⚠ DRAFT — FOR BOARD REVIEW ONLY ⚠ This document has not been adopted and does not represent official District policy. For board discussion only. Not for public distribution without board authorization.
🏠
Southern Park County Fire Protection District
A Colorado Special District • Park County, Colorado • Est. 1987

Service Plan

Pursuant to C.R.S. § 32-1-201 et seq. • C.R.S. § 32-1-1001 et seq.
DRAFT — Prepared for Board Review Prepared by: [Author / District Counsel]
Draft Date: April 2026
Document Version: 1.0 — DRAFT
Supersedes: Original Service Plan filed [Date]
District Office
1745 County Road 102
Guffey, Colorado 80820
(719) 689-9479 • info@spcfpd.org
⚠ Draft Document Notice This Service Plan draft has been prepared for review by the Board of Directors of the Southern Park County Fire Protection District. Yellow-highlighted fields marked [like this] require board verification, legal review, or completion of specific data before adoption. This draft must be reviewed by District counsel and presented at a duly noticed public hearing before submission to the Park County Board of County Commissioners for approval, as required by C.R.S. § 32-1-204.5.
SPCFPD • Service Plan Draft • April 2026
Table of Contents
Preliminary Matter
Cover Page1
Table of Contents2
Defined Terms and Abbreviations3
Article I — Introduction and Statutory Authority
1.1 Purpose of Service Plan
1.2 History and Organization of the District
1.3 Statutory Authority
Article II — Description of the District
2.1 District Name and Principal Office
2.2 Boundary Description and Service Area
2.3 Service Area Characteristics
2.4 ISO Fire Protection Classification
Article III — Services to Be Provided
3.1 Fire Suppression Services
3.2 Emergency Medical Services
3.3 Wildland and WUI Fire Response
3.4 Hazardous Materials Response
3.5 Public Education and Prevention
3.6 Burn Permit Administration
3.7 Defensible Space and Fuel Mitigation
Article IV — Facilities, Apparatus, and Infrastructure
4.1 Fire Stations
4.2 Apparatus and Equipment
4.3 Communications Systems
4.4 Water Supply and Dry Hydrant Systems
Article V — Financial Plan
5.1 Revenue Sources
5.2 Authorized Mill Levy
5.3 Budget and Expenditures
5.4 Debt Authorization and Limitations
5.5 TABOR Compliance
5.6 Audit and Financial Reporting
Article VI — Governance
6.1 Board of Directors
6.2 Officers and Staff
6.3 Meetings and Open Records
6.4 Personnel Policies
Article VII — Service Standards and Performance
7.1 Response Time Standards
7.2 Training and Certification Standards
7.3 Minimum Staffing and Volunteer Program
Article VIII — Inclusion and Exclusion of Territory
8.1 Inclusion Procedures
8.2 Exclusion Procedures
Article IX — Intergovernmental Agreements and Mutual Aid
Article X — Consistency with Park County Master Plan
Article XI — Amendments to Service Plan
Article XII — Dissolution
Exhibits
Exhibit A — District Boundary Map
Exhibit B — Legal Boundary Description
Exhibit C — Station Location Map
Exhibit D — Current Apparatus Inventory
Exhibit E — Preliminary Financial Projections
2
SPCFPD • Service Plan Draft • April 2026
Defined Terms and Abbreviations

As used in this Service Plan, the following terms have the meanings set forth below:

Term / AbbreviationDefinition
BoardThe Board of Directors of the Southern Park County Fire Protection District
BOCCPark County Board of County Commissioners
C.R.S.Colorado Revised Statutes
DFPCColorado Division of Fire Prevention & Control
DistrictSouthern Park County Fire Protection District
DOLAColorado Department of Local Affairs — Division of Local Government
EMSEmergency Medical Services
HazMatHazardous Materials
ISOInsurance Services Office, Inc.
NFPANational Fire Protection Association
PPCISO Public Protection Classification
Service PlanThis document, as adopted and amended from time to time
SOSColorado Secretary of State
TABORTaxpayer's Bill of Rights, Colo. Const. Art. X, § 20
WUIWildland-Urban Interface

Introduction and Statutory Authority

1.1 Purpose of Service Plan

This Service Plan (the "Service Plan") is submitted on behalf of the Southern Park County Fire Protection District (the "District") pursuant to C.R.S. § 32-1-201 et seq. and C.R.S. § 32-1-1001 et seq. This updated Service Plan supersedes and replaces all prior service plans and amendments, and constitutes the operative service plan for the District from and after its adoption by the Park County Board of County Commissioners.

