Nicole (speaker 2) told the council that recent centralization and changes in county dispatch arrangements have driven up fees and that staff and legal counsel recommended adopting the county's blended dispatch approach for billing. She said dispatch fees that have been around $0.90 could increase substantially under the new model and that the city must decide how to cover the increase.
Council members discussed practical options: spread the cost through a direct rate increase on residents (one figure raised in the session was a shift from $0.90 to $4.90 per billing period), cut other services, or transfer one‑time funds from reserves to absorb the increase for a period. Members noted political and communication challenges: residents will direct complaints at the city regardless of who sets the fee, and some argued the county should lead public explanation.
Several councilors asked for outreach materials. Chair (speaker 1) said he had asked the mayor of Layton to provide informational materials in a manner similar to past garbage bill notices so residents understand why fees are rising. Councilors continued discussing whether the dispatch arrangement should include an advisory board or a different governance model; some members expressed concern that once local operations move to a consolidated dispatch center it will be difficult to reverse.
Staff did not record a final policy decision in the session; members asked staff to pursue coordination with affected agencies, draft public information for residents, and return with cost scenarios alongside the FY2026 budget updates.