Search CO Senate News

<< July ’09  
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
  
 1
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7
 8
 9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
  
Kopp to tackle 'obsolete' tax on Colorado businesses Print E-mail
Wednesday, 31 December 2008

On the heels of a GOP propoposal to phase out the state's notorious business personal-property tax, a Republican senator says he has another idea to stimulate the state's struggling economy--scrapping what he says is an unwarranted tax on business that only serves to hinder job creation.

Sen. Mike Kopp, the Littleton lawmaker who serves as the Senate's GOP caucus chair, announced today he will introduce a measure to repeal a state tax on the premiums that employers pay for their insurance covering workers' job-related injuries. The tax currently goes into two funds that Kopp said are a holdover from earlier times and are no longer needed.

"We could inject nearly $300 million back into our state's economy over the next five years by eliminating this outdated assessment on businesses," Kopp said. "Just think what that would do for our economy--for employers' ability to put people back to work."

Kopp also says the cash in those funds has been misused by lawmakers to pay for unrelated programs when revenue from other sources dips in an economic downturn.

Sen. Mike Kopp 


"The money only serves as a tempting target for the legislature to raid," he said."In terms of its original purpose, it's obsolete. Shutting it down not only would remove another burden from the businesses that create our jobs, but it also would keep the state's budget process a llittle more honest."

Kopp said the programs that have been funded by the tax no longer accept new beneficiaries, and current beneficiaries--workers with certain kinds of extenuating circumstances--can draw down the funds that already have been amassed. That amounts to some $250 million.

Once those funds are depleted at some point in the future, any remaining beneficiaries should be covered out of the state's general operating budget, he said.

Kopp pointed out that when tax revenue to the state fell during the last recession at the beginning of this decade, lawmakers dug into a number of specialized cash funds, which are accounts that are supposed to be dedicated to specific state programs that generate their own revenue. Among those accounts were the ones Kopp now wants to close out.

"Let's inject some more transparency into the state's budgeting and put those funds to much better use  employing people in the private sector," he said.

Kopp said ending the tax would free up additional business cash flow that would amount to the equivalent of 5,000 $50,000-a-year jobs.

 

 

Faces in the Crowd

More News

Dems' car tax, fee hikes kick in amid public outrage; GOP warns, 'Backlash has just begun'
Thursday, 02 July 2009
Republicans say an outcry this week among angry Colorado motorists--blindsided ...
 
Kopp's bid to ease biz tax burden is now law
Monday, 08 June 2009
A GOP effort to curb an obsolete tax on Colorado ...
 
Republicans call on Ritter to account for any bonuses in his administration
Wednesday, 17 June 2009
Amid disclosures of staff bonuses and other questionable expenditures by ...
 
GOP: Guv pumps up bureaucracy while public feels the pinch
Wednesday, 17 June 2009
On the heels of more than $1 billion in tax ...
 
Republican transparency plan signed into law
Wednesday, 10 June 2009
In what backers call a major victory for Colorado taxpayers, ...
 
Senate GOP tallies 2009's 'tremendous toll' on taxpaying public
Tuesday, 19 May 2009
The final tab for this year's legislative session is almost ...
 
Ritter OKs bill blowing state budget cap; Dems say tax limits are next target
Wednesday, 03 June 2009
As Colorado's Democrat governor effectively signed away a long-standing policy ...
 
Guv's ink on Pinnacol bill sets stage for next 'reckless raid,' Republicans charge
Tuesday, 02 June 2009
The governor disappointed the state's business community Monday by signing ...
 
Ship terrorists to Colorado's Supermax? Kester still says never
Wednesday, 20 May 2009
State Republican lawmakers are seeing red over renewed talk in ...
 
GOP leader Penry names education reformers from both parties to key interim committee
Wednesday, 20 May 2009
In a move that could foster continued bipartisan backing for ...