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Forecast predicts a fat year at state Capitol

Budget surplus predicted for 2014

DENVER – ’Tis the season of ringing bells, but the one ringing at the state Capitol on Friday sounded more like a dinner bell.

Legislators heard their quarterly economic forecast, and it crystallized a story that has been coming into focus all year: Colorado is recovering, and relatively good times have returned for lawmakers writing the state budget.

Last year’s conservative budget left the state with a half-billion-dollar surplus. But by 2015 at the latest, legislators probably will have to deal with something they haven’t seen since the 1990s. The Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights requires tax refunds once state spending grows enough.

Add it all up, and it means 2014 will be the year of “maximum flexibility” for the state budget, said Natalie Mullis, the Legislature’s chief economist.

So for legislators and lobbyists who have waited years to get their programs funded, if ever there were a Christmas season to go shopping, it’s now. But act fast, because these door-buster specials won’t last long.

The annual legislative session begins Jan. 8, and the big but fleeting surplus of cash is shaping up to be one of the session’s major themes. The Legislature’s budget experts were already making pleas for restraint Friday.

Another recession could arrive in just a few years, said Rep. Cheri Gerou, R-Evergreen.

“I think we have a limited amount of time to fix what has been broken in the infrastructure of our state. Just because things are going better doesn’t mean we don’t have to be very, very careful about our spending,” Gerou said.

Economists for the Legislature and Gov. John Hickenlooper deliver their forecasts every three months, and they have grown more confident all year about predicting a slow but real recovery.

Colorado has ranked fourth in job growth nationally since the Great Recession, said Jason Schrock, chief economist for the governor’s office. His forecast changed very little since September.

“I think that shows the economy is becoming more boring. I think becoming more boring is a good thing. We all know what it’s like to live in interesting times,” Schrock said.

The Legislature’s economics staff noted one big, positive change since September. The budget deal Congress passed last week should remove the risk of Washington drama crashing the economy. Another government shutdown or flirtation with debt default probably won’t happen, according to the forecast.

jhanel@durangoherald.com



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