Representative Candice B. Pierucci proposes the following substitute bill:


1     
LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD AMENDMENTS

2     
2024 GENERAL SESSION

3     
STATE OF UTAH

4     
Chief Sponsor: Candice B. Pierucci

5     
Senate Sponsor: Michael S. Kennedy

6     

7     LONG TITLE
8     General Description:
9          This bill addresses actions of a school district that may be subject to a referendum.
10     Highlighted Provisions:
11          This bill:
12          ▸     defines terms;
13          ▸     subject to certain exceptions, provides that a law passed by a local school board that
14     increases a tax or imposes a new tax may be referred to the voters of the school
15     district for the voters approval or rejection; and
16          ▸     makes technical and conforming changes.
17     Money Appropriated in this Bill:
18          None
19     Other Special Clauses:
20          None
21     Utah Code Sections Affected:
22     AMENDS:
23          10-9a-103, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapters 16, 327 and 478
24          10-9a-509, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 478
25          17-27a-103, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapters 15, 327 and 478

26          17-27a-508, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 478
27          20A-1-102, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapters 15, 234 and 297
28          20A-4-301, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 15
29          20A-7-101, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapters 107, 116
30          20A-7-102, as last amended by Laws of Utah 1994, Chapter 272
31          20A-7-401.3, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2019, Chapter 203
32          20A-7-401.5, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 116
33          20A-7-402, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 435
34          20A-7-405, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2019, Chapter 203
35          20A-7-601, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapters 107, 219
36          20A-7-602.5, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 107
37          20A-7-602.7, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 107
38          20A-7-603, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 107
39          20A-7-604, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 107
40          20A-7-607, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapters 107, 116
41          20A-7-608, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapters 45, 107
42          20A-7-609, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 107
43          20A-7-609.5, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2020, Chapter 31
44          20A-7-610, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 107
45          20A-7-611, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 107
46          20A-7-613, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 116
47          20A-7-614, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 107
48          63G-30-102, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 435
49     

50     Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
51          Section 1. Section 10-9a-103 is amended to read:
52          10-9a-103. Definitions.
53          As used in this chapter:
54          (1) "Accessory dwelling unit" means a habitable living unit added to, created within, or
55     detached from a primary single-family dwelling and contained on one lot.
56          (2) "Adversely affected party" means a person other than a land use applicant who:

57          (a) owns real property adjoining the property that is the subject of a land use
58     application or land use decision; or
59          (b) will suffer a damage different in kind than, or an injury distinct from, that of the
60     general community as a result of the land use decision.
61          (3) "Affected entity" means a county, municipality, special district, special service
62     district under Title 17D, Chapter 1, Special Service District Act, school district, interlocal
63     cooperation entity established under Title 11, Chapter 13, Interlocal Cooperation Act, specified
64     public utility, property owner, property owners association, or the Department of
65     Transportation, if:
66          (a) the entity's services or facilities are likely to require expansion or significant
67     modification because of an intended use of land;
68          (b) the entity has filed with the municipality a copy of the entity's general or long-range
69     plan; or
70          (c) the entity has filed with the municipality a request for notice during the same
71     calendar year and before the municipality provides notice to an affected entity in compliance
72     with a requirement imposed under this chapter.
73          (4) "Affected owner" means the owner of real property that is:
74          (a) a single project;
75          (b) the subject of a land use approval that sponsors of a referendum timely challenged
76     in accordance with Subsection [20A-7-601(6)] 20A-7-601(7); and
77          (c) determined to be legally referable under Section 20A-7-602.8.
78          (5) "Appeal authority" means the person, board, commission, agency, or other body
79     designated by ordinance to decide an appeal of a decision of a land use application or a
80     variance.
81          (6) "Billboard" means a freestanding ground sign located on industrial, commercial, or
82     residential property if the sign is designed or intended to direct attention to a business, product,
83     or service that is not sold, offered, or existing on the property where the sign is located.
84          (7) (a) "Charter school" means:
85          (i) an operating charter school;
86          (ii) a charter school applicant that a charter school authorizer approves in accordance
87     with Title 53G, Chapter 5, Part 3, Charter School Authorization; or

88          (iii) an entity that is working on behalf of a charter school or approved charter
89     applicant to develop or construct a charter school building.
90          (b) "Charter school" does not include a therapeutic school.
91          (8) "Conditional use" means a land use that, because of the unique characteristics or
92     potential impact of the land use on the municipality, surrounding neighbors, or adjacent land
93     uses, may not be compatible in some areas or may be compatible only if certain conditions are
94     required that mitigate or eliminate the detrimental impacts.
95          (9) "Constitutional taking" means a governmental action that results in a taking of
96     private property so that compensation to the owner of the property is required by the:
97          (a) Fifth or Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States; or
98          (b) Utah Constitution Article I, Section 22.
99          (10) "Culinary water authority" means the department, agency, or public entity with
100     responsibility to review and approve the feasibility of the culinary water system and sources for
101     the subject property.
102          (11) "Development activity" means:
103          (a) any construction or expansion of a building, structure, or use that creates additional
104     demand and need for public facilities;
105          (b) any change in use of a building or structure that creates additional demand and need
106     for public facilities; or
107          (c) any change in the use of land that creates additional demand and need for public
108     facilities.
109          (12) (a) "Development agreement" means a written agreement or amendment to a
110     written agreement between a municipality and one or more parties that regulates or controls the
111     use or development of a specific area of land.
112          (b) "Development agreement" does not include an improvement completion assurance.
113          (13) (a) "Disability" means a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits
114     one or more of a person's major life activities, including a person having a record of such an
115     impairment or being regarded as having such an impairment.
116          (b) "Disability" does not include current illegal use of, or addiction to, any federally
117     controlled substance, as defined in Section 102 of the Controlled Substances Act, 21 U.S.C.
118     802.

