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Colorado has constitutional mandates that require most tax hikes to be approved by voters. The school tax on the ballot Tuesday would have raised individual and corporate tax rates from 4.63 percent to 5 percent and Colorado's sales and use tax rate from 2.9 percent to 3 percent. The rates would have been in effect from 2012 through 2016, with an estimated $2.9 billion in new taxes during that time going to K-12 schools and public colleges. The Colorado vote came after the state, like many others, ratcheted back school funding in response to declining tax receipts. Lawmakers here cut schools more than $200 million earlier this year, to $2.8 billion. Many school districts have gone to four-day weeks. Others have laid off teachers and increased class sizes. The director of DU's Center for Colorado's Economic Future, which earlier this year warned of fiscal disaster if the state doesn't make big change, didn't seem surprised by Tuesday's votes. But he predicted voters will agree to changes for state finance
-- eventually. "Structural problems take some time to be created, and they take some time to be resolved," Charlie Brown said. "It's a little overwhelming for policy makers right now." Colorado State University political scientist John Straayer put it even more bluntly. "This isn't rocket science -- the economic and political circumstances are not favorable to these kinds of things," Straayer said of the tax hikes.
[Associated
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