Your monthly support provides voters the knowledge they need to make confident decisions at the polls. Donate today.

Colorado Four-Year Limit on Voter-Approved Revenue Changes Initiative (2024)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Colorado Four-Year Limit on Voter-Approved Revenue Changes Initiative
Flag of Colorado.png
Election date
November 5, 2024
Topic
Direct democracy measures and State and local government budgets, spending and finance
Status
Not on the ballot
Type
Constitutional amendment
Origin
Citizens

The Colorado Four-Year Limit on Voter-Approved Revenue Changes Initiative was not on the ballot in Colorado as an initiated constitutional amendment on November 5, 2024.

This initiative would have required voter-approved revenue changes to expire after four years unless subsequently approved by voters.[1]

Text of measure

Ballot title

The ballot title for the initiative would have been as follows:[1]

Shall there be an amendment to the Colorado constitution limiting the effective period of past and future voter-approved revenue changes to four years, and, in connection therewith, limiting voter-approved revenue changes that allow the state or local government to keep and spend revenue in excess of the limits set in the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights (TABOR) to four years without subsequent voter approval and decreasing revenue for state and certain local government services without such approval?

[2]

Full text

The full text is available here.

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Colorado

The state process

In Colorado, the number of signatures required to qualify an initiated constitutional amendment for the ballot is equal to 5 percent of the total number of votes cast for the office of Colorado secretary of state in the preceding general election. For initiated constitutional amendments, signature gathering must be distributed to include signatures equal to 2 percent of the registered voters who live in each of the state's 35 senate districts.

State law provides that petitioners have six months to collect signatures after the ballot language and title are finalized. State statutes require a completed signature petition to be filed three months and three weeks before the election at which the measure would appear on the ballot. The Constitution, however, states that the petition must be filed three months before the election at which the measure would appear. The secretary of state generally lists a date that is three months before the election as the filing deadline.

Constitutional amendments in Colorado require a 55% supermajority vote to be ratified and added to the state constitution. This requirement was added by Amendment 71 of 2016.

The requirements to get an initiated constitutional amendment certified for the 2024 ballot:

The secretary of state is responsible for signature verification. Verification is conducted through a review of petitions regarding correct form and then a 5 percent random sampling verification. If the sampling projects between 90 percent and 110 percent of required valid signatures, a full check of all signatures is required. If the sampling projects more than 110 percent of the required signatures, the initiative is certified. If less than 90 percent, the initiative fails.

Details about this initiative

  • The initiative was filed by Jon Caldara and Vanessa Rutledge on March 29, 2024. The initiative was cleared for signature gathering between May 15 and August 5, 2024.[1]
  • Sponsors did not submit signatures by the deadline on August 5, 2024.[1]

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Colorado Secretary of State, "Initiative Filings," accessed January 23, 2024
  2. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.