119          (14) "Educational facility":
120          (a) means:
121          (i) a school district's building at which pupils assemble to receive instruction in a
122     program for any combination of grades from preschool through grade 12, including
123     kindergarten and a program for children with disabilities;
124          (ii) a structure or facility:
125          (A) located on the same property as a building described in Subsection (14)(a)(i); and
126          (B) used in support of the use of that building; and
127          (iii) a building to provide office and related space to a school district's administrative
128     personnel; and
129          (b) does not include:
130          (i) land or a structure, including land or a structure for inventory storage, equipment
131     storage, food processing or preparing, vehicle storage or maintenance, or similar use that is:
132          (A) not located on the same property as a building described in Subsection (14)(a)(i);
133     and
134          (B) used in support of the purposes of a building described in Subsection (14)(a)(i); or
135          (ii) a therapeutic school.
136          (15) "Fire authority" means the department, agency, or public entity with responsibility
137     to review and approve the feasibility of fire protection and suppression services for the subject
138     property.
139          (16) "Flood plain" means land that:
140          (a) is within the 100-year flood plain designated by the Federal Emergency
141     Management Agency; or
142          (b) has not been studied or designated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency
143     but presents a likelihood of experiencing chronic flooding or a catastrophic flood event because
144     the land has characteristics that are similar to those of a 100-year flood plain designated by the
145     Federal Emergency Management Agency.
146          (17) "General plan" means a document that a municipality adopts that sets forth general
147     guidelines for proposed future development of the land within the municipality.
148          (18) "Geologic hazard" means:
149          (a) a surface fault rupture;

150          (b) shallow groundwater;
151          (c) liquefaction;
152          (d) a landslide;
153          (e) a debris flow;
154          (f) unstable soil;
155          (g) a rock fall; or
156          (h) any other geologic condition that presents a risk:
157          (i) to life;
158          (ii) of substantial loss of real property; or
159          (iii) of substantial damage to real property.
160          (19) "Historic preservation authority" means a person, board, commission, or other
161     body designated by a legislative body to:
162          (a) recommend land use regulations to preserve local historic districts or areas; and
163          (b) administer local historic preservation land use regulations within a local historic
164     district or area.
165          (20) "Hookup fee" means a fee for the installation and inspection of any pipe, line,
166     meter, or appurtenance that connects to a municipal water, sewer, storm water, power, or other
167     utility system.
168          (21) "Identical plans" means building plans submitted to a municipality that:
169          (a) are clearly marked as "identical plans";
170          (b) are substantially identical to building plans that were previously submitted to and
171     reviewed and approved by the municipality; and
172          (c) describe a building that:
173          (i) is located on land zoned the same as the land on which the building described in the
174     previously approved plans is located;
175          (ii) is subject to the same geological and meteorological conditions and the same law
176     as the building described in the previously approved plans;
177          (iii) has a floor plan identical to the building plan previously submitted to and reviewed
178     and approved by the municipality; and
179          (iv) does not require any additional engineering or analysis.
180          (22) "Impact fee" means a payment of money imposed under Title 11, Chapter 36a,

181     Impact Fees Act.
182          (23) "Improvement completion assurance" means a surety bond, letter of credit,
183     financial institution bond, cash, assignment of rights, lien, or other equivalent security required
184     by a municipality to guaranty the proper completion of landscaping or an infrastructure
185     improvement required as a condition precedent to:
186          (a) recording a subdivision plat; or
187          (b) development of a commercial, industrial, mixed use, or multifamily project.
188          (24) "Improvement warranty" means an applicant's unconditional warranty that the
189     applicant's installed and accepted landscaping or infrastructure improvement:
190          (a) complies with the municipality's written standards for design, materials, and
191     workmanship; and
192          (b) will not fail in any material respect, as a result of poor workmanship or materials,
193     within the improvement warranty period.
194          (25) "Improvement warranty period" means a period:
195          (a) no later than one year after a municipality's acceptance of required landscaping; or
196          (b) no later than one year after a municipality's acceptance of required infrastructure,
197     unless the municipality:
198          (i) determines for good cause that a one-year period would be inadequate to protect the
199     public health, safety, and welfare; and
200          (ii) has substantial evidence, on record:
201          (A) of prior poor performance by the applicant; or
202          (B) that the area upon which the infrastructure will be constructed contains suspect soil
203     and the municipality has not otherwise required the applicant to mitigate the suspect soil.
204          (26) "Infrastructure improvement" means permanent infrastructure that is essential for
205     the public health and safety or that:
206          (a) is required for human occupation; and
207          (b) an applicant must install:
208          (i) in accordance with published installation and inspection specifications for public
209     improvements; and
210          (ii) whether the improvement is public or private, as a condition of:
211          (A) recording a subdivision plat;

212          (B) obtaining a building permit; or
213          (C) development of a commercial, industrial, mixed use, condominium, or multifamily
214     project.
215          (27) "Internal lot restriction" means a platted note, platted demarcation, or platted
216     designation that:
217          (a) runs with the land; and
218          (b) (i) creates a restriction that is enclosed within the perimeter of a lot described on
219     the plat; or
220          (ii) designates a development condition that is enclosed within the perimeter of a lot
221     described on the plat.
222          (28) "Land use applicant" means a property owner, or the property owner's designee,
223     who submits a land use application regarding the property owner's land.
224          (29) "Land use application":
225          (a) means an application that is:
226          (i) required by a municipality; and
227          (ii) submitted by a land use applicant to obtain a land use decision; and
228          (b) does not mean an application to enact, amend, or repeal a land use regulation.
229          (30) "Land use authority" means:
230          (a) a person, board, commission, agency, or body, including the local legislative body,
231     designated by the local legislative body to act upon a land use application; or
232          (b) if the local legislative body has not designated a person, board, commission,
233     agency, or body, the local legislative body.
234          (31) "Land use decision" means an administrative decision of a land use authority or
235     appeal authority regarding:
236          (a) a land use permit; or
237          (b) a land use application.
238          (32) "Land use permit" means a permit issued by a land use authority.
239          (33) "Land use regulation":
240          (a) means a legislative decision enacted by ordinance, law, code, map, resolution,
241     specification, fee, or rule that governs the use or development of land;
242          (b) includes the adoption or amendment of a zoning map or the text of the zoning code;

