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Type in your address in the search bar of the map, and you will find the Colorado Welcome Center closest to you. You can also view this as a full-screen map.
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Colorado Welcome Centers
Type in your address in the search bar of the map, and you will find the Colorado Welcome Center closest to you. You can also view this as a full-screen map.
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Program Manager
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Performing Arts
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Visual Arts and Design
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Heritage
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Performing Arts
Visual Arts and Design
Heritage
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Connect Further
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Program Manager
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Past music ambassadors
Shawn King
In 2017, then-Governor John Hickenlooper and Colorado Creative Industries chose Shawn King as Colorado’s first music ambassador for his outstanding creative, professional and social contributions to the state. King is the drummer of Colorado-based band DeVotchKa. In addition to his exemplary creative activities, King works with Colorado businesses to increase music licensing opportunities for Colorado musicians in film, on television and online through the Colorado Music Licensing Project. He also leads workshops around the state on music licensing. Learn more about him.
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The Rural Jump-Start Program helps economically distressed communities attract new businesses and jobs. Counties, municipalities, and higher education institutions work together to apply for this program.
When a community is a designated rural jump-start zone, new businesses can receive incentive payments and tax relief including credits, exemptions, and refunds from:
- state income tax
- state sales and use tax
- county and municipal personal property taxes
Employees of new businesses receive a grant for starting a new business and a tax credit for 100% of state income taxes on their wages for work in the rural jump-start zone.
The Rural Jump-Start Program began in January 2016 and will accept applications through December 31, 2025.
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Overview
Type: Program
For: Counties, municipalities, and higher education institutions
Application deadline: Rolling
OEDIT division: Business Funding and Incentives
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The Rural Jump-Start Program helps economically distressed communities attract new businesses and jobs. Counties, municipalities, and higher education institutions work together to apply for this program.
When a community is a designated rural jump-start zone, new businesses can receive incentive payments and tax relief including credits, exemptions, and refunds from:
- state income tax
- state sales and use tax
- county and municipal personal property taxes
Employees of new businesses receive a grant for starting a new business and a tax credit for 100% of state income taxes on their wages for work in the rural jump-start zone.
The Rural Jump-Start Program began in January 2016 and will accept applications through December 31, 2025.
OverviewType: Program
For: Counties, municipalities, and higher education institutions
Application deadline: Rolling
OEDIT division: Business Funding and Incentives
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These counties are currently rural jump-start zones: Archuleta, Clear Creek, Delta, Dolores, Fremont, Garfield, Huerfano, Las Animas, Lincoln, Logan, Mesa, Moffat, Montezuma, Montrose, Otero, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, Routt, San Juan, Sedgwick
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These counties are designated as economically distressed. They are eligible to be rural jump-start zones, but they have not yet applied to the program: Alamosa, Baca, Bent, Cheyenne, Conejos, Costilla, Crowley, Cyster, Hinsdale, Jackson, Kiowa, Kit Carson, Lake, Mineral, Morgan, Phillips, Rio Grande, Saguache, Washington, Yuma
Just Transition counties
Just Transition communities are diversifying away from coal-dependent economic development strategies. Just Transition counties include Delta, Gunnison, Moffat, Montrose, Morgan, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, and Routt.
Sponsor entities
If your economic development organization would like to become approved, please contact the program manager below to start the process. These economic development offices have been approved:
- Logan County Economic Development Organization
- Lincoln County Economic Development Organization
- City of Craig Economic Development
A Designated Institute of Higher Education (DIHE) needs to lead the rural jump-start zone application. Only a public school may serve as a DIHE. A private higher education institution may participate as a partner, but not lead an application.
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To use this map, type in your address and it will direct you to the closest Designated Institute of Higher Education.
