In closing remarks at the June 16 meeting Commissioner (role label) and Chair John Crofts emphasized voting deadlines and regional drought concerns.
The commissioner reminded residents that because of a recent change in state law ballots must be received by election day (June 23) to be counted; drop boxes are available in every city and in-person delivery is permitted on election day. "Everyone has all day in person if they want to be able to take their ballot in person on June 23," the commissioner said, urging residents to mail early or use drop boxes.
The commissioner also summarized items from the council of governments, noting Weber Basin Conservancy has implemented a Level 3 moderate drought response that calls for a 20% reduction in contracted water deliveries for some customers, earlier irrigation starts and earlier shutdowns, and a shift from paper mailers to text and email alerts. The commissioner highlighted pilot programs for warm-season grasses such as Bermuda, reporting a 60'70% reduction in water use compared with Kentucky bluegrass. Chair John Crofts described a Great Salt Lake field visit highlighting exposed lakebed "coral" and the resignation of the state's Great Salt Lake Commissioner, noting regional coordination is necessary but that the county's authority over the lake is limited.
Why it matters: The election-rule reminder affects voters' ability to cast valid ballots; the drought measures and pilot landscaping strategies may affect irrigation practices and landscaping choices for residents, and the Great Salt Lake status has regional ecological and economic implications.
Next steps: County staff and commissioners encouraged public awareness about ballot deadlines and said regional partners will continue drought-response planning and project-seeking for reservoir and river projects.