243     and
244          (c) does not include:
245          (i) a land use decision of the legislative body acting as the land use authority, even if
246     the decision is expressed in a resolution or ordinance; or
247          (ii) a temporary revision to an engineering specification that does not materially:
248          (A) increase a land use applicant's cost of development compared to the existing
249     specification; or
250          (B) impact a land use applicant's use of land.
251          (34) "Legislative body" means the municipal council.
252          (35) "Local historic district or area" means a geographically definable area that:
253          (a) contains any combination of buildings, structures, sites, objects, landscape features,
254     archeological sites, or works of art that contribute to the historic preservation goals of a
255     legislative body; and
256          (b) is subject to land use regulations to preserve the historic significance of the local
257     historic district or area.
258          (36) "Lot" means a tract of land, regardless of any label, that is created by and shown
259     on a subdivision plat that has been recorded in the office of the county recorder.
260          (37) (a) "Lot line adjustment" means a relocation of a lot line boundary between
261     adjoining lots or between a lot and adjoining parcels in accordance with Section 10-9a-608:
262          (i) whether or not the lots are located in the same subdivision; and
263          (ii) with the consent of the owners of record.
264          (b) "Lot line adjustment" does not mean a new boundary line that:
265          (i) creates an additional lot; or
266          (ii) constitutes a subdivision or a subdivision amendment.
267          (c) "Lot line adjustment" does not include a boundary line adjustment made by the
268     Department of Transportation.
269          (38) "Major transit investment corridor" means public transit service that uses or
270     occupies:
271          (a) public transit rail right-of-way;
272          (b) dedicated road right-of-way for the use of public transit, such as bus rapid transit;
273     or

274          (c) fixed-route bus corridors subject to an interlocal agreement or contract between a
275     municipality or county and:
276          (i) a public transit district as defined in Section 17B-2a-802; or
277          (ii) an eligible political subdivision as defined in Section 59-12-2219.
278          (39) "Moderate income housing" means housing occupied or reserved for occupancy
279     by households with a gross household income equal to or less than 80% of the median gross
280     income for households of the same size in the county in which the city is located.
281          (40) "Municipal utility easement" means an easement that:
282          (a) is created or depicted on a plat recorded in a county recorder's office and is
283     described as a municipal utility easement granted for public use;
284          (b) is not a protected utility easement or a public utility easement as defined in Section
285     54-3-27;
286          (c) the municipality or the municipality's affiliated governmental entity uses and
287     occupies to provide a utility service, including sanitary sewer, culinary water, electrical, storm
288     water, or communications or data lines;
289          (d) is used or occupied with the consent of the municipality in accordance with an
290     authorized franchise or other agreement;
291          (e) (i) is used or occupied by a specified public utility in accordance with an authorized
292     franchise or other agreement; and
293          (ii) is located in a utility easement granted for public use; or
294          (f) is described in Section 10-9a-529 and is used by a specified public utility.
295          (41) "Nominal fee" means a fee that reasonably reimburses a municipality only for time
296     spent and expenses incurred in:
297          (a) verifying that building plans are identical plans; and
298          (b) reviewing and approving those minor aspects of identical plans that differ from the
299     previously reviewed and approved building plans.
300          (42) "Noncomplying structure" means a structure that:
301          (a) legally existed before the structure's current land use designation; and
302          (b) because of one or more subsequent land use ordinance changes, does not conform
303     to the setback, height restrictions, or other regulations, excluding those regulations, which
304     govern the use of land.

305          (43) "Nonconforming use" means a use of land that:
306          (a) legally existed before its current land use designation;
307          (b) has been maintained continuously since the time the land use ordinance governing
308     the land changed; and
309          (c) because of one or more subsequent land use ordinance changes, does not conform
310     to the regulations that now govern the use of the land.
311          (44) "Official map" means a map drawn by municipal authorities and recorded in a
312     county recorder's office that:
313          (a) shows actual and proposed rights-of-way, centerline alignments, and setbacks for
314     highways and other transportation facilities;
315          (b) provides a basis for restricting development in designated rights-of-way or between
316     designated setbacks to allow the government authorities time to purchase or otherwise reserve
317     the land; and
318          (c) has been adopted as an element of the municipality's general plan.
319          (45) "Parcel" means any real property that is not a lot.
320          (46) (a) "Parcel boundary adjustment" means a recorded agreement between owners of
321     adjoining parcels adjusting the mutual boundary, either by deed or by a boundary line
322     agreement in accordance with Section 10-9a-524, if no additional parcel is created and:
323          (i) none of the property identified in the agreement is a lot; or
324          (ii) the adjustment is to the boundaries of a single person's parcels.
325          (b) "Parcel boundary adjustment" does not mean an adjustment of a parcel boundary
326     line that:
327          (i) creates an additional parcel; or
328          (ii) constitutes a subdivision.
329          (c) "Parcel boundary adjustment" does not include a boundary line adjustment made by
330     the Department of Transportation.
331          (47) "Person" means an individual, corporation, partnership, organization, association,
332     trust, governmental agency, or any other legal entity.
333          (48) "Plan for moderate income housing" means a written document adopted by a
334     municipality's legislative body that includes:
335          (a) an estimate of the existing supply of moderate income housing located within the