The purpose of this Service Plan is to:

  1. Define the services the District is authorized and obligated to provide;
  2. Establish a financial plan demonstrating the District's ability to provide those services;
  3. Describe the District's boundaries and service area characteristics;
  4. Establish infrastructure and service standards;
  5. Document governance and accountability requirements; and
  6. Ensure compliance with all applicable Colorado statutes and Park County requirements.
1.2 History and Organization of the District

The Southern Park County Fire Protection District was organized as a Colorado special district in 1987 pursuant to the Colorado Special District Act. The District was organized by Order and Decree of the District Court for Park County, Colorado, in [Case No. / Date]. The District was organized following a petition and public hearing before the Park County Board of County Commissioners and approval of the original Service Plan by resolution of the BOCC on [Date of Original Service Plan Approval].

Since its organization, the District has grown from a single-station volunteer fire district to a multi-station organization providing comprehensive fire suppression, wildland fire response, and emergency services to a 226-square-mile service area in southern Park County.

1.3 Statutory Authority
C.R.S. § 32-1-101 et seq. — Colorado Special District Act The District is organized and operates as a special district under the Colorado Special District Act. All powers, duties, and limitations of the District are governed by the Special District Act unless otherwise provided by more specific statute.
C.R.S. § 32-1-1001 et seq. — Fire Protection District Law The District is specifically organized as a fire protection district and exercises all powers granted to fire protection districts by the Fire Protection District Law. Such powers include fire suppression, acquisition of property, employment of personnel, levy and collection of taxes, issuance of bonds, and execution of intergovernmental agreements.
C.R.S. § 32-1-201 et seq. — Service Plan Requirements The District's Service Plan was submitted to and approved by the Park County Board of County Commissioners in accordance with C.R.S. § 32-1-201 et seq. Any material modification of the Service Plan requires approval of the BOCC following a public hearing per C.R.S. § 32-1-207.
3
SPCFPD • Service Plan Draft • April 2026

Description of the District

2.1 District Name and Principal Office

The legal name of the District is the Southern Park County Fire Protection District. The District's principal office is located at:

1745 County Road 102, Guffey, Colorado 80820
Telephone: (719) 689-9479 • Fax: (719) 689-9483
Email: info@spcfpd.org

The District is a political subdivision of the State of Colorado. The District may change its principal office by resolution of the Board without amendment to this Service Plan, provided that appropriate notice is filed with DOLA and the Park County Clerk & Recorder.

2.2 Boundary Description and Service Area

The District encompasses approximately 226 square miles in the southern portion of Park County, Colorado. The precise legal boundaries of the District are set forth in the Order and Decree of Organization and all subsequent Orders of Inclusion and Exclusion recorded with the Park County Clerk & Recorder.

✎ Board Action Required — Boundary Verification Prior to adoption of this Service Plan, the Board should confirm the current legal boundary description with the Park County Assessor and Clerk & Recorder, and attach the verified legal description as Exhibit B. A current boundary map should be attached as Exhibit A.

The service area includes unincorporated portions of southern Park County, including the communities of Guffey, Hartsel, Elevenmile, Lake George (as applicable within District boundaries), and surrounding rural areas. The District's boundaries are contiguous with those of [Adjacent FPDs / Counties] to the north, east, south, and west.

The District has no established extraterritorial service jurisdiction. All services described herein are provided within the District's legal boundaries, subject to mutual aid obligations described in Article IX.

