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The suit would essentially force taxpayers to pay for an effort to dismantle the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, which was approved by voters in 1992
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The cuts will enable the state to absorb the rising costs of Medicaid and fully fund K-12 for another year. But they didn’t eliminate the state’s structural deficit, which will require ongoing cuts for years to come.
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Each week, »Ê¹ÚÍøÖ· collects and curates some of the more important stories of the week that have aired on our daily newscast. We know how busy life can be, and that it's not always possible to get your news on our airwaves (or from streaming us right here on our website). Fill in the gaps and catch up right here. No one enjoys the feeling of missing out!
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Each week »Ê¹ÚÍøÖ· collects and curates some of the more important stories of the week that have aired on our daily newscast. We know how busy life can be, and that it's not always possible to get your news on our airwaves (or from streaming us right here on our website). Fill in the gaps and catch up right here. No one enjoys the feeling of missing out!
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Democratic state lawmakers struck a deal with Gov. Jared Polis earlier this week that could make big changes to how TABOR, or the Taxpayer Bill of Rights, is managed. The agreement protects two pending bills that would create a new tax write-off for families and expand the state credit for low-income earners. The Colorado Sun editor David Krause joined »Ê¹ÚÍøÖ·'s Michael Lyle, Jr. to get more on this story.
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Statewide ballot measure Proposition HH was rejected even though it would provide the most immediate relief from rising property taxes. Voters also weighed in on mayoral races in Boulder and Fort Collins and school board races across Northern Colorado, including in Denver, the state’s largest district.
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News Brief with The Colorado Sun: Possible sanctions for ozone pollution and tax refunds under TABOR»Ê¹ÚÍøÖ·'s Desmond O'Boyle sat down with The Colorado Sun's David Krause to talk about how the Front Range has already violated federal ozone caps and whether stricter drilling and transportations bans are on the way, and things that might affect how much taxpayers get as a refund under the Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TABOR).
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Of the ballot questions Coloradans will vote on in November, Constitutional Amendment B might be the most confusing. So, to help us navigate the complex world of the 1992 Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights (TABOR) and the 1982 Gallagher Amendment, Colorado Edition turned to Phyllis Resnick, executive director and lead economist of the Colorado Futures Center at Colorado State University.
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Colorado wants a federal court to reconsider a ruling that revived a legal challenge to the state's tax-and-spending limits.Attorney General Phil Weiser…
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Colorado's Supreme Court says proponents of a ballot initiative to eliminate constitutional limits on taxation and spending can proceed.The court ruled…