H.B. 82: Property
Taxing Authority for Public Water
Rep. Kraig Powell (R–Heber) has proposed House Bill 82 to modify the maximum property tax rate that water districts served by the Colorado River Compact to the Upper Basin can charge. Currently, Section 17B-2a-1006 of the Utah Code allows Upper Basin water districts to increase the amount of property taxes they may impose on individuals and businesses up to a maximum of 0.004 per dollar of taxable value of taxable property.
Rep. Kraig Powell (R–Heber) has proposed House Bill 82 to modify the maximum property tax rate that water districts served by the Colorado River Compact to the Upper Basin can charge. Currently, Section 17B-2a-1006 of the Utah Code allows Upper Basin water districts to increase the amount of property taxes they may impose on individuals and businesses up to a maximum of 0.004 per dollar of taxable value of taxable property.
This bill would continue the current maximum rate through
fiscal year 2020, but lower the maximum rate to 0.002 beginning in fiscal year
2021. The fiscal note for the bill estimates that the legislation may decrease
the amount of property taxes Upper Basin districts can impose by about $33.6
million beginning in fiscal year 2021. The fiscal note also observes that the
districts could make up the decrease through user fees.
You can read the full text of the bill, as introduced, by clicking here.
H.C.R. 1: Concurrent
Resolution on Waters of the United States
Rep. Mike Noel (R–Kanab) has proposed House Concurrent Resolution 1
to express the Legislature’s and the Governor’s joint disapproval of the
so-called “Waters of the United States” rule. The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers finalized the rule last year
to resolve uncertainty the U.S. Supreme Court created in its divided Rapanos v.
United States decision regarding the extent of Clean Water Act (CWA) jurisdiction.
The rule has drawn praise from conservation groups and the ire of farmers,
industry, and at least 30 states, including Utah, which have filed challenges
in courts across the country to stop the rule.
The proposed resolution criticizes the rule as an “unlawful
exercise of federal regulatory authority” that will improperly expand the CWA
to include dry land and infringe on the ability of states to manage their water
resources. It would also express support for Attorney General Sean Reyes’s ongoing
efforts to vacate the rule. The rule is currently on hold pursuant to a
nationwide stay the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals issued in October while it
determines which courts have jurisdiction to hear the various court challenges.
If enacted, the resolution would not be Utah’s first
concurrent resolution regarding federal CWA jurisdiction. In 2009, the
Legislature and former Governor John Huntsman issued HCR 6, strongly opposing federal
legislative efforts to expand the scope of the CWA. At the time, a number of
bills, commonly known as the “Clean Water Restoration Act,” had been introduced
to “restore” the scope of the CWA to the status quo that existed before Rapanos.
Republicans and some Democrats defeated these bills, and have since introduced
repeated legislation to stop the rule. Given this history, opponents have
criticized the rule for enacting provisions Congress has rejected through
regulation. EPA and the Corps, as well as the rule’s supporters, deny these
claims and maintain that the rule is less expansive that the pre-Rapanos status
quo and is needed to provide protections for water quality.
You can read the full text of the resolution, as introduced, by clicking here.
H.J.R. 4: Joint
Resolution on Water Infrastructure
Rep. Mike McKell (R–Spanish Fork) is sponsoring House Joint Resolution 4, which urges Utah’s congressional delegation to support the efforts
of Utah water users to secure title transfer of reclamation projects and
associated water rights from the federal government to local water user
organizations. The project specifically mentioned in the joint resolution are
the Strawberry Valley Project, Moon Lake Project, and Emery County Project.
You can read the full text of the resolution, as introduced, by clicking here.
S.B. 23: Water Law –
Protected Purchaser Amendments
Sen. Margaret Dayton (R–Orem) is sponsoring Senate Bill 23, which
was recommended by the State Water Development Commission. It seeks to modify the definition of a
“protected purchaser” in the Investment Securities chapter of the Utah Uniform
Commercial Act. The bill would add additional requirements for a purchaser of a
share of stock in a water company to qualify as a protected purchaser. The
standard requirements of a protected purchaser are (1) give value, (2) not have
notice of an adverse claim, and (3) obtain control of the certificate. A purchaser of a share of stock in a water
company would also need to show that he, or his predecessors in interest, (1)
paid assessments on the share for at least four of the prior seven years, and
(2) used water available under the share for at least four of the prior seven
years.
