Tag
well permits
6 Porch Notes tagged “well permits,” from counties across Colorado.
Water and land - Adams County
An Adams County private well starts with a state permit
A private well in Adams County runs on a state permit; search Colorado Division of Water Resources records before you rely on one.
Read note ->Water and land - Arapahoe County
An Arapahoe County private well starts with a state permit record
An Arapahoe County private well is a state water-rights record, not just a pump, and the permit decides what the water may be used for.
Read note ->Water and land - Pueblo County
A well on Pueblo County land is not unlimited water
On rural and unincorporated land around Pueblo County, a domestic well comes with a state permit that sets what the water may be used for, so 'has a well' is not the same as 'has all the water you want.'
Read note ->Water and land - Adams County
Some Adams County wells come with Denver Basin limits
A Denver Basin well permit in Adams County can limit which aquifer, how much water, and what uses the parcel is allowed.
Read note ->Water and land - Arapahoe County
Some Arapahoe County wells draw from the Denver Basin
Many Arapahoe wells draw Denver Basin groundwater, and the permit can cap irrigation, livestock, homes, or pumping even when water exists.
Read note ->Water and land - Arapahoe County
An Arapahoe home permit may need water and sewer proof
A residential permit here can require a water and sewer will-serve letter, or well and septic paperwork if the lot is off city service.
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