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League of Women voters backs petition questioning West Greeley development project

A rendering of the proposed $1.1 billion hotel-hockey arena- water park development in west Greeley that is part of the Cascadia project.
Courtesy - Water Valley Co.
A rendering of the proposed $1.1 billion hotel-hockey arena- water park development in west Greeley that is part of the Cascadia project. A petition is being circulated by a group hoping that voters in November will get a chance to have their say on the Greeley City Council鈥檚 approval of the complex financing plan.

A petition being circulated by a group hoping that voters in November will get a chance to have their say on the Greeley City Council鈥檚 approval of the complex financing plan for a $1.1 billion sports and entertainment project on the city鈥檚 western edge has won the endorsement of the .

Collecting 4,518 valid signatures from registered voters residing in Greeley by Aug. 6 would put the issue on the ballot in November. If passed, it would invalidate the present funding arrangement and essentially pause, but not end, the project.

Ordinance 2025-15, by the Greeley City Council, authorizes the financing plan for an entertainment district on city-owned land near Weld County Road 17 and U.S. Highway 34 that would include an ice arena, hotel and water park and anchor Windsor-based developer Martin Lind鈥檚 proposed Cascadia mixed-use development.

鈥淲hile the League of Women Voters does not take a position on Cascadia,鈥 said a news release issued Tuesday by the League鈥檚 local chapter, 鈥渋t has a longstanding tradition of supporting citizen involvement in government.鈥

鈥淒emocracy works best when the citizens participate,鈥 chapter president Jeanne Lipman said in a prepared statement. 鈥淪low the process down a little and let the people have a say.鈥

Lipman confirmed that neither she nor the League holds a position on the project, but added that 鈥淕reeley has grown a lot in the 50 years I鈥檝e lived here, and this project, if it鈥檚 successful, would help it grow even more. Now is a good time to make sure we are all behind this kind of growth.

鈥淗aving such an expensive project go forward on the vote of just five people bypasses the will of the voters,鈥 she said.

Petitions are being circulated by the citizens group Greeley Deserves Better at community events such as Friday Fest and the Arts Picnic, grocery stores, and coffee shops.

The plan authorized the city to mortgage 46 public buildings 鈥 including City Hall, the Police Department, City Center North, the Ice Haus and three fire stations 鈥 as collateral for the private development. The plan includes using $115 million worth of 鈥渃ertificates of participation鈥 to lease those city facilities to Salt Lake City-based Zions Bancorp. as collateral to pay for the first phase of the core entertainment district dubbed 鈥淐atalyst.鈥

Reached Wednesday, Lind said no one from the opposition group has reached out to him, his development company or a group called Greeley Forward that is advocating for the project.

鈥淲e have vetted this to make it successful,鈥 Lind said. 鈥淲e know the project intimately and feel it鈥檚 amazingly defendable financially and a game-changer for Greeley that they won鈥檛 see for another five decades if they don鈥檛 get it.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 feel they鈥檙e asking questions, just giving opinions,鈥 Lind said.

A statement issued Wednesday by Greeley Forward added that 鈥渢his announcement by the League urging Greeley voters to disregard a supermajority vote by their democratically elected City Council is a terrible look and highly inconsistent with the League鈥檚 own democratic values.鈥

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With BizWest since 2012 and in Colorado since 1979, Dallas worked at the Longmont Times-Call, Colorado Springs Gazette, Denver Post and Public News Service. A Missouri native and Mizzou School of Journalism grad, Dallas started as a sports writer and outdoor columnist at the St. Charles (Mo.) Banner-News, then went to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch before fleeing the heat and humidity for the Rockies. He especially loves covering our mountain communities.