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Volume 16 • Edition 2
January 18, 2023
Delivering to over 17,000 homes & businesses including all of Morgan County.
“Truth will ultimately prevail where there is pains taken to bring it to light” George Washington “If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be informed” Thomas Jefferson
Murrey: Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights Refunds in Democrats’ Crosshairs
by Ben Murrey, The Colorado Sun Last year, Colorado Democrats championed TABOR refunds as they campaigned for reelection. Yet not a week into the 2023 legislative session, they announced plans to try and halt those refunds indefinitely. A forthcoming bill by Rep. Cathy Kipp (D) and Sen. Rachel Zenzinger (D), if passed by the legislature and approved by voters, would allow the state to retain future tax refund dollars mandated under the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights (TABOR) in Colorado’s Constitution. Kipp says the money would go to fund public schools. Proponents of this idea have failed in the past to gather the 120,000 signatures required to put the question on the November ballot. The legislature can circumvent this requirement by passing the measure as a bill first. Every time voters speak on key issues related to TABOR, they send the same unambiguous message: “Leave TABOR alone and let us keep our money!” Democratic legislators either didn’t get the message, or they just don’t care what voters think. In 2019 after voters gave Democrats unified control over state government, legislators thanked them by sending Proposition CC–which would have permanently ended TABOR refunds–to the November ballot, where Coloradans soundly rejected it. Coloradans spoke loud and clear: “Leave TABOR alone and let us keep our money!” In 2020, voters had the choice between two competing citizen-led ballot initiatives. One would have raised taxes and repealed TABOR’s requirement that Colorado maintains the same income tax rate for all taxpayers. The other, put on the ballot by my organization, Independence Institute, reduced the state’s income tax rate from 4.63 to 4.55 percent. The latter passed with a wide margin. The former failed even to gather enough signatures to appear on the ballot. Once again, Coloradans spoke loud and clear: “Leave TABOR alone and let us keep our money!” Fast forward to 2022. If the people of Colorado had not made their will clear enough already, last year left no ambiguity. First, progressives launched a citizen initiative nearly identical to the pending legislative measure. Initiative 63 would have taken TABOR refunds from taxpayers and given the money back to the state to spend on public education. Like the tax increase measure from 2020, the initiative failed even to make the ballot. Conversely, Independence Institute worked to put Proposition 121 on the ballot. The measure won with more than a 30-point margin and lowered the state income tax rate from 4.55 to 4.4 percent, saving taxpayers over $400 million per year. Meanwhile, TABOR required the legislature to choose a method for refunding $3.85 billion in state revenue surpluses to taxpayers. Lawmakers elected to send out $750 checks to individual filers and $1,500 checks to joint filers to fill their constitutional obligation. Governor Jared Polis and his colleagues in the legislature announced last year’s refund mechanism at a press conference on the steps of the capitol. There they publicly celebrated TABOR as they faced reelection last November—a sharp departure from their 2019 attempt to eliminate TABOR refunds. They evidently got the message Coloradans had been sending them. In response to the announcement, then Colorado GOP Chairwoman Kristi Burton Brown said, “I’m happy that Jared Polis and the Democrats in the state legislature have publicly reversed course and are now joining Republicans in touting the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights.” Colorado Democrats campaigned as fiscal conservatives and TABOR advocates and won. Now, with their power over state government secure, they are wasting no time in once again reversing course on TABOR and stabbing taxpayers in the back. Despite their rhetoric on the campaign trail in 2022, the TABOR refund repeal bill comes as no surprise. After Sen. Zenzinger discussed options for abolishing TABOR refunds with Joint Budget Committee (JBC) staff in a November hearing, I sounded the alarm that Democrats would attempt this money grab again in 2023. They proved me right on day three of the legislative session. Only a handful of bills introduced each session ever receive a floor vote. The fact that JBC Chair Zenzinger is the prime senate sponsor of this bill, however, suggests it may be a key priority of Democratic leadership, greatly increasing its chance of passage. Rep. Kipp argues that the legislature must take refunds away from taxpayers to “properly fund our public schools.” When petitioners presumably explained this to everyday Coloradans as they gathered signatures for Initiative 63 last year, the argument clearly fell flat. While the legislature has the authority to sidestep signature gathering and put the Murrey: Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights Refunds in Democrats’ Crosshairs continued on page 4...
Denver Announces 14-day Shelter Limit for Migrants as Colorado Governor Stops Busing Them to Other States Jared Polis was criticized by fellow Democratic mayors of Chicago and New York City for sending migrants on chartered buses by Jennifer Brown, The Colorado Sun
A small busload of people arrives at an emergency shelter for migrants from the southern U.S. border set up at a Denver recreation center on Dec. 13, 2022. (Kevin J. Beaty, Denverite)
Denver officials said Monday they are warning migrants arriving by the busload from the U.S. southern border that they can stay in emergency shelters for no more than 14 days, another sign that the city’s capacity to help is waning. Gov. Jared Polis, meanwhile, ended a state-funded operation that was sending migrants who came to Denver from Central and South America via charter buses to other cities. The program ended just four days after it began and after Polis said he had a “productive conversation” with the mayors of Chicago and New York, fellow Democrats who were peeved that Colorado was sending migrants to their cities. In a joint letter to Colorado’s governor, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and New York City Mayor Eric Adams said they “respectfully demand that you cease and desist sending migrants” to their cities. The mayors said they had received hundreds of migrants from Colorado since December. That’s in addition to thousands of migrants who have been “inhumanely bused” to those two cities from Texas since spring 2022, the letter said. “Before the first bus arrived in either of our cities, we informed a Colorado official directly that neither city had any additional room to accommodate any more migrants,” they wrote. “We have seen your statements in the media that you are simply accommodating the wishes of migrants to come to cities like New York City and Chicago. However, you are sending migrants and families to New York City and Chicago that do not have any ties, family members or community networks to welcome them, and at a time where Denver Announces 14-day Shelter Limit for Migrants as Colorado Governor Stops Busing Them to Other States continued on page 4...
WHAT’S IN THIS ISSUE
Page 2: Way of the World
Page 3: Meet New Hudson Town Manager – Bryce Lange Page 4: Denver Limits Support for Illegal Immigrants Page 5: Wiggins School District Newsletter Page 6: Five Fiscal Policy Issues to Watch in 2023 Legislature Page 7: Colorado Pork Producers 2023 Annual Meeting Page 8: Colorado Graduation Up, But So Are Dropouts Page 9: Avian Flu Wreaks Havoc Among Egg Layers Page 16: Fort Morgan Basketball Highlights