Colorado Porch

Tag

site work

7 Porch Notes tagged “site work,” from counties across Colorado.

Water and land - Weld County

In Weld County, the MS4 map can matter before site work

Parcels in Weld County's unincorporated urbanized MS4 area follow county stormwater rules, even when they look rural.

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Home and property - Rio Grande County

Check floodplain and wetlands maps before site work in Rio Grande County

Before moving dirt in Rio Grande County, check floodplain, wetlands, and FEMA flood maps; a flat-looking pad can still need a permit.

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Local rules - Sedgwick County

Sedgwick floodplain work has its own permit path

Near the South Platte, work in a Sedgwick floodplain needs its own development permit before grading, fill, building, or utilities begin.

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Home and property - Prowers County

Check Prowers County floodplain permits before changing a site

Site work near mapped flood risk in Prowers County may need a Floodplain Development Permit before you grade, fill, or build.

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Home and property - Gunnison County

Check Gunnison County floodplain rules before site work

A Gunnison County floodplain development permit can apply before you grade, build, or fill near mapped flood risk, so check early.

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Water and land - Larimer County

A Larimer County drainage letter can be more than a sketch

In Larimer County a drainage letter is a real design document showing how a project will handle runoff, best settled before work begins, not after.

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Home and property - Pitkin County

Pitkin County site work can need an earthmoving permit

An earthmoving permit can apply in Pitkin County once a project disturbs enough soil or vegetation, including everyday work like trenching and grading.

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