Colorado Code § 25-29-105

Transfer of health system assets and liabilities to authority
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) The
authority is authorized to enter into agreements with the city for the purpose of leasing,
conveying, or otherwise acquiring Denver's health system assets. Any such lease, conveyance,
transfer, or other agreement to acquire such assets shall be on such terms as may be agreed upon
by the parties and shall include consideration of the authority's agreement to assume Denver's
health system liabilities.
(2) Any transfer of health system assets to the authority shall be conditioned upon the
existence of a binding agreement between the city and the authority transferring management
and operation of some or all of the Denver health system to the authority and by which the
authority shall accept and agree to fulfill the mission specified in section 25-29-104 and the
provisions of section 25-29-107 concerning personnel.
(3) Any transfer of health system assets to the authority pursuant to this section shall be
further conditioned upon the existence of a binding agreement between the authority and the city
which provides that, effective on the transfer date and thereafter, the authority shall assume
responsibility for and shall defend, indemnify, and hold the city harmless with respect to:
(a) All liabilities and duties of the city pursuant to contracts, agreements, and leases for
commodities, services, and supplies utilized by the Denver health system, including real property
leases;
(b) All claims related to the employment relationship between employees of the
authority and the authority on and after the transfer date;
(c) All claims for breach of contract resulting from the authority's action or failure to act
on and after the transfer date; and
(d) All claims related to the authority's errors and omissions including but not limited to
medical malpractice; director and officer liability; workers' compensation; automobile liability;
and premises, completed operations, and products liability.

‹ Prev All Colorado sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.