Colorado 2024 2024 Regular Session

Colorado House Bill HB1338 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 02/29/2024

                    Page 1 
February 28, 2024  HB 24-1338 
 
 
 
 Legislative Council Staff 
Nonpartisan Services for Colorado’s Legislature 
 
Fiscal Note  
  
 
Drafting Number: 
Prime Sponsors: 
LLS 24-0797  
Rep. Rutinel; Velasco 
Sen. Michaelson Jenet  
Date: 
Bill Status: 
Fiscal Analyst: 
February 28, 2024 
House Energy & Environment  
Matt Bishop | 303-866-4796 
matt.bishop@coleg.gov  
Bill Topic: CUMULATIVE IMPACTS & ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE  
Summary of  
Fiscal Impact: 
☐ State Revenue 
☒ State Expenditure 
☐ State Transfer 
☐ TABOR Refund 
☒ Local Government 
☐ Statutory Public Entity 
 
The bill creates the Office of Environmental Justice, creates a rapid response team to 
respond to air quality complaints, requires an assessment of refinery regulations, and 
establishes a mechanism for local governments to request stricter emissions limits. It 
increases state expenditures on an ongoing basis. 
Appropriation 
Summary: 
For FY 2024-25, the bill requires an appropriation of $1,829,087 to the Department of 
Public Health and Environment. 
Fiscal Note 
Status: 
The fiscal note reflects the introduced bill. 
Table 1 
State Fiscal Impacts Under HB 24-1338 
  
Budget Year 
FY 2024-25 
Out Year 
FY 2025-26 
Revenue  	-     	-     
Expenditures 	General Fund 	$1,829,087     $2,418,821 
 
Centrally Appropriated 	$99,196 $121,288 
 
Total Expenditures 	$1,928,283 $2,540,109 
 	Total FTE 	5.8 FTE 9.0 FTE 
Transfers  	-  	-  
Other Budget Impacts General Fund Reserve 	$274,363 $362,823 
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February 28, 2024  HB 24-1338 
 
 
 
Summary of Legislation 
The bill creates the Office of Environmental Justice, creates a rapid response team to respond to 
air quality complaints, requires an assessment of refinery regulations, and establishes a 
mechanism for local governments to request stricter emissions limits. 
Office of Environmental Justice. The bill creates the office in the Department of Public Health 
and Environment (CDPHE) to increase state engagement with disproportionately impacted 
communities, develop CDPHE’s environmental justice goals, support the department’s water 
quality testing program in mobile home parks, provide translation services for the department, 
and generally coordinate environmental justice work across government and tribal entities in 
Colorado. 
The bill requires the office to contract for at least two Environmental Equity and Cumulative 
Impact Analyses for state agencies in analyzing cumulative impacts. Each analyses evaluates a 
particular geographic reason, as determined by the office, based on published guidance from 
the Environmental Justice Task Force and the federal Environmental Protection Agency. 
Rapid response inspections. CDPHE must establish a rapid response inspection team to 
respond to air quality complaints. The team must develop best practices for responding to 
complaints, prioritizing complaints related to adverse effects in disproportionately impacted 
communities, and must conduct education and outreach in communities.  
Petroleum refinery regulations. CDPHE must hire an expert in air pollution control for 
petroleum refineries to assess petroleum refinery control regulations and other measures. 
Beginning January 1, 2025, petroleum refineries must provide data to the department on 
emissions monitoring systems and compliance with state orders. Before that date, petroleum 
refineries must upgrade community-based monitoring systems to monitor certain pollutants 
and atmospheric conditions, as specified by the bill. 
New emissions limits. Beginning January 1, 2026, the bill authorizes local governments that are 
cumulatively impacted by pollution to request that the Air Quality Control Commission impose 
limits on certain stationary sources of air pollution in their jurisdictions. The bill specifies 
exemptions, including emissions activities required for compliance with state or federal law or 
related to renewable energy production, affordable housing, or domestic wastewater treatment. 
State Revenue 
The bill potentially increases state revenue from gifts, grants, or donations; however, no sources 
have been identified at this time. Gifts, grants, and donations are exempt from TABOR revenue 
limits. 
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February 28, 2024  HB 24-1338 
 