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Existing Rural Jump-Start zones
These counties are currently rural jump-start zones: Archuleta, Clear Creek, Delta, Dolores, Fremont, Garfield, Huerfano, Las Animas, Lincoln, Logan, Mesa, Moffat, Montezuma, Montrose, Otero, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, Routt, San Juan, Sedgwick
These counties are designated as economically distressed. They are eligible to be rural jump-start zones, but they have not yet applied to the program: Alamosa, Baca, Bent, Cheyenne, Conejos, Costilla, Crowley, Cyster, Hinsdale, Jackson, Kiowa, Kit Carson, Lake, Mineral, Morgan, Phillips, Rio Grande, Saguache, Washington, Yuma
Just Transition counties
Just Transition communities are diversifying away from coal-dependent economic development strategies. Just Transition counties include Delta, Gunnison, Moffat, Montrose, Morgan, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, and Routt.
Sponsor entities
If your economic development organization would like to become approved, please contact the program manager below to start the process. These economic development offices have been approved:
- Logan County Economic Development Organization
- Lincoln County Economic Development Organization
- City of Craig Economic Development
A Designated Institute of Higher Education (DIHE) needs to lead the rural jump-start zone application. Only a public school may serve as a DIHE. A private higher education institution may participate as a partner, but not lead an application.
To use this map, type in your address and it will direct you to the closest Designated Institute of Higher Education.
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A sponsor entity needs to lead and submit the application online in the OEDIT application portal. The sponsor entity can submit an application at any time.
Before applying, the sponsor entity should know the boundaries of the zone, the participating municipalities, and any other relevant aspects of the zone.
County and municipality tax relief resolutions
Counties and participating municipalities need to pass tax relief resolutions to become a rural jump-start zone. The resolution needs to state that the jurisdiction will not impose a business personal property tax on new businesses. Partial relief from business personal property tax does not qualify. The jurisdiction needs to offer tax relief for up to eight years for each business.
Jurisdictions may also adopt resolutions with incentive payments and other tax relief including credits, exemptions, and refunds.
Unlike counties, municipalities may limit resolutions to specific businesses. Municipalities may restrict resolutions to certain geographic areas of the municipality.
After the county and participating municipalities pass resolutions, the DIHE can apply for rural jump-start zone designation.
Application materials
The sponsor entity need to include these materials with the application:
- list of all jurisdictions that have passed or are expected to pass tax relief resolutions
- copies of the county and municipality/ies tax relief resolutions
- list all economic development organizations working with the entity
- description of the geographic boundaries of the zone
- a strategy to implement the Rural Jump-Start Program
- a report of all businesses in the pipeline
If the sponsor entity wants to modify the zone by changing boundaries, adding or removing municipalities, the sponsor entity needs to file a separate application through the OEDIT application portal.
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How to become a rural jump-start zone
A sponsor entity needs to lead and submit the application online in the OEDIT application portal. The sponsor entity can submit an application at any time.
Before applying, the sponsor entity should know the boundaries of the zone, the participating municipalities, and any other relevant aspects of the zone.
County and municipality tax relief resolutions
Counties and participating municipalities need to pass tax relief resolutions to become a rural jump-start zone. The resolution needs to state that the jurisdiction will not impose a business personal property tax on new businesses. Partial relief from business personal property tax does not qualify. The jurisdiction needs to offer tax relief for up to eight years for each business.
Jurisdictions may also adopt resolutions with incentive payments and other tax relief including credits, exemptions, and refunds.
Unlike counties, municipalities may limit resolutions to specific businesses. Municipalities may restrict resolutions to certain geographic areas of the municipality.
After the county and participating municipalities pass resolutions, the DIHE can apply for rural jump-start zone designation.
Application materials
The sponsor entity need to include these materials with the application:
- list of all jurisdictions that have passed or are expected to pass tax relief resolutions
- copies of the county and municipality/ies tax relief resolutions
- list all economic development organizations working with the entity
- description of the geographic boundaries of the zone
- a strategy to implement the Rural Jump-Start Program
- a report of all businesses in the pipeline
If the sponsor entity wants to modify the zone by changing boundaries, adding or removing municipalities, the sponsor entity needs to file a separate application through the OEDIT application portal.
Review process
After you submit your application, the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) will review it at the next EDC meeting. EDC meetings are on the third Thursday of every month. The EDC will approve, deny, or defer the application. The sponsor entity will be notified of the decision.
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An eligible institute may apply to be a Designated Institute of Higher Education (DIHE) before forming or while forming a rural jump-start zone.
