Colorado Code § 24-30-202

Procedures - vouchers, warrants, and checks - rules - penalties - definitions - repeal
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(1) No disbursements shall be made in payment of any liability incurred on
behalf of the state, other than from petty cash or by any alternative means of payment approved
by fiscal rule promulgated by the controller, unless there has been previously filed with the
office of the state controller a commitment voucher. The commitment voucher may be in the
form of an advice of employment, a purchase order, a copy of a contract, or a travel
authorization or in other form appropriate to the type of transaction as prescribed by the
controller. Any state contract involving the payment of money by the state shall contain a clause
providing that the contract shall not be deemed valid until it has been approved by the controller
or such assistant as he or she may designate; except that a state contract for a major information
technology project as defined in section 24-37.5-102 (19) shall contain a clause providing that
the contract shall not be deemed valid until it has been approved by the chief information officer
or the chief information officer's designee. Such contracts entered into on or after July 1, 1997,
shall also contain a clause notifying the other party to the contract of the controller's authority to
withhold debts owed to state agencies under the vendor offset intercept system pursuant to
section 24-30-202.4 (3.5)(a)(I) and the types of debts that are subject to withholding under said
system. The form and content of and procedures for filing such vouchers shall be prescribed by
the fiscal rules promulgated by the controller.
(2) The controller, or such assistant as he may designate, shall examine each
commitment voucher to ascertain whether or not the proposed expenditure is authorized by the
appropriation and allotment to which it is proposed to be charged, whether or not the prices or
rates are in accordance with law or administrative rules or are fair and reasonable and whether or
not the amount of the expenditure exceeds the unencumbered balance of the allotment. The
controller or his designated assistant shall record his approval or disapproval either on the face of
each voucher or by electronically entering such approval or disapproval in the state computer-
based accounting system. The head of the state department, institution, or other agency involved
shall be notified of any proposed expenditures that are disallowed.
(3) In no event shall the head of any state department, institution, or other agency or the
controller, either by himself or through any assistant designated by him, approve any
commitment voucher involving expenditure of any sum in excess of the unencumbered balance
of the appropriation to which the resulting disbursement would be charged. No person shall incur
or order or vote for the incurrence of any obligation against the state in excess of or for any
expenditure not authorized by appropriation and approved commitment voucher except as
expressly authorized by this section. Any such obligation so raised in contravention of this
section shall not be binding against the state but shall be null and void ab initio and incapable of
ratification by any administrative authority of the state to give effect thereto against the state.
But every person incurring or ordering or voting for the incurrence of such obligation and his
surety shall be jointly and severally liable therefor.
(4) The controller is hereby authorized to grant special authority for any department,
institution, or other agency, during any fiscal year, to make specific purchases of supplies or
materials to be used in the next ensuing fiscal year or to enter into contracts in anticipation of
appropriations already made or to be made for the next ensuing fiscal year for any purpose
authorized by any existing law, including contracts by the department of transportation for state
highway reconstruction, repair, maintenance, and capacity expansion projects to be funded by
the revenues appropriated out of the capital construction fund under section 24-75-302 (2), but in
no case for any amount exceeding that necessary to meet the requirements for the first quarter of
the next fiscal year. No such purchase order shall be issued nor contract entered into unless such
purchase order or contract has been approved and countersigned by the controller or the
controller's authorized agent, whose duty it shall be to see that the special authority so granted is
not exceeded; except that this restriction shall not apply to contracts for capital outlay projects
for which appropriations have been provided for obligations to be incurred in two or more fiscal
years. Payments made at the close of a fiscal year under such authority shall be treated as
deferred charges to the appropriations and expenses of the next ensuing fiscal year until the
beginning of such year.
(4.3) (a) The controller may retroactively adjust encumbrances against appropriations for
contracts and grants authorized pursuant to the authority to spend money from the "American
Rescue Plan Act of 2021" cash fund, created in section 24-75-226 (4)(a)(II), if the funding
source for the contract or grant is subsequently refinanced. Any retroactive contract or grant
encumbrance adjustments between funding sources authorized in this section are not permitted
to increase the total encumbrance.
(b) This subsection (4.3) is repealed, effective July 1, 2027.