336     municipality;
337          (b) an estimate of the need for moderate income housing in the municipality for the
338     next five years;
339          (c) a survey of total residential land use;
340          (d) an evaluation of how existing land uses and zones affect opportunities for moderate
341     income housing; and
342          (e) a description of the municipality's program to encourage an adequate supply of
343     moderate income housing.
344          (49) "Plat" means an instrument subdividing property into lots as depicted on a map or
345     other graphical representation of lands that a licensed professional land surveyor makes and
346     prepares in accordance with Section 10-9a-603 or 57-8-13.
347          (50) "Potential geologic hazard area" means an area that:
348          (a) is designated by a Utah Geological Survey map, county geologist map, or other
349     relevant map or report as needing further study to determine the area's potential for geologic
350     hazard; or
351          (b) has not been studied by the Utah Geological Survey or a county geologist but
352     presents the potential of geologic hazard because the area has characteristics similar to those of
353     a designated geologic hazard area.
354          (51) "Public agency" means:
355          (a) the federal government;
356          (b) the state;
357          (c) a county, municipality, school district, special district, special service district, or
358     other political subdivision of the state; or
359          (d) a charter school.
360          (52) "Public hearing" means a hearing at which members of the public are provided a
361     reasonable opportunity to comment on the subject of the hearing.
362          (53) "Public meeting" means a meeting that is required to be open to the public under
363     Title 52, Chapter 4, Open and Public Meetings Act.
364          (54) "Public street" means a public right-of-way, including a public highway, public
365     avenue, public boulevard, public parkway, public road, public lane, public alley, public
366     viaduct, public subway, public tunnel, public bridge, public byway, other public transportation

367     easement, or other public way.
368          (55) "Receiving zone" means an area of a municipality that the municipality
369     designates, by ordinance, as an area in which an owner of land may receive a transferable
370     development right.
371          (56) "Record of survey map" means a map of a survey of land prepared in accordance
372     with Section 10-9a-603, 17-23-17, 17-27a-603, or 57-8-13.
373          (57) "Residential facility for persons with a disability" means a residence:
374          (a) in which more than one person with a disability resides; and
375          (b) which is licensed or certified by the Department of Health and Human Services
376     under:
377          (i) Title 26B, Chapter 2, Part 1, Human Services Programs and Facilities; or
378          (ii) Title 26B, Chapter 2, Part 2, Health Care Facility Licensing and Inspection.
379          (58) "Residential roadway" means a public local residential road that:
380          (a) will serve primarily to provide access to adjacent primarily residential areas and
381     property;
382          (b) is designed to accommodate minimal traffic volumes or vehicular traffic;
383          (c) is not identified as a supplementary to a collector or other higher system classified
384     street in an approved municipal street or transportation master plan;
385          (d) has a posted speed limit of 25 miles per hour or less;
386          (e) does not have higher traffic volumes resulting from connecting previously separated
387     areas of the municipal road network;
388          (f) cannot have a primary access, but can have a secondary access, and does not abut
389     lots intended for high volume traffic or community centers, including schools, recreation
390     centers, sports complexes, or libraries; and
391          (g) primarily serves traffic within a neighborhood or limited residential area and is not
392     necessarily continuous through several residential areas.
393          (59) "Rules of order and procedure" means a set of rules that govern and prescribe in a
394     public meeting:
395          (a) parliamentary order and procedure;
396          (b) ethical behavior; and
397          (c) civil discourse.

398          (60) "Sanitary sewer authority" means the department, agency, or public entity with
399     responsibility to review and approve the feasibility of sanitary sewer services or onsite
400     wastewater systems.
401          (61) "Sending zone" means an area of a municipality that the municipality designates,
402     by ordinance, as an area from which an owner of land may transfer a transferable development
403     right.
404          (62) "Special district" means an entity under Title 17B, Limited Purpose Local
405     Government Entities - Special Districts, and any other governmental or quasi-governmental
406     entity that is not a county, municipality, school district, or the state.
407          (63) "Specified public agency" means:
408          (a) the state;
409          (b) a school district; or
410          (c) a charter school.
411          (64) "Specified public utility" means an electrical corporation, gas corporation, or
412     telephone corporation, as those terms are defined in Section 54-2-1.
413          (65) "State" includes any department, division, or agency of the state.
414          (66) (a) "Subdivision" means any land that is divided, resubdivided, or proposed to be
415     divided into two or more lots or other division of land for the purpose, whether immediate or
416     future, for offer, sale, lease, or development either on the installment plan or upon any and all
417     other plans, terms, and conditions.
418          (b) "Subdivision" includes:
419          (i) the division or development of land, whether by deed, metes and bounds
420     description, devise and testacy, map, plat, or other recorded instrument, regardless of whether
421     the division includes all or a portion of a parcel or lot; and
422          (ii) except as provided in Subsection (65)(c), divisions of land for residential and
423     nonresidential uses, including land used or to be used for commercial, agricultural, and
424     industrial purposes.
425          (c) "Subdivision" does not include:
426          (i) a bona fide division or partition of agricultural land for the purpose of joining one of
427     the resulting separate parcels to a contiguous parcel of unsubdivided agricultural land, if
428     neither the resulting combined parcel nor the parcel remaining from the division or partition

