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Bayfield lodgers tax proposal fails

La Plata County will continue collecting funds on behalf of town
Bayfield voters rejected a lodging tax in the town’s general election Tuesday. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald file)

La Plata County will continue collecting lodgers tax revenue from rentals within Bayfield’s boundaries after voters Tuesday rejected a proposal for the town to impose its own tax.

The measure failed with 54% of voters rejecting it.

Ballot Issue 2C asked Bayfield residents to approve a 4% lodging tax on short-term rentals, projected to raise about $20,000 annually for affordable housing and economic development projects.

Bayfield residents already pay a lodgers tax, but it is collected by La Plata County, not the town, Town Manager John Waters said. He described the proposal as essentially “a change in the location of collection.” If approved, the tax revenue generated from rentals within Bayfield would have shifted from the county to the town.

Under Colorado law, counties cannot collect lodgers tax within municipalities that have enacted their own. In other words, a county and municipal lodgers tax cannot be stacked – it’s one or the other.

Waters said the proposal was “simply going to allow the town to collect the lodgers tax within its corporate boundaries.”

Unless the results shift dramatically, La Plata County will continue collecting its 2% lodgers tax – the maximum rate allowed by state law.

jbowman@durangoherald.com

An earlier version of this story misstated the ballot issue number. It is Ballot Issue 2C.



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