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Summit County staff flags several state bills affecting county services and land use

February 28, 2024 | Summit County Council, Summit County Commission and Boards, Summit County, Utah


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Summit County staff flags several state bills affecting county services and land use
At the tail end of the legislative session, Jana delivered a detailed update to the Summit County Council on bills the county has tracked, noting that many measures were still changing rapidly and that staff will return after session adjournment with a fuller briefing and recommendations.

Jana highlighted HB236, a sales-and-use-tax modification that would expand eligibility for a rural hospital tax to third-class counties and remove prior micropolitan language, making Summit County eligible to implement a rural hospital tax that could be used to address tourism-related impacts including emergency medical services, solid-waste disposal, search and rescue, law enforcement, fire protection and avalanche forecasting. “This is something… that now does indeed make Summit County eligible to implement this tax if we are interested in it,” Jana said.

Jana also flagged HB476, a major municipal land-use regulation bill that was recently substituted and expanded to include counties. The substituted language, as described by staff, could prohibit recording certain land-regulating instruments against property (for example plats, conditional-use permits or deed restrictions), leaving legislative development agreements as the only recordable instrument; Jana said the county has asked a senator to query the sponsor for clarification and warned of far-reaching implications if the language is not fixed.

Other bills of concern included SB258 (municipal incorporation amendments that would ease requirements for creating new municipalities and prompted county opposition), SB91 (substituted language that raised separation-of-powers and personnel-management issues by potentially expanding the legislative body’s role in salary decisions), HB502 (critical infrastructure and mining changes that appear to have shifted toward a state-led study and county reporting) and HB382 (wildlife amendments that could change liability allocation between the Division of Wildlife Resources and counties). Jana said the county’s lobbyists and the Utah Association of Counties are monitoring the bills and will provide a fuller post-session briefing.

Council members thanked Jana and staff for the work at the Capitol and asked staff to return with details after the session.

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