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How to become a Designated Institute of Higher Education
An eligible institute may apply to be a Designated Institute of Higher Education (DIHE) before forming or while forming a rural jump-start zone.
Apply online through the OEDIT application portal. Log in or create a new account. New users are manually added to the portal for security reasons, so it may take several days to activate your account.
Application materials
In the application, the institution needs to prove that it:
- intends to actively execute in its role in the rural jump-start zone
- has the resources to manage the program
- has designated a point person to work with businesses and our office
Every institution needs to:
- maintain a strategic plan for the rural jump-start zone
- adopt a conflict of interest policy
- keep a written record of all conflict of interest disclosures
- provide disclosures for the last calendar year to the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) by January 31 of each year
The conflict of interest policy needs to state that:
- a representative of the institution may not use the relationship between the institution and the business for the representative’s private benefit
- a person who sells goods or services to the institution, an employee of such person, or a person with a business interest in such person’s business shall not vote on or participate on behalf of the institution in any transaction with such business
- if a representative of the institution is aware of any actual or potential conflict of interest, he or she shall advise the chief academic officers or executive director of the institution of the conflict
Review process
After you submit your application, the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) will review it at the next EDC meeting. EDC meetings are on the third Thursday of every month. The EDC will approve, deny, or defer the application. The sponsor entity will be notified of the decision.
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Award Distribution
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The Rural Jump-Start Grant and Tax Credit helps new businesses start in or move into rural, economically distressed areas and hire new employees. The program provides both a grant and tax credit to businesses.
Grant and tax relief amounts are dependent on the business's location. For example:
- If a business is located in a Rural-Jump Start zone, businesses can receive up to $20,000 as a newly established business and up to $2,500 per new hire.
- If a business is located in a Tier 1 Just Transition county, businesses can receive up to $40,000 as a newly established business and up to $5,000 per new hire.
Tax benefits include relief from:
- state income taxes for the new business
- state sales and use tax for the business
- 100% of county personal property taxes for the business
- municipal personal property taxes for the business (in participating municipalities)
- 100% of state income taxes for the employee
After the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) approves a company’s rural jump-start application, the company and its eligible employees have four years of tax relief, with the possibility of extending it another four years. Your business may use rural jump-start tax credits only for each year you receive them. These tax credits do not carry forward to future years.
Businesses must apply through a sponsor entity. A sponsor entity is associated with specific counties, and not every sponsor entity can work in every rural jump-start zone.
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The Rural Jump-Start Grant and Tax Credit
The Rural Jump-Start Grant and Tax Credit helps new businesses start in or move into rural, economically distressed areas and hire new employees. The program provides both a grant and tax credit to businesses.
Grant and tax relief amounts are dependent on the business's location. For example:
- If a business is located in a Rural-Jump Start zone, businesses can receive up to $20,000 as a newly established business and up to $2,500 per new hire.
- If a business is located in a Tier 1 Just Transition county, businesses can receive up to $40,000 as a newly established business and up to $5,000 per new hire.
Tax benefits include relief from:
- state income taxes for the new business
- state sales and use tax for the business
- 100% of county personal property taxes for the business
- municipal personal property taxes for the business (in participating municipalities)
- 100% of state income taxes for the employee
After the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) approves a company’s rural jump-start application, the company and its eligible employees have four years of tax relief, with the possibility of extending it another four years. Your business may use rural jump-start tax credits only for each year you receive them. These tax credits do not carry forward to future years.
Businesses must apply through a sponsor entity. A sponsor entity is associated with specific counties, and not every sponsor entity can work in every rural jump-start zone.
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These counties are currently rural jump-start zones: Archuleta, Clear Creek, Delta, Dolores, Fremont, Garfield, Huerfano, Las Animas, Lincoln, Logan, Mesa, Moffat, Montezuma, Montrose, Otero, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, Routt, San Juan, Sedgwick
These counties are designated as economically distressed. They are eligible to be rural jump-start zones, but they have not yet applied to the program: Alamosa, Baca, Bent, Cheyenne, Conejos, Costilla, Crowley, Cyster, Hinsdale, Jackson, Kiowa, Kit Carson, Lake, Mineral, Morgan, Phillips, Rio Grande, Saguache, Washington, Yuma
Just Transition counties
Just Transition communities are diversifying away from coal-dependent economic development strategies. Just Transition counties include Delta, Gunnison, Moffat, Montrose, Morgan, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, and Routt.