(5) (a) No money of the state or for which the state is responsible shall be withdrawn
from the treasury or otherwise disbursed for any purpose except to pay obligations under
expenditures authorized by appropriation and allotment and not in excess of the amount so
authorized. Each such expenditure shall have been authorized by the head of the department,
institution, or other agency by or for which the expenditure was made. Such authorization shall
contain the manual or facsimile signature of the head of the department, institution, or agency or
any assistant designated by him. The controller, or his authorized agent, shall have approved a
commitment voucher therefor, and a claim on a prescribed form shall have been submitted to
and approved by the controller or his agent. The provisions of this section shall not be construed
to apply to withdrawals of funds from any state depository bank for immediate redeposit in any
other state depository bank or for investment.
(b) If a state department, institution, or agency enters into a contract to purchase real
property or any interest therein that has a total purchase price of more than one hundred
thousand dollars, the contract must contain a contingency clause that requires the state to secure
an appraisal of the subject real property or interest therein prior to closing by an independent
appraiser licensed in the state of Colorado to substantiate the purchase price and that makes the
closing of the purchase contingent on the approval of the contract by the state controller. When
the state department, institution, or agency entering into the contract receives the appraisal, the
state department, institution, or agency shall provide a copy of the appraisal to the state
controller. This subsection (5)(b) shall not apply to the acquisition of property by the department
of transportation for the construction, maintenance, or supervision of the public highways of this
state, nor shall it apply to any additional financed purchase of an asset or certificate of
participation agreement entered into pursuant to the master lease program authorized by part 7 of
article 82 of this title 24.
(c) (I) If a state department, institution, or agency enters into an option to purchase real
property or any interest therein that has a total purchase price of more than one hundred
thousand dollars, the appraisal requirement described in paragraph (b) of this subsection (5) must
occur prior to closing on the purchase of the real property or interest therein.
(II) Prior to a state department, institution, or agency entering into an option to purchase
real property or any interest therein that has a total purchase price of more than one hundred
thousand dollars, the state department, institution, or agency shall obtain a written broker
opinion of value completed by an independent broker licensed in the state of Colorado or an
appraisal by an independent appraiser licensed in the state of Colorado of the subject property in
order to complete a thorough analysis of the property or interests therein being considered. The
opinion of value or the appraisal must be forwarded to the state controller prior to the state
controller approving the option to purchase contract.
(5.5) Any commitment voucher that provides that the financial obligations of the state in
subsequent fiscal years are contingent upon funds for that purpose being appropriated, budgeted,
and otherwise made available shall not be deemed to create any state multiple-fiscal year direct
or indirect debt or other financial obligation whatsoever for purposes of section 20 (4)(b) of
article X of the state constitution. If a financed purchase of an asset or certificate of participation
agreement is subject to the requirement of specific authorization by the general assembly under
part 8 of article 82 of this title 24, such committees shall make a recommendation to the general
assembly concerning whether to authorize the financed purchase of an asset or certificate of
participation agreement. The department of personnel and the Colorado commission on higher
education shall maintain comparative data which will assist in determining the relative costs to
the state, over the entire term of the arrangement, of financing the purchase or lease of property
through pay-as-you-go methods, certificates of participation, or other arrangements.
(6) The controller shall prescribe the form of warrants and checks to be drawn upon the
state treasurer. All warrants and checks for approved expenditures and claims shall be drawn and
issued under direction of the controller or his or her authorized agent and transmitted to the
department of the treasury to be recorded.
(7) Each warrant and check drawn and issued shall be signed by the controller and
countersigned by the state treasurer. Facsimiles of such signature and countersignature may be
affixed by a mechanical device. The signature of the controller on a warrant or check, however
affixed, shall constitute full and complete authority to the state treasurer to pay the amount
thereof upon presentation to him or her.
(8) Each warrant or check drawn and issued shall bear a notation clearly printed in a
prominent position upon its face stating that it shall be void after six months from its date of
issue. Upon satisfactory proof furnished of loss or destruction, during said six-month period, of
any warrant or check drawn and issued in payment of an approved expenditure or claim, the
controller shall cause a duplicate of such lost or destroyed warrant or check to be drawn and
issued in favor of the original payee or his or her assignee, as the case may be. The issuing state
agency shall thereupon void said original warrant or check, and, if it thereafter is presented for
payment, the state treasurer shall refuse payment thereof.
(8.5) Any other provision of law to the contrary notwithstanding, the controller may,
after adequate notification to the state treasurer, make payment by means of an electronic fund
transfer. Payment by electronic fund transfer shall be in lieu of payment by state warrant or
check and shall discharge the controller's obligation with respect to payment. Any unauthorized
use of the electronic fund transfer capability shall be reported to the controller within twenty-
four hours after occurrence or disclosure becomes known. Immediately upon discovery of
unauthorized use, measures that will prevent further unauthorized use shall be implemented.
