Greeley Voters Came Through Once Again
Greeley Demands Better meets the five-day deadline with an additional 501 signatures surpassing the curated signature count to fulfill their petition requirement.
Greeley, Colo. (November 3, 2025)
On Monday, November 3, 2025, Greeley Demands Better submitted 501 new and cured petition signatures – the vast majority volunteer obtained – to the Greeley City Clerk. This far surpasses the 32-signature requirement needed to fulfill the petition’s validity within the five-day legal timeframe.
On Wednesday evening, October 29, 2025, the Greeley City Clerk determined that the number of petition signatures submitted by the grassroots citizen initiative, Greeley Demands Better (GDB) was “insufficient” by 32 signatures. Many of the 4,000+ signatures were rejected for trivial matters, including street names without the road suffixes (Blvd, Drive, Avenue, etc.), addresses missing an apartment number, and the like, contrary to Secretary of State standards and procedures.
“Greeley officials have continuously put their thumb on the scales in opposition to their own citizens, and Wednesday’s declaration of deficiency was just the latest example,” observed Greeley Demands Better attorney Suzanne Taheri. “State standards and jurisprudence in reviewing petition signatures is clear. Colorado courts recognize the right to petition on the same footing as the right to vote. This is why courts apply a standard of substantial compliance to avoid disenfranchising voters. In contrast, the clerk applied a standard of strict compliance disqualifying and disenfranchising voters for every technical foul she could find down to incomplete apartment numbers or street designations. Imagine if a clerk did this with ballots and started disenfranchising voters for such trivial things. Thankfully, she won’t be running the election.”
GDB had five days to cure the signatures with a deadline of today, November 3, 2025. Signatures could be cured in one of two ways – collecting additional signatures or correcting the signatures in question. Curiously, after notifying GDB of their two curing options, the city clerk took nearly 24 hours to provide the line-item detail of the insufficient signature list. This left GDB limited to only one option to cure signatures during that timeframe - collecting additional signatures.
“At this point, we expect the city to make this entire process difficult,” said, Taheri. “Sadly, actions like this one from the city match the long list of questionable acts that have continued since we made Greeley residents aware of this project being pushed through without their vote. It’s clear the city has chosen to do everything in its power to throw out the will of its own citizens.”
This ‘veto referendum’ petition began in mid-October when Greeley Demands Better submitted 7,739 signatures to give residents a vote on the zoning of the $1.1 billion Cascadia/Catalyst hockey arena and entertainment district. Only 4,586 valid signatures were needed, according to the city, but the city rejected 41% of the signatures submitted for the petition. Of note, the standard rejection rate in municipal and statewide petition efforts is 20%.
Once the signatures are approved for this petition, the project is frozen in its tracks. Zoning for the Cascadia/Catalyst project is halted until there is a vote of the people. The project’s financing terms include mortgaging many of the Greeley City properties, such as City Hall, bus facilities, recreation center, police buildings and fire facilities.
# # #
About Greeley Demands Better
The “Greeley Demands Better” campaign is a grassroots citizen initiative seeking to repeal the zoning for the “Bad Cascadia Deal” and ensure responsible fiscal management of taxpayer dollars. The initiative process is 100% Greeley-driven, co-chaired by Greeley resident Brandon Wark, and Rhonda Solis, former Colorado's 8th Congressional District Board of Education member, Greeley-Evans school board member, and long-time Greeley resident.
For more information, visit GreeleyDemandsBetter.com or follow the campaign on social media.
The November 4, 2025, Election May Be the Most Consequential in Greeley’s Recent History
November 1, 2025
By Brandon Wark and Rhonda Solis, Proponents, Greeley Demands Better
Voters will decide not just on city council and mayoral seats, but on the very future of our community, its finances, and who truly holds power at City Hall. The policies, priorities, and independence of our next council will shape Greeley for generations — from neighborhood investments to billion-dollar development bets.
At the heart of this pivotal moment is the Cascadia project. A developer rode into Greeley with a desperate need to land a new home for Cascadia and his Colorado Eagles after Larimer County refused. Greeley’s substantial financial resources made it an inviting prospect.
The developer courted and won the approval of five council members. Now, Greeley city leaders are willing to risk the future of our community without a public vote. They have mortgaged Greeley’s future by taking on hundreds of millions in risk — all while sidelining transparency and citizen oversight. Twice, 8000+ residents rose up to demand a public vote, underscoring widespread alarm about sweetheart deals and fiscal overreach. The city’s response? Spend as quickly as possible and defend the current terms at all costs.
As it stands, the City of Greeley will assume ownership of the high-risk $860 million Catalyst Hotel, Water Park, and Arena Complex, along with an obligation to pay $2 billion in debt service over the next 40 years. Projections show the city could be short as much as $20 million per year just to meet debt payments.
In stark contrast, the 1,000-acre Cascadia Residential development — on land at County Rd 17 and Highway 34 — remains entirely in the developers control as a low-risk, highly profitable private venture.
To build public enthusiasm, the developer has boasted that major retailers will transform the area into a bustling commercial hub, boosting Greeley’s retail sales. In reality, top retailers have little incentive to locate off the I-25 corridor, where visibility and customer traffic are critical for their success.
Industry experts warn that the Catalyst Hotel and Water Park, five miles east of I-25, will struggle to reach the projected activity and revenue targets, with expected cash flows potentially falling $10–15 million short annually.
At its core, the Cascadia project has served the interests of the developer above all others. The city shoulders every penny of the financial risk. The developer locks in lucrative, long-term terms for his hockey team, secures a sweetheart deal for his residential development, and stands to pocket a $30 million “consulting fee” from the deal.
Through it all, Greeley’s elected officials appear determined to advance the developer’s agenda rather than advocate for the broader interests of the community.
Now is the time for new leadership — leaders willing to confront hard truths, overhaul risky financial deals, and restore responsible, transparent stewardship of our city’s resources. Sensible decisions for Greeley’s future depend on electing independent voices committed to reimagining the project’s financing to protect the community for generations to come.
Greeley deserves a council and mayor dedicated to serving all residents, not just well-connected interests. A new council must closely examine and revise the financial plan to ensure long-term stability and lower the risks associated with the current deal. They must challenge risky assumptions and expensive agreements, and champion solutions that serve Greeley today and tomorrow.
That’s all we, along with the thousands of Greeley citizens and business leaders we represent, have asked for.
