Morgan Turner provided testimony in support of House Bill 25-1153, Statewide Government Language Access Assessment. CCLP is in support of HB25-1153, and it is one of our priority bills.
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CCLP testifies to Joint Budget Committee on Medicaid and TABOR

On Monday, February 3, 2025, Bethany Pray, CCLP’s Chief Legal and Policy Officer, provided testimony to the Joint Budget Committe on the looming federal cuts to Medicaid and its intersection with TABOR. Read the Joint Budget Committee’s Memorandum about these anticipated cuts.
Mr. Chair and members of the Joint Budget Committee, thank you for the opportunity to testify today.
My name is Bethany Pray, and I’m speaking on behalf of the Colorado Center on Law and Policy, an anti-poverty advocacy organization. We’re opposed to cutting provider reimbursement, or eligible populations, because doing so will cause immediate and long-term harm. Medicaid is the most cost-effective insurance program we have[1], and is the only program that can meet the needs of people who live with disabilities.[2]
This committee must do everything it can to support the core programs, CCAP and SNAP among them, that we rely on as a state. That means expanding the use of enterprises, developing referred measures, and using creative financing.
But first, some Medicaid facts:
- Today, every dollar we cut from Medicaid results in Colorado losing about $2 federal dollars. Colorado spent about 4.1 billing in General Fund dollars on Medicaid in 2024; the federal government spent 8.2 billion.[3] [4] To put that in perspective, the entire general fund in 2024-25 was 15.1billion dollars.
- The more than 12 billion dollars spent on Colorado Medicaid is a major driver for our economy, due to the high multiplier effect of health care dollars, as you heard from earlier speakers.[5] Dollars spent on Medicaid result in expenditures on equipment and supplies and create good jobs, with then more spending on household goods, food, transportation, etc.
- Where more people are enrolled in Medicaid, the impact of reduced reimbursement, will be particularly marked. Consider what happens when you lose that multiplier effect.
- Adams, Denver and Mesa counties –over 28% of residents are in Medicaid
- In the five counties in the southeast corner of Colorado, 31-40% of residents are enrolled in Medicaid.
- And in the San Luis Valley counties, 36-54% of residents are enrolled.[6]
CCLP has been a frank critic of our Medicaid agency and its leadership. That said, over-spending is not the reason. Rather, our criticism has focused on the Department’s failure to prioritize core functions – the eligibility system, case management design, contract and vendor oversight.
I lie awake nights worrying about both our fraying safety net and the strong possibility that the federal government will default on its Medicaid obligations or radically limit its support to states via block grants, cuts in federal match, or punitive measures like work requirements.
Although all states are reliant on federal dollars, Colorado is uniquely limited in its ability to backfill because of TABOR: we’re in a financial straitjacket of our own making. We must find a way to give ourselves flexibility to weather what’s ahead.
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[1] Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (2024). National Health Expenditures 2023 Highlights. https://www.cms.gov/files/document/nhe-infographic.pdf
[2] Department of Health Care Policy and Financing (2025, January). FY 2024-25 Medicaid Premiums Expenditure and Caseload Report. https://hcpf.colorado.gov/sites/hcpf/files/2025%20January%2C%20Joint%20Budget%20Committee%20Monthly%20Premiums%20Report.pdf
[3] 2024 State Expenditure Report. National Association of State Budget Officers. https://www.nasbo.org/reports-data/state-expenditure-report
[4] Colorado also spent $1.46B that was characterized as non general-fund spending.
[5] Brown, C., Fisher, S.B., Resnick, P. (2016). Assessing the Economic and Budgetary Impact of Medicaid Expansion in Colorado. The Colorado Health Foundation. https://coloradohealth.org/sites/default/files/documents/2017-01/Medicaid_Expansion_Full_ONLINE_.PDF
[6] Department of Health Care Policy and Financing. County Facts Sheets. https://hcpf.colorado.gov/county-fact-sheets