Colorado Code § 30-20-504

Authority of governing body
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) Within the unincorporated territory of
any county, the governing body of such county is hereby vested with jurisdiction, power, and
authority to establish districts for the acquisition, construction, installation, operation, or
maintenance of improvements or the provision of services authorized by this part 5. The
governing body of a county may establish a district wholly or partially within the boundaries of
any municipality or partially within the unincorporated territory of another county if such
municipality or county consents by resolution to the establishment of such district.
(2) If a municipality annexes or incorporates any territory within an established district,
such territory shall remain in the district unless the municipality notifies the district's board of
the municipality's intent to exclude the territory annexed or incorporated from the district. If the
municipality notifies the board of its intent to exclude such territory, such exclusion shall take
effect January 1 of the year following such notice. Any property excluded from the district under
this subsection (2) shall remain subject to payment of its share of any indebtedness or bonds that
are outstanding on the date of such exclusion.
(3) At such time as all of the territory included within an existing district that has no
outstanding indebtedness or bonds is annexed or incorporated into a municipality, the governing
body of the municipality shall exercise all duties of the governing body of the district but
continue to act under this section as if it were the board of county commissioners. The presiding
officer of the governing body of the municipality shall be ex officio the presiding officer of the
board, the clerk of the municipality shall be ex officio the secretary of the board, and the
treasurer of the municipality shall be ex officio the treasurer of the board and district.

‹ 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.