Greeley faces a defining choice on November 4. Elect leaders loyal to an outside developer or elect independent and courageous leaders loyal to you, the Greeley residents. Remember this when you vote - the city council and staff work for us - the people, the taxpayers, and the voters. Let’s vote in candidates who will respect the voice of our citizens.
Vote wisely, Greeley.
---
About Greeley Demands Better
The “Greeley Demands Better” campaign is a grassroots citizen initiative seeking to repeal the zoning for the “Bad Cascadia Deal” and ensure responsible fiscal management of taxpayer dollars. The initiative process is 100% Greeley-driven, co-chaired by Greeley resident Brandon Wark, and Rhonda Solis, former Colorado's 8th Congressional District Board of Education member, Greeley-Evans school board member, and long-time Greeley resident.
For more information, visit GreeleyDemandsBetter.com or follow the campaign on social media.
City Blocks Greeley Resident Petition, “Democracy Failed Us Again”
The hard-fought battle for Greeley Demands Better blocked by the City of Greeley by unduly rejecting thousands of petition signatures.
Greeley, Colo. (October 30, 2025)
On Wednesday evening, October 29, 2025, the Greeley City Clerk determined that the number of petition signatures submitted by the grassroots citizen initiative, Greeley Demands Better (GDB) was “insufficient” by 32 signatures. GDB now has five days to cure the signatures either by collecting additional signatures or correcting the signatures in question – and GDB will cure the petition by the Monday deadline.
Greeley Demands Better submitted 7,739 signatures to give residents a vote on the zoning of the $1.1 billion Cascadia hockey arena and entertainment district. The city’s required number of valid signatures was 4,586, and the timeframe to obtain those signatures was limited to just two weeks. Greeley citizens responded to the call and delivered a count far above the requirement – nearly 70% more – but, still, the Greeley City Clerk disqualified just enough signatures to deny Greeley residents the right to vote on the project.
“The city rejected 41% of the signatures submitted for the petition,” said Greeley Demands Better attorney, Suzanne Taheri. “This is an irrationally high rejection rate. This continued conduct is unprecedented and a violation of our first amendment right to petition the government. The standard rejection rate in municipal and statewide petition efforts is 20%. Notably, Greeley chooses not to follow the standards and best practices of the Secretary of State in verifying signatures. We plan to cure the signatures by Monday and are confident we can do so.”
At the time they submitted their 7,739 signatures, Greeley Demands Better requested an independent review or at the very least an election watcher during the petition signature validation process. The clerk rejected both requests.
“This is unacceptable. The city and democracy failed us again. It has been a long, tough road to inform our neighbors about what was at stake in this deal – and they want a new plan. Still, city staff and these city leaders continue to fail us; but it’s not over yet,” said Rhonda Solis, Co-chair of Greeley Demands Better. “We just want a better solution to the zoning and financing of this project. It’s absurd that Greeley voters have been purposefully omitted from this process. This coming election is more important than ever. Greeley must elect city councilmembers who are not afraid to hold city staff accountable to the residents of Greeley.”
The Cascadia project is estimated to cost $1.1 billion to build, and part of the financing terms include mortgaging many of Greeley’s high value properties, including City Hall, bus facilities, recreation center, police buildings, and fire facilities.
“Today, another roadblock has been placed in our path – the city rejected thousands of signatures but did not identify which signatures were of concern and why they were rejected. We will win the battle in our efforts to correct the wrongs and re-establish the veracity of the workings of our local government,” said Brandon Wark, Co-chair of Greeley Demands Better. “This is a shame and embarrassment for our City Council, City Manager and the developer.”
The process has been unduly challenging for Greeley Deserves/Demands Better and their supporters. GDB has faced a series of obstructive roadblocks along the way, especially from the City Manager, City Council, and the developer.
“Clearly, the city has done everything in its power to ensure the fix was in for the developer from day one,” said Greeley Demands Better attorney, Suzanne Taheri. “We have experienced actions that are at odds with due process and many dealings that are highly questionable.”
Throughout the ordeal, the list of shadowy methods from the adversaries of Greeley Deserves/Demands Better is long:
· The City of Greeley has acknowledged their conflict-of-interest issue but refused to appoint a neutral clerk to review the petitions.
· On the first petition, the city rejected thousands of signatures and entire sections of the petition for trivial omissions violating case law and failed to provide petitioners the necessary five-day “cure” period.
· The first petition submission from Greeley citizens was stalled by the city which claimed the issue was an “administrative” action (rather than legislative) to interfere with it being placed on the November ballot.
· The City of Greeley hired a blatantly biased Hearing Officer to rule in favor of the city and affirm the city’s claim that the initial petition was “administrative”.
· On the second petition submission, GDB requested an election watcher to observe the petition verification process. The city clerk denied the request. The city then claimed the petition was not sufficient and refuses to provide the list of rejected signatures to allow for cure.
· The City of Greeley used the wrong election cycle to determine the number of signatures required for both petitions. Rather than using “10% of the ballots cast in the last municipal election” as required by the city charter, the city clerk required GDB to gather nearly three times the amount of signatures by using the votes cast in the presidential election.
· Police issued trespass notices solely to GDB petitioners during the referendum petition gathering. Petition circulators for other causes were not given trespass notices at the same locations.
· The opponents of GDB petition gathering efforts parked a large truck with a digital display that read, “Decline to Sign” and “Don’t be Tricked” next to petition signing locations to block access and interfere with GDB’s right to petition.
· After expressing their evidence-based disappointment in an op-ed in the Greeley Tribune that the first petition wouldn’t be on the November ballot, the developer is now suing Greeley Deserves Better and its two volunteer proponents claiming false and defamatory statements are hurting his reputation.
The coalition of concerned Greeley citizens, now called Greeley Demands Better, formed in June 2025 and initially filed an initiative to repeal Ordinance 2025-15. The ordinance exposes taxpayers to over $1 billion in financial risk and unlimited liability for the controversial Cascadia West Greeley Project, which includes an ice hockey arena, a waterpark, an event center, and an entertainment district.
# # #
About Greeley Demands Better
The “Greeley Demands Better” campaign is a grassroots citizen initiative seeking to repeal the zoning for the “Bad Cascadia Deal” and ensure responsible fiscal management of taxpayer dollars. The initiative process is 100% Greeley-driven, co-chaired by Greeley resident Brandon Wark, and Rhonda Solis, former Colorado's 8th Congressional District Board of Education member, Greeley-Evans school board member, and long-time Greeley resident.
For more information, visit GreeleyDemandsBetter.com or follow the campaign on social media.
Greeley Voters Calling: Can You Hear Us Now?
