What the Proposal Is
This November, Larimer County voters will decide on a 0.15% sales and use tax on Ballot Issue 1A. That’s an extra 15 cents for every $100 spent. The tax would last 15 years and raise about $15 million each year.
County officials argue that new funding is needed to cover a $650 million transportation gap over the next 25 years. They say rising costs, aging roads, and steady traffic growth have outpaced the County’s revenue.
If passed, the money would fund:
- Road safety improvements for drivers, pedestrians, and cyclists
- Better reliability for emergency and evacuation routes
- Projects to reduce congestion and delays
- Matching funds to bring in state and federal grants
- Investments now to avoid higher repair costs later
The tax exempts groceries, gasoline, diapers, and prescription medications. Leaders say this reduces the burden on families and avoids taxing fuel twice. Still, a sales tax means everyone pays, whether or not they drive on county roads. That raises a key question: Will this money make Larimer County stronger, or keep us on the same costly path?
Where the Money Would Go
The county’s “Larimer On The Move” plan lists more than 500 possible projects. Many involve road construction. Some add bike and pedestrian features, but the focus remains on cars.
Widening Rural Roads
Most projects would widen rural roads. That often means turning two-lane roads into three or four lanes, with paved shoulders. Wider shoulders can give cyclists space and reduce some crash risks. Wider lanes and roads tend to make drivers feel comfortable going faster, which often leads to more dangerous crashes. We worry that calling these projects “safety improvements” hides the real goal: moving more cars.
Paving Gravel Roads
Another large set of projects would pave gravel roads. Paving cuts down on dust and reduces grading costs. But it also creates higher long-term maintenance costs and often sparks more development. Paved roads attract traffic and encourage sprawl, which increases future liabilities. Strong Towns thinking urges caution: only pave when the road already serves enough people to justify the cost.
Intersection Fixes
The project list also includes signals, roundabouts, turn lanes, and visibility upgrades. These targeted fixes often improve safety at a much lower cost than full road expansions. The county’s Safety Action Plan even suggests simple changes like new crosswalks, pedestrian beacons, and speed management. These are low-cost, high-value projects. The worry is that they will be overlooked if most money flows to larger road projects.
Bike, Pedestrian, and Transit Features
Some projects add side paths or crossings, but most bike and pedestrian changes appear as wider shoulders on fast-moving roads. Few dedicated bike paths or sidewalks are proposed. Transit receives even less attention. While the plan mentions future bus service, most projects on the list are about roads.
Does It Match Strong Towns Principles?
Financial Productivity
Strong Towns asks: will new infrastructure pay for itself? Larimer County already faces a $650 million shortfall. Adding more lanes and paved roads creates more long-term costs. Every new mile of asphalt will eventually need repair. Unless the surrounding development produces enough tax base, the county risks making the problem worse.
A better strategy would be to fix existing roads first. Invest where the return is highest: bridges near town centers, safety upgrades near schools, or roads serving the most residents.
Congestion and Demand
The County promotes this tax as a way to cut congestion. But history shows that widening roads rarely works. Extra lanes attract more drivers – a pattern called induced demand. Before long, the widened road is congested again.
Instead of chasing congestion relief, the county could manage demand. That means supporting transit, biking, and walking. It also means linking land use with transportation, so people don’t need to drive long distances for daily needs.
Incremental Improvements
Strong Towns favors small, testable steps. Rather than betting big on long-range traffic projections, try cheaper fixes first: improve signals, add a turn lane, or paint a crosswalk. If traffic or safety improves, build on that success.
The County’s plan does include some creative small-scale ideas, like volunteer driver programs for seniors. But these programs risk being overshadowed by road expansion projects.
The Trade-offs
Without new funding, the County may face rougher roads, delayed safety fixes, and less money to match state or federal grants. With the tax, the County would gain $15 million each year. The big question is how the money will be spent.
A sales tax spreads the cost across everyone. Shoppers in Fort Collins or Loveland will help fund projects far from town. That makes accountability critical. Residents should demand that funds go first to maintenance and true safety fixes, not just wider roads in the name of congestion relief.
A Stronger Path Forward
The need for transportation funding is real. The danger lies in using new money to repeat past mistakes. To build a stronger county, tax revenue should focus on:
- Fixing existing infrastructure first
- Improving safety for all users
- Making small, targeted congestion fixes
- Supporting biking, walking, and transit
- Tying new infrastructure to productive land use
This sales tax is a tool. Used wisely, it could create a safer and more resilient transportation system. Used poorly, it could deepen the county’s infrastructure debt. The choice will depend not just on the vote, but on how residents and leaders hold the County accountable after the vote.
Sources:
- Larimer County Ballot Issue 1A (2024) results
- Estes Valley Voice – “Larimer County voters to decide in Nov. on sales tax increase to fund transportation infrastructure” (Aug 12, 2025)
- Larimer County Press Release (Aug 8, 2025)
- Larimer County “Larimer on the Move” Draft Transportation Plan (July 2025)
- Larimer County Comprehensive Safety Action Plan project list
- Transportation for America – “Things DOTs say: ‘Expanding the road will definitely reduce congestion’” (Sep 7, 2023)
- Magellan Strategies – Larimer County Transportation Survey Results (2023)
- Strong Towns articles on induced demand and infrastructure
- Transportation for America “Things DOTs say: Expanding the road will definitely reduce congestion”

Leave a Reply