429     violates an applicable land use ordinance;
430          (ii) a boundary line agreement recorded with the county recorder's office between
431     owners of adjoining parcels adjusting the mutual boundary in accordance with Section
432     10-9a-524 if no new parcel is created;
433          (iii) a recorded document, executed by the owner of record:
434          (A) revising the legal descriptions of multiple parcels into one legal description
435     encompassing all such parcels; or
436          (B) joining a lot to a parcel;
437          (iv) a boundary line agreement between owners of adjoining subdivided properties
438     adjusting the mutual lot line boundary in accordance with Sections 10-9a-524 and 10-9a-608 if:
439          (A) no new dwelling lot or housing unit will result from the adjustment; and
440          (B) the adjustment will not violate any applicable land use ordinance;
441          (v) a bona fide division of land by deed or other instrument if the deed or other
442     instrument states in writing that the division:
443          (A) is in anticipation of future land use approvals on the parcel or parcels;
444          (B) does not confer any land use approvals; and
445          (C) has not been approved by the land use authority;
446          (vi) a parcel boundary adjustment;
447          (vii) a lot line adjustment;
448          (viii) a road, street, or highway dedication plat;
449          (ix) a deed or easement for a road, street, or highway purpose; or
450          (x) any other division of land authorized by law.
451          (67) (a) "Subdivision amendment" means an amendment to a recorded subdivision in
452     accordance with Section 10-9a-608 that:
453          (i) vacates all or a portion of the subdivision;
454          (ii) alters the outside boundary of the subdivision;
455          (iii) changes the number of lots within the subdivision;
456          (iv) alters a public right-of-way, a public easement, or public infrastructure within the
457     subdivision; or
458          (v) alters a common area or other common amenity within the subdivision.
459          (b) "Subdivision amendment" does not include a lot line adjustment, between a single

460     lot and an adjoining lot or parcel, that alters the outside boundary of the subdivision.
461          (68) "Substantial evidence" means evidence that:
462          (a) is beyond a scintilla; and
463          (b) a reasonable mind would accept as adequate to support a conclusion.
464          (69) "Suspect soil" means soil that has:
465          (a) a high susceptibility for volumetric change, typically clay rich, having more than a
466     3% swell potential;
467          (b) bedrock units with high shrink or swell susceptibility; or
468          (c) gypsiferous silt and clay, gypsum, or bedrock units containing abundant gypsum
469     commonly associated with dissolution and collapse features.
470          (70) "Therapeutic school" means a residential group living facility:
471          (a) for four or more individuals who are not related to:
472          (i) the owner of the facility; or
473          (ii) the primary service provider of the facility;
474          (b) that serves students who have a history of failing to function:
475          (i) at home;
476          (ii) in a public school; or
477          (iii) in a nonresidential private school; and
478          (c) that offers:
479          (i) room and board; and
480          (ii) an academic education integrated with:
481          (A) specialized structure and supervision; or
482          (B) services or treatment related to a disability, an emotional development, a
483     behavioral development, a familial development, or a social development.
484          (71) "Transferable development right" means a right to develop and use land that
485     originates by an ordinance that authorizes a land owner in a designated sending zone to transfer
486     land use rights from a designated sending zone to a designated receiving zone.
487          (72) "Unincorporated" means the area outside of the incorporated area of a city or
488     town.
489          (73) "Water interest" means any right to the beneficial use of water, including:
490          (a) each of the rights listed in Section 73-1-11; and

491          (b) an ownership interest in the right to the beneficial use of water represented by:
492          (i) a contract; or
493          (ii) a share in a water company, as defined in Section 73-3-3.5.
494          (74) "Zoning map" means a map, adopted as part of a land use ordinance, that depicts
495     land use zones, overlays, or districts.
496          Section 2. Section 10-9a-509 is amended to read:
497          10-9a-509. Applicant's entitlement to land use application approval --
498     Municipality's requirements and limitations -- Vesting upon submission of development
499     plan and schedule.
500          (1) (a) (i) An applicant who has submitted a complete land use application as described
501     in Subsection (1)(c), including the payment of all application fees, is entitled to substantive
502     review of the application under the land use regulations:
503          (A) in effect on the date that the application is complete; and
504          (B) applicable to the application or to the information shown on the application.
505          (ii) An applicant is entitled to approval of a land use application if the application
506     conforms to the requirements of the applicable land use regulations, land use decisions, and
507     development standards in effect when the applicant submits a complete application and pays
508     application fees, unless:
509          (A) the land use authority, on the record, formally finds that a compelling,
510     countervailing public interest would be jeopardized by approving the application and specifies
511     the compelling, countervailing public interest in writing; or
512          (B) in the manner provided by local ordinance and before the applicant submits the
513     application, the municipality formally initiates proceedings to amend the municipality's land
514     use regulations in a manner that would prohibit approval of the application as submitted.
515          (b) The municipality shall process an application without regard to proceedings the
516     municipality initiated to amend the municipality's ordinances as described in Subsection
517     (1)(a)(ii)(B) if:
518          (i) 180 days have passed since the municipality initiated the proceedings; and
519          (ii) (A) the proceedings have not resulted in an enactment that prohibits approval of the
520     application as submitted; or
521          (B) during the 12 months prior to the municipality processing the application, or

522     multiple applications of the same type, are impaired or prohibited under the terms of a
523     temporary land use regulation adopted under Section 10-9a-504.
524          (c) A land use application is considered submitted and complete when the applicant
525     provides the application in a form that complies with the requirements of applicable ordinances
526     and pays all applicable fees.
527          (d) A subsequent incorporation of a municipality or a petition that proposes the
528     incorporation of a municipality does not affect a land use application approved by a county in
529     accordance with Section 17-27a-508.
530          (e) The continuing validity of an approval of a land use application is conditioned upon
531     the applicant proceeding after approval to implement the approval with reasonable diligence.
532          (f) A municipality may not impose on an applicant who has submitted a complete
533     application a requirement that is not expressed in:
534          (i) this chapter;
535          (ii) a municipal ordinance in effect on the date that the applicant submits a complete
536     application, subject to Subsection 10-9a-509(1)(a)(ii); or
537          (iii) a municipal specification for public improvements applicable to a subdivision or
538     development that is in effect on the date that the applicant submits an application.
539          (g) A municipality may not impose on a holder of an issued land use permit or a final,
540     unexpired subdivision plat a requirement that is not expressed:
541          (i) in a land use permit;
542          (ii) on the subdivision plat;
543          (iii) in a document on which the land use permit or subdivision plat is based;
544          (iv) in the written record evidencing approval of the land use permit or subdivision
545     plat;
546          (v) in this chapter;
547          (vi) in a municipal ordinance; or
548          (vii) in a municipal specification for residential roadways in effect at the time a
549     residential subdivision was approved.
550          (h) Except as provided in Subsection (1)(i), a municipality may not withhold issuance
551     of a certificate of occupancy or acceptance of subdivision improvements because of an
552     applicant's failure to comply with a requirement that is not expressed:

