Colorado lawmakers want voters to know cost of some ballot measures

Colorado lawmakers want voters to know cost of some ballot measures

In the 2024 election, Colorado voters passed a conservative-backed ballot measure that directed cash-strapped lawmakers to find $350 million for police training.

Should a similar proposal come before voters again, state lawmakers want the public to know the budget impact the ballot measure would have.

The Colorado House passed a bill Friday that would require more information to be included in the ballot language of some voter initiatives. If they direct the state to spend money without providing a source, they’d have to either identify which existing programs would be cut to pay for it — or list the large pots of state money that may be affected, like Medicaid or school funding.

House Bill 1084 was passed along party lines, clearing its first chamber. The proposal is aimed at ballot measures that seek to increase state spending without an attached funding source, such as a tax increase.

“By having more information, we’re providing that transparency, and we’re allowing the citizens to have a more informed choice as they’re voting for these initiatives,” Rep. Cecelia Espenoza, a Denver Democrat, told lawmakers during a committee debate last month. She’s sponsoring the bill with fellow Denver Democratic Rep. Sean Camacho.

Espenoza and Camacho both linked the bill to the 2024 passage of Proposition 130, the police funding ballot measure.

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