2.3 Service Area Characteristics
CharacteristicDescription
Total AreaApproximately 226 square miles
Elevation RangeApproximately 7,800 to 11,000+ feet above sea level
TerrainMountainous, high-altitude; mix of grassland, forest, canyon, and semi-arid terrain
Primary CommunitiesGuffey, Hartsel, Lake George area, Eleven Mile Canyon, surrounding rural areas
Estimated Population[Approx. X,XXX permanent + seasonal residents]
Estimated Parcels[Approx. X,XXX parcels]
Primary StructuresSingle-family residential; rural agricultural; commercial properties; recreational cabins
Primary HazardsWildland and WUI fire; structure fire; vehicle accidents on Highway 9, Highway 24, and County Roads; propane/rural gas systems; remote rescue
Wildfire Risk ClassificationHigh to Extreme (per DFPC and Park County Community Wildfire Protection Plan)
Road AccessMix of paved state highways and unpaved county roads; seasonal access limitations in winter
2.4 ISO Fire Protection Classification

The District has been evaluated by the Insurance Services Office (ISO) and assigned a Public Protection Classification (PPC) as follows:

ClassificationApplicable PropertiesBasis
ISO Class 9 Properties located within 5 road miles of any of the three District fire stations Fire department response, communication, and water supply capabilities as evaluated by ISO
ISO Class 10 Properties located beyond 5 road miles of the nearest District fire station Properties beyond ISO's recognized travel distance threshold receive a Class 10 designation

The District actively pursues improvements in apparatus, equipment, personnel, and water supply infrastructure to support ISO re-evaluation and potential classification improvements over time. Property owners in Class 10 areas are encouraged to maintain on-site water storage and defensible space per NFPA 1144 standards.

4
SPCFPD • Service Plan Draft • April 2026

Services to Be Provided

The District is authorized and shall endeavor to provide the following services to residents, property owners, and visitors within its boundaries. The scope and level of each service is subject to available funding, personnel, and equipment as reflected in the District's annual budget adopted pursuant to C.R.S. § 29-1-108.

3.1 Structural Fire Suppression Services

The District provides structural fire suppression services to all improved properties within its boundaries. These services include:

C.R.S. § 32-1-1002 — Fire Protection Authority The District has the authority to provide fire protection services including fire suppression, prevention, and inspection within its boundaries.
3.2 Emergency Medical Services (EMS)

The District provides first-response emergency medical services at the [EMT-Basic / EMT-Advanced / First Responder] level. The District's EMS program includes:

The District coordinates with [Park County EMS / Designated Transport Provider] for Advanced Life Support (ALS) and ambulance transport services. The District's EMS program operates in accordance with protocols established by the [Park County Medical Director / Designated Physician] and all applicable Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) requirements.

3.3 Wildland and Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) Fire Response

Given the District's location in the high-risk wildland-urban interface of southern Park County, wildland fire response represents a core District service. The District provides:

3.4 Hazardous Materials Response

The District provides Hazardous Materials Operations-level response in accordance with NFPA 472 and OSHA 29 CFR 1910.120. For incidents beyond Operations level, the District will request assistance from [Regional HazMat Team / CERC] and coordinate with the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. Services include:

3.5 Public Education and Prevention

The District is committed to reducing fire incidents and improving public safety through community education and prevention programs, including:

3.6 Burn Permit Administration

The District administers a burn permit program for prescribed and debris burns within its jurisdiction, consistent with Park County regulations and applicable state fire restriction orders. The District shall:

3.7 Defensible Space and Fuel Mitigation Review

Upon request, the District shall conduct property assessments for defensible space and wildfire fuel reduction, providing recommendations consistent with NFPA 1144 (Standard for Reducing Structure Ignition Hazards from Wildland Fire) and the Colorado State Forest Service's recommendations. This service is provided at no charge to District residents as a public safety service, subject to available personnel resources.

