State hospital provider fee can't become an enterprise fund, says legal memo
Colorado’s Office of Legislative Legal Services has told state Senate President Bill Cadman
that the Legislature cannot convert the hospital provider fee into an
enterprise fund as a way to boost money for road improvements — an
opinion that Cadman said should end the debate over whether such a move
should be undertaken.
Democrats and business leaders have ramped up a campaign
over the past month to convince reluctant Republicans to pull the
seven-year-old hospital provider fee out from under the state’s Taxpayer
Bill of Rights revenue cap and make it into an enterprise, which would
significantly increase the chances of the state general fund
transferring $800 million to transportation over the next four years.
Road funding is
tied to the fee — which hospitals charge upon themselves and leverage
the revenues to get more federal funding — because road funding falls
when revenues exceed the TABOR cap, and exceeding the cap is far more
likely if the roughly $700 million a year coming in from the fee counts
against the cap.
Cadman,
R-Colorado Springs, said he had been working through the off-season to
come up with some legislative solution to the fee/road funding issue
when he decided to ask the Office of Legislative Legal Services (OLLS)
on Dec. 31 for its opinion on the legality of enterprising the fee.
He said he
received the opinion back within 40 minutes, leaving him assured of the
definitiveness of the answer and of the belief that someone had sought
the opinion before.
“There is no
'maybe' in this opinion. Our attorneys say it shall not stand,” Cadman
said at a news conference in his Capitol office one week before the Jan.
13 start of the four-month legislative session. “And we’re going to
honor it just like we honor the constitution.”
But Henry
Sobanet, director of the governor’s Office of State Planning and
Budgeting, issued a statement in reaction to Cadman’s release of the
memo saying that Hickenlooper’s office worked with office of state
Attorney General Cynthia Coffman
in 2015 before it first proposed the idea of converting the hospital
fee, which then became a bill that passed the House but died in the
Senate. It was assured that turning the fee into an enterprise is legal,
he said.
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