Colorado 2022 2022 Regular Session

Colorado House Bill HB1411 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/29/2022

                    Page 1 
April 29, 2022  HB 22-1411  
 
 Legislative Council Staff 
Nonpartisan Services for Colorado’s Legislature 
 
Fiscal Note  
  
 
Drafting Number: 
Prime Sponsors: 
LLS 22-0957  
Rep. McCluskie; Herod 
Sen. Moreno  
Date: 
Bill Status: 
Fiscal Analyst: 
April 29, 2022 
House Appropriations 
Clare Pramuk | 303-866-2677 
clare.pramuk@state.co.us  
Bill Topic: MONEY FROM CORONAVIRUS STATE FISCAL RECOVERY FUND  
Summary of  
Fiscal Impact: 
☐ State Revenue 
☒ State Expenditure 
☒ State Transfer 
☐ TABOR Refund 
☐ Local Government 
☐ Statutory Public Entity 
 
The bill amends the administrative requirements for spending federal American 
Rescue Plan Act funds and substitutes money that was allocated in 2021 legislation 
from the Federal Coronavirus State Fiscal Recovery Fund with General Fund or cash 
funds through transfers and changes to appropriations. 
Appropriation 
Summary: 
The bill makes adjustments to funding sources in other bills.  See State Appropriations 
section. 
Fiscal Note 
Status: 
The fiscal note reflects the introduced bill. 
 
 
Table 1 
State Fiscal Impacts Under HB 22-1411 
 
  
Budget Year 
FY 2022-23 
Out Year 
FY 2023-24 
Revenue  	-       	-       
Expenditures 
 
-       	-       
Transfers 	General Fund ($64,500,000)        	-       
 	Cash Funds ($41,000,000) 	-       
 	Cash Funds $105,500,000 	- 
 	Net Transfer 	($0)       	-       
Other Budget Impacts  	- 	- 
 
 
 
 
    Page 2 
April 29, 2022  HB 22-1411  
 
Summary of Legislation 
The bill amends the administrative requirements for spending federal American Rescue Plan Act 
(ARPA) funds and substitutes money that was allocated in 2021 legislation from the Federal 
Coronavirus State Fiscal Recovery Fund with General Fund or cash funds through transfers and 
changes to appropriations. 
 
The changes to the administrative requirements include: 
 
 requiring subrecipients to spend or obligate ARPA funds by November 30, 2024, expend the funds 
by December 11, 2026, and return unspent funds by December 11, 2026; 
 requiring the State Controller to transmit the unspent funds to the U.S. Department of the 
Treasury; 
 clarifying that the compliance, reporting, record-keeping, and program evaluation requirements 
established by the Office of State Planning and Budgeting and the State Controller apply to a 
person regardless of whether the person is a beneficiary or a subrecipient and regardless of 
whether the person receives the money directly from a department or from a subrecipient; 
 requiring the Department of Revenue to provide the controller with information about reductions 
or increases in net tax revenue; and 
 establishing that money transferred from the fund to a recipient fund is available to be reported 
as being an expenditure for the provision of government services. 
State Transfers 
For FY 2022-23, the bill requires the following transfers. 
 
From the General Fund: 
 
 $28.0 million to the Housing Development Grant Fund; 
 $30.9 million to the Workers, Employers, and Workforce Centers Cash Fund; and 
 $5.6 million to the Revenue Loss Restoration Cash Fund.  
 
From Cash Funds: 
 
 $10.0 million from Workers, Employers, and Workforce Centers Cash Fund to the Revenue Loss 
Restoration Cash Fund; 
 $1.5 million from the Affordable Housing and Home Ownership Cash Fund (that originates from 
the General Fund) to the Housing Development Grant Fund; and 
 $29.5 million from the Housing Development Grant Fund to the Affordable Housing and Home 
Ownership Cash Fund. 
State Expenditures 
The bill will increase workload for the Department of Personnel and Administration, the Department 
of Revenue, and the Treasury Department to comply with the bill requirements.  This increase does 
not require an increase in appropriations.  Page 3 
April 29, 2022  HB 22-1411  
 
Effective Date 
The bill takes effect 90 days following adjournment of the General Assembly sine die, assuming no 
referendum petition is filed. 
State Appropriations 
For the current FY 2021-22: 
  
 the bill changes the source of the appropriation for House Bill 21-1288 to specify that the amount 
from the Colorado Startup Loan program Fund is from the General Fund instead of from ARPA 
funds; and  
 the bill changes the source of the appropriation for House Bill 21-1329 to specify that the amount 
from the Affordable Housing and Home Ownership Cash Fund is from the General Fund instead 
of ARPA funds. 
State and Local Government Contacts 
Personnel  Revenue Treasury 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The revenue and expenditure impacts in this fiscal note represent changes from current law under the bill for each 
fiscal year.  For additional information about fiscal notes, please visit:  leg.colorado.gov/fiscalnotes.