5
SPCFPD • Service Plan Draft • April 2026

Facilities, Apparatus, and Infrastructure

4.1 Fire Stations

The District operates three (3) fire stations strategically positioned to provide coverage across its 226-square-mile service area. Station locations are as follows:

Station Address Community Primary Service Area
Station 1
(District HQ)
1745 County Road 102
Guffey, CO 80820
Guffey Guffey, surrounding CR 102 corridor; District administrative office
Station 2 2406 County Road 88
Guffey, CO 80820
Guffey / CR 88 area Northern district; CR 88 and surrounding areas
Station 3 8340 County Road 102
Guffey, CO 80820
Western CR 102 corridor Western district; lower CR 102 corridor and surrounding areas

The District shall maintain all stations in a safe, operational condition. The Board shall include station maintenance and capital improvement needs in the annual budget and Capital Improvement Plan. Station locations may be changed or new stations added by Board resolution, subject to financial constraints and the requirement to maintain effective coverage across the service area. A material change in the number of stations or their general locations is considered a material modification to the Service Plan requiring BOCC approval per C.R.S. § 32-1-207.

4.2 Apparatus and Equipment

The District shall maintain a fleet of apparatus and equipment adequate to support the services described in Article III. Minimum apparatus requirements are described below. A current apparatus inventory is attached as Exhibit D.

Apparatus TypeNFPA ClassificationMinimum QuantityPrimary Use
Structural EngineType 1 or Type 2[#]Structure fire suppression; primary attack engine
Wildland EngineType 3, 4, 5, or 6[#]Wildland and WUI fire attack
Tender / TankerNFPA 1901 / 1906[#]Water supply in areas without hydrant coverage
Brush/Patrol UnitType 6[#]Wildland patrol, initial attack, mop-up
Support / CommandN/A[#]Incident command, logistics, personnel transport
Rescue / EMS UnitN/A[#]EMS response, technical rescue support

The District shall maintain a Capital Apparatus Replacement Schedule as part of its Capital Improvement Plan, with a target apparatus replacement cycle of no more than [20–25] years for structural engines and [15–20] years for wildland apparatus, subject to annual condition assessments. The Board shall maintain an Apparatus Reserve Fund in accordance with the District's adopted Financial Plan.

4.3 Communications Systems

The District operates its communications systems in coordination with the Park County Emergency Communications Center (9-1-1 Dispatch) and the Colorado Department of Public Safety Statewide Digital Trunked Radio System (DTRS / FirstNet where applicable). District communications requirements include:

4.4 Water Supply and Dry Hydrant Systems

In the absence of a municipal water distribution system within the District, the District's water supply strategy relies on:

The District shall maintain and update a Water Supply Atlas identifying all static water sources, dry hydrants, and fill sites within its boundaries. The Board shall budget annually for dry hydrant installation, maintenance, and improvement as a priority capital expense.

6
SPCFPD • Service Plan Draft • April 2026

Financial Plan

This Article sets forth the District's financial plan demonstrating its ability to provide the services described in Article III and maintain financial self-sufficiency as required by C.R.S. § 32-1-203(2)(b). Preliminary financial projections are attached as Exhibit E.

5.1 Revenue Sources

The District derives revenue from the following sources:

Revenue SourceStatutory AuthorityNotes
Property Tax (Ad Valorem) C.R.S. § 32-1-1101; C.R.S. § 39-5-121 Primary revenue source; mill levy certified annually to Park County Assessor and Treasurer
Specific Ownership Tax C.R.S. § 42-3-107 Vehicle registration fees distributed to special districts by county
Intergovernmental Grants C.R.S. § 29-1-203 Federal (FEMA/AFG, USFS, FHWA), state (DFPC, DOLA), and foundation grants as available
Burn Permit Fees Board Resolution Fees established by Board resolution; deposited into General Fund
Service Request Fees Board Resolution Fees for non-emergency services as established by the Board
Bond Proceeds C.R.S. § 32-1-1101 General obligation bonds subject to TABOR voter approval; used for capital projects only
Donations and Fundraising C.R.S. § 32-1-1001 Volunteer association fundraising, community donations; not budgeted as primary revenue
Interest Income C.R.S. § 24-75-601 Interest on District fund balances invested per the District's investment policy
5.2 Authorized Mill Levy

The District is authorized to levy a property tax (ad valorem) not to exceed [XX.XXX] mills on all taxable property within the District boundaries. The actual mill levy shall be set by Board resolution annually following adoption of the budget, and certified to the Park County Assessor and Treasurer pursuant to C.R.S. § 39-5-121 no later than December 15 of each year.

