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More disputed tax revenue used to fund scholarships for low-income Adams County students

Adams County’s recreational pot tax is under legal challenge from three of its cities

Mariana Hernandez waits along with classmates ...
Patrick Traylor, The Denver Post
Mariana Hernandez waits along with classmates before her graduation ceremony from Northglenn High School at the Coors Events Center in Boulder on May 15, 2017.
DENVER, CO - OCTOBER 2:  Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
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Adams County continues to use disputed tax revenue from recreational marijuana sales to fund scholarships, recently announcing that 64 high school students in the county had been awarded more than $1 million in total.

The scholarships, paid for through the Adams County Scholarship Fund, are funded through the county’s . The pot tax is , which claim that the county has no right to collect within their borders tax above and beyond what the cities collect.

The but Adams County continues to collect the tax as it fights the court’s opinion all the way to the Colorado Supreme Court. The state’s high court has not yet decided whether to accept the case.

“It is our great pleasure to see these well-deserving students receive scholarships that will enable them to continue their educations,” Adams County commissioner Eva Henry said last week. “These scholarships will allow these students to continue their academic excellence and alleviate some of the worries of paying for college.”

High-achieving students enrolled in the free and reduced lunch program were eligible to apply for scholarship money.

Adams County last year , which first went into effect in July 2015, to fund four-year scholarships for 50 low-income students.

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