Greeley Demands Better Submits nearly 8,000 signatures for the second time to give Greeley residents a vote on the $1.1B Cascadia hockey arena and entertainment district
Greeley, Colo. (October 16, 2025)
With an extremely tight two-week timeframe to gather the necessary 4,586 valid signatures to place the Cascadia zoning on the ballot, Greeley Demands Better and its volunteer brigade have submitted 7,739 signatures to the Greeley Clerk before today’s deadline.
“During this second round of signature gathering, Greeley residents are now much more aware of the high-risk financing scheme of Cascadia project that puts our Greeley taxpayers on the hook for over a billion dollars in long-term obligations. Greeley residents have real issues that they are looking to the City to solve. The lack of hockey arenas simply isn’t one of them,” said Rhonda Solis, Co-Chair of Greeley Demands Better, former Colorado's 8th Congressional District Board of Education member, Greeley-Evans school board member, and long-time Greeley resident.
The Cascadia project is estimated to cost $1.1 billion to build and part of the financing terms include mortgaging many of the Greeley City properties, including City Hall, police buildings and fire facilities.
“Almost 8,000 signatures in two weeks is incredible – and it speaks to the deep concerns of our residents,” said Brandon Wark, Co-Chair of Greeley Demands Better, currently on the Keenesburg Government Efficiency Committee and running for a seat on the Greeley City Council. “The concerns of this financing arrangement cross all party lines and all age demographics in our city. All Greeley residents deserve transparency from local government; that’s why I’m standing here supporting this initiative. Let’s develop this event center the right way – the responsible way.”
The next milestone in this ballot saga is for the City of Greeley to certify the signatures. According to state statute, because Greeley does not have explicit language in its charter about the right to cure for a referendum, the governing statute reverts to state law, which would allow Greeley Demands Better five days to cure any signature questions from the Clerk. Once the signatures are approved, the Cascadia project must halt until there is a vote of the people.
“We have deep concerns about the transparency of the City of Greeley, which already has acknowledged it has a conflict of interest regarding this issue. The last time we submitted signatures, despite the City Clerk approving the petition, the City sued and threw out a record breaking 7,739 signatures from Greeley residents that we submitted, claiming the issue – that the City of Greeley itself called legislative – was administrative and not eligible for the ballot measure process,” said Suzanne Taheri, legal counsel for Greeley Demands Better. “This time, we requested an ‘election watcher’ from the Secretary of State’s office and were denied by the City Clerk for this signature count. We will be monitoring this issue carefully for potential disenfranchisement of Greeley voters. The City of Greeley has already played that card and voters will not stand for another round of silencing its constituents.”
Beginning in June 2025, this coalition of concerned Greeley citizens, now under the name Greeley Demands Better, filed an initiative to repeal Ordinance 2025-15, which exposed taxpayers to over $1 billion in financial risk and unlimited liability for the controversial Cascadia West Greeley Project.
Since then and in just a few short months, the 100% Greeley-driven grassroots citizen group has received a growing number of supporters and continues to press the Greeley City Council to renegotiate responsible financing options for the Cascadia project, transparency in the decisions, and voter input.
# # #
About Greeley Demands Better
The “Greeley Demands Better” campaign is a grassroots citizen initiative seeking to repeal the financing for the “Bad Cascadia Deal” and ensure responsible fiscal management of taxpayer dollars. The initiative process is 100% Greeley-driven, co-chaired by Greeley resident Brandon Wark, currently on the Keenesburg Government Efficiency Committee and running for a seat on the Greeley City Council, and Rhonda Solis, former Colorado's 8th Congressional District Board of Education member, Greeley-Evans school board member, and long-time Greeley resident.
For more information, visit www.greeleydeservesbetter.com or follow the campaign on social media.
City of Greeley Certifies Zoning Referendum
Greeley Demands Better to start collecting petition signatures immediately; signatures due by October 16
October 2, 2025 (Greeley, Colo.)
Last week, Greeley Demands Better, a bipartisan grassroots campaign that is pressing the City of Greeley to find a new solution for the billion-dollar ice arena in Greeley, filed a request for referendum on the project’s zoning measure, which was approved approximately two weeks ago. The City of Greeley approved the referendum.
“While that first repeal effort is stuck in litigation with the city, we are pursuing a fail-safe — a suspension of the zoning ordinance,” noted Suzanne Taheri, legal counsel for the organization. “It's what's known as a veto referendum, and it's something the city cannot interfere with or play games with to deny citizens’ voice.”
The organization began collecting signatures to put the referendum before voters.
“We are gratified the City of Greeley approved our petition; although, we have to ask, ‘what took so long? This is an hour of work at the most,’” said Taheri. “This seems like another attempt by the City to prevent citizens from having a say in this matter by running out the clock. Greeley Deserves Better volunteers from across city gathered a record-breaking number of signatures, and we anticipate that we will be able to do it again even with this shortened timeline. What’s most important here is that Greeley residents get a vote on this project, which puts many critical Greeley-owned buildings at risk. It is frustrating that the City is forcing its residents to collect basically the same signatures twice. It’s the City’s latest example of disenfranchisement.”
While the request was submitted by Greeley Deserves Better, the new issue must be carried forward by a new issue committee, Greeley Demands Better. The request was submitted on behalf of its two proponents: Brandon Wark, a conservative candidate for Greeley City Council in Ward II; and Rhonda Solis, former Greeley Evans School Board member and former Board of Education member from Congressional District 8, a liberal.
“Cascadia is a cool project. The pictures are beautiful. But this is a bad deal for Greeley residents. Bankrolling developers is simply not an appropriate function of local government. The financing would collateralize city properties, including police and fire stations, to finance what boils down to a new theme park and hockey arena,” said Wark. “The way this is financed puts all the risk on Greeley taxpayers instead of the developer. It’s heads the developer wins, tails the city loses.”
Solis, who is known for her community engagement in Greeley, particularly around education, also finds the financing of this project problematic, albeit for different reasons.
“I fought hard to provide additional funds for Greeley’s kids to attend college. Proposing to spend a billion dollars to benefit one developer is absurd. Spend that money to meet our citizens’ basic needs. There are families in the 8th Congressional District who are desperate for a hand up. Blowing $1B on a hockey rink – without serious accountability measures in place – threatens the financial stability of the community programs that Greeley residents rely upon.”
Greeley Deserves Better, the committee that was pursuing a ballot measure to overturn the project’s financing by the City Council via Ordinance 2025-15, remains committed to its original effort. That effort is stuck in litigation, specifically awaiting a hearing in District Court.
