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Hospital Provider Fee bill killed in favor of new effort at Colorado Capitol

A bipartisan incarnation is reportedly in the works

DENVER – The Hospital Provider Fee debate was all set to be renewed at the Colorado State Capitol on Tuesday, but abruptly came crashing to a halt.

Senate Bill 57 would have done away with the current provider fee and the board that oversees it, and replace it with an ‘enterprise’ fee that would not count towards the cap of tax revenue the legislature is allowed to retain in its general fund each year. But it was quickly killed by its sponsor, Senate Minority Leader Lucía Guzmán, D-Denver, during a hearing before the Senate Finance Committee.

Guzmán said SB57 was an opportunity to sustain and promote hospitals across the state, but the incarnation brought before the committee Tuesday was not the bill that would accomplish that.

“It’s pretty much a sure thing that we have a late bill that will be coming forth that has been worked on bipartisanly,” she said. “It has had some great work, some great ideas and I believe that the best thing to do is to (kill) this bill and prepare for another bill that is coming forward.”

When this new bill will be introduced or who in the GOP will sponsor it unknown, but the talk of the provider fee and its impacts have been recurrent throughout the session.

The Hospital Provider Fee works by accessing a fee on facilities that is matched by the federal government and reimbursed to a hospital based on a formula that largely favors rural facilities. The issue is that the revenue generated by the fee is counted towards the Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TABOR) cap and triggers a refund to taxpayers out of the state’s General Fund even though the funding goes directly back into the health care system.

To bypass refunds this year, a $195 million reduction in the amount gathered from hospitals under the fee and the matching revenue from the federal government, was proposed in the governor’s 2017-18 budget.

Making it an enterprise fee was listed as a priority by both Guzmán and Gov. John Hickenlooper, who mentioned it in his State of the State speech in January and told the press Tuesday that any reform to the fee would have to be a bipartisan effort.

Making it an enterprise fee would keep the state from having to refund $279.4 million in the 2017-18 fiscal year and $287.2 million in 2018-19.

The change would also increase transfers towards transportation infrastructure by more than $226.8 million and capital construction by $103.4 million over the next two years by not triggering the TABOR cap, which limits transfers when it is exceeded.

lperkins@durangoherald.com



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