Sponsor entities
If your economic development organization would like to become approved, please contact the program manager below to start the process. These economic development offices have been approved:
- Logan County Economic Development Organization
- Lincoln County Economic Development Organization
- City of Craig Economic Development
A Designated Institute of Higher Education (DIHE) needs to lead the rural jump-start zone application. Only a public school may serve as a DIHE. A private higher education institution may participate as a partner, but not lead an application.
To use this map, type in your address and it will direct you to the closest Designated Institute of Higher Education.
The Rural Jump-Start Grant and Tax Credit helps new businesses start in or move into rural, economically distressed areas and hire new employees. The program provides both a grant and tax credit to businesses.
Grant and tax relief amounts are dependent on the business's location. For example:
- If a business is located in a Rural-Jump Start zone, businesses can receive up to $20,000 as a newly established business and up to $2,500 per new hire.
- If a business is located in a Tier 1 Just Transition county, businesses can receive up to $40,000 as a newly established business and up to $5,000 per new hire.
Tax benefits include relief from:
- state income taxes for the new business
- state sales and use tax for the business
- 100% of county personal property taxes for the business
- municipal personal property taxes for the business (in participating municipalities)
- 100% of state income taxes for the employee
After the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) approves a company’s rural jump-start application, the company and its eligible employees have four years of tax relief, with the possibility of extending it another four years. Your business may use rural jump-start tax credits only for each year you receive them. These tax credits do not carry forward to future years.
Businesses must apply through a sponsor entity. A sponsor entity is associated with specific counties, and not every sponsor entity can work in every rural jump-start zone.
In partnership with counties, an approved economic development office or Designated Institute of Higher Education applies to become the sponsor of a rural jump-start zone. The Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) approves rural jump-start status in counties that meet certain economic distress criteria.
The EDC can approve an unlimited number of rural jump-start zones. Each municipality can contain only one rural jump-start zone. A rural jump-start zone may not be larger than a county.
Once the EDC approves a rural jump-start zone, the zone will exist until the county loses its economically distressed status. An area will qualify as a rural jump-start zone based on population and economically distressed measures, as explained below.
Population
The area needs to be in a county with a population of fewer than 250,000 people.Economic distress measures
Rural jump-start zones need to meet at least three of these requirements:- per capita income is at least 20% below the state average
- county-wide personal income is at least 20% below the state average
- average unemployment level during the last five years is at least 20% above the state average
- during the past 5 to 10 years, the area lost population in the workforce age range
- percent of students eligible for free school lunch is higher than the state average
- designated as an Enhanced Rural Enterprise Zone
- be in a metropolitan statistical area as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau
Municipalities
If a county participates in the program, municipalities in the county are not automatically enrolled. A county or sponsor entity cannot force a municipality to participate in the Rural Jump-Start Program.
To be eligible for the Rural Jump-Start Program, a municipality needs to:
- be in a county that the Colorado Economic Development Commission designated as economically distressed (the municipality itself does not need the designation)
- be in a county that passed a rural jump-start tax relief resolution that the Colorado Economic Development Commission has approved
- work with an approved economic development office or Designated Institute of Higher Education, which leads the application
- pass a resolution to participate in the program
A sponsor entity needs to lead and submit the application online in the OEDIT application portal. The sponsor entity can submit an application at any time.
Before applying, the sponsor entity should know the boundaries of the zone, the participating municipalities, and any other relevant aspects of the zone.
County and municipality tax relief resolutions
Counties and participating municipalities need to pass tax relief resolutions to become a rural jump-start zone. The resolution needs to state that the jurisdiction will not impose a business personal property tax on new businesses. Partial relief from business personal property tax does not qualify. The jurisdiction needs to offer tax relief for up to eight years for each business.
Jurisdictions may also adopt resolutions with incentive payments and other tax relief including credits, exemptions, and refunds.
