UPDATE: The Littleton charter amendment covered in this story is on the November ballot as Measure 3A.
LITTLETON—A group of Littleton residents has collected enough signatures to force a public vote on a controversial housing density ordinance being pushed by the city council.
Passed on first reading in late 2024, Ordinance 31-2024 among other things forces open city neighborhoods currently zoned for single-family housing to multi-family (duplexes, triplexes, etc.) construction.
The ordinance angered many Littleton community members, who argue the zoning changes will not only diminish property values and change neighborhood environments, but that it is depriving homeowners of the original appeal of a single-family neighborhood that they had in mind when they originally bought their homes.
In January, nearly 400 people flooded the city council chambers in protest, resulting in council members postponing final action on the ordinance to later this year, giving the citizen group Rooted in Littleton time to take action against the proposed land-use changes.
“What we did is we found out you could do a thing called a charter amendment which would effectively freeze the city from changing zoning or ULUC code for at least two years,” said Joe Whiney, co-founder of Rooted in Littleton. “It gives the city a chance to bring people together and really comment of what they want to happen.”
The group conducted a survey on residents’ opinions about the issue, sending it out to 27,000 people. They found that 54% of Littleton citizens and 65% of homeowners in the area were against increased housing density.
To get a citizen-initiated charter amendment on the ballot, they then had to collect a minimum of 1,800 signatures. The Littleton city clerk verified some 2,200 signatures on July 31.
The south metro-Denver city of roughly 43,000 residents includes portions of Arapahoe, Jefferson and Douglas counties, meaning the measure will appear on all three county ballots as part of the 2025 general election in November.
Littleton voters will also be electing four new city councilmembers in November, in which the land-use and zoning controversy will undoubtedly play a role.
Complete Colorado will update this story when a ballot number is assigned to the charter amendment.

