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LEGAL KNOW YOUR RIGHTS March 27, 2026 7 min read

Boulder Community Court: How to Get Your Yellow Ticket Dismissed

If you have a yellow municipal ticket in Boulder — camping, trespass, open container, park curfew — Community Court can often dismiss it completely. No lawyer, no formal hearing. Just show up Thursday morning.

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William Lodge
Lived experience · HomelessBoulder.com

Getting a ticket in Boulder when you're homeless is one of those things that starts small and compounds fast. A camping citation you can't pay turns into a fine you can't afford, which turns into a warrant, which turns into an arrest the next time you're stopped for anything. I've watched this happen to people who had no idea there was an alternative.

There is an alternative. It's called Community Court — and it's specifically designed for situations like this.

The single most important thing: If you have a yellow ticket (City of Boulder municipal citation), show up at the Penfield Tate II Building at 1777 Broadway on a Thursday between 9:30 AM and 10:30 AM. That's it. You do not need a lawyer. You do not need an appointment. Just show up with your ticket and be willing to talk.

First — What Color Is Your Ticket?

This matters more than most people realize. Boulder has two separate court systems that handle citations in completely different ways, and going to the wrong one wastes your time and doesn't help your case.

Ticket ColorCourt TypeWhere to Go
🟡 YELLOWMunicipal (City of Boulder)Community Court — Thursdays 9:30 AM, Penfield Tate II, 1777 Broadway
🔵 BLUE or WHITEState or CountyBoulder County Justice Center — 1777 6th St. You need Colorado Legal Services for this: 303-449-7575

Not sure? Look at the top of your ticket. It will say either "City of Boulder" (municipal — yellow) or "State of Colorado / Boulder County" (state/county — different process entirely). This post is about yellow tickets.

What Is Community Court?

Boulder Community Court is a voluntary, alternative court program specifically designed to address low-level municipal violations — the kinds of citations that pile up for people experiencing homelessness. It operates on a "help, not arrest" philosophy.

Instead of a formal court hearing, fines, and potential bench warrants, Community Court offers a different path: participate in a program, complete a community service hour or two, connect with services — and your ticket gets dismissed. The program works because it acknowledges that camping tickets written to people who have nowhere to sleep aren't solving anything for anyone.

"Community Court doesn't ask why you were where you were. It asks what you need and whether you're willing to show up. Most people are."

What Happens When You Show Up Thursday

What Kinds of Tickets Can Community Court Dismiss?

Community Court handles low-level City of Boulder municipal violations. Common ones include:

💡 What Community Court cannot handle: State or county charges (blue/white tickets), felonies, DUI, domestic violence charges, or federal violations. For any of those, contact the Colorado State Public Defender (303-444-2322) or Colorado Legal Services (303-449-7575).

What If You've Missed Court Dates Already?

If you have outstanding warrants from missed municipal court dates, Community Court can still often help. The program has relationships with the municipal court and can sometimes facilitate a path to clearing a warrant without an arrest. Go to Community Court first and tell them what's going on — including the warrant. Being upfront is better than hoping no one notices.

If the warrant is significant or has escalated, contact Colorado Legal Services at 303-449-7575 before you appear anywhere. They can advise you on how to handle it safely.

Community Court Also Connects You to Services

This is the part that doesn't get talked about enough. Community Court isn't just a ticket dismissal program — the Thursday sessions are also a connection point for services. Staff there can help you get connected to housing navigation, ID help, benefits enrollment, and case management. You don't have to be there for a ticket to show up on a Thursday morning and ask for help navigating the system.

Think of it as a low-barrier weekly service hub that happens to also dismiss tickets.

"The worst they can say is that they can't help with your specific charge. In five years in Boulder, I never saw them turn someone away completely."
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