✎ Board Action Required — Mill Levy Cap Verification The authorized mill levy cap must be confirmed against the District's original Service Plan, any voter-approved TABOR mill levy limitations, and any existing mill levy limitations. District counsel should verify the current statutory and TABOR-compliant mill levy ceiling before adoption of this Service Plan.

Any increase in the mill levy above the District's current certified levy constitutes a tax increase subject to TABOR voter approval unless the increase falls within the limits of the District's existing voter-approved authority. The Board shall consult with District counsel before certifying any mill levy increase.

5.3 Budget and Expenditures

The District adopts an annual budget in accordance with the Local Government Budget Law of Colorado, C.R.S. § 29-1-101 et seq. The budget shall be organized by fund and include:

The Board shall adopt the annual budget no later than December 15 of each year and publish notice in the [Flume / Park County newspaper of general circulation] as required by C.R.S. § 29-1-109.

5.4 Debt Authorization and Limitations

The District is authorized to issue general obligation bonds, revenue bonds, certificates of participation, or other forms of debt as authorized by law. Issuance of general obligation debt constituting a "multiple-fiscal year direct obligation" requires prior voter approval under TABOR (Colo. Const. Art. X, § 20). Debt obligations are subject to the following limitations:

5.5 TABOR Compliance

The District complies with all requirements of the Taxpayer's Bill of Rights (TABOR), Colo. Const. Art. X, § 20. Specific TABOR requirements applicable to the District include:

The District [has / has not] received voter approval for a TABOR "de-Brucing" (removal of spending limits) as of the adoption date of this Service Plan. Current TABOR status and voter-approved authority shall be documented in the District's records and reviewed annually by the Board.

5.6 Audit and Financial Reporting

The District shall cause an annual audit of its financial statements to be prepared by an independent certified public accountant, in accordance with C.R.S. § 29-1-606. The audit shall be completed within 180 days of the end of the fiscal year and filed with DOLA. Financial statements shall be made available to the public pursuant to CORA, C.R.S. § 24-72-201 et seq., and posted on the District's website as practicable.

7
SPCFPD • Service Plan Draft • April 2026

Governance

6.1 Board of Directors

The District is governed by a Board of five (5) Directors elected by eligible electors of the District pursuant to C.R.S. § 32-1-901. Directors serve four-year staggered terms. Terms are staggered so that, as nearly as possible, no more than three directors' terms expire in the same election year.

Current Board of Directors (as of April 2026):

DirectorOfficeTerm ExpiresHow Seated
Sean EnglishPresident2027Appointed (2026)
Mike BrandtSecretary / Treasurer2029Elected (2018)
Mike ParrishDirector2027Elected (2014)
Mike SmithDirector2027Elected (2023)
Jennifer TaylorDirector2027Appointed (2026)
6.2 Officers and Staff

The Board shall elect from its members, at its organizational meeting following each election, a President, Secretary, and Treasurer pursuant to C.R.S. § 32-1-902. The same person may hold the offices of Secretary and Treasurer. The Board may employ a Fire Chief and such other staff as the budget allows. Staff employment is governed by the District's adopted Personnel Policy.

6.3 Meetings and Open Records

All meetings of the Board are subject to the Colorado Open Meetings Law, C.R.S. § 24-6-402, and all District records are subject to the Colorado Open Records Act (CORA), C.R.S. § 24-72-201 et seq. Regular meetings are held on the [1st Wednesday] of each month at 3:00 PM at Station 1, 1745 County Road 102, Guffey, Colorado 80820, unless otherwise posted. Meeting agendas are posted at least 24 hours in advance at the District's principal office and on the District's website.

6.4 Personnel Policies

The District operates with a combination of career, part-time, and volunteer personnel. The Board shall adopt and maintain a Personnel Policy governing employment terms, compensation, benefits, conduct standards, and separation procedures. The District's volunteer program is governed by a Volunteer Policies and Procedures Manual adopted by the Board. All personnel policies shall comply with applicable state and federal law including the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act (C.R.S. § 24-34-401 et seq.) and the Fair Labor Standards Act.

