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Local Government Energy and Mineral Impact Assistance Fund

Administrative Modifications to Energy and Mineral Impact Assistance Fund

  • Categorization of grants into three tiers
  • Expedited review for Tier I grant application which are $200,000 or less
  • Tier II grant application level can be up to $2 million
  • Tier III grant application is under development; the goal is provide up to three grants/yr at $10 million if dollars are available. Will be implemented in the year 2009
  • Provide match options to include cash, grant, in-kind and/or loan
  • Enhanced policy role for Impact Advisory committee
  • Allow and encourage use of remote access for hearings via video conferencing for Tier II grant applications

 

Legislative Changes  

HB 08-1083
Governance and Direct Distribution of
Local Government Mineral Impact Assistance

1. Change in the composition and role of the Energy Impact Assistance Advisory Committee

  • To improve accountability the legislation provides for the following:
    • Adds two impact area citizen representatives to the committee which oversees the local government energy and mineral impact grant and loan decisions
    • Requires the Governor to appointment the seven citizen impact area representatives and have them be confirmed by the Senate
    • Adds the executive director of the Department of Public Health and Environment, and,
    • Enhances the policy oversight responsibilities of the advisory committee.
    • Requires written guidelines for both direct distribution and distribution of grants

2. Change in the guidelines, reporting and accountability on the distribution of the local government mineral impact assistance grants

  • To improve transparency, the legislation specifies that in the administration of the local government energy and mineral impact assistance fund, the Department of Local Affairs will compose guidelines and make reports to the State Auditor.

3. Modification of the metrics used in the direct distribution payments to local governments

While maintaining the 70% - 30% split of severance tax receipts between the grants program and the direct distribution, the legislation makes five modifications to the direct distribution statute. The first application of the new language would be for the direct distribution in August, 2009; using 30% of the DOLA 50% share of severance tax.

  • Clarifies which taxpayers should make the reports: the legislation links the employee resident reporting requirement to an existing taxpayer filing requirement in the severance tax statute.
  • Clarification of which employees should be reported: The legislation removes the restrictive language and allows the taxpayers to determine who they report within the statutory specification “for the purposes of extracting”.
  • Addition of mining permit and production to the current employee residence reports (ERR) as metrics on which to calculate the direct distribution payments:

Each of these metrics is intended to capture a different part of the “life cycle” of impacts: the permits for the prospecting phase, the employee residence reports for the development phase, and the production for the production phase. Since the permits and production data do not provide sub-county detail, the new formula would operate in a two stage process. First a “county area allocation” would be made using the three metrics. Then, within each county, this “county area allocation” would be distributed to the towns and county on the basis of the employee residence report, population and the HUTF miles figures provided by CDOT.

The weighting of these factors is set in the first year at 50% ERR, 25% POP and 25% HUTF. Following years the weights must be at least 30%. The Employee Residence data is designated by mineral type. Then it is applied to the severance revenue by type to get a different payment per reported employee for each mineral type. Oil and gas paid $1,555 per reported employee last year while coal paid $468 and metals only $393.

The legislation requires specific guidelines and reporting: Construction of each index requires some technical policy decisions. Under the bill these types of issues would be brought before the Energy Impact Assistance Advisory Committee for resolution. The department will bring these policy issues to stakeholders and the Committee over the next six months.

4. Cleanup of inconsistent language in the federal mineral lease distribution formula

 

HB 08-1084
Severance Tax Credit

Establishes a committee of stakeholders to identify and recommend how best to improve the impact assistance severance tax credit under C.R.S.39-29-107.5 to finance major infrastructure needs in impacted areas. A report to the legislature is due January 31, 2009. The members of the interim study group shall include:

  • Executive Director of the Department of Local Affairs
  • Executive Director of the Department of Natural Resources
  • All other members of the Energy Impact Assistance Advisory Committee
  • Executive Director of the Department of revenue
  • Colorado Municipal League
  • Colorado Counties Inc
  • Representatives of the energy and mining industry
  • Other stakeholders

 

SB 08-147
DOLA Impact Grant Assisted Building Projects Subject
to Energy Efficiency Standards

  • Requires DOLA impact grant assisted facility projects be designed, constructed, and renovated pursuant to a high performance standard certification program to achieve buildings energy efficiency standards.

 

SB 08-218
Allocation of Federal Mineral Lease

The legislation achieves the following four actions:

1. Separates out bonus and rents from the other federal lease revenues and splits these bonus revenues 50/50 between reserve funds for the local government metric based direct distribution and the higher education. The local direct distribution reserve fund from the bonuses may be used to backfill the local direct distributions from DOLA when state federal mineral lease receipts decline more than 10%. The higher education reserve serves a similar function.

2. Allocates the non-bonus revenues at follows:

    • 48.3% to the State Public School Fund up to $65 million inflated at 104% after FY11.
    • 10% to the Colorado Water Conservations Board up to $14 million inflated each year.
    • 1.7% to school districts in the impacted areas up to $3.6 million inflated each year.
    • 40% to the Local Government Mineral Impact Fund without a cap. This DOLA local fund is further split 50/50 between the grants programs and a metric based direct distribution.

3. The spillover from the caps on K-12 education, Colorado Water Conservation Board (CWCB) and the school districts go to fund higher education.

4. The direct distribution from DOLA is made in August of each year to county areas on the basis of a metric composed of the amounts of federal mineral lease revenue generated in the “county-of-origin” (COO) and the employee residence reports collected under HB-08-1083 Within each county this “county area allocation” would be distributed to the towns and county on the basis of the employee residence report, population and the HUTF miles figures provided by the Colorado Department of Transportation. The weighting of these factors is left to be determined by DOLA and the Impact Assistance Advisory Committee, with the exception that DOLA may accept a memorandum between county and its municipalities that directs an alternative allocation.

 

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