You can read the full text of the bill, as introduced, by clicking here.
S.B. 28: Water
System Conservation Pricing
Sen. Scott Jenkins (R–Plain City) is sponsoring Senate Bill 28, which was recommended by the Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment
Interim Committee. It requires retail
water providers to establish a tiered rate structure where the price per unit
of water increases as the quantity of water delivered increases from tier to
tier. Many water retailers already use
tiered pricing as a conservation incentive and to obtain assistance from state
revolving loan funds. Each retailer
retains the flexibility of identifying the size and number of tiers or blocks
of water and of setting the increasing rate applicable to each tier. This bill mandates this pricing approach for
all “retailer water providers,” a term that is already defined by statute as
entities which supply culinary water to more than 500 end user
connections. The bill also requires that
the end users be given, at least annually, notice of: (1) the amount of water
used, (2) the billing cycle or period; and (3) the tiered rates.
You can read the full text of the bill, as introduced, by clicking here.
S.B. 75: Water
Rights Adjudication Amendments
Senator Margaret Dayton (R–Orem) is sponsoring Senate Bill 75,
which seeks to make a number of changes to the general adjudication statutes
found in Title 73, Chapter 4 of the Utah Code. As with other general
adjudication amendments that have passed in the last few years, this bill seeks
to take more responsibility from the Division of Water Rights and puts it on
the water users to ensure that timely and proper water claims are filed.
A substantial change is with respect to the hydrographic survey maps. Previously, these surveys of water use were completed as an
initial step by the Division of Water Rights, and were the primary source of
information that the Division then used to complete Water User’s Claims for the
water users to review and sign. Under the bill, no survey would be done in the
preliminary stages of the adjudication; rather, the hydrographic survey maps
would be prepared late in the process—at the same time that the proposed
determination is prepared—using the data from the submitted claims to prepare
the maps.
Other significant provisions of the bill include:
- Changing the term “Water User’s Claims” to “Statements of Claim”
- Allowing the Division to accept electronic Statements of Claim
- Providing a mechanism for water users to ask the Division for an extension of time to file their Statements of Claim
- Removing a provision under which a water user could petition the adjudication court for permission to file a late claim
- Providing additional notice and a public meeting regarding unclaimed rights of record, which will occur after claim are due but before a proposed determination is published. Owners of the unclaimed rights of record may object to the list of unclaimed rights (i.e., assert that their rights should be included in the general adjudication), but the claimants will have to demonstrate that their failure to file a timely statement of claim was excused by circumstances beyond their control, mistake, or other justification.
S.B. 80: Infrastructure Funding Amendments
Senator Stuart Adams (R–Layton) is sponsoring Senate Bill 80, which proposes that a 1/16% sales tax rate be redirected from the
Transportation Fund to the new Water Infrastructure Restricted Account that was
created last year. This sales tax rate
was originally destined for water project funding but got diverted to major
transportation needs, most of which have now been met. Now that the state has identified $33 billion
in costs for essential water infrastructure need between now and 2060, there is
a clear need for these sales tax funds back in the Water Infrastructure
Account.
You can read the full text of the bill, as introduced, by clicking here.
S.C.R. 1: Concurrent
Resolution Encouraging Universal Metering of Water Systems
Sen. Scott Jenkins (R–Plain City) is sponsoring Senate Concurrent Resolution 1, which was recommended by the Natural Resources, Agriculture, and
Environment Interim Committee. It
encourages public water suppliers to implement metering of water on “all retail
public and private water systems,” including secondary water systems, because
water users tend to voluntarily conserve more water when they know how much
water they are actually using.
You can read the full text of the resolution, as introduced, by clicking here.
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