(9) (a) Every warrant and check drawn and issued that has not been presented to the state
treasurer for payment and remains unpaid shall be canceled pursuant to fiscal rules promulgated
by the state controller and transferred to the unclaimed property trust fund created in section 38-
13-116.5; except that the amount of any warrant or check drawn on the wildlife cash fund
created in section 33-1-112 (1), other than a warrant or check refunding a license fee submitted
as part of an unsuccessful limited license application, shall be credited to that fund and the
amount of any warrant or check representing money received by the federal government shall be
processed in accordance with federal program guidelines for disposition of those moneys.
(b) If at any time thereafter application is made to the controller for reissuance of any
warrant or check that has been canceled and expunged from the records and it appears that the
expenditure or claim that the canceled warrant or check represented is still valid and unpaid, the
controller shall issue a new warrant or check, and the amount thereof shall be charged to the
fund or account to which the amount of the canceled warrant or check was previously credited.
(c) In the event of any conflict between this subsection (9) and any provision of the
"Revised Uniform Unclaimed Property Act", article 13 of title 38, the provisions of the "Revised
Uniform Unclaimed Property Act" shall control; except that this subsection (9) shall control with
regard to:
(I) A tax warrant or check;
(II) Repealed.
(III) That portion of a warrant or check representing moneys received from the federal
government;
(IV) A warrant or check drawn on the wildlife cash fund created in section 33-1-112 (1),
C.R.S., other than a warrant or check refunding a license fee submitted as part of an unsuccessful
limited license application.
(d) Notwithstanding any provision of this subsection (9) to the contrary, the provisions
of this subsection (9) shall not apply to any warrant or check drawn by an institution of higher
education or by the Auraria higher education center that is exempt from the state fiscal rules
pursuant to paragraph (b) of subsection (13) of this section.
(10) The attorney general shall be the legal adviser of the controller and to the attorney
general shall be referred any question concerning the legality of any obligation by or claim
against the state.
(11) It is the duty of the controller to keep up to date a detailed list of all sources from
which moneys accrue to the state, classified according to the departments, institutions, and other
agencies responsible for the collection of the moneys, showing for each of the several units: The
several kinds of taxes, fees, and other charges collected or to be collected; the name of the
person responsible for collecting public moneys from each such source; and the name of the
employee actually engaged in collecting, handling, and depositing such moneys. The controller
has the power, and it is his duty with respect to each state tax, to prescribe or approve such
accounts and procedures as will provide adequate accounting and current internal audit control
of unpaid taxes and other charges and the proceeds of collections and as will furnish the
information required for the maintenance of the general accounts of the state. The controller has
the power and it is his duty to prescribe the forms to be used by the several units for licenses,
permits, and certificates for which fees are prescribed by law and to establish controls of the
supplies of such forms.
(12) The controller shall prescribe and cause to be installed a unified and integrated
system of accounts for the state. Except as otherwise provided in sections 24-75-201 (2) and
25.5-4-201, C.R.S., such system shall be based upon the accrual system of accounting, as
enunciated by the governmental accounting standards board, which shall include:
(a) A set of budgetary control accounts for each fund, which shall be maintained
pursuant to the accounts and control functions of the department of personnel;
(b) A set of general controlling proprietary and operating accounts for each fund, which
shall be maintained pursuant to the accounts and control functions of the department of
personnel, recording the transactions of the fund in summary form and showing the actual
current assets, prepaid expenses, current liabilities, deferred credits to income, reserves, actual
income, actual expenditures, and current surplus or deficit as the case may be;
(c) A uniform classification of the sources of revenue and nonrevenue receipts, which
shall be observed by all the departments, institutions, and other agencies;
(d) A standard classification of the departments, institutions, and other agencies and their
principal functions, by major functions of government;
(e) A standard classification of expenditures by activities;
(f) A unified classification of ordinary recurring expenses, extraordinary expenses, and
capital outlays, respectively, by the kinds of commodities and services involved, which shall be
observed in reporting expenditures, in preparing budget estimates, and in allotting
appropriations.
(13) (a) The controller shall promulgate fiscal rules to carry out the functions assigned
and the procedures prescribed by this section. Such rules relating to the forms, records, and
procedures involved in financial administration shall be binding upon the several departments,
institutions, including institutions of higher education except as otherwise provided in paragraph
(b) of this subsection (13), and other agencies of the state and upon their several officers and
employees.
