Colorado Code § 37-46-109

Authority of board to levy taxes
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(1) (a) In addition to other means of
providing revenue for the district, the board of directors has the power to fix the amount of an
assessment upon the property within the district, not to exceed two and one-half mills for every
dollar of valuation for assessment therein as a level or general levy to be used for the purpose of
paying the expenses of organization, for surveys and plans, to pay the salaries of officers and the
per diem allowed to directors and their expenses, for the costs and expenses of construction or
partial construction of any project designed or intended to accomplish the utilization of water, by
storage or otherwise, for any beneficial uses or purposes, and for other incidental expenses
which may be incurred in the administration of the affairs of the district.
(b) and (c) Repealed.
(d) Upon the receipt of any proceeds of a tax levy made under paragraph (a) of this
subsection (1), if any items of expense have already been paid in whole or in part from any other
sources by the district, they may be repaid from receipts of such levy. Such levy may be made,
although the work proposed or any part thereof may have been found impractical or for other
reasons abandoned. The collection of data and the payment of expenses therefor, including the
compensation of engineers and attorneys and clerical assistants, to conserve the water of the
district and to enable the district to adopt plans and projects for the orderly development of the
district are hereby declared to be a matter of general benefit to the public welfare and such that
taxes for said purposes may be properly imposed in the opinion of the general assembly.
(e) If this subsection (1) or any clause, phrase, or part thereof is held unconstitutional or
invalid by any court of competent jurisdiction, such decision shall not affect the validity or force
of any other part of this section or any other part of this law, and the general assembly hereby
declares it would have enacted the remainder of this article without this subsection (1).
(2) The board of said district may, in lieu of the level or general tax authorized by
subsection (1) of this section, levy special assessments upon all real estate within the district,
except such real estate as is exempted in this article, to raise funds to pay expenses of
organization, salaries, expenses, and per diem allowances of officers and directors and to prepare
a general plan for the maintenance of constant streamflow and adequate water supplies in all the
principal tributaries and the main stream of the Colorado river in said district and provide for
future development of the district and insure water therefor. Such assessments shall be made in
proportion to the benefits to each piece of real estate accruing by reason of the adoption of a
comprehensive plan of development of the natural resources of the district as a whole. The board
of directors, if it deems it advisable at any time before levying special assessments, shall
appraise the benefits to the several parcels of real estate within the district which shall result
from the organization of said district and the general plans and development aforesaid. The
board may adopt rules for such purpose and provide inter alia for notice and hearing to all
persons affected thereby. A permanent record, arranged by counties, of the benefits which will
accrue to each tract of land shall be kept, and such benefits shall be apportioned over a series of
years, the amount to be collected each year to be in the discretion of the board; but the amount of
such assessment to be levied and assessed against the real property in said district in any one
year shall not exceed a total of seventy-five hundred dollars, and it is hereby declared that the
amount of special benefits accruing annually to the real estate in said district is in excess of such
amount. All property owned by the state, counties, cities, towns, school districts, or other
governmental agencies shall be exempt from taxation or special levies under this article.
(3) Prior to October 15 of each year in which an assessment is made, the board of
directors shall appoint a time and place where it will meet within the district for the purpose of
hearing objections to assessments at least thirty days prior to the dates so appointed. Notice of
such hearing shall be given by posting a notice thereof at or near the door of the treasurer's office
in each county in said district and by publishing said notice in a legal newspaper not less than
three consecutive times within a period of thirty days, immediately prior to the hearing. The
notice posted in each county shall be sufficient if it pertains to the property subject to assessment
in said county only and need not contain the description of, or any reference to, property situated
in other counties also affected by such assessment. The notice shall contain a description of the
real estate so assessed in the county in which said notice is posted and published, the amount of
the assessment fixed by the board, and the time and place fixed by the board for the hearing of
objections to such assessments. It shall not be necessary for the notice to contain a separate
description of the lots or tracts of real estate, but it shall be sufficient if the said notice contains
such descriptions as will inform the owner whether or not his real estate is covered by such
descriptions, and to inform the owner of the amount of special assessments thereon.
(4) If, in the opinion of any person whose real estate is assessed, his property has been
assessed too high or has been erroneously or illegally assessed, at any time before the date of
such hearing, he may file written objections to such assessments, stating the ground of such
objections, which statement shall be verified by the affidavit of said person or some other person
familiar with the facts. At such hearing the board shall hear such evidence and argument as may
be offered concerning the correctness or legality of such assessment and may modify or amend
the same. Any owner of property desiring to appeal from the finding of the board as to
assessments, within thirty days from the finding of the board, shall file with the clerk of the
district court of the county in which the property is situated, a written notice making demand for
a trial by the court. At the same time, the appellant shall file a bond with good and sufficient
security, to be approved by the clerk of said court, in a sum not exceeding two hundred dollars,
to the effect that, if the finding of the court is not more favorable to the appellant than the finding
of the board, the appellant will pay the costs of the appeal. The appellant shall state definitely
from what part of the order the appeal is taken. In case more than one appeal is taken, upon a
showing that the same may be consolidated without injury to the interests of anyone, the court
may consolidate and try the appeals together.
(5) The court shall not disturb the findings of the board unless the finding of the board in
any case is manifestly disproportionate to the assessments imposed upon other property in the
district created under this article. The trial shall be to the court, and the matter shall take
precedence before the court and shall be taken up as promptly as may be after the appeal is filed.
If no appeal is taken from the finding of the board within the time prescribed in this section, or
after the finding of the district court in case an appeal is taken from the finding of the board, then
said assessments shall be final and conclusive evidence that said assessments have been made in
proportion to the benefits conferred upon each tract of real estate of said district by reason of the
general plans of survey, comprehensive plan of development, and the completion of
improvements to be constructed under the provisions of this article, and such assessments shall
constitute a perpetual lien as provided in section 37-46-121 upon the real estate so assessed until
paid.

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