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Beaver City outlines major road work, considers road-utility fee to pay for reconstructions

January 12, 2026 | Beaver City, Beaver County, Utah


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Beaver City outlines major road work, considers road-utility fee to pay for reconstructions
Beaver City staff presented a multi-part roads and public-works update, detailing last year’s paving and maintenance work, proposed 2026 projects and options for funding larger reconstruction needs.

The city’s public-works presenter (Speaker 6, public works staff) said, “I feel like, in my opinion, it was probably the best road year we had since I started,” and described a package of asphalt overlays, grader patches, chip-seal rotation and crack sealing to keep the system on a regular maintenance schedule. Staff reported a roughly 10‑year chip‑seal rotation historically, with last year’s chip‑seal work valued at about $150,000; they recommended moving toward an 8–9 year rotation to extend pavement life.

Why it matters: staff said smaller, recurring maintenance (overlays, chip-seal and crack sealing) has improved road condition citywide, but several streets require reconstruction rather than surface treatments. The clerk’s materials and staff estimates list Porter Subdivision (1000 East/1100 East and Loop Bridal) as the top reconstruction candidate with a rebuild estimate of $609,798. Staff said an overlay-only approach reduces some immediate cost but leaves major subgrade and curb/gutter issues unaddressed.

Funding proposals and trade-offs: the meeting included a discussion of several financing approaches. Speaker 6 modeled a city road-utility fee as a recurring revenue source and said, “If we build all those $10 a month, we'd have about a 188,000 a year,” based on an assumed billing population of roughly 1,500 meters. Alternatives discussed included a modest property‑tax increase with earmarked revenues, bond financing serviced by a road fee, and a special-assessment (project-area) approach requiring a local vote in the affected neighborhood.

Council members and staff repeatedly emphasized transparency about who benefits and who pays. Speaker 1 noted the city’s property taxes are currently very low, saying, “Our property tax is 0,” and argued the road-fee option warrants more study. Speaker 3 said a recurring fee “makes a lot of sense to me” because it is perpetual rather than a one-time grant.

Key projects and timing: staff said the federal grant-funded Highway 357 (Nashville Highway) reconstruction is in design and expected to be bid over the coming winter with construction ideally beginning spring 2027; staff estimated the city’s local share at roughly $200,000 of an approximately $2.2 million project. The industrial-park access road to Unitec is a high priority for local economic development; staff and economic-development partners are exploring loop‑line water options and grant/loan packages to meet fire-flow and utility requirements.

Operational efficiencies: staff credited recent equipment purchases (roller, trailer, skid steer with broom attachment) with cost savings and faster chip cleanup; they said in‑house overlay and chip-seal work has reduced vendor costs while recognizing some roads will ultimately require full reconstruction.

Next steps: staff asked the council to consider whether the city should pursue a road-utility fee, pursue bonding or special assessments for targeted project areas, and continue applying for grants. No formal votes were recorded during the discussion.

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