553          (i) in the building permit or subdivision plat, documents on which the building permit
554     or subdivision plat is based, or the written record evidencing approval of the land use permit or
555     subdivision plat; or
556          (ii) in this chapter or the municipality's ordinances.
557          (i) A municipality may not unreasonably withhold issuance of a certificate of
558     occupancy where an applicant has met all requirements essential for the public health, public
559     safety, and general welfare of the occupants, in accordance with this chapter, unless:
560          (i) the applicant and the municipality have agreed in a written document to the
561     withholding of a certificate of occupancy; or
562          (ii) the applicant has not provided a financial assurance for required and uncompleted
563     public landscaping improvements or infrastructure improvements in accordance with an
564     applicable ordinance that the legislative body adopts under this chapter.
565          (2) A municipality is bound by the terms and standards of applicable land use
566     regulations and shall comply with mandatory provisions of those regulations.
567          (3) A municipality may not, as a condition of land use application approval, require a
568     person filing a land use application to obtain documentation regarding a school district's
569     willingness, capacity, or ability to serve the development proposed in the land use application.
570          (4) Upon a specified public agency's submission of a development plan and schedule as
571     required in Subsection 10-9a-305(8) that complies with the requirements of that subsection, the
572     specified public agency vests in the municipality's applicable land use maps, zoning map,
573     hookup fees, impact fees, other applicable development fees, and land use regulations in effect
574     on the date of submission.
575          (5) (a) If sponsors of a referendum timely challenge a project in accordance with
576     Subsection [20A-7-601(6)] 20A-7-601(7), the project's affected owner may rescind the
577     project's land use approval by delivering a written notice:
578          (i) to the local clerk as defined in Section 20A-7-101; and
579          (ii) no later than seven days after the day on which a petition for a referendum is
580     determined sufficient under Subsection 20A-7-607(5).
581          (b) Upon delivery of a written notice described in Subsection (5)(a) the following are
582     rescinded and are of no further force or effect:
583          (i) the relevant land use approval; and

584          (ii) any land use regulation enacted specifically in relation to the land use approval.
585          Section 3. Section 17-27a-103 is amended to read:
586          17-27a-103. Definitions.
587          As used in this chapter:
588          (1) "Accessory dwelling unit" means a habitable living unit added to, created within, or
589     detached from a primary single-family dwelling and contained on one lot.
590          (2) "Adversely affected party" means a person other than a land use applicant who:
591          (a) owns real property adjoining the property that is the subject of a land use
592     application or land use decision; or
593          (b) will suffer a damage different in kind than, or an injury distinct from, that of the
594     general community as a result of the land use decision.
595          (3) "Affected entity" means a county, municipality, special district, special service
596     district under Title 17D, Chapter 1, Special Service District Act, school district, interlocal
597     cooperation entity established under Title 11, Chapter 13, Interlocal Cooperation Act, specified
598     property owner, property owner's association, public utility, or the Department of
599     Transportation, if:
600          (a) the entity's services or facilities are likely to require expansion or significant
601     modification because of an intended use of land;
602          (b) the entity has filed with the county a copy of the entity's general or long-range plan;
603     or
604          (c) the entity has filed with the county a request for notice during the same calendar
605     year and before the county provides notice to an affected entity in compliance with a
606     requirement imposed under this chapter.
607          (4) "Affected owner" means the owner of real property that is:
608          (a) a single project;
609          (b) the subject of a land use approval that sponsors of a referendum timely challenged
610     in accordance with Subsection [20A-7-601(6)] 20A-7-601(7); and
611          (c) determined to be legally referable under Section 20A-7-602.8.
612          (5) "Appeal authority" means the person, board, commission, agency, or other body
613     designated by ordinance to decide an appeal of a decision of a land use application or a
614     variance.

615          (6) "Billboard" means a freestanding ground sign located on industrial, commercial, or
616     residential property if the sign is designed or intended to direct attention to a business, product,
617     or service that is not sold, offered, or existing on the property where the sign is located.
618          (7) (a) "Charter school" means:
619          (i) an operating charter school;
620          (ii) a charter school applicant that a charter school authorizer approves in accordance
621     with Title 53G, Chapter 5, Part 3, Charter School Authorization; or
622          (iii) an entity that is working on behalf of a charter school or approved charter
623     applicant to develop or construct a charter school building.
624          (b) "Charter school" does not include a therapeutic school.
625          (8) "Chief executive officer" means the person or body that exercises the executive
626     powers of the county.
627          (9) "Conditional use" means a land use that, because of the unique characteristics or
628     potential impact of the land use on the county, surrounding neighbors, or adjacent land uses,
629     may not be compatible in some areas or may be compatible only if certain conditions are
630     required that mitigate or eliminate the detrimental impacts.
631          (10) "Constitutional taking" means a governmental action that results in a taking of
632     private property so that compensation to the owner of the property is required by the:
633          (a) Fifth or Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States; or
634          (b) Utah Constitution, Article I, Section 22.
635          (11) "County utility easement" means an easement that:
636          (a) a plat recorded in a county recorder's office described as a county utility easement
637     or otherwise as a utility easement;
638          (b) is not a protected utility easement or a public utility easement as defined in Section
639     54-3-27;
640          (c) the county or the county's affiliated governmental entity owns or creates; and
641          (d) (i) either:
642          (A) no person uses or occupies; or
643          (B) the county or the county's affiliated governmental entity uses and occupies to
644     provide a utility service, including sanitary sewer, culinary water, electrical, storm water, or
645     communications or data lines; or

