Utah Code § 59-12-2212.2

Allowable uses of local option sales and use tax revenue
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) Except as otherwise provided in this part, a county, city, or town that imposes a local option
sales and use tax under this part may expend the revenue generated from the local option
sales and use tax for the following purposes:
(a) the development, construction, maintenance, or operation of:
(i) a class A road;
(ii) a class B road;
(iii) a class C road;
(iv) a class D road;
(v) traffic and pedestrian safety infrastructure, including:
(A) a sidewalk;
(B) curb and gutter;
(C) a safety feature;
(D) a traffic sign;
(E) a traffic signal; or
(F) street lighting;
(vi) streets, alleys, roads, highways, and thoroughfares of any kind, including connected
structures;

(vii) an airport facility;
(viii) an active transportation facility that is for nonmotorized vehicles and multimodal
transportation and connects an origin with a destination; or
(ix) an intelligent transportation system;
(b) a system for public transit;
(c) all other modes and forms of conveyance used by the public;
(d) debt service or bond issuance costs related to a project or facility described in Subsections
(1)(a) through (c); or
(e) corridor preservation related to a project or facility described in Subsections (1)(a) through (c).
(2) Any revenue subject to rights or obligations under a contract between a county, city, or town
and a public transit district entered into before January 1, 2019, remains subject to existing
contractual rights and obligations.
(3) In addition to the uses described in Subsection (1), for any revenue generated by a sales and
use tax imposed under Section 59-12-2219 that is not contractually obligated for debt service,
the percentage described in Subsection 59-12-2219(11) shall be made available for public
transit innovation grants as provided in Title 72, Chapter 2, Part 4, Public Transit Innovation
Grants.

‹ 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.