
5 minute read
SEE TOWN HALL
the Lone Tree Arts Center.
Due to TABOR, the city had to project a maximum amount it was allowed to collect from the 2E tax in 2022. The maximum was set at $15,563,749.
“We did include infl ation estimates in our forecasting. We did not include 8%,” Millet said.
According to a city staff report, through July, sales tax collections were trending 8% above 2019 levels, in part due to rising infl ation rates, which means the city was projected to collect more than the maximum amount.
To comply with TABOR and ensure the city does not over-collect, the city council approved an ordinance in October to temporarily reduce the sales tax by 0.5% for December. With the approval, the city sales tax rate in December will go from 2.8125% to 2.3125%.
In January, the city’s tax rate will return to 2.8125%, Millet said.
Part of the city’s sales tax is a 0.3125% rate, which was approved by voters to build recreation projects and the Lone Tree Arts Center, according to the city’s website.
Millet said by Nov. 30 of next year, the city is expected to pay off its arts and recreation bonds, meaning the 0.3125% rate will end and the city’s sales tax rate will be 2.5% by December 2023.
Uses of 2E tax funding
About 81% of the revenue from the 2E tax went to capital expenses and sharebacks, the police department and public works, Millet said.
“The remainder of those dollars, that 19%, is focused on really providing the high level of city services that we’ve all come to love and enjoy as residents,” Millet said.
For the police department, funding from the 2E tax allowed the city to unfreeze two police offi cer positions and hire another offi cer to join the crisis response team, Millet said.
Millet said police offi cers are often the frontline of mental health and homelessness response. The homelessness crisis is increasing throughout the region and impacting the city as well, she added.
“It’s another one of the burdens that has been placed on our police department in the City of Lone Tree, because that is the only thing we have as a resource to respond,” Millet said.
Millet applauded the creation of Douglas County’s Homeless Engagement, Assistance and Resource Team, also referred to as HEART. The team consists of three navigators who assist law enforcement, respond to community calls regarding homelessness and provide support to individuals experiencing homelessness, according to Douglas County’s website.
Funding from the 2E tax measure helped the city fund more public works issues, including road maintenance, storm sewer repairs and assessment, and replacement of traffi c signals, Millet said.
The city is also able to fully fund its free micro-transit service again, she said. Link On Demand is a shuttle service that offers people rides within the city limits for free.
Update on Treõ At Lone Tree
While discussing businesses in Lone Tree, Millet gave an update on Treõ At Lone Tree, a building located at 9070 Maximus Drive that faces South Yosemite Street, which has been vacant for more than a decade.
Millet said the city would always prefer that the market resolve the issues, but it has been “a dozen years” and it hasn’t been resolved.
She is hopeful there will be changes, explaining the council, city staff and police department have spent more time than they should addressing the property.
There are a few “good opportunities in the works there,” she said, saying she is committed to seeing something change.
“There will be no zoning change there,” she said.

RidgeGate East
Millet described the development at RidgeGate East, located east of Interstate 25 and south of RidgeGate Parkway, as a great expansion of the Lone Tree community.
An 80-acre park is one of several developments coming to RidgeGate East, Millet said, in addition to a Lone Tree City Center, three school sites and three residential villages.
The fi rst residential village, Lyric at RidgeGate, is overseen by Shea Homes and will involve about 2,000 attached and detached homes for sale, she said.
“It’s a range of products and a range of prices. We are hoping that some of these coming in will be a little more affordable,” she said, explaining it will be a more dense community and she thinks it will be a good addition.
Near the RTD RidgeGate Parkway Station, there is also an affordable housing project being built — Koelbel and Company’s Talus affordable housing project — which includes 67 apartments.
Millet said the apartments will be for people making about 60% of the area median income, which amounts to between $45,000 and $80,000, depending on the size of a person’s household.
The city’s investment in infrastructure has paved the way for the development, Millet said.


About 50 people were in the audience for the Oct. 12 town hall held at Lone Tree Arts Center.
PHOTOS BY TAYLER SHAW
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