Overview
Since its inception in 1988, McGeady Becher Cortese Williams has worked side by side with leaders in the commercial, industrial, mixed-use and residential development industries to build successful communities throughout Colorado.
Our Firm is committed to:
- Bringing experience, dedication and creativity to each and every project in order to provide quality, responsive legal services.
- Working to provide ideal mechanisms for the financing of public infrastructure which meet the needs of each particular client.
- Guiding clients through each step of the process, from project conceptualization to completion.
- Building lasting relationships with each client by giving specific attention to individual needs and future goals.
- Establishing collaborative working relationships with municipal, county and state staff and officials on all matters affecting public infrastructure financing including the simplification of the special district approval process.
- Fostering positive relationships with the various individuals involved in the public infrastructure finance practice, including bond counsel, underwriters, special district managers, engineers and accountants.
- Ongoing involvement at every level of the legislative process, from providing input on proposed legislation, drafting legislation, and testifying at legislative hearings.
Rankings
Regional
Colorado
Rankings
Regional
Colorado
Practice Areas
- Real Estate
McGeady Becher Cortese Williams P.C. currently serves as general counsel to more than 300 special districts throughout Colorado, from the Front Range to the Western Slope, and the list continues to expand.
The core of our practice is creating and supporting metropolitan and other special districts of all sizes and types, from small, in-fill residential projects to large scale multi-use commercial and residential developments and redevelopment, as well as unique projects involving transportation nodes, brownfield redevelopment, and those projects involving multiple parties, regulatory agencies and governments. Once formed, special district entities allow for the provision of a wide range of necessary public improvements and services, including funding public infrastructure needed to support new commercial, mixed use, or residential developments that cannot otherwise be provided by the governing county and/or municipality.