Greeley Demands Better will have 30 days to collect the requisite number of signatures from the date the ordinance was passed, with the deadline set for October 16, 2025.
Greeley Deserves Better Files Zoning Referendum to Halt Progress on Billion-Dollar Ice Arena
This halts any forward movement on the $1.1 billion event center
Greeley, Colo. (September 24, 2025)
Yesterday, Greeley Deserves Better, a grassroots campaign that is pressing the City of Greeley to find a new funding solution for the billion-dollar ice arena in Greeley, filed a request for referendum on the project’s zoning, which was approved last week.
“Put simply, the Catalyst project is contingent on zoning. Once the petition is turned in and found sufficient, the zoning ordinance cannot go into effect until voters decide, halting any forward motion of this deal,” said Greeley Deserves Better attorney Suzanne Taheri.
Greeley Deserves Better submitted a request for the referendum, which includes naming two proponents and the ordinance number. Once the petition format is set, Greeley Deserves Better will have 30 days to collect signatures from the date the ordinance was passed. The city clerk has five days to issue the petition for signatures.
“At this point, the citizens of Greeley will now get to decide on the zoning,” said Taheri. “Any legal actions from the proponents of the Catalyst deal would only delay the vote of the citizens and the effective date of the ordinance. The Greeley City Clerk has already admitted she has a conflict of interest in this matter. We are calling on the City to appoint a neutral designated election official that won’t work against the citizens. With a neutral process, we expect the City to approve this referendum immediately with no further unnecessary delays or monkey-wrenching of the process so signature-gathering can begin. The citizens deserve a smooth and transparent process.”
The bipartisan effort is chaired by Brandon Wark, a candidate for Greeley City Council in Ward II; and Rhonda Solis, former Greeley Evans School Board member and former Board of Education member from Congressional District 8.
“I’m running for office to ensure that Greeley remains affordable for our hardworking families. This $1 billion deal mortgages our city’s buildings, guarantees profits to the developer, and puts all the risk on taxpayers to build a ice arena and entertainment center. Not only could this lead to a less affordable cost of living in Greeley, but it could also tie up resources that we need to keep Greeley safe and prosperous,” said Wark. “The Cascadia project looks awesome, but the financing of it is extremely problematic. City Council should go back to the drawing board and find a financing mechanism that doesn’t mortgage our kids’ futures.”
Wark is not the only one who is concerned about this boondoggle. Democrat Solis cites lack of accountability as a reason she is spearheading this referendum.
“A hallmark of my public service has always been accountability. How can we demand accountability from some government functions, like education, but not others? It’s this type of hypocrisy that erodes the people’s trust in representative government,” said Solis. “I fought hard to provide additional funds for Greeley’s kids to attend college. Proposing to spend a billion dollars to benefit one developer is absurd. Spend that money to meet our citizens’ basic needs. There are families in the 8th Congressional District who are desperate for a hand up. Blowing $1B on a hockey rink – without serious accountability measures in place – offends even the most basic understanding of being a good steward of taxpayers’ dollars.”
Recent polling shows that 87% of informed voters support repeal once they understand the financing structure. Further, 92% of respondents believe the developer should provide financial guarantees, 87% consider this issue important in determining their November vote, and 69% of respondents are less likely to vote for candidates who supported the deal.
# # #
Greeley Deserves Better Withdrawals TABOR Lawsuit
Greeley, Colo. (September 22, 2025)
On Monday, September 22, Greeley Deserves Better filed to withdraw its lawsuit that alleged Greeley’s Cascadia deal was in violation of TABOR. Please attribute the following statement to Suzanne Taheri, legal counsel for Greeley Deserves Better.
“Greeley Deserves Better's proponents have chosen to withdraw their TABOR lawsuit in order to narrow their focus where it matters most: ensuring that Greeley residents have the right to vote on the $1 billion Cascadia ice arena project. While we remain deeply concerned by the City’s lack of transparency and pattern of interference, we believe our resources are best directed toward securing ballot access for the community. We know this is a top priority for Greeley voters because our position on this issue enjoys a vast majority of support from Greeley residents. Residents are concerned.
“Those pushing this boondoggle have access to virtually unlimited funding and political leverage, while ordinary Greeley citizens are being silenced by the government interference in the petition process. The city sought legal fees from two citizen volunteers who chose to get involved in this effort to give their fellow citizens a voice. That is outrageous, and only demonstrates the lengths the City and this developer will go to ensure this question never makes the ballot.
“By stepping back from the TABOR suit, we are making clear that our top priority is restoring the voice of Greeley residents in this convoluted process. The people of Greeley deserve the chance to decide for themselves whether this deal reflects this community’s values, such as responsible fiscal stewardship. We maintain it does not.”
Greeley Deserves Better Files Financials Early
99.7% of donations came from Greeley, remaining from Northern Colorado
Greeley, Colo. (September 19, 2025)
On Friday, September 19, Greeley Deserves Better attorney Suzanne Taheri disclosed that the group filed its financial disclosure report ahead of its November 1 deadline in light of the City of Greeley's refusal to follow state campaign finance law. Taheri remains confident that state law outlines that Greeley Deserves Better did not have to file its financial disclosure report until Nov. 1.
The "2025 Municipal Frequent and Infrequent Filing Calendar" on the Colorado Secretary of State's website defines the difference between "frequent" and "infrequent" filing for municipal campaign committees. The law states, the "infrequent" calendar applies to "issue committees whose issue does not attempt access to or appear on the November 4, 2025, election ballot" and sets the report-filing deadline as the "1st day of the month in which the anniversary of the major election occurs."
"We are disappointed in the lack of response and transparency from the city of Greeley regarding our inquiries to file our financial disclosure report on November 1 and its refusal to follow state law. Therefore, Greeley Deserves Better will simply file early and put an end to the distraction about the interpretation of the law," said Taheri.
Notably, Greeley’s unresponsiveness is consistent with its continual interference with its citizens' petition and right to vote. The City’s actions and clear collusion with project developer Martin Lind has denied Greeley citizens the opportunity to vote on the $1 billion ice rink project.
“Undeterred by their own hypocrisy, the city, after successfully blocking Greeley Deserves Better from the ballot, requires us to report early, and continue to report as though we are on the ballot. They have pulled every lever to disenfranchise and intimidate their own citizens from speaking. It makes you wonder if this was the plan all along, to exhaust our volunteers and our resources?" said Taheri.
