Colorado Gov. Polis Signs 911 Fees Bill
Colorado is reworking its method for collecting local 911 fees. Gov. Jared Polis (D) signed HB-1293 Friday to replace a system in which 58 local 911 governing bodies set their own surcharges and must ask the Public Utilities Commission for…
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approval to charge more than 70 cents. The new law requires the PUC by Jan. 1 to adjust the cap annually for inflation, and establishes a separate statewide 911 surcharge, up to 50 cents monthly on phone bills, to be distributed to the local 911 bodies based on the size of their system. Prepaid wireless will be treated like landline, wireless and VoIP. The drawback to the old approach was that rural and mountain communities with small populations didn’t have enough subscribers to produce enough revenue for the size of their 911 systems, “which don't scale well at the small end and oftentimes have to be bigger than their population would indicate due to tourist traffic,” state 911 Program Manager Daryl Branson emailed Monday. The new approach will provide more funding to all local 911 governing bodies, with proportionally more support to rural and mountain areas, he said. HB-1293 is expected to increase revenue to local governments by $3.2 million in FY 2020-21, $6.5 million the following fiscal year, said a June 8 fiscal note by Colorado Legislative Council staff.