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The bill requires the secretary of state to refer a ballot issue at the November 2026 general election to seek voter approval for the state to retain and spend an amount of state revenue equal to the amount of state public K-12 education funding in excess of the limitation on state fiscal year spending and to increase state public K-12 education funding by up to 2% for 10 years. The bill directs legislative council staff to determine the amount of state public K-12 education funding and describes how legislative council staff will make that determination. The bill creates a positive factor to provide additional funding for each district. A positive factor is equal to the lesser of 2% of statewide total program funding for the 2026-27 budget year multiplied by a district's total program as a percentage of the statewide total program or the amount that the state is authorized to retain and spend that would otherwise have been in excess of the limitation on state fiscal year spending multiplied by a district's total program as a percentage of the statewide total program. A district may only use its positive factor funding for increasing teacher pay, improving teacher retention, lowering class sizes, and increasing access to career and technical courses. The bill creates the excess state revenues account (account) within the general fund. The account consists of an amount of money equal to the amount of state revenues in excess of the excess state revenues cap that the state retains for a given fiscal year pursuant to voter approval of the bill. Money in the account must first be spent for paying districts their positive factor and only after that may be spent for any other purpose. The bill directs the state auditor to conduct and publish, for each state fiscal year that the state retains and spends state revenues in excess of the limitation on state fiscal year spending, a legislative report. That report must include descriptions of:The amount of state revenues that the state retained and spent that would otherwise have been in excess of the limitation on state fiscal year spending; andHow the state revenues that the state retained and spent that would otherwise have been in excess of the limitation on state fiscal year spending were expended. Lastly, the bill makes conforming amendments to ensure that voter approval of the bill does not impact the expanded earned income tax credit, the family affordability tax credit, or the affordable housing financing fund.(Note: This summary applies to this bill as introduced.)
Introduced
Mar 5, 2026
Last Action
Mar 5, 2026
Session
CO 2026A
Sponsors
42 primary · 0 co
Senate Committee on Finance Refer Amended to Appropriations
Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Finance
Get a plain-English explanation of what this bill does, who it affects, and why it matters.
Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Finance
M. Snyder
T. Sullivan
B. Titone
E. Velasco
J. Willford
J. Bridges
C. Kipp
J. Bacon
M. Lukens
J. Amabile
A. Benavidez
J. Coleman
L. Cutter
J. Danielson
L. Daugherty
T. Exum
J. Gonzales
N. Hinrichsen
I. Jodeh
C. Kolker
W. Lindstedt
J. Marchman
K. Mullica
R. Rodriguez
M. Weissman
A. Boesenecker
S. Camacho
M. Carter
M. Duran
L. Goldstein
E. Hamrick
J. Joseph
S. Lieder
M. Lindsay
M. Martinez
K. McCormick
K. Nguyen
A. Paschal
J. Phillips
G. Rydin
L. Smith
R. Stewart