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File #: 24-464    Version: 1
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 8/14/2024 In control: Board of County Commissioners Business Meeting
On agenda: 8/20/2024 Final action: 8/20/2024
Title: Resolution to refer a ballot measure to the November 5, 2024, election that would provide relief from the revenue and spending limits of the Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TABOR) and other limits provided by law
Attachments: 1. Board Summary Report, 2. Presentation, 3. Draft Motion, 4. Resolution
To: Board of County Commissioners

Through: County Attorney's Office

Prepared By:
prepared
Commissioners' Office
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presenter
Presenter: Michelle Halstead, Director, Commissioners' Office
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Subject:
title
Resolution to refer a ballot measure to the November 5, 2024, election that would provide relief from the revenue and spending limits of the Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TABOR) and other limits provided by law
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Purpose and Request:
recommended action
The purpose of this resolution is to refer a ballot measure to voters to obtain relief from the revenue and spending limits of TABOR.
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Background and Discussion: Arapahoe County is one of Colorado's fastest growing counties and is expected to add 120,000 individuals by 2030, making it the most populous county in the state. It also is one of 13 counties that lives within the property tax revenue and spending limits established by TABOR, which poses unique budgetary problems that constrain its ability to provide essential services that neighboring counties do not experience. As a result, Arapahoe County has had do more with less, delivering crucial public safety, human services, and transportation programs without additional funding, running a lean government, leveraging federal and state grants, employing fiscal transparency, and building a modest rainy-day fund to address unexpected emergencies. TABOR's budget constraints also have meant deferring maintenance on critical infrastructure and limiting public safety investments, as the County's property tax rates became one of the lowest in the Denver metro area.

In the past 25 years, the cost to meet increased demand from residents has outpaced revenue growth. The $384 received in property taxes on an average residential property does not generate sufficient resources to provide the essential and mandated services residents rely on. The County has not applied its full mill levy since 2015, resulting in the County receiving 29 percent less in...

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