Scott Renfroe

Principled Conservative Leadership

 
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Legislation

Bills Senator Renfroe is sponsoring this session:

Bills sponsored in the 2008 session:

Bills sponsored in the 2007 session: 



Critics say Dem emissions-testing bill spreads metro Denver misery to Larimer, Weld

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Colorado Senate News
March 26, 2009

Republicans fought back today at an attempt to expand the metropolitan-Denver area's much-unloved automotive emissions-testing program into northern Colorado's populations centers, but ruling Senate Democrats waved off concerns and OK'd the proposal anyway.

In floor debate on Senate Bill 3, northern Front Range Republican senators said the measure not only poses a tremendous new burden on motorists in places like Greeley and Fort Collins but also is flat-out unwarranted. They said those climes are by and large already in compliance with federal air-quality standards.

Sponsored by Fort Collins Democrats Bob Bacon in the Senate and Randy Fischer in the House, SB 3 expands the so-called "enhanced emissions program"--now consisting of the counties that make up the Denver metro area--to include Larimer and Weld counties. The upshot, the Republicans point out, will be to impose costly and time-consuming Denver-style emissions testing on vehicle owners by 2011 in those northern counties.

"This issue has been flying under the radar here in the General Assembly, but there will be an uproar in my community when this thing hits home," said Greeley Republican Sen. Scott Renfroe, who pushed back hard at the measure in today's debate and tried unsuccessfully to amend it.

Another critic, the GOP's Sen. Kevin Lundberg, of Berthoud in Larimer County, said what's at issue isn't whether northern Coloradans want clean air but rather whether the drastic step of expanding the Denver area's unpopular and unwieldy program makes sense. Lundberg says not only are the two northern counties largely compliant with standards for emissions of carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons, but so are most cars and trucks everywhere in the state--meaning that testing regimes like the one in force in Denver amount to overkill.

Denver's program long has raised the ire of motorists who have to pay a fee and at times have had to wait hours at one of a few officially designated testing locations--only to be told in the vast majority of cases that their vehicles pass. Air-quality experts long have said that a small percentage of all cars and trucks on the road--typically the oldest that are in poor repair--are disproportionately responsible for air pollution.

Requiring all cars to undergo a test that all but a few will pass is like taking a sledgehammer to kill a gnat, the Republicans say.

"If the old Soviet Union had cared about air quality, its program would have been run like the one in Denver," quipped Lundberg. "Long lines, few locations, one-size-fits-all--and all to catch a handful of offenders."

The Republican senators say the bill may be an abstraction to a lot of the public right now, but that is the calm before the storm.

Another provision that may irritate the public, the Republicans say, is that the bill changes the definition of collector's item for the purposes of motor vehicle registration and emission testing to a model year 1975 or earlier, or a vehicle that was registered as a collector's item prior to September 1, 2009. Under current law, vehicles that are at east 25 years old may be considered a collector's item. That means a lot of the kinds of cars currently eligible for collectors plates and exempt from testing--including some bona fide classics--won't be exampt any longer.

 

Dems' transportation package passes Senate -- over bipartisan opposition

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5 February 2009
Colorado Senate News

Dashing their hopes of winning a broad mandate, Senate Democrats passed a costly and wide-ranging transportation package today with no GOP support—and over the objections of two members within  their own ranks.

Senate Bill 108--which rankled Republicans with its provisions expanding tolling and hiking wide-ranging motor vehicle fees--drew "no" votes from all 14 Senate Republicans as well as Democrat Sens. Morgan Carroll, of Aurora, and Lois Tochtrop, of Thornton. The measure now heads to the House of Representatives.

"Ours is the only truly bipartisan position on this issue right now," Senate GOP leader Josh Penry said after the vote.

The GOP's Sen. Scott Renfroe, of Greeley, one of the bill's many vocal critics, offered a similar take.

"It’s amazing how the Democrat leadership continually says we’ve come together on this issue, yet it’s obvious the two parties are far apart, and even some of their own members aren't on board.”

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Lawmakers wrangle over roads funding

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by Andrew Villegas
The Greeley Tribune
March 2, 2009

It reads like a small child’s fake checkbook.

$400 million! $250 million! $100 million!

But it’s not written with crayon on pieces of notebook paper and cashed at mom and dad’s kitchen counter. It’s real money. Real money Colorado will start getting over the next few weeks and carrying into years that will amount to nearly $1 billion for roads and transit in Colorado.

The money comes in the form of both federal stimulus dollars — Democrats say it’ll create jobs and keep people in work, Republicans say it’s deficit spending run amok — and a bill poised to be signed by Gov. Bill Ritter today named FASTER that will raise vehicle registration fees by an average of $41 per car during the next two years to raise $250 million per year for ailing bridges and roads.

The stimulus dollars are one-time dollars, but the FASTER dollars are meant as a stopgap to keep up with work a special blue ribbon panel says desperately needs to be done, which is at least $500 million worth per year . . .

But Sen. Scott Renfroe, R-Greeley, said Colorado is paying more into the system than it’s taking out. Things like the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights have meant Colorado hasn’t been hit as hard as most of the country during the recession, Renfroe said.

“It’s a tribute to TABOR,” he said, adding that Colorado can’t turn those funds down now, however. “The (Colorado) budget is being balanced on the back of the federal bailout.”

But as state Republicans grudgingly accept federal funds to help with the budget and economy, they aren’t lying dead on other state fiscal matters.

Though they couldn’t stop the FASTER bill from sailing through, Republicans are preparing a filibuster in the state Senate on a bill that would attempt to lift the 6 percent growth limit on the state’s general fund.

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Dirty Hot Political Air Pushing Emissions Tests for Weld County

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By Senator Scott Renfroe

You may have heard of a proposal in the State Senate to require emissions tests in Weld County. An emissions test costs about $30 per vehicle, and the repair to fix a car that does not meet the required standards can cost hundreds of dollars.

Mandating onerous emissions testing requirements might be justified if Weld County’s air truly was not meeting the EPA standards – but the fact is, we already meet and exceed air quality standards.

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