Greeley Deserves Better’s campaign finance report shows $13,540 raised, of which a whopping 99.7% of dollars came from Greeley residents. A $15 donation also came from a resident of Windsor, Colo. and a $25 donation came from a resident of Fort Lupton.
There is one donation from We Are Greeley, a 501(c)(4) organization, which provides protection from retaliation for funders and supporters of the repeal effort. Contributions to the We Are Greeley organization are restricted to citizens of Greeley only.
Greeley Forward did not disclose any donors, despite nearly $8,000 in expenses.
This organization became necessary after numerous established business leaders and long-time community members expressed fears and instances of retaliation from city officials and project proponents for questioning the Cascadia financing arrangement. The organization allows concerned leaders to support the repeal effort without fear of the bullying that has become a hallmark of the project’s supporters.
###
Greeley Deserves Better Hearing on Preliminary Junction Today
Would Prevent Greeley City Council from Continuing to Spend on $1.1B Deal that Leverages City Properties Without a Vote
Greeley, Colo. (September 4, 2025)
On Tuesday, September 2, 2025, Greeley Deserves Better attorney Suzanne Taheri filed an emergency motion for preliminary injunction. The case involves the citizens of Greeley and their constitutional right to petition.
A protest was filed against the Petitioners on two grounds: 1) the matter was not legislative and therefore not within the purview of the voters; and 2) the ballot title was inaccurate. Petitioners respectfully request that this Court enter an Order (1) granting this Emergency Motion; (2) Order the City of Greeley to certify the ballot question to the November 4, 2025, election (3) granting such other relief as the Court deems just and proper.
Hearing
Date: September 4, 2025
Time: 1:00pm – 3:30pm
WebEx: 720-650-7664, Access code: 2599 625 6218
Courts may enter preliminary injunctions pursuant to C.R.C.P. 65. A preliminary injunction is “designed to preserve the status quo or protect rights pending the final determination of a cause.” McLean v. Farmers’ Highline Canal & Reservoir Co., 44 Colo. 184, 195-96 (1908). The purpose of an injunction is to stop the alleged unauthorized actions of the defendant, and to prevent any further damage to plaintiff.
The opponents’ arguments prevailed in front of a city-appointed hearing officer. The proponents filed an immediate appeal in district court.
The deadline to certify the November ballot is Friday, September 5. Should an injunction not be entered, the proponents of the ballot initiative and the over 5,500 Greeley voters who signed the petition will be denied their constitutional right to petition.
# # #
Dan Wheeler and Pam Bricker File TABOR Complaint Against the City of Greeley
City proposes to use nearly all city properties as collateral to build a hockey complex without a vote of Greeley residents
Greeley, Colo. (August 20, 2025)
Last night, Greeley residents Dan Wheeler and Pam Bricker filed a complaint in Weld County District Court alleging the City of Greeley is in violation of Colorado’s Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TABOR) statute due to its extraordinarily risky financing deal for the Cascadia Project.
Notably, Greeley City Council has proposed mortgaging and/or collateralizing over 60 city properties to pay for the hockey arena and other amenities. The action of entering into long-term fiscal obligations without voter approval is in violation of TABOR.
“Without a clause that requires or even allows the city council to appropriate the fiscal debt each year, it fits the definition of long-term fiscal debt. Because of the fact that Greeley has literally mortgaged practically every property it owns to help finance this deal, Greeley cannot use discretion to appropriate this debt each year,” said Suzanne Taheri, counsel for Dan Wheeler and Pam Bricker. “This is extremely complicated, but the easiest analogy is if you take out a lease for a car, miss a payment, and your house is repossessed. In this case, Greeley is proposing using buildings, parks, and even the Greeley Family Fun Center as collateral for the Cascadia Project.”
From the complaint:
“To pay for the developers’ $115 million in pre-development costs, the City of Greeley adopted a financial structure designed to circumvent legal barriers anchored in the State Constitution and the City Charter that mandated such important fiscal decisions must be approved by the voters. But as structured and utilized in this development project, the COPs operate as a lease buy back that clearly violate the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights (“TABOR”) prohibition on multi-year fiscal debt without a vote of the people. Colo. Const. art. X §20. Contrary to claims in the text of the Ordinance and finance contracts, Ordinance No. 15, 2025 results in the City of Greeley entering into long-term fiscal obligations without the approval of the City of Greeley voters.”
The complaint further contextualizes this terrible deal noting that this financing deal creates a level of debt that places Greeley and its residents in a perilous financial position, and places it in violation of its own charter, which says it is not allowed to transfer a park without a public vote.
“I’m a Greeley native, have lived in Greeley my whole life, and have been part of some of the area’s most exciting projects, but this one is different. I joined this effort to stand up for Greeley residents whose voices were being silenced by this unlawful process. Greeley residents deserve a public debate about this risky financial scheme,” said Plaintiff Pam Bricker, former executive director of the Greeley Downtown Development Authority. “This process was specifically designed to circumvent TABOR and it’s just not right. What happens if Greeley loses its police and fire stations? Or its municipal buildings? Or even our parks? It will destroy the fabric of our community.”
Funds generated by certificates of participation (COPs) are only available because the City of Greeley collateralized numerous essential city properties and agreed to lease back their own properties to benefit the developer. Among the 46 original properties pledged are:
Greeley City Hall
Greeley Police Department
Three Greeley Fire Stations
Ten properties owned by Greeley and overseen by the Greeley Culture, Parks, and Recreation Department (CPRD), such as the Greeley Museum, two golf courses, and a dedicated park
Earlier this week, the City of Greeley added 16 additional properties to the list of those collateralized, including the public safety training facility, the Balsam Pool and Balsam Sports Complex, the Family FunPlex, the Twin Rivers Softball Complex, and the Union Colony Civic Center.
“And, herein lies the problem – collateralizing Greeley’s buildings and real property in this manner creates a multi-year fiscal obligation without voter approval,” said Taheri. “While the issue is complex, law is clear – this action violates TABOR. The City of Greeley also is considering potentially reducing public safety resources at the same time it is also talking about welcoming more people to the Greeley community. It’s a recipe for public safety breakdown.”
The plaintiffs are asking the Weld County District Court to:
Declare that Ordinance 15-2025 violates TABOR;
Declare that the ordinance also violates the city charter;
Declare that the ordinance violates Article V, Section 1 of the Colorado Constitution because it contains a nonrepeal clause;
Declare that any property managed by CPRD is a park for the purposes of the city charter;
Void any COPs issued illegally as of the date of the Court’s ruling;
Prevent Greeley from using COPs to generate funding unrelated to the properties being leveraged;
Invalidate the finance contracts so the bond holders won’t be legally obligated to repay;
Award attorney’s fees and costs; and
Any other relief that the Court finds just and equitable
Weld County District Court has not yet set a hearing date or any additional dates in this process, but the process typically requires the defendant to submit a response.
