Background & source documents |
Also quite informative is the legislative history for HB07-1251. CLICK to download that 33-page resource.
Colorado recognizes sacrifices of our totally disabled veterans, awarding a partial property tax exemption to 100 percent totally and permanently disabled veterans. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has two types of 100% disabled veterans – (1) vets with a 100% disability (2) vets with a total disability rated “Total Disability for Individual Unemployability” (TDIU.) VA benefits for the two types are identical, but Colorado’s TDIU veterans are unfairly denied the exemption
Background & source documents |
"The veteran to whom the applicant was married must have applied for and been granted the disabled veterans property tax exemption as provided by § 39-3-203(1.5)(a), C.R.S., prior to his or her death" (Colorado CMDVA Form 15-DPT-AR DV-002-07/14)Very clearly, CMDVA's form discourages widows from applying unless the veteran was already receiving Colorado's disabled veteran property tax exemption. This is even though no prohibition can be found in the constitution or the state's laws as regards the veteran's receipt before death.
(1) HB07-1251 left out the constitution's provision for totally disabled military retirees, and (2) the Division of Military Affairs added somehow a barrier to VA's Permanent and Total Individual Unemployability (TDIU.)Vets who've been around the block with the US Department of Veterans Affairs will tell anyone asking how slow the VA is in making its disability awards. Even the simplist 100% disability rating can take years following the initial injury while on duty. Following the Gulf War, this writer was retired by the Air Force with a permanent and total 100% service connected disability military retirement effective in 1996, yet the VA 100% service connected rating didn't follow until 2015! Thus, Colorado denied its tax exemption even though the constitution clearly provides for it. Further, Colorado refused to recognize the VA's TDIU rating dating from 1998,
1. corrective legislation, with "late bill" restoring military disability retirements and unemployability provisions of the Constitution, to begin in 2017, or...1. A legislative solution through a "late bill" is a much, much cheaper solution. If enacted, it will provide the exemption for application in 2017. Because Colorado laws prohibit retroactive correction., there can be no payment for years when the exemption was withheld. But...
2. the Supreme Court to declare unconstitutional statutes and regulations related to Referendum E/Article X Section 3.5