A senior district court judge has dismissed allegations that Boulder County breached its contractual obligations to pay the multimillion-dollar cost of maintaining and rehabilitating about 150 miles of paved roads in the county’s unincorporated residential subdivisions.
Judge Dave Williams’ ruling on Tuesday, however, left the door open for the 300 individuals and families suing Boulder County to amend their lawsuit to reflect any other legal theories they might offer about why the court should order the county to proceed with funding the reconstruction, repair and repaving of those rural roads.
Boulder County Fairness in Road Maintenance, an organization whose members are among the subdivision homeowners who filed the lawsuit in September, said in a Wednesday afternoon news release that those plaintiffs do intend to amend and pursue their lawsuit against the county.
“The goal of Boulder County FIRM has always been to get our subdivision roads fixed without new taxes. We look forward to the opportunity to present our case before the courts,” the organization said in that news release.
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