# # #
Issue Committee Greeley Deserves Better Serves Cease and Desist to Opponents Following False and Reckless Statements Meant to Mislead and Confuse Voters
Greeley, Colo. (August 18, 2025)
Greeley Deserves Better, an issue campaign seeking to overturn Greeley’s funding mechanism for the proposed Greeley soccer stadium, served Thomas Donkle of the Greeley Forward campaign a cease and desist letter highlighting his campaign’s persistent violations of CRS §1-13-109. The Greeley Forward campaign committee has asserted false and reckless statements about the Greeley Deserves Better initiative almost since the inception of the campaign.
Among the alleged false claims disseminated by Greeley Forward are:
Coordination with nonprofit With Many Hands
Claims that petition signers were misled about the scope of the initiative
Multiple false statements regarding the signature collection process, such as a false “unlicensed company” claim when no such license is required by city signature gatherers; and more.
“While it’s expected that some mudslinging occurs during a campaign, the law does not permit patently false statements,” said Suzanne Taheri, former deputy Secretary of State, and legal counsel for Greeley Deserves Better. “Greeley Forward has repeatedly and with a pattern of knowing misrepresentation attempted to smear the many volunteers and citizens who want their voices heard on this important issue. There’s a reason the campaign submitted the highest number of signatures in Greeley’s municipal history; it’s because there is overwhelming grassroots support from all corners of the city. Greeley residents are no fools – they know a bad deal when they see one.”
From the cease and desist letter:
“These false statements establish a pattern of knowing misrepresentation designed to affect the vote on the ballot initiative. Greeley Forward is acting with "conscious disregard of the truth or falsity" of these statements, meeting the statutory definition of reckless conduct under C.R.S. § 1-13-109(2)(a).
“It is clear your organization intends to spend money on advertisements smearing the many volunteers and citizens that want their voices heard. The advertisements you are currently airing are blatantly false and were aired in Colorado with the intent to mislead voters. These advertisements are the reason Colorado has a law prohibiting false statements.
“No person shall knowingly make, publish, broadcast, or circulate or cause to be made, published, broadcasted, or circulated in any letter, circular, advertisement, or poster or in any other communication any false statement designed to affect the vote on any issue submitted to the electors at any election or relating to any candidate for election to public office. C.R.S. § 1-13-109(1)(a).
“No person shall recklessly make, publish, broadcast, or circulate or cause to be made, published, broadcasted, or circulated in any letter, circular, advertisement, or poster or in any other communication any false statement designed to affect the vote on any issue submitted to the electors at any election or relating to any candidate for election to public office... a person acts "recklessly" when he or she acts in conscious disregard of the truth or falsity of the statement made, published, broadcasted, or circulated. C.R.S. § 1-13-109(2)(a).”
The letter was delivered on August 17, 2025, via email to Thomas Dunkle, the registered agent for Greeley Forward, and a developer land use consultant.
# # #
Setting the Record Straight on False Claims and Misleading Attacks
GREELEY, CO –The Greeley Deserves Better campaign today responded to misleading claims made in a campaign finance complaint filed by supporters of the risky billion-dollar Cascadia financing scheme. The complaint represents a desperate attempt to distract from the overwhelming opposition to a deal that puts Greeley taxpayers at unlimited financial risk while guaranteeing millions in profits to a private developer.
Dan Wheeler, campaign co-chair and local business owner, issued the following statement:
"This week, Greeley voters delivered a loud and clear message in opposition to the risky Cascadia funding scheme by providing a record-smashing 9,000 petition signatures to give Greeley voters the opportunity to repeal the risky scheme this November. Rather than address why 87% of informed voters oppose their risky financing scheme, project supporters are manufacturing distractions.
"Let me be crystal clear: An army of volunteers engaged in the effort to repeal Ordinance 2025-15. Greeley Deserves Better, consisting entirely of and wholly funded by Greeley residents, operated alone and did not coordinate efforts with any other advocacy groups. Our signature gathering was conducted by our incredible volunteer team of over 50 Greeley residents, supplemented by professional services from The Field Group, a legitimate professional signature-gathering firm.
"The real issue remains unchanged: this deal puts over $1 billion in risk on taxpayers while guaranteeing the developer millions in profits every year regardless of project success. Greeley deserves better than a financing scheme that puts all the risk on the public while guaranteeing profits for a private developer."
Suzanne Staiert, campaign attorney and former Deputy Secretary of State, noted:
"These frivolous and laughable complaints were filed by groups hastily formed just this week and are transparently political. Allies of the city council are panicked and have launched a desperate attack designed to mislead voters and distract from the groundswell of opposition to the council’s risky Cascadia funding scheme, evidenced by this week’s record-smashing petition submission. They want to deny the voters of Greeley their legally sacred right of petition and silence their voices.”
The campaign emphasized that the complaints will have no effect on ballot qualification. The City Clerk is currently reviewing signatures, with 4,586 valid signatures needed to place the repeal before voters in November.
# # #
Greeley Deserves Better Submits 8,993 Signatures to Repeal CASCADIA DEAL
Grassroots-led Effort Delivers Nearly 100% Above Required Signatures - Exceeds Nearly Half the Total Vote in Last Mayor's Race
Volunteer Army of 50+ Citizens Collects Majority of Signatures in Remarkable Show of Grassroots Opposition
(GREELEY, CO) — The Greeley Deserves Better campaign today submitted 8,993 petition signatures to the Greeley City Clerk asking that Ordinance 2025-15, the bad Cascadia deal, be placed on the November ballot for consideration by city voters. The remarkable total represents nearly 100% more than the 4,563 signature requirement and approaches nearly half of the 20,126 total votes cast in the last mayoral election.
In an extraordinary demonstration of grassroots engagement, more than half the signatures were collected by an army of 50+ unpaid volunteers during the campaign's brief 33-day signature-gathering period, reflecting the groundswell of community opposition to the Greeley City Council's financing scheme for the Cascadia/Catalyst project.
Ordinance 2025-15 authorizes a $1.1 billion financing plan for the Cascadia West entertainment district that mortgages 46 public buildings and exposes Greeley citizens to long-term debt and risk—no less than $25-30 million annually, regardless of project success.