 
 
State Expenditures 
The bill increases state expenditures in CDPHE by about $1.9 million in FY 2024-25 and 
$2.5 million in FY 2025-26, paid from the General Fund. Expenditures are shown in Table 2 and 
detailed below. 
Table 2 
Expenditures Under HB 24-1338 
 	FY 2024-25 FY 2025-26 
Department of Public Health and Environment   
Personal Services 	$504,618       $617,274       
Operating Expenses 	$5,760 $7,040 
Capital Outlay Costs 	$33,350 $6,670 
Legal Services 	$310,449 $812,927 
Contractor 	$959,310 $959,310 
Travel Costs 	$15,600 $15,600 
Centrally Appropriated Costs
1
 	$99,196 $121,288 
FTE – Personal Services 	4.5 FTE 5.5 FTE 
FTE – Legal Services 	1.3 FTE 3.5 FTE 
Total Cost $1,928,283 $2,540,109 
Total FTE 5.8 FTE 9.0 FTE 
1
 Centrally appropriated costs are not included in the bill's appropriation. 
Environmental Justice Office. CDPHE requires 2.0 FTE to staff the office, including setting goals 
and coordinating environmental justice work across departments. This workload includes 
soliciting the contract for the environmental equity and cumulative impacts analyses and 
overseeing the contractor’s work. The contractor costs in Table 2 assume that one analysis will 
be initiated each year and that contractor costs require roll-forward spending authority over 
multiple years until the analysis is published. 
Rapid response team. CDPHE requires 2.0 FTE to conduct education and outreach on air 
pollution and to respond to air quality complaints. Travel costs include mileage to visit 
communities and accommodations for overnight travel as necessary. 
Petroleum refinery regulation. The bill requires CDPHE to hire 1.0 FTE to provide necessary 
expertise on petroleum refinery regulation and to propose rules to the department as 
appropriate. This position is prorated for a January 1, 2025, start date. 
Local government requests to limit emissions. CDPHE requires 0.5 FTE beginning in 
FY 2025-26 to evaluate request from local governments for eligibility and to support local 
governments in understanding potential regulatory actions.  Page 4 
February 28, 2024  HB 24-1338 
 
 
 
Operating and capital costs. For each staff function, standard capital and operating costs are 
included, and are prorated for each position’s start date.  
Legal services.  CDPHE will require legal services for general counsel to the Environmental 
Justice Office and to support rulemaking and regulatory actions. Based on the bill’s staggered 
implementation timeline, this requires 2,425 hours in FY 2024-25, 6,350 hours in FY 2025-26, and 
9,050 hours ongoing. Legal services are provided by the Department of Law at a rate of $128.02 
per hour. 
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 2. 
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. 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, decreasing the amount of General Fund available for other purposes. 
Local Government 
The bill increases expenditures in any local government that seeks stricter emissions limits on 
pollution sources in its jurisdiction to ensure that it meets the bill’s conditions for making the 
request of CDPHE. 
Effective Date 
The bill takes effect upon signature of the Governor, or upon becoming law without his signature. 
State Appropriations 
For FY 2024-25, the bill requires a General Fund appropriation of $1,829,087 to the Department 
of Public Health and Environment, and 4.5 FTE. Of this, $310,449 is reappropriated to the 
Department of Law, with an additional 1.3 FTE. An estimated $959,310 in contractor costs 
require roll-forward spending authority through FY 2025-26. 
CDPHE made a budget request for FY 2024-25 to create a new Office of Health Equity and 
Environmental Justice. If that budget request is approved, some of the impacts identified in this 
fiscal note for the Office of Environmental Justice operations may be redundant. The fiscal note 
may be updated if funding included in the Long Bill affects the required resources for this bill. 
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February 28, 2024  HB 24-1338 
 
 
 
State and Local Government Contacts 
Law      Public Health and Environment  
 
 
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 the General Assembly website.