(b) It is the intent of the general assembly that fiscal rules promulgated by the controller
shall be applicable to any institution of higher education; except that the governing board of an
institution of higher education that has adopted fiscal procedures and has determined that the
fiscal procedures provide adequate safeguards for the proper expenditure of the moneys of the
institution may elect to exempt the institution from the fiscal rules promulgated by the controller
pursuant to this subsection (13), including any procedures or forms required by law to be
promulgated by the controller and any review or approval required to be performed by the
controller, and shall not be required to comply with rules promulgated pursuant to this
subsection (13) or with the provisions of subsection (1), (5)(b), (20.1), (22), or (26) of this
section. The provisions of this paragraph (b) shall also apply to the board of directors of the
Auraria higher education center with regard to the expenditure of moneys of the auraria higher
education center.
(c) Repealed.
(d) An institution of higher education, including the auraria higher education center, that
is exempt from the state fiscal rules pursuant to paragraph (b) of this subsection (13) shall
continue to provide to the controller such information as is necessary to enable the controller to
meet the obligations set forth in subsection (11) of this section and sections 24-17-102 and 24-
30-204; except that an institution of higher education shall be required to provide only such data
and reports as are readily accessible to the institution or presently generated by the institution.
(14) If the controller or any other state employee knowingly draws or issues any warrant
or check upon the state treasurer not authorized by law, he or she commits a class 2
misdemeanor.
(15) Any person holding the office of state treasurer or controller or any other state
officer or employee who, directly or indirectly, receives from any person, body of persons,
association, or corporation, for himself or herself or otherwise than in behalf of the state, any
reward, compensation, or profit, either in money or other property or thing of value, in
consideration of the loan to or deposit with any such person, body of persons, association, or
corporation of any public money or other property belonging to the state or in the consideration
of the approval or payment of any claim against the state or any other agreement or arrangement
touching the use of such money or uses or knowingly permits the use of any such money for any
purposes not authorized by law commits a class 6 felony and shall be punished as provided in
section 18-1.3-401, C.R.S.
(16) Any person who, directly or indirectly, pays or gives to anyone holding the office of
state treasurer or controller or to any other state officer or employee or other person any reward
or compensation, either in money or other property or things of value, in consideration of the
loan to or deposit with any such person, body of persons, association, or corporation of any
public money belonging to the state or for which the state is responsible or in consideration of
the approval or payment of any claim against the state or of any other agreement or arrangement
touching the use of such money commits a class 6 felony and shall be punished as provided in
section 18-1.3-401, C.R.S.
(17) Any state officer or employee who willfully neglects or refuses to perform the
officer's or employee's duty as prescribed in this section or as prescribed in the fiscal rules
promulgated by the controller in conformity with this section commits a civil infraction.
(18) (a) to (e) Repealed.
(f) All state agencies are required to make and preserve records of employees' wages and
hours and other conditions and practices of employment.
(g) to (j) Repealed.
(19) If any money of the state is paid out from any appropriation or fund for any purpose
and such money, or any part thereof, is for any reason subsequently refunded to the state, the
controller is authorized to order the money so refunded to be credited to the fund or
appropriation from which it was originally paid.
(20) Repealed.
(20.1) The controller, or the controller's designee, is hereby authorized, upon written
request made to the controller, to allow any state department, institution, or agency to draw upon
its appropriation a sum set by fiscal rule promulgated by the controller, which fiscal rule may not
authorize a sum in excess of two thousand five hundred dollars, and considered appropriate for
the circumstances, to be used for the payment of incidental expenses. Items of postage, express,
telegrams, and other incidental expenses may be paid from such moneys. At the end of each
month, or as often as is practicable, the department, institution, or agency making such incidental
expenditures shall submit a voucher to the controller covering the total amount of such
expenditures and shall submit a list of all such expenditures, together with proper receipts, if
any, and the controller shall draw the controller's warrant or check against the proper
appropriation to cover all items of expenditures that the controller approves. The controller is
also authorized, upon the request of any state department, institution, or agency, to allow a
reasonable advance of moneys to employees and officials for authorized travel on official state
business not to exceed an amount set by fiscal rule promulgated by the controller.
(21) If, as a result of fire or other insured loss to state property, the state receives moneys
from any insurance company, the controller is authorized to deposit such moneys in an account
from which he may, without regard to the provisions of part 3 of article 37 of this title and
without further legislative action, reimburse contractors for repair, replacement, or
reconstruction of state properties damaged or destroyed under a contract executed in accordance
with state contracting laws and procedures in effect at the time of the execution of the contract.