646          (ii) a person uses or occupies with or without an authorized franchise or other
647     agreement with the county.
648          (12) "Culinary water authority" means the department, agency, or public entity with
649     responsibility to review and approve the feasibility of the culinary water system and sources for
650     the subject property.
651          (13) "Development activity" means:
652          (a) any construction or expansion of a building, structure, or use that creates additional
653     demand and need for public facilities;
654          (b) any change in use of a building or structure that creates additional demand and need
655     for public facilities; or
656          (c) any change in the use of land that creates additional demand and need for public
657     facilities.
658          (14) (a) "Development agreement" means a written agreement or amendment to a
659     written agreement between a county and one or more parties that regulates or controls the use
660     or development of a specific area of land.
661          (b) "Development agreement" does not include an improvement completion assurance.
662          (15) (a) "Disability" means a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits
663     one or more of a person's major life activities, including a person having a record of such an
664     impairment or being regarded as having such an impairment.
665          (b) "Disability" does not include current illegal use of, or addiction to, any federally
666     controlled substance, as defined in Section 102 of the Controlled Substances Act, 21 U.S.C.
667     Sec. 802.
668          (16) "Educational facility":
669          (a) means:
670          (i) a school district's building at which pupils assemble to receive instruction in a
671     program for any combination of grades from preschool through grade 12, including
672     kindergarten and a program for children with disabilities;
673          (ii) a structure or facility:
674          (A) located on the same property as a building described in Subsection (16)(a)(i); and
675          (B) used in support of the use of that building; and
676          (iii) a building to provide office and related space to a school district's administrative

677     personnel; and
678          (b) does not include:
679          (i) land or a structure, including land or a structure for inventory storage, equipment
680     storage, food processing or preparing, vehicle storage or maintenance, or similar use that is:
681          (A) not located on the same property as a building described in Subsection (16)(a)(i);
682     and
683          (B) used in support of the purposes of a building described in Subsection (16)(a)(i); or
684          (ii) a therapeutic school.
685          (17) "Fire authority" means the department, agency, or public entity with responsibility
686     to review and approve the feasibility of fire protection and suppression services for the subject
687     property.
688          (18) "Flood plain" means land that:
689          (a) is within the 100-year flood plain designated by the Federal Emergency
690     Management Agency; or
691          (b) has not been studied or designated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency
692     but presents a likelihood of experiencing chronic flooding or a catastrophic flood event because
693     the land has characteristics that are similar to those of a 100-year flood plain designated by the
694     Federal Emergency Management Agency.
695          (19) "Gas corporation" has the same meaning as defined in Section 54-2-1.
696          (20) "General plan" means a document that a county adopts that sets forth general
697     guidelines for proposed future development of:
698          (a) the unincorporated land within the county; or
699          (b) for a mountainous planning district, the land within the mountainous planning
700     district.
701          (21) "Geologic hazard" means:
702          (a) a surface fault rupture;
703          (b) shallow groundwater;
704          (c) liquefaction;
705          (d) a landslide;
706          (e) a debris flow;
707          (f) unstable soil;

708          (g) a rock fall; or
709          (h) any other geologic condition that presents a risk:
710          (i) to life;
711          (ii) of substantial loss of real property; or
712          (iii) of substantial damage to real property.
713          (22) "Hookup fee" means a fee for the installation and inspection of any pipe, line,
714     meter, or appurtenance to connect to a county water, sewer, storm water, power, or other utility
715     system.
716          (23) "Identical plans" means building plans submitted to a county that:
717          (a) are clearly marked as "identical plans";
718          (b) are substantially identical building plans that were previously submitted to and
719     reviewed and approved by the county; and
720          (c) describe a building that:
721          (i) is located on land zoned the same as the land on which the building described in the
722     previously approved plans is located;
723          (ii) is subject to the same geological and meteorological conditions and the same law
724     as the building described in the previously approved plans;
725          (iii) has a floor plan identical to the building plan previously submitted to and reviewed
726     and approved by the county; and
727          (iv) does not require any additional engineering or analysis.
728          (24) "Impact fee" means a payment of money imposed under Title 11, Chapter 36a,
729     Impact Fees Act.
730          (25) "Improvement completion assurance" means a surety bond, letter of credit,
731     financial institution bond, cash, assignment of rights, lien, or other equivalent security required
732     by a county to guaranty the proper completion of landscaping or an infrastructure improvement
733     required as a condition precedent to:
734          (a) recording a subdivision plat; or
735          (b) development of a commercial, industrial, mixed use, or multifamily project.
736          (26) "Improvement warranty" means an applicant's unconditional warranty that the
737     applicant's installed and accepted landscaping or infrastructure improvement:
738          (a) complies with the county's written standards for design, materials, and

739     workmanship; and
740          (b) will not fail in any material respect, as a result of poor workmanship or materials,
741     within the improvement warranty period.
742          (27) "Improvement warranty period" means a period:
743          (a) no later than one year after a county's acceptance of required landscaping; or
744          (b) no later than one year after a county's acceptance of required infrastructure, unless
745     the county:
746          (i) determines for good cause that a one-year period would be inadequate to protect the
747     public health, safety, and welfare; and
748          (ii) has substantial evidence, on record:
749          (A) of prior poor performance by the applicant; or
750          (B) that the area upon which the infrastructure will be constructed contains suspect soil
751     and the county has not otherwise required the applicant to mitigate the suspect soil.
752          (28) "Infrastructure improvement" means permanent infrastructure that is essential for
753     the public health and safety or that:
754          (a) is required for human consumption; and
755          (b) an applicant must install:
756          (i) in accordance with published installation and inspection specifications for public
757     improvements; and
758          (ii) as a condition of:
759          (A) recording a subdivision plat;
760          (B) obtaining a building permit; or
761          (C) developing a commercial, industrial, mixed use, condominium, or multifamily
762     project.
763          (29) "Internal lot restriction" means a platted note, platted demarcation, or platted
764     designation that:
765          (a) runs with the land; and
766          (b) (i) creates a restriction that is enclosed within the perimeter of a lot described on
767     the plat; or
768          (ii) designates a development condition that is enclosed within the perimeter of a lot
769     described on the plat.