Unlike counties, municipalities may limit resolutions to specific businesses. Municipalities may restrict resolutions to certain geographic areas of the municipality.
After the county and participating municipalities pass resolutions, the DIHE can apply for rural jump-start zone designation.
Application materials
The sponsor entity need to include these materials with the application:
- list of all jurisdictions that have passed or are expected to pass tax relief resolutions
- copies of the county and municipality/ies tax relief resolutions
- list all economic development organizations working with the entity
- description of the geographic boundaries of the zone
- a strategy to implement the Rural Jump-Start Program
- a report of all businesses in the pipeline
If the sponsor entity wants to modify the zone by changing boundaries, adding or removing municipalities, the sponsor entity needs to file a separate application through the OEDIT application portal.
Review process
After you submit your application, the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) will review it at the next EDC meeting. EDC meetings are on the third Thursday of every month. The EDC will approve, deny, or defer the application. The sponsor entity will be notified of the decision.
An eligible institute may apply to be a Designated Institute of Higher Education (DIHE) before forming or while forming a rural jump-start zone.
Apply online through the OEDIT application portal. Log in or create a new account. New users are manually added to the portal for security reasons, so it may take several days to activate your account.
Application materials
In the application, the institution needs to prove that it:
- intends to actively execute in its role in the rural jump-start zone
- has the resources to manage the program
- has designated a point person to work with businesses and our office
Every institution needs to:
- maintain a strategic plan for the rural jump-start zone
- adopt a conflict of interest policy
- keep a written record of all conflict of interest disclosures
- provide disclosures for the last calendar year to the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) by January 31 of each year
The conflict of interest policy needs to state that:
- a representative of the institution may not use the relationship between the institution and the business for the representative’s private benefit
- a person who sells goods or services to the institution, an employee of such person, or a person with a business interest in such person’s business shall not vote on or participate on behalf of the institution in any transaction with such business
- if a representative of the institution is aware of any actual or potential conflict of interest, he or she shall advise the chief academic officers or executive director of the institution of the conflict
Review process
After you submit your application, the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) will review it at the next EDC meeting. EDC meetings are on the third Thursday of every month. The EDC will approve, deny, or defer the application. The sponsor entity will be notified of the decision.
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Success Stories
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Connect Further
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In partnership with counties, an approved economic development office or Designated Institute of Higher Education applies to become the sponsor of a rural jump-start zone. The Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) approves rural jump-start status in counties that meet certain economic distress criteria.
The EDC can approve an unlimited number of rural jump-start zones. Each municipality can contain only one rural jump-start zone. A rural jump-start zone may not be larger than a county.
Once the EDC approves a rural jump-start zone, the zone will exist until the county loses its economically distressed status. An area will qualify as a rural jump-start zone based on population and economically distressed measures, as explained below.
Population
The area needs to be in a county with a population of fewer than 250,000 people.Economic distress measures
Rural jump-start zones need to meet at least three of these requirements:- per capita income is at least 20% below the state average
- county-wide personal income is at least 20% below the state average
- average unemployment level during the last five years is at least 20% above the state average
- during the past 5 to 10 years, the area lost population in the workforce age range
- percent of students eligible for free school lunch is higher than the state average
- designated as an Enhanced Rural Enterprise Zone
- be in a metropolitan statistical area as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau
Municipalities
If a county participates in the program, municipalities in the county are not automatically enrolled. A county or sponsor entity cannot force a municipality to participate in the Rural Jump-Start Program.
To be eligible for the Rural Jump-Start Program, a municipality needs to:
- be in a county that the Colorado Economic Development Commission designated as economically distressed (the municipality itself does not need the designation)
- be in a county that passed a rural jump-start tax relief resolution that the Colorado Economic Development Commission has approved
- work with an approved economic development office or Designated Institute of Higher Education, which leads the application
- pass a resolution to participate in the program
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How zones are established
In partnership with counties, an approved economic development office or Designated Institute of Higher Education applies to become the sponsor of a rural jump-start zone. The Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) approves rural jump-start status in counties that meet certain economic distress criteria.
The EDC can approve an unlimited number of rural jump-start zones. Each municipality can contain only one rural jump-start zone. A rural jump-start zone may not be larger than a county.