Service Standards and Performance

7.1 Response Time Standards

The District establishes the following response time performance targets, measured from dispatch notification to arrival of first apparatus at scene. These are goals, not guarantees, and are subject to available personnel, road conditions, weather, and the rural nature of the service area.

Incident TypeTarget Response — Within 5 mi. of StationTarget Response — Beyond 5 mi.
Structure Fire (life threat)[XX] minutes[XX] minutes
Wildland Fire (initial attack)[XX] minutes[XX] minutes
EMS (life threat)[XX] minutes[XX] minutes
Vehicle Accident (with injury)[XX] minutes[XX] minutes
HazMat (defensive operations)[XX] minutes[XX] minutes

Response time data shall be collected through the District's Computer-Aided Dispatch (CAD) or records management system and reported to the Board quarterly. The Board shall annually review response time performance and take corrective action where feasible.

7.2 Training and Certification Standards

All District personnel performing firefighting functions shall maintain the following minimum training certifications as required by the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention & Control and the District's adopted Training Policy:

7.3 Minimum Staffing and Volunteer Program

The District operates a combination department utilizing both career/part-time staff and a volunteer corps. The Board shall adopt a Minimum Staffing Standard by resolution. The District's goal is to maintain sufficient staffing at all three stations to provide an effective response to reported incidents within the service area. The District's Volunteer Program shall be governed by a Volunteer Policies and Procedures Manual adopted by the Board and reviewed no less than every three years.

8
SPCFPD • Service Plan Draft • April 2026

Inclusion and Exclusion of Territory

8.1 Inclusion of Territory

Property not within the District boundaries may be included in the District pursuant to C.R.S. § 32-1-401 et seq. Inclusion requires a written petition by the property owner(s), a public hearing before the Board with notice published in the newspaper of general circulation pursuant to C.R.S. § 32-1-404, and a resolution of the Board approving inclusion. Upon approval, an Order of Inclusion shall be recorded with the Park County Clerk & Recorder and filed with the Park County Assessor. Included property becomes subject to the District's mill levy beginning with the next assessment cycle.

In evaluating petitions for inclusion, the Board shall consider:

8.2 Exclusion of Territory

Property within the District may be excluded pursuant to C.R.S. § 32-1-501 et seq. on petition of the property owner(s). The Board shall hold a public hearing and shall approve exclusion only upon finding that the exclusion will not impair the District's ability to discharge existing obligations or provide services to the remaining territory. Outstanding obligations attributable to the excluded property may be required to be paid or guaranteed before exclusion is approved. An Order of Exclusion shall be recorded with the Park County Clerk & Recorder and filed with the Park County Assessor.

Intergovernmental Agreements and Mutual Aid

The District is authorized to enter into intergovernmental agreements (IGAs) pursuant to C.R.S. § 29-1-203 and C.R.S. § 32-1-1001. The District currently maintains, or shall seek to enter into, mutual aid and cooperation agreements with the following agencies:

AgencyAgreement TypePurpose
[Adjacent Fire Districts]Mutual / Automatic AidFire suppression and EMS assistance across jurisdictional boundaries
Park County Sheriff's OfficeLaw Enforcement Support IGAScene security, evacuation assistance, joint incident response
[Park County EMS / Transport Provider]EMS Coordination AgreementALS and ambulance transport coordination
Colorado Division of Fire Prevention & ControlState Mutual Aid / Resource SharingWildland fire resources, state activation during declared emergencies
USDA Forest Service / BLMCooperative Fire Protection AgreementWildland fire response on federal lands adjacent to District
Park County Office of Emergency ManagementEmergency Management CooperationCoordination on mass casualty, evacuation, and disaster response

All IGAs shall be approved by Board resolution and maintained in the District's permanent records. Copies of current IGAs shall be available for public inspection pursuant to CORA.

Consistency with Park County Master Plan

This Service Plan is consistent with the Park County Master Plan, as last updated [Date]. The District's service area encompasses portions of the Park County Master Plan designated as [Rural Residential / Agricultural / Public Lands / etc.]. The District's services support the land use goals of the Master Plan by providing adequate fire and emergency services to accommodate existing and anticipated future development within the District boundaries.

