H.B. 82: Property Taxing Authority for Public Water
The Utah Legislature failed to act on House Bill 82 during the
2016 Legislative session. The bill would have modified 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. H.B. 82 would have continued the current maximum
rate through fiscal year 2020, but would have lowered the rate to 0.002
beginning in fiscal year 2021. The fiscal note for the bill estimated that the
legislation may have decreased the amount of property taxes Upper Basin
districts can impose by about $33.6 million beginning in fiscal year 2021. The
fiscal note also observed that districts could make up the decrease through
user fees.
To view the bill, click here.
To view the bill, click here.
H.B. 257: Water Funding Revisions
House Bill 257, which sought to send some of the State sales
tax to the Water Infrastructure Restricted Account, was similar to S.B. 80,
which did pass.
To view the bill, click here.
To view the bill, click here.
H.B. 283: Public Utility Easement Amendments
The Legislature failed to act on House Bill 283 during the 2016
Session. The bill would have required public utilities to provide notice to
affected property owners within 48 hours after the utility disturbs property
subject to a public utility easement. The required notice would have described
the name, address, and phone number of the utility company. Telephone
corporations and electrical corporations with less than 30,000 customers would
not have been subject to this requirement.
To view the bill, as substituted, click here.
To view the bill, as substituted, click here.
H.B. 309: Sales and Use Tax Earmark Amendments
Rep. Daniel McCay (R-Riverton) sponsored House Bill 309 seeking
to repeal the 1/16th % sales tax that has been dedicated to water funds within
the Utah Department of Natural Resources.
This bill was assigned to the House Standing Tax and Revenue
Committee, but was never considered by that committee or otherwise acted upon
To view the bill, click here.
To view the bill, click here.
H.B. 326: Special and Local District Transparency Amendments
Rep. Justin Fawson (R-North Ogden) sponsored House Bill 326
seeking to, among other things: (1) change the election process for district
trustees; (2) place districts under the jurisdiction of cities and/or counties
and grant them authority to audit districts; and (3) changing the process for
dissolving districts. This bill was assigned
to the House Standing Political Subdivisions Committee, but was never
considered by that committee or otherwise acted upon.
To view the bill, click here.
To view the bill, click here.
H.B. 432: Governmental Nonprofit Entity Compliance
Amendments
Rep. Kim Coleman (R-West Jordan) sponsored House Bill 432 seeking
to re-classify private nonprofit organizations that have governmental entities
as shareholders or members that together have a "controlling
interest" in the organization as "governmental nonprofit
corporations." All such
re-classified organizations would then become subject to governmental
regulatory laws such as the "Open and Public Meetings Act," the
"Government Records Access and Management Act" (GRAMA), and other
governmental reporting acts. This bill
was assigned to the House Standing Tax and Revenue Committee, which voted to
substitute the bill, but it was never considered thereafter or otherwise acted
upon.
To view the bill, as substituted, click here.
To view the bill, as substituted, click here.
H.B. 457: Water Quality Revisions
The Legislature failed to pass House Bill 457 to revise the Utah
Water Quality Act to provide that inadvertent releases of water from publicly
owned culinary water systems do not constitute a "discharge of a
pollutant," which the Act prohibits absent compliance with specific
requirements. The bill did provide, however, that inadvertent discharges from a
publicly owned culinary water system will qualify as a "discharge of a
pollutant" if they are caused by misconduct, a primary cause of pollution,
and released in violation of numeric water quality standards.
To view this bill, click here.
To view this bill, click here.
H.B. 218: Utah Revised Nonprofit Corporation Act
S.B. 116: Water Law - Nonprofit Corporation Amendments
House Bill 218 and Senate Bill 116 were identical bills that
sought to amend two provisions of the Utah Revised Nonprofit Corporation Act.
First, the bills sought to exempt shares of stock in water companies from the
general rule in the Act that memberships in nonprofit corporations may not be
transferred. This proposed change was primarily in response to the Utah Supreme
Court's decision in the Southam v. South Despain Ditch Co. case from 2014.
Second, the bills sought to clarify that shareholders in water companies have
an undivided interest in the property and water rights of the company and that
they are entitled to the use of water and right to change the use of water
under the Utah water code.
To view HB 218, click here.
To view HB 218, click here.
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