Denver City Council

 

2026 budget approval process      

See the Weekly Schedule Summary 

Public Hearings

The following public hearing is scheduled for Monday, December 15, at 5:30 p.m. Find out how to participate in public hearings.

  • 25-1541: A bill for an ordinance changing the zoning classification of 709 South Delaware Street in Baker (proposed soccer stadium site).

Audiencias Públicas

La siguiente audiencia pública está programada para el lunes 15 de diciembre a las 5:30 p.m. Descubre cómo puedes participar en las audiencias públicas.

  • 25-1541: Un proyecto de ley para una ordenanza que cambia la clasificación de zonificación de la dirección 709 South Delaware Street en el vecindario de Baker (sitio propuesto para un estadio de fútbol).



 

Top 5 Ways to Keep Up with What the Denver City Council is Doing | Denver City Council Statement Supporting a Unified Denver.

 

Denver City Council News

See the Weekly Schedule Summary 

Public Hearings

The following public hearing is scheduled for Monday, December 15, at 5:30 p.m. Find out how to participate in public hearings.

  • 25-1541: A bill for an ordinance changing the zoning classification of 709 South Delaware Street in Baker (proposed soccer stadium site).

Audiencias Públicas

La siguiente audiencia pública está programada para el lunes 15 de diciembre a las 5:30 p.m. Descubre cómo puedes participar en las audiencias públicas.

  • 25-1541: Un proyecto de ley para una ordenanza que cambia la clasificación de zonificación de la dirección 709 South Delaware Street en el vecindario de Baker (sitio propuesto para un estadio de fútbol).



Statement in Response to Auditor’s Follow-Up Report on City Council Operations

This morning, Denver City Council President Amanda P. Sandoval and Executive Director Bonita Roznos met with the Independent Audit Committee to address the findings in the auditor’s follow-up report of a City Council operations audit. While the auditor acknowledged the council’s significant progress in today’s meeting, the follow-up press release issued by his office made several mischaracterizations that must be addressed.

Today’s press release continued to assert that the council failed to obtain legal definitions for “donations” and “sponsorships” as well as a legal opinion on the “appropriateness” of providing funds to local organizations. To be clear, the Council did seek and receive legal counsel from attorneys assigned to it by the City Attorney’s Office. The Council was advised that no definitions for these terms exist in the city charter or ordinance. Furthermore, the attorneys cautioned that a determination of definitions would have unintended consequences for other city agencies, including the mayor’s office and departments that also provide funds to local organizations.

While the auditor’s office may disagree with that legal interpretation, it does not invalidate the guidance provided to the council or the actions taken to strengthen internal processes following that counsel. There are limitations in place around these activities, and today’s statement from the auditor’s office overlooks that fact, as discussed in today’s meeting.

Additionally, the Council president reiterated several times during the Independent Audit Committee meeting that each City Council member is an independently elected official. The city charter assigns each elected official, including the auditor, the responsibility to file financial reports directly with the clerk and recorder. The follow-up report and today’s press release imply that the Council’s administrative staff should take on responsibilities that fall to the elected officials themselves. This is a misunderstanding of both the law and the structure of city governance. An elected official’s financial reporting requirements do not fall under the operational purview of the council’s executive director.

It is disappointing that the auditor’s press release omitted these key facts and instead presented a narrative that lacks the full, unchallenged context shared during today’s meeting. Transparency and accountability remain core values of the City Council, and it is committed to upholding them while respecting the legal frameworks that govern its operations.

We encourage the public and media to review the full video discussion from today’s Independent Audit Committee meeting for a more accurate and complete understanding of the issues raised and addressed.

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July 16, 2024

Beginning the week of July 21, the Denver City Council will launch a new slate of committees to better reflect the issues it addresses and the departments and agencies it considers when drafting and approving legislation. These updated committees are more focused and aligned with the Council’s current priorities.

  • Visit our website to explore individual committee pages and discover the responsibilities of each one.
  • Download a spreadsheet(PDF, 230KB) containing a comprehensive list of committees, descriptions, members, the agencies they oversee, and their regular meeting times. It also has a link to each committee's official calendar, agendas, minutes, and archived videos.
  • Looking for records from former committees? You can still find them on Legistar — just click the Committees tab and use the dropdown to select the one you're interested in.

Don’t forget! The Weekly Schedule Summary is your best resource for staying up to speed on what the City Council is discussing. It lands in your inbox every Thursday at 4:30 p.m. with a rundown of which committees are meeting, what they are discussing, and links to tune in live or watch later on demand. It will also inform you about public participation opportunities, such as public hearings or committee public input sessions. Subscribe here; it's a great way to stay informed and participate in your local government. 

 

 

 

Thanks for staying engaged — and as always, let us know how we can make these resources more useful for you.

 

 

 

Best,

 

Central Communications

 

Office of Denver City Council