Colorado 2024 2024 Regular Session

Colorado Senate Bill SB091 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 02/05/2024

                    Page 1 
February 5, 2024  SB 24-091 
 
 
 Legislative Council Staff 
Nonpartisan Services for Colorado’s Legislature 
 
Fiscal Note  
  
 
Drafting Number: 
Prime Sponsors: 
LLS 24-0283  
Sen. Pelton B.; Mullica 
Rep. Martinez; Catlin  
Date: 
Bill Status: 
Fiscal Analyst: 
February 5, 2024 
Senate Transportation & Energy  
Colin Gaiser | 303-866-2677 
colin.gaiser@coleg.gov  
Bill Topic: RIGHTS-OF-WAY PERMITS FOR BROADBAND DEPLOYMENT  
Summary of  
Fiscal Impact: 
☒ State Revenue 
☒ State Expenditure 
☐ State Transfer 
☒ TABOR Refund 
☐ Local Government 
☐ Statutory Public Entity 
 
The bill requires the Department of Transportation to allow broadband providers fair 
access to public rights-of-way for deployment and establishes a permit process. 
Beginning in FY 2024-25, the bill increases state revenue and expenditures on an 
ongoing basis.  
Appropriation 
Summary: 
No appropriation is required. The State Highway Fund is continuously appropriated to 
the Department of Transportation.  
Fiscal Note 
Status: 
The fiscal note reflects the introduced bill. This analysis is preliminary and will be 
updated following further review and any additional information received. 
Table 1 
State Fiscal Impacts Under SB 24-091 
  
Budget Year 
FY 2024-25 
Out Year 
FY 2025-26 
Revenue 	State Highway Fund 	$343,707     $227,697     
 	Total Revenue 	$343,707      $227,697      
Expenditures State Highway Fund 	$286,863  $170,853  
 
Centrally Appropriated 	$56,844  $56,844  
 
Total Expenditures 	$343,707  $227,697  
 	Total FTE 	3.2 FTE 3.2 FTE 
Transfers  	-  	-  
Other Budget Impacts TABOR Refund 	$343,707     $227,697     
   Page 2 
February 5, 2024  SB 24-091 
 
 
Summary of Legislation 
The bill requires the Department of Transportation (CDOT) to allow broadband providers fair 
access to public rights-of-way (ROW) for the deployment of broadband. The bill establishes a 
permit and fee process for access to ROW, and allows providers seeking access to pursue either 
the permit process or the existing public-private initiative agreement process.  
In issuing permits that grant access to ROW, the bill: 
 requires the CDOT to approve or deny a permit application within 30 days; 
 specifies that the term of any permit is 30 years and the CDOT cannot take ownership of 
broadband infrastructure except if it is abandoned; 
 prohibits the CDOT from requiring the permit recipient to lay additional fiber; 
 prohibits the CDOT from requiring the permit recipient to provide any in-kind good or 
services as a condition of granting access to ROW; and 
 the CDOT will produce an anticipated annual budget for the costs associated with the permit 
application process and the anticipated annual forecast of revenue generated from the 
permit fees.  
 
The bill allows the CDOT to impose a one-time permit processing fee that does not exceed the 
costs of granting and administering permits. The CDOT is prohibited from including any charge 
in the permit processing fee to receive compensation for the fair market value of ROW or access 
to ROW. However, if the attorney general declares this violates federal law and that the violation 
will result in the loss of federal money apportioned to the state, the department must include 
fair market value in the permit processing fee. In this case, the department must set the rate of 
fair market value at a level that does not exceed the lowest rate of fair market value established 
by any other state for access to that state's ROW for broadband deployment.  
Background 
Current ROW access fees. The Transportation Commission approved a resolution in December 
2023 adopting initial and annual payments for fiber builds within CDOT ROW, which are 
outlined in Table 2. 
Table 2 
Adopted Fee Structure for ROW Access and Use for Broadband (Fiber) Deployment 
One-time Application Fee Annual Property Use Fee 
$0.05 per foot $0.10 per foot for counties with >200k population
 
 	$0.03 per foot for rural counties <200k population 
CDOT data show that up to 2,362 miles of new fiber may be built in CDOT ROW.  
   Page 3 
February 5, 2024  SB 24-091 
 
 
State Revenue 
On net, the bill is expected to increase state revenue to the SHF by about $344,000 in 
FY 2024-25 and $228,000 in FY 2025-26 to cover the costs of the bill’s expenditures. The bill 
removes the annual fee for ROW access; however, CDOT is allowed to impose a one-time permit 
processing fee to cover its actual costs for granting and administering permits. The fiscal note 
assumes the total revenue from implementing this fee will not exceed the cost of the new 
expenditures (see State Expenditures section below), plus any existing costs for permit 
processing.  
State Expenditures 
The bill increases state expenditures in the CDOT by about $344,000 in FY 2024-25 and $228,000 
in FY 2025-26, paid from the State Highway Fund. Expenditures are shown in Table 3 and 
detailed below. 
Table 3 
Expenditures Under SB 24-091 
 	FY 2024-25 FY 2025-26 
Department of Transportation   
Personal Services 	$166,757       $166,757       
Operating Expenses 	$4,096       $4,096       
Capital Outlay Costs 	$20,010       -       
Computer Programming 	$96,000       -       
Centrally Appropriated Costs
1
 	$56,844       $56,844             
Total Cost $343,707 $227,697 
Total FTE 3.2 FTE 3.2 FTE 
1
 Centrally appropriated costs are not included in the bill's appropriation. 
Department of Transportation. Costs will increase in the CDOT in FY 2024-25 and ongoing 
years to satisfy the bill’s requirements.  
 Staff. The CDOT requires 3.2 FTE of administrator work beginning in FY 2024-25 to meet 
requirements of turnaround time for application processing. Currently, it takes CDOT about 
45 days to process a fiber permit, so meeting the bill’s 30-day requirement necessitates 
additional staff dedicated to processing fiber permits. The fiscal note assumes staff will begin 
work in July 2024.  
 
 Computer programming. The bill requires CDOT to update Salesforce to process permits 
under the new process created in the bill. Based on previous updates to Salesforce, the 
CDOT will need two developers working 40 hours per week for eight weeks at $150 an hour. 
This is 640 hours of work costing $96,000. 
  Page 4 
February 5, 2024  SB 24-091 
 
 
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. 
 
State Highway Fund. Funding from the SHF is allocated by the Transportation Commission. The 
commission will adjust spending from the SHF to accommodate the increase in CDOT 
expenditures under this bill.  
Other Budget Impacts 
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 
December 2023 LCS revenue forecast. A forecast of state revenue subject to TABOR is not 
available beyond FY 2025-26. 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 upon signature of the Governor, or upon becoming law without his 
signature. 
State and Local Government Contacts 
Counties     Information Technology     Law 
Local Affairs    Regulatory Agencies      Transportation  
 
 
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.