Colorado 2022 2022 Regular Session

Colorado Senate Bill SB173 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/29/2022

                    Page 1 
April 29, 2022  SB 22-173  
 
 Legislative Council Staff 
Nonpartisan Services for Colorado’s Legislature 
 
Revised Fiscal Note  
(replaces fiscal note dated April 12, 2022)  
 
Drafting Number: 
Prime Sponsors: 
LLS 22-0947  
Sen. Rodriguez; Smallwood 
Rep. Bird; McKean  
Date: 
Bill Status: 
Fiscal Analyst: 
April 29, 2022 
House  HHS 
Annie Scott | 303-866-5851 
Annie.Scott@state.co.us  
Bill Topic: TELEPHARMACY CRITERIA REMOVE LOCATION RESTRICTION  
Summary of  
Fiscal Impact: 
☒ State Revenue 
☒ State Expenditure 
☐ State Diversion 
☒ TABOR Refund 
☐ Local Government 
☐ Statutory Public Entity 
 
This bill removes geographic restrictions on, and further defines, telepharmacy outlets, 
and requires the State Board of Pharmacy to adopt rules.  This bill increases state 
revenue and expenditures beginning in FY 2022-23.    
Appropriation 
Summary: 
For FY 2022-23, the bill requires an appropriation of $505,819 to the Department of 
Regulatory Agencies.    
Fiscal Note 
Status: 
The revised fiscal note reflects the reengrossed bill. 
 
 
Table 1 
State Fiscal Impacts Under SB 22-173 
 
  
Budget Year 
FY 2022-23 
Out Year 
FY 2023-24 
Revenue 	Cash Funds $1,354,620              -       
Expenditures 	Cash Funds 	$505,819  	$566,727  
 	Centrally Appropriated 	$126,579  	$153,487  
 	Total Expenditures 	$632,398  	$720,214  
 	Total FTE 	4.8 FTE       5.9 FTE       
Other Budget Impacts Tabor Refund $1,354,620       	-       
 
 
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April 29, 2022  SB 22-173  
 
Summary of Legislation 
Under current law, a telepharmacy outlet must be located more than 20 miles from any pharmacy or 
telepharmacy outlet.  The bill removes this geographic restriction, and requires that a telepharmacy 
be located in an area of need, as defined under the bill.  The State Board of Pharmacy is required to 
adopt rules for telepharmacy outlets concerning:  
 
 applications; 
 structures and equipment; 
 staffing, training, and consultant pharmacist visitations; 
 inventory record-keeping and storage requirements; 
 operational policies and procedures; and 
 the number of telepharmacy outlets that may be operated by a central pharmacy. 
Assumptions 
The fiscal note assumes that the removal of geographic restrictions and the addition of facilities 
licensed by the Department of Public Health and Environment as falling within an area of need, will 
result in 3,165 entities registering as an Other Outlet, and that:  
 
 each facility will require an annual protocol review and 791 facilities will require protocol 
revisions; 
 617 complaints will be received; 
 204 cases will require investigation; 
 51 cases will result in disciplinary action; and 
 5 cases will be referred to the Attorney General.   
State Revenue 
This bill will increase state revenue by $1,354,620 to the Division of Professions and Occupations Cash 
Fund in FY 2022-23 from fees to cover the costs of the bill for two fiscal years.  
 
Fee impact on telepharmacy outlets. Colorado law requires legislative service agency review of 
measures which create or increase any fee collected by a state agency.  These fee amounts are estimates 
only; actual fees will be set administratively by the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA) based 
on cash fund balance, estimated program costs, and the estimated number of licenses subject to the 
fee.  As shown in Table 2, the fiscal note assumes that 3,165 entities will register as an Other Outlets 
under the bill, and will pay the increased initial licensing fee in FY 2022-23.   
 
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April 29, 2022  SB 22-173  
 
Table 2 
Fee Impact on Specialized Prescription Drug Outlets 
 
Type of 
Fee 
Current  
Fee 
Estimated 
Fee 
Fee 
Increase 
Number 
Affected Total Fee Impact 
Other Outlet 
License 
$160 $428 $268 3,165 $1,354,620 
FY 2022-23 Total $1,354,620 
State Expenditures 
The bill increases state expenditures in the Division of Professions and Occupations (DPO) in the 
DORA by $632,398 in FY 2022-23 and $720,214 in FY 2023-24 from the Division of Professions and 
Occupations Cash Fund. Expenditures are shown in Table 3 and detailed below. 
 