770          (30) "Interstate pipeline company" means a person or entity engaged in natural gas
771     transportation subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission under
772     the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 717 et seq.
773          (31) "Intrastate pipeline company" means a person or entity engaged in natural gas
774     transportation that is not subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory
775     Commission under the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 717 et seq.
776          (32) "Land use applicant" means a property owner, or the property owner's designee,
777     who submits a land use application regarding the property owner's land.
778          (33) "Land use application":
779          (a) means an application that is:
780          (i) required by a county; and
781          (ii) submitted by a land use applicant to obtain a land use decision; and
782          (b) does not mean an application to enact, amend, or repeal a land use regulation.
783          (34) "Land use authority" means:
784          (a) a person, board, commission, agency, or body, including the local legislative body,
785     designated by the local legislative body to act upon a land use application; or
786          (b) if the local legislative body has not designated a person, board, commission,
787     agency, or body, the local legislative body.
788          (35) "Land use decision" means an administrative decision of a land use authority or
789     appeal authority regarding:
790          (a) a land use permit;
791          (b) a land use application; or
792          (c) the enforcement of a land use regulation, land use permit, or development
793     agreement.
794          (36) "Land use permit" means a permit issued by a land use authority.
795          (37) "Land use regulation":
796          (a) means a legislative decision enacted by ordinance, law, code, map, resolution,
797     specification, fee, or rule that governs the use or development of land;
798          (b) includes the adoption or amendment of a zoning map or the text of the zoning code;
799     and
800          (c) does not include:

801          (i) a land use decision of the legislative body acting as the land use authority, even if
802     the decision is expressed in a resolution or ordinance; or
803          (ii) a temporary revision to an engineering specification that does not materially:
804          (A) increase a land use applicant's cost of development compared to the existing
805     specification; or
806          (B) impact a land use applicant's use of land.
807          (38) "Legislative body" means the county legislative body, or for a county that has
808     adopted an alternative form of government, the body exercising legislative powers.
809          (39) "Lot" means a tract of land, regardless of any label, that is created by and shown
810     on a subdivision plat that has been recorded in the office of the county recorder.
811          (40) (a) "Lot line adjustment" means a relocation of a lot line boundary between
812     adjoining lots or between a lot and adjoining parcels in accordance with Section 17-27a-608:
813          (i) whether or not the lots are located in the same subdivision; and
814          (ii) with the consent of the owners of record.
815          (b) "Lot line adjustment" does not mean a new boundary line that:
816          (i) creates an additional lot; or
817          (ii) constitutes a subdivision or a subdivision amendment.
818          (c) "Lot line adjustment" does not include a boundary line adjustment made by the
819     Department of Transportation.
820          (41) "Major transit investment corridor" means public transit service that uses or
821     occupies:
822          (a) public transit rail right-of-way;
823          (b) dedicated road right-of-way for the use of public transit, such as bus rapid transit;
824     or
825          (c) fixed-route bus corridors subject to an interlocal agreement or contract between a
826     municipality or county and:
827          (i) a public transit district as defined in Section 17B-2a-802; or
828          (ii) an eligible political subdivision as defined in Section 59-12-2219.
829          (42) "Moderate income housing" means housing occupied or reserved for occupancy
830     by households with a gross household income equal to or less than 80% of the median gross
831     income for households of the same size in the county in which the housing is located.

832          (43) "Mountainous planning district" means an area designated by a county legislative
833     body in accordance with Section 17-27a-901.
834          (44) "Nominal fee" means a fee that reasonably reimburses a county only for time spent
835     and expenses incurred in:
836          (a) verifying that building plans are identical plans; and
837          (b) reviewing and approving those minor aspects of identical plans that differ from the
838     previously reviewed and approved building plans.
839          (45) "Noncomplying structure" means a structure that:
840          (a) legally existed before the structure's current land use designation; and
841          (b) because of one or more subsequent land use ordinance changes, does not conform
842     to the setback, height restrictions, or other regulations, excluding those regulations that govern
843     the use of land.
844          (46) "Nonconforming use" means a use of land that:
845          (a) legally existed before the current land use designation;
846          (b) has been maintained continuously since the time the land use ordinance regulation
847     governing the land changed; and
848          (c) because of one or more subsequent land use ordinance changes, does not conform
849     to the regulations that now govern the use of the land.
850          (47) "Official map" means a map drawn by county authorities and recorded in the
851     county recorder's office that:
852          (a) shows actual and proposed rights-of-way, centerline alignments, and setbacks for
853     highways and other transportation facilities;
854          (b) provides a basis for restricting development in designated rights-of-way or between
855     designated setbacks to allow the government authorities time to purchase or otherwise reserve
856     the land; and
857          (c) has been adopted as an element of the county's general plan.
858          (48) "Parcel" means any real property that is not a lot.
859          (49) (a) "Parcel boundary adjustment" means a recorded agreement between owners of
860     adjoining parcels adjusting the mutual boundary, either by deed or by a boundary line
861     agreement in accordance with Section 17-27a-523, if no additional parcel is created and:
862          (i) none of the property identified in the agreement