Grassroots Movement Drives Historic Signature Total
"Today's submission demonstrates the power of grassroots democracy in action," said Dan Wheeler, local business owner and campaign co-chair. "While we engaged a paid signature gathering firm as insurance to meet our deadline in just 33 days, the real story is the remarkable volunteer effort. Over 50 unpaid volunteers collected the majority of these signatures because they believe Greeley deserves better than a billion-dollar deal that puts taxpayers on the hook for unlimited financial risk while guaranteeing millions in profits to a private developer."
Pam Bricker, former Executive Director of the Greeley Downtown Development Authority and campaign co-chair, emphasized the campaign's community focus: "After 30 years of working to build up this community, I've seen what happens when we make smart investments versus risky gambles. This volunteer-driven effort shows that when people understand this deal puts taxpayers on the hook for over $1 billion in risk while guaranteeing a private developer millions in profits, they want their voices heard. These aren't just signatures—they represent real Greeley families concerned about our city's financial future."
May Monahan, co-chair of the signature gathering effort, highlighted the volunteer achievement: "What we accomplished with volunteers in 33 days is truly remarkable. Citizens from every corner of Greeley—from the Stampede to coffee shops to grocery stores—stepped up because they care about transparency, fiscal responsibility, and fairness. This grassroots energy shows that when people understand what's at stake, they take action to protect their community."
Legal Analysis Confirms Repeal's Comprehensive Impact
Campaign attorney Suzanne Taheri of West Group Law + Policy confirms that the city's claims that repeal only affects the issuance of Certificates of Participation significantly understates the ordinance's scope and the comprehensive effect of its repeal.
According to Taheri's legal analysis, repealing Ordinance 2025-15 in its entirety would:
Rescind all ratification and approval of past agreements related to the Cascadia project
Terminate the City Manager's delegated authority for future financing and lease activities, requiring any future actions to receive explicit approval from Council or voters
Halt all specific authorizations for certificates of participation and their sale
Nullify approval of all project documents including the Site Lease, Ordinance Lease, and Indenture
"A repeal of the ordinance would rescind the approval of past agreements and stop future activity, including financing, unless there is a new approval by Council or the voters," states Taheri's memorandum.
The legal analysis notes that due to Colorado's TABOR requirements, even if agreements were executed prior to repeal, the City's obligations are subject to annual appropriation, and multi-year contracts attempting to bind the City beyond the current fiscal year are void or subject to annual re-approval without penalty.
"The repeal is far more expansive than city officials are suggesting," Wheeler added. "Our attorney's analysis makes clear it doesn't just stop the issuance of bonds—it rescinds the City's approval of this entire billion-dollar financing framework and requires starting over with proper public input and voter approval."
Strong Polling Support Continues
The campaign continues to build momentum after polling showed that 87% of likely Greeley voters support repealing the "Bad Cascadia Deal" in Ordinance 2025-15 after learning key facts about the deal. The poll revealed overwhelming bipartisan opposition:
Republicans: 81% support repeal
Democrats: 75% support repeal
Independents: 87% support repeal
Additionally, 92% believe the developer should provide financial guarantees, and 69% oppose the current financing approach altogether.
Next Steps
Today is the deadline to submit signatures to place Ordinance 2025-15 on this November's ballot. Upon verification of sufficient signatures by the clerk, the Greeley City Council can either repeal the ordinance or place the decision in the hands of the voters.
The campaign's signature gathering effort was supplemented by a professional program that collected 3,909 signatures as insurance to ensure the deadline was met. However, the majority of the 8,993 signatures submitted came from the dedicated volunteer petitioners who understood the stakes for their community.
"This represents democracy in action," concluded Bricker. "Nearly 9,000 Greeley residents signed because they want a voice in billion-dollar decisions that affect their city's future. Whether the Council repeals this ordinance themselves or lets the voters decide in November, Greeley residents have made their position clear."
For more information, visit www.greeleydeservesbetter.com or follow the campaign on social media.
# # #
NEW POLL DETAILS REVEAL OVERWHELMING VOTER OPPOSITION TO CASCADIA FINANCING ACROSS ALL DEMOGRAPHICS
A comprehensive scientific survey shows 87% of informed voters support repeal, with opposition spanning party lines and geographic areas
GREELEY, CO – July 20, 2025 – The "Greeley Deserves Better" campaign today released additional details from its comprehensive scientific poll conducted by Pulse Decision Science, revealing the depth and breadth of voter opposition to the Cascadia financing arrangement across all major demographic groups and political affiliations.
The poll was conducted by Pulse Decision Science from June 16-20, 2025. The study surveyed 376 likely Greeley municipal voters using text and live telephone operators, as well as random sampling methods drawn from the state voter file. The poll has a margin of error of ±5.1% and used probability proportionate sampling across age, party affiliation, ideology, gender, and ward representation to ensure all registered voters had a known chance of selection.
Opposition Transcends Traditional Political Divisions
After learning unbiased details about the financing details, support for repealing the Cascadia financing deal reached remarkable consistency across demographic lines:
Republicans: 81% support repeal
Democrats: 75% support repeal
Independents: 87% support repeal
Conservatives: 82% support repeal
Moderates: 81% support repeal
Liberals: 84% support repeal
"These numbers demonstrate that fiscal responsibility isn't a partisan issue," said a campaign spokesperson. "When voters learn that taxpayers bear unlimited liability while developers receive guaranteed profits, the response is overwhelmingly negative regardless of political affiliation. Notably, information about city revenue and job growth potential from the project had little impact on positive voter sentiment toward the project.”
Survey Response Patterns by Residential Tenure
The poll examined responses across residential tenure and found:
Residents 11-20 years: 80% support repeal
Residents 6-10 years: 79% support repeal
Residents 20+ years: 82% support repeal
Residents less than 5 years: 84% support repeal
Voter Response to Information
The poll tracked voter responses before and after receiving information about the financing structure:
Initial support for repeal: 36% support repeal, 42% oppose repeal, 21% unsure
Final support after full information for and against: 87%
Net movement: +51 percentage points
Electoral Implications
The survey also measured voter attitudes about the financing deal's impact on future elections:
69% of voters would be less likely to vote for candidates who supported the financing
87% say a candidate's position on this issue is important in determining their vote
79% would be likely to sign a petition to put repeal on the ballot
Overwhelming Demand for Developer Investment
Perhaps most telling, 92% of voters believe the developer should be required to invest their own money or provide financial guarantees for the project – a stark contrast to the current arrangement in which the developer bears no financial risk.
