trusted, why would voters let them do whatever they want?

        The CO budget deficit right now is more nuanced at any rate. State planned to do certain things, Federal toilet decided to change the rules of the game halfway through the year. Federal congress of traitors and Mango Mussolini are the real cause of the financial issues right now, across the entire United States.

      • OboTheHobo@ttrpg.network
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        4 days ago

        Huh? In the 2024 colorado election there was a ballot measure to retain excess tax from sports betting and it overwhelmingly passed. Year before there was a similar one for excess tax on tobacco, also passed by a ton. Are you referring to something different?

        • DancingBear@midwest.social
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          4 days ago

          I hope you’re wrong, it just serves to arbitrarily lock spending. I think it’s a republican relic. Pretty bad policy.

    • Stamau123@lemmy.worldOP
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      5 days ago

      I believe those weed taxes are for K-12 only, and that’s one of the departments he’s not cutting

    • skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de
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      4 days ago

      Nope, not some promised land magic income and never was. And decreasing as weed tourism decreases (as other states legalize).

      They’ve also gone through many consolidation phases where many mom n pop shops have been gathered up by the chains, and quality has dropped as well. Some report a while back was put out that the vendors aren’t matching what is on the label and product is weaker than claimed.

      It’s run its course.