Table 3 
Expenditures Under SB22-173 
 
 	FY 2022-23 FY 2023-24 
Department of Regulatory Agencies   
Personal Services 	$383,823  $485,239  
Operating Expenses 	$5,940  $7,560  
Capital Outlay Costs 	$37,200  	-  
Legal Services 	$78,856  $73,928  
Centrally Appropriated Costs
1
 	$126,579  $153,487  
FTE – Personal Services 	4.4 FTE 5.5 FTE 
FTE – Legal Services 	0.4 FTE 0.4 FTE 
Total Cost $632,398  $720,214  
Total FTE 4.8 FTE 5.9 FTE 
1
 Centrally appropriated costs are not included in the bill's appropriation. 
    
Registration.  Beginning in FY 2022-23, the DPO requires 0.5 FTE to process registrations, verify 
information, update licensing databases, communicate with applicants, and issue registrations. Costs 
are adjusted for a September 1 start date and standard operating and capital outlay costs are included.        
 
Oversight. Beginning in FY 2022-23, the DPO requires 1.9 FTE of a pharmacist to conduct 
pharmaceutical compliance, performance and drug accountability audits, investigate complaints and 
possible fraud, and participate in enforcement activities as necessary.  Costs are adjusted for a 
September 1 start date in the first year and standard operating and capital outlay costs are included.    
 
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April 29, 2022  SB 22-173  
 
Enforcement.  Beginning in FY 2022-23, the DPO will require 2.9 FTE of a criminal investigator to 
identify individuals involved in an investigation, interview witnesses, obtain relevant documents and 
verify the authenticity of those documents, examine books or records, collect evidence, prepare 
subpoenas, and write investigation reports.  Costs are adjusted for an October 1 start date in the 
first year, as it is assumed that some level of monitoring will need to take place prior to the need for 
an investigation. Standard operating and capital outlay costs are included. 
 
Settlement. Beginning in FY 2022-23, the DPO will require 0.3 FTE to draft stipulations and final 
agency orders, and facilitate settlement of the referred matters.  Costs are adjusted for a November 1 
start date, as it is assumed that settlements will begin taking place after monitoring and enforcement 
actions have occurred.  Standard operating and capital outlay costs are included.  
  
Legal services. In FY 2022-23, the DPO will require 800 hours of legal services from the Department 
of Law for rule making and adjudication at a blended rate of $98.57 per hour and 0.4 FTE.  This fiscal 
note assumes that 50 hours will be required to assist with promulgation of rules in the first year only, 
and that each case referred to the Attorney General will require 150 hours of staff time for enforcement 
and complaint resolution.   
 
Centrally appropriated costs. Pursuant to a Joint Budget Committee policy, certain costs associated 
with this bill are addressed through the annual budget process and centrally appropriated in the Long 
Bill or supplemental appropriations bills, rather than in this bill.  These costs, which include employee 
insurance and supplemental employee retirement payments, are shown in Table 3. 
Other Budget Impacts 
TABOR refunds.  The bill is expected to increase the amount of state revenue required to be refunded 
to taxpayers by the amounts shown in the State Revenue section above.  This estimate assumes the 
March 2022 LCS revenue forecast. A forecast of state revenue subject to TABOR is not available 
beyond FY 2023-24. Because TABOR refunds are paid from the General Fund, increased cash fund 
revenue will reduce the amount of General Fund available to spend or save. 
Effective Date 
The bill takes effect 90 days following adjournment of the General Assembly sine die, assuming no 
referendum petition is filed. 
State Appropriations 
In FY 2022-23, the bill requires an appropriation of $505,819 from the Division of Professions and 
Occupations Cash Fund the Department of Regulatory Agencies, and 4.4 FTE. Of this amount, $78,856 
is reappropriated to the Department of Law with 0.4 FTE.   
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April 29, 2022  SB 22-173  
 
State and Local Government Contacts 
Information Technology Law  Regulatory Agencies 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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.