Campaign Moving Forward with Confidence
The campaign continues to collect signatures to place the repeal measure on the November ballot, with a deadline of August 6 to qualify. Volunteers are gathering signatures at locations throughout Greeley.
"This isn't about opposing development – it's about demanding fair deals that protect taxpayers rather than guaranteeing private profits," said the spokesperson. “When 92% of Republicans and 75% of Democrats agree on something, elected officials should listen."
City Violates Open Records Law, Lawyers to File Suit Over Cascadia Deal Documents
City's failure to comply with CORA deadline raises questions about transparency in billion-dollar financing arrangement.
GREELEY, CO – July 17, 2025 – The Greeley Deserves Better campaign announced today that the City of Greeley has violated Colorado's Open Records Act by failing to provide requested documents related to the controversial $1.1 billion Cascadia financing deal, despite their legal obligation to respond with the requested information within two weeks. This evening, the campaign's attorney filed a notice of intent to file suit on Monday to compel the city's compliance with state transparency laws.
The massive financing arrangement includes $115 million in Certificates of Participation secured by mortgaging 46 city buildings, approximately $832 million in bonds, $129 million through a General Improvement District, $55 million from water/sewer funds, plus a required $33.2 million annual reserve fund and guaranteed developer fees of $25-30 million.
"The city's refusal to provide these documents on time is deeply troubling and raises serious questions about what they're trying to hide," said Suzanne Taheri, attorney representing the campaign. "When taxpayers are being asked to shoulder over $1 billion in financial risk and unlimited liability for a private entertainment district—while the city mortgages essential public buildings as collateral—they have an absolute right to know exactly how this deal was negotiated and whether proper protocols were followed."
The Colorado Open Records Act request, submitted on June 12th and paid for on June 25th, sought comprehensive documentation about the Cascadia deal negotiations, including:
All communications with developer Martin Lind since January 2024
Travel records for city officials, including a controversial trip on the developer's private jet to Texas
Communications regarding project planning and negotiations
Property appraisals and zoning records
Any separation agreement for former economic development director, John Hall
Campaign Questions City's Transparency
"The fact that the city is now a week overdue in providing legally required documents about a $1.1 billion deal that exposes taxpayers to unlimited financial liability is unacceptable," said Taheri. "Citizens deserve full transparency about how such an unprecedented deal was negotiated, especially given arrangements like city staff being flown on the developer's private jet to view other projects."
The records request explicitly seeks to examine whether proper ethical protocols were followed during deal negotiations, including documentation of the private jet trip funded by developer Martin Lind that transported city officials to Texas.
Legal Action Imminent
"We will not allow the city to stonewall legitimate requests for transparency on a deal of this magnitude," said Taheri. "When you're talking about over $1 billion in taxpayer exposure and guaranteed developer profits regardless of project performance, Colorado's Open Records Act exists precisely to prevent this kind of secretive behavior by public officials. We will pursue all legal remedies to ensure these documents are released."
The Greeley Deserves Better campaign continues to gather signatures to place a repeal measure on the November ballot, with recent polling showing that 87% of informed voters support repealing the financing arrangement.
Group launches drive to repeal West Greeley financing plan
In the latest move by Northern Colorado voters to challenge municipal government decisions at the ballot box, a coalition of Greeley citizens plans to begin collecting signatures to put an item on the November ballot to repeal the City Council’s approval of the complex financing plan for a $1.1 billion sports and entertainment project on the city’s western edge, part of an ambitious development…
Click here to read the full article.
Letters: West Greeley plan, help with air-conditioner
Turn down the West Greeley plan I am answering this week’s question, “Should the West Greeley financing plan be repealed?” Yes, I think it’s too risky for the city. Alan Dickerson, Greeley Unable to vote on Cascadia project This is the second time this has happened. The Tribune lets you vote on a topic.
Click here to read the full article.
Greeley group opposing Cascadia financing begins gathering signatures
A group hoping that voters will repeal the Greeley City Council’s approval of the complex financing plan for a $1.1 billion sports and entertainment project on the city’s western edge won approval of its petition form from the city clerk’s office Friday.
Click here to read the full article.
Pam Bricker and Dan Wheeler: Greeley deserves better terms for our future
Greeley has always been built by hardworking people who create their future through vision and smart investments. From our agricultural heritage to our role as the heart of Colorado’s energy industry, each generation has strengthened the foundation for the next. That’s why we’re concerned about Ordinance 2025-15 and the unprecedented financial risk it places on our hardworking community.
Click here to read the full article.
Petition Approved: Signature Drive launched to Repeal Bad $1B Deal
GREELEY, CO — June 27, 2024 - The Greeley Deserves Better campaign announced today that the Greeley City Clerk has officially approved the petition form to repeal the “Bad Cascadia Deal” in Greeley Ordinance 2025-15, clearing the way for volunteers to begin collecting signatures immediately.
Ordinance 2025-15 authorizes a $1.1 billion financing plan for the Cascadia West entertainment district that mortgages 46 public buildings and exposes Greeley citizens to long-term debt and risk—$25-30 million annually regardless of project success.
Volunteers with the campaign will begin collecting signatures this weekend at the Greeley Stampede and continue throughout the city at coffee shops, grocery stores, and community events over the coming weeks.
“Today's approval finally gives Greeley voters a voice in this billion-dollar decision,” said campaign co-chair and local business leader Dan Wheeler. “Now that we have the green light, we’re hitting the ground running to ensure voters have the chance to reject this risky deal at the ballot box.”
“We’ve heard from hundreds of residents who are ready to sign — and now they can,” said Pam Bricker, longtime downtown business leader and co-chair of the campaign. “This is about protecting taxpayers, our budget, our future and our community’s voice.”
“We’ll be out in every corner of Greeley — from the Stampede to your favorite coffee shop,” said May Monahan, co-chair of the signature gathering effort. “We're excited to meet our neighbors at the Stampede and throughout the community to explain why this deal puts our city and fellow citizens at unnecessary risk. If you care about transparency, fiscal responsibility, and fairness, sign the petition and join us.”
The campaign has until August 6 to collect the 4653 signatures required to place the repeal on the November 2025 ballot.
Community members interested in volunteering to help collect signatures are encouraged to sign up at the campaign’s website: www.greeleydeservesbetter.com.
The campaign continues to build momentum after a recent poll showed that 87% of likely Greeley voters support repealing the “Bad Cascadia Deal” in Ordinance 2025-15 after learning key facts about the deal. 92% believe the developer should provide financial guarantees, and 69% oppose the current financing approach altogether.