Utah Code § 35A-16-1301

Temporary shelter expansion -- Definitions -- Requirements -- Mitigation
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) As used in this part, "municipal consent" means the written approval from a municipality in
which a congregate shelter is located to the office and to a service provider for temporary
expansion of a congregate shelter's designated bed capacity.
(2) A service provider may expand the capacity limit of a congregate shelter up to 135% of the
shelter's designated bed capacity to provide temporary shelter to individuals experiencing
homelessness if:
(a) the service provider informs the office of the need to temporarily expand the capacity limit of
the shelter;
(b) the service provider requests approval from the municipality in which the congregate shelter is
located to expand the shelter's capacity;
(c) the municipality in which the congregate shelter is located provides municipal consent to the
service provider and the office; and
(d) the congregate shelter remains in compliance with the applicable state and local building and
fire codes.
(3) Municipal consent under this section may include reasonable conditions related to public safety,
coordination, or neighborhood mitigation.
(4) The authorization provided under this section does not modify any other applicable licensing,
health, or safety requirements.
(5) For purposes of formula distributions made under this chapter, the number of beds operated
under Subsection (2) may be counted as tier three beds.
(6) Additional bed capacity authorized under this section may be mitigated using funds
appropriated under this chapter as determined in rule made by the office in accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act.
(7)
(a) A congregate shelter may not operate at the expanded capacity limit described in Subsection
(2) after April 30, 2027.
(b) On or after May 1, 2027, a congregate shelter shall return to the congregate shelter's capacity
limit as determined by the congregate shelter's conditional use permit unless otherwise
authorized by the relevant municipality.

‹ Prev All Utah sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.