Colorado 2022 2022 Regular Session

Colorado Senate Bill SB172 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/04/2022

                    Page 1 
April 4, 2022  SB 22-172  
 
 Legislative Council Staff 
Nonpartisan Services for Colorado’s Legislature 
 
Fiscal Note  
  
 
Drafting Number: 
Prime Sponsors: 
LLS 22-0909  
Sen. Winter; Rankin 
Rep. Roberts; Rich  
Date: 
Bill Status: 
Fiscal Analyst: 
April 4, 2022 
Senate HHS 
Josh Abram | 303-866-3561 
Josh.Abram@state.co.us  
Bill Topic: COLORADO RURAL HEALTH -CARE WORKFORCE INITIATIVE  
Summary of  
Fiscal Impact: 
☐ State Revenue 
☒ State Expenditure 
☐ State Transfer 
☐ TABOR Refund 
☐ Local Government 
☐ Statutory Public Entity 
 
The bill establishes the Colorado Rural Health-Care Workforce Initiative to expand the 
number of health-care professionals practicing in rural or frontier counties.  The bill 
increases state expenditures beginning FY 2022-23 
Appropriation 
Summary: 
For FY 2022-23, the bill requires appropriations totaling $4,950,000 to multiple 
institutions of higher education. 
Fiscal Note 
Status: 
The fiscal note reflects the introduced bill. 
 
 
Table 1 
State Fiscal Impacts Under SB 22-172 
 
  
Budget Year 
FY 2022-23 
Out Year 
FY 2023-24 
Revenue  	-     	-     
Expenditures 	General Fund 	$4,950,000     $150,000     
Transfers  	-     	-     
Other Budget Impacts General Fund Reserve 	$742,500 $22,500 
 
 
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April 4, 2022  SB 22-172  
 
Summary of Legislation 
The bill establishes the Colorado Rural Health-Care Workforce Initiative to expand the number of 
health-care professionals practicing in rural or frontier counties.  The bill permits an institution of 
higher education to establish a health-care professional rural track, or expand an existing rural track, 
within specified health care degree programs at the schools.  The bill specifies required components 
of a rural track program, including outreach campaigns, scholarships, didactic curriculum, and 
clinical experience. 
 
Institutions may use funding for faculty compensation, housing costs for participating students, 
training preceptors who practice in rural counties, and student scholarships.  Students receiving a 
scholarship must commit to working as a health-care provider in rural areas for two years after 
completing their credential.   
 
Schools receiving funding must report how the school intends to use the funding to establish or 
expand a rural track to the Rural Program Office (the office) at the University of Colorado Health 
Sciences Center .  The office must provide assistance to the institutions with recruitment, admissions, 
housing support, clinical instruction, and other technical or administrative needs of operating a rural 
track.  The office must establish metrics to evaluate the effectiveness of the initiative and the rural 
tracks, and prepare and submit an annual progress report to the General Assembly. 
 
The bill requires that the General Assembly annually appropriate $150,000 to the University of 
Colorado Health Sciences Center for the Rural Programs Office to help administer the initiative.  For 
FY 2022-23 only, the General Assembly must appropriate up to $400,000 to the following 12 programs 
at state supported institutions of higher education: 
 
 Adams State University, in its nursing program; 
 Colorado Mesa University, in its nursing program; 
 Colorado School of Public Health, in its master of public health program (CU, CSU, UNC); 
 Colorado State University - Pueblo, in its school of nursing; 
 Metropolitan State University of Denver, in its nursing program; 
 University of Colorado, in its school of dental medicine; 
 University of Colorado, in its school of medicine; 
 University of Colorado, Colorado Springs campus, in its nursing program; 
 University of Northern Colorado, in its school of nursing; 
 Western Colorado University, in its master of behavioral science in rural community health 
program; 
 Front Range Community College, in its nursing program; and 
 Otero College, in its nursing program. 
State Expenditures 
The bill increases state expenditures by $4,950,000 in FY 2022-23, and by $150,000 in FY 2023-24 from 
the General Fund.  Each named institution is provided one-time funding of $400,000 in FY 2022-23 to 
establish and operate a rural track program, with assistance from the Rural Program Office.  
Expenditures in the office are $150,000 annually. Each appropriation will be spent by schools in 
different ways to implement the initiative.  Schools that operate a rural track must use 40 percent of  Page 3 
April 4, 2022  SB 22-172  
 
funding receivedfor student scholarships.  Other expenses include housing assistance and faculty and 
preceptor compensation.  No detail was provided by the Department of Higher Education or from 
affected schools allowing more detailed descriptions. This fiscal note will be updated if more 
information becomes available. 
Other Budget Impacts 
General Fund reserve. Under current law, an amount equal to 15 percent of General Fund 
appropriations must be set aside in the General Fund statutory reserve beginning in FY 2022-23.  Based 
on this fiscal note, the bill is expected to increase the amount of General Fund held in reserve by the 
amounts shown in Table 1, which will decrease the amount of General Fund available for other 
purposes. 
Effective Date 
The bill takes effect upon signature of the Governor, or upon becoming law without his signature. 
State Appropriations 
For FY 2022-23, the bill requires the following appropriations totaling $4,950,000 from the General 
Fund: 
 
 $150,000 to University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Rural Programs Office; 
 $400,000 to  Adams State University; 
 $400,000 to Colorado Mesa University; 
 $400,000 to University of Colorado for allocation to the tri-institutional Colorado School of Public 
Health (CU, CSU, UNC); 
 $400,000 to Colorado State University - Pueblo; 
 $400,000 to Metropolitan State University of Denver; 
 $400,000 to University of Colorado, for its school of dental medicine; 
 $400,000 to University of Colorado, for its school of medicine; 
 $400,000 to University of Colorado, Colorado Springs campus; 
 $400,000 to University of Northern Colorado; 
 $400,000 to Western Colorado University; 
 $400,000 to Front Range Community College; and 
 $400,000 to Otero College. 
State and Local Government Contacts 
Higher Education 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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.