Once the EDC approves a rural jump-start zone, the zone will exist until the county loses its economically distressed status. An area will qualify as a rural jump-start zone based on population and economically distressed measures, as explained below.
Population
The area needs to be in a county with a population of fewer than 250,000 people.Economic distress measures
Rural jump-start zones need to meet at least three of these requirements:- per capita income is at least 20% below the state average
- county-wide personal income is at least 20% below the state average
- average unemployment level during the last five years is at least 20% above the state average
- during the past 5 to 10 years, the area lost population in the workforce age range
- percent of students eligible for free school lunch is higher than the state average
- designated as an Enhanced Rural Enterprise Zone
- be in a metropolitan statistical area as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau
Municipalities
If a county participates in the program, municipalities in the county are not automatically enrolled. A county or sponsor entity cannot force a municipality to participate in the Rural Jump-Start Program.
To be eligible for the Rural Jump-Start Program, a municipality needs to:
- be in a county that the Colorado Economic Development Commission designated as economically distressed (the municipality itself does not need the designation)
- be in a county that passed a rural jump-start tax relief resolution that the Colorado Economic Development Commission has approved
- work with an approved economic development office or Designated Institute of Higher Education, which leads the application
- pass a resolution to participate in the program
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Apply online through the OEDIT application portal. Log in or create a new account. New users are manually added to the portal for security reasons, so it may take several days to activate your account.
The DIHE needs to determine the boundaries of the zone, the participating municipalities, and any other relevant aspects of the zone.
County and municipality tax relief resolutions
To become a Rural Jump-Start zone, counties and participating municipalities need to pass tax relief resolutions. The resolution needs to state that the jurisdiction will not impose a business personal property tax on new businesses. Partial relief from business personal property tax does not qualify. The jurisdiction needs to offer tax relief for up to eight years for each business.
Jurisdictions may also adopt resolutions with incentive payments and other tax relief including credits, exemptions, and refunds.
Unlike counties, municipalities may limit resolutions to specific businesses. Municipalities may restrict resolutions to certain geographic areas of the municipality.
After the county and participating municipalities pass resolutions, the DIHE can apply for Rural Jump-Start zone designation.
Application materials
The Designated Institute of Higher Education (DIHE) need to include these materials with the application:
- list of all jurisdictions that have passed or are expected to pass tax relief resolutions
- copies of the county and municipality/ies tax relief resolutions
- list all economic development organizations working with the DIHE
- description of the geographic boundaries of the zone
- a strategy to implement the Rural Jump-Start Program
- a report of all businesses in the pipeline
If the DIHE wants to modify the zone by changing boundaries, adding or removing municipalities, the DIHE needs to file a separate application through the OEDIT application portal.
Application process
-
Review process
After you submit your application, the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) will review it at the next EDC meeting. EDC meetings are on the third Thursday of every month. The EDC will approve, deny, or defer the application. The sponsor entity will be notified of the decision.
-
Apply online through the OEDIT application portal. Log in or create a new account. New users are manually added to the portal for security reasons, so it may take several days to activate your account.
Application materials
In the application, the institution needs to prove that it:
- intends to actively execute in its role in the rural jump-start zone
- has the resources to manage the program
- has designated a point person to work with businesses and our office
Every institution needs to:
- maintain a strategic plan for the rural jump-start zone
- adopt a conflict of interest policy
- keep a written record of all conflict of interest disclosures
- provide disclosures for the last calendar year to the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) by January 31 of each year
The conflict of interest policy needs to state that:
- a representative of the institution may not use the relationship between the institution and the business for the representative’s private benefit
- a person who sells goods or services to the institution, an employee of such person, or a person with a business interest in such person’s business shall not vote on or participate on behalf of the institution in any transaction with such business
- if a representative of the institution is aware of any actual or potential conflict of interest, he or she shall advise the chief academic officers or executive director of the institution of the conflict
-
Review process
After you submit your application, the Colorado Economic Development Commission (EDC) will review it at the next EDC meeting. EDC meetings are on the third Thursday of every month. The EDC will approve, deny, or defer the application. The sponsor entity will be notified of the decision.
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