Utah Code § 10-6-113

and 10-6-114
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(b)
(i) The governing body of a city that proposes to impose or increase a transportation utility
fee shall, in addition to the notice required under Subsection (6)(a), provide notice of the
proposed fee and the public hearing:
(A) in a notice with the city's monthly utility bill, if the city mails or emails residents a monthly
utility bill; or
(B) through another primary means of communicating with residents, if the city does not
provide residents a monthly utility bill.
(ii) The public hearing required for a proposal to impose or increase a transportation utility
fee may be held in conjunction with a budget hearing under Section 10-6-114 but shall be
separate and distinct from the budget hearing.
(7)
(a) A transportation utility fee may be imposed or increased only by an ordinance adopted by the
city's governing body.
(b)
(i) Subject to Subsection (7)(b)(ii), the governing body may adopt an ordinance imposing or
increasing a transportation utility fee at the same meeting in which the governing body
adopts the city budget.
(ii) The governing body vote on the imposition or increase of a transportation utility fee shall be
separate from the governing body vote on the city budget or any other item.

(c) The amount of a transportation utility fee for the city's population or for any user segment shall
be reasonably related to the services provided to, benefits received by, or need created by
those within the city's population or user segment who pay the transportation utility fee, as
determined in the study under Subsection (3).
(d)
(i) Revenue from a transportation utility fee may not supplant existing general fund
appropriations that the city has budgeted for transportation facilities as of the date the
transportation utility fee becomes effective.
(ii) The limitation under Subsection (7)(d)(i) does not apply to a designated transportation
facilities capital or reserve account established before the effective date of a transportation
utility fee under this section.
(8)
(a) Simultaneously with adopting an ordinance described in Subsection (7), a city shall establish
an appeals process for an individual or entity that wishes to challenge the user classification,
as described in Subsection (5), the city assigns to the individual or entity.
(b) As part of an appeal described in Subsection (8)(a), the individual or entity shall:
(i) demonstrate why the city's assignment of a user classification to the individual or entity is not
reasonable as applied to the individual or entity; and
(ii) provide evidence of the individual's or entity's actual traffic count or trip generation.
(c) The appeal process described in Subsection (8)(a) shall establish the individual or body at the
city that shall hear and make a final decision on the appeal, which shall be:
(i) the same individual or body that hears appeals related to other fee appeals, if the city has a
process to appeal fees;
(ii) the governing body; or
(iii) the mayor, if the city operates under the council-mayor form of government established in
Chapter 3b, Part 2, Council-Mayor Form of Municipal Government.
(9)
(a) A city that imposes a transportation utility fee shall establish a transportation fund as provided
in this Subsection (9).
(b) A city shall deposit into the transportation fund all revenue from a transportation utility fee.
(c) A city may not:
(i) deposit into or commingle with a transportation fund any money from any other source; or
(ii) use money in a transportation fund for any purpose other than to pay for the cost of:
(A) the development or construction of a new transportation facility;
(B) upgrading or replacing an existing transportation facility;
(C) the maintenance, operation, or repair of an existing transportation facility; or
(D) reasonable administrative costs associated with the transportation fund or with activities
described in Subsections (9)(c)(ii)(A), (B), and (C).
(d) Notwithstanding Sections 10-6-124, 10-6-125, and 10-6-135.5, a city may not transfer money
in a transportation fund to any other fund or to a separate account.
(10)
(a) A city that imposes a transportation utility fee shall conduct an annual review of the
transportation utility fee as provided in this Subsection (10) and prepare a written report of the
annual review.
(b) In an annual review under Subsection (10)(a), the governing body shall:
(i) review the balance of the transportation fund;
(ii) review the current amount of the transportation utility fee;

(iii) demonstrate that there is still a reasonable relationship between the amount of the
transportation utility fee and the transportation services provided to, benefits received by, or
need created by those who pay the fee;
(iv) consider other possible revenue sources that the city could use for transportation facilities
instead of a transportation utility fee;
(v) ensure that the city is compliant with Subsection (7)(d); and
(vi) demonstrate that revenue from the transportation utility fee continues to be needed to
provide a transportation facility that the city could not otherwise provide from other existing
revenue sources.
(c)
(i) A city shall submit a copy of the written report under Subsection (10)(a) to the state auditor.
(ii) A city may fulfill the requirement of Subsection (10)(c)(i) by submitting the written report as
part of the city's annual financial reports submitted to the state auditor.
(11)
(a) A transportation utility fee imposed under this section expires 10 years after the effective date
of the ordinance imposing the transportation utility fee.
(b) The 10-year period described in Subsection (11)(a) begins again with any subsequent
adoption of any ordinance imposing a transportation utility fee after the initial adoption of an
ordinance imposing a transportation utility fee.
(12) An ordinance imposing a transportation utility fee is subject to local referenda as provided in
Title 20A, Chapter 7, Part 6, Local Referenda - Procedures.
(13) A city that, before May 6, 2026, imposes a fee to pay for a transportation facility shall, no later
than July 1, 2027:
(a) ensure that requirements of this section have been complied with for the fee that the city
imposes; or
(b) repeal the fee.
(14)
(a) Nothing in this section precludes or abrogates the property tax exemptions provided for in
Utah Constitution, Article XIII, Section 3.
(b) To the extent that a court determines a transportation utility fee is a property tax for purposes
of Utah Constitution, Article XIII, Section 3, a city may not require a person to pay that
transportation utility fee with respect to property or the use of property that is exempt from
property tax under Utah Constitution, Article XIII, Section 3.

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