If the amount of insurance recovery exceeds the actual cost of such repair, replacement, or
reconstruction, any balance remaining in said account after payment of actual costs shall revert
to the general fund. With respect to the loss or damage to state property which is not insured or
the loss or damage to state property which is insured but the insurance does not fully cover the
loss or damage, the controller may, with the approval of the governor, without further legislative
action, reimburse contractors for the repair, replacement, or reconstruction of such state property
up to a maximum amount of one hundred thousand dollars; except that the controller is not
authorized to provide for reimbursement for repair, replacement, or reconstruction of state
property if the state is self-insured for loss or damage to state property.
(22) The controller shall make uniform and equitable fiscal rules controlling the types of
perquisites which may be allowed state employees in the executive branch of government in
addition to their regular salaries. Such rules shall include the eligibility of employees to receive
such perquisites, the charges to be made for such perquisites, and the method of payment of such
charges to the state. Before such rules become effective, they shall be approved by the governor.
No employee shall have authority to grant to himself or herself or to any other employee under
his or her supervision any perquisite, nor shall any employee receive any perquisite without full
payment therefor, except as provided for by statute or by the rules of the controller as authorized
in this section. Charges prescribed by such rules shall be reviewed annually by the controller.
(23) Repealed.
(24) (a) The controller shall promulgate fiscal rules requiring that disbursements made in
the payment of any liability incurred on behalf of the executive branch of this state be made
within forty-five days after such liability was incurred or shall pay interest from the forty-fifth
day at a rate of one percent per month on the unpaid balance until the account is paid in full.
(b) As used in subsection (24)(a) of this section, "liability incurred on behalf of the state"
means the receipt of supplies, as defined in section 24-101-301 (47), or services, as defined in
section 24-101-301 (42), and receipt of a correct notice of the amount due, by the state agency
procuring such supplies or services from a nongovernmental entity. No liability is incurred on
behalf of the state if a good faith dispute exists as to the state's obligation to pay all or a portion
of the account. Nothing in this subsection (24) shall be construed to affect any provision for the
time of payment in a written contract between a state agency procuring services or supplies and a
nongovernmental entity.
(25) (a) (Deleted by amendment, L. 2005, p. 278, § 9, effective August 8, 2005.)
(b) On July 1, 1985, the controller shall, by fiscal rule, provide for the assessment of a
reasonable monetary penalty based on cost against any person who issues a check returned for
insufficient funds to any state department, institution, or agency in payment of fees, fines, or
other moneys due the state.
(c) For the purposes of this subsection (25), "insufficient funds" means not having a
sufficient balance in account with a bank or other drawee for the payment of a check when
presented for payment within thirty days after issue.
(d) The penalty provided for in this subsection (25) shall be assessed in addition to any
other penalties provided by law except for the penalty provided in section 24-35-114 relating to
checks issued to the department of revenue.
(26) The controller shall promulgate equitable fiscal rules concerning travel policies
applicable to state employees, including methods of transportation, travel advances,
reimbursements, travel allowances, use of travel agents, and use of state or privately owned
vehicles, and may promulgate such rules for the implementation of a state travel policy as he
deems necessary to assure fair and reasonable expenditures.
(27) To avoid the imposition of duplicative or excessively burdensome or numerous
reporting requirements upon state-supported institutions of higher education and to encourage
the promulgation of reporting rules that, to the extent possible, require such institutions to
provide only data and reports readily accessible to or presently generated by such institutions,
the controller shall consult with the Colorado commission on higher education before adopting,
amending, or repealing rules affecting or creating reporting requirements applicable to such
institutions.
(28) (a) As used in this subsection (28):
(I) (A) "Charitable food organization" means a charitable organization, including a faith-
based organization, exempt from federal taxation under the provisions of the federal "Internal
Revenue Code of 1986", as amended, that distributes food directly or indirectly for hunger relief
in the community.
(B) "Charitable food organization" includes a school food authority as defined in section
22-32-120 (8).
(II) "State agricultural products" means agricultural products produced in the state in
accordance with section 24-103-907 (3)(a).
(b) The controller shall promulgate fiscal rules to clarify that state agencies may, under
review of the state controller, provide for advance payment for the purchase of state agricultural
products by a charitable food organization using state grant money, and may include, as the
controller deems necessary, rules for the implementation of the advance payment policy
including proper accounting, compliance with industry standards, and determination that the
advance payment provides a benefit to the state at least equal to the cost and risk of the advance
payment.

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