✎ Board Action Required — Master Plan Consistency Statement District counsel or the District's planning consultant should verify consistency with the current Park County Master Plan and prepare a specific consistency statement for this section prior to submission to the BOCC.

Amendments to Service Plan

11.1 Material Modifications

A material modification of this Service Plan requires approval by the Park County Board of County Commissioners following a public hearing with published notice, pursuant to C.R.S. § 32-1-207. Material modifications include, but are not limited to: changes in the types of services authorized; significant changes to District boundaries; changes in authorized debt or mill levy limits; and substantial changes in financial plan assumptions.

The District shall provide written notice to the BOCC of any proposed material modification at least 10 days before the public hearing. The Board shall also file an updated Service Plan with DOLA within 60 days of BOCC approval of any material modification.

11.2 Non-Material Modifications

Non-material modifications may be made by Board resolution without BOCC approval. Non-material modifications include administrative updates, corrections, and updates to reflect changes in applicable law that do not alter the District's authorized services, boundaries, or financial structure. The Board shall file notice of non-material modifications with DOLA and maintain a complete amendment history in the District's permanent records.

Dissolution

The District may be dissolved pursuant to C.R.S. § 32-1-701 et seq. Dissolution requires a resolution of the Board or petition of eligible electors, a duly noticed public hearing, satisfaction or provision for all outstanding obligations, and an Order of Dissolution recorded with the Park County Clerk & Recorder. Notice of dissolution shall be filed with the Colorado Secretary of State and DOLA. Upon dissolution, District assets shall be distributed in accordance with applicable statutory requirements. Nothing in this Service Plan is intended to prohibit or restrict the District from exercising its dissolution rights under applicable law.

9
SPCFPD • Service Plan Draft • April 2026
Certification and Signatures
⚠ Draft Certification — Not For Execution This signature block is provided for planning purposes only. This document must be reviewed and approved by the Board of Directors at a duly noticed public meeting, reviewed by District counsel, and submitted to the Park County Board of County Commissioners for a public hearing before any official adoption or signature by District officers.

The undersigned, being the duly authorized officers of the Southern Park County Fire Protection District, a Colorado special district, hereby certify that this Service Plan was duly considered and adopted by the Board of Directors of the District at a regularly scheduled and duly noticed public meeting held on ____________, 2026, by a vote of ____ in favor and ____ opposed, with ____ abstaining, and that this Service Plan accurately reflects the District's authorized services, financial plan, and governance structure.

 
Sean English, President
Board of Directors
Southern Park County Fire Protection District
Date: ______________
 
Mike Brandt, Secretary / Treasurer
Board of Directors
Southern Park County Fire Protection District
Date: ______________
 
Mike Parrish, Director
Board of Directors
Southern Park County Fire Protection District
Date: ______________
 
Mike Smith, Director
Board of Directors
Southern Park County Fire Protection District
Date: ______________
 
Jennifer Taylor, Director
Board of Directors
Southern Park County Fire Protection District
Date: ______________

BOCC Approval Block

To be completed by Park County upon approval following public hearing per C.R.S. § 32-1-204.5.

The Board of County Commissioners of Park County, Colorado, hereby approves the foregoing Service Plan of the Southern Park County Fire Protection District following a public hearing held on ____________, 2026.

 
Chair, Park County Board of County Commissioners
Date: ______________
 
Park County Clerk & Recorder (Attest)
Date: ______________

Exhibits

The following exhibits are incorporated by reference into this Service Plan:

ExhibitDescriptionStatus
Exhibit ADistrict Boundary Map (current, to scale)To be attached prior to adoption
Exhibit BLegal Description of District BoundariesObtain from Park County Clerk & Recorder
Exhibit CStation Location Map showing ISO 5-mile radius ringsTo be prepared by District
Exhibit DCurrent Apparatus Inventory with Condition AssessmentTo be compiled by Fire Chief
Exhibit EFive-Year Financial Projections (Revenue, Expenditures, Mill Levy)To be prepared by District Treasurer / CPA
10