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Arapahoe County appears to adopt issue 1A

The measure will allow the government to keep and spend all taxes collected, and get rid of TABOR spending limits.

Arapahoe County voters appear to agree that the local government should be able to retain and spend taxes it has collected.

Issue 1A is leading large at about 71% to about 29% with 218,970 votes counted, the unofficial count Wednesday morning showed.

Under Colorado’s Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, voters may allow their respective governments to “de-Bruce” — that is, permit a county, municipality, or school district to eliminate TABOR’s revenue limit and use all the taxes it has collected for spending priorities. The phrase references the constitutional amendment’s author, Douglas Bruce.

Under TABOR, voters may allow their respective governments to “de-Bruce” — that is, permit a county, municipality, or school district to eliminate TABOR’s revenue limit and use all the taxes it has collected for spending priorities. The phrase references the constitutional amendment’s author, Douglas Bruce.

Arapahoe County is one of a few counties that still operates under the TABOR limits. Officials said, if approved, the money would go toward roads and pedestrian safety, emergency response, housing, mental health resources and other programs.

County officials said they placed the measure on the ballot after years of insufficient tax revenue and increased demand for services.

The proposal technically does not raise taxes, officials said. Its approval allows the county to retain roughly $74 million more tax revenue in some years.

FILE PHOTO: Two cyclists ride on the High Line Canal trail on June 20, 2024. Arapahoe County Open Spaces is looking to update its rules and regulations, and is asking for community feedback. (KylaPearceAurora reporterkyla.pearce@denvergazette.comhttps://denvergazette.com/content/tncms/avatars/2/16/1e5/2161e54a-3f47-11ed-bc0c-ff41892600ae.4fb8f678b9b96eab286c33c5af828fe7.png)
FILE PHOTO: Two cyclists ride on the High Line Canal trail on June 20, 2024. Arapahoe County Open Spaces is looking to update its rules and regulations, and is asking for community feedback. (KylaPearceAurora [email protected]://denvergazette.com/content/tncms/avatars/2/16/1e5/2161e54a-3f47-11ed-bc0c-ff41892600ae.4fb8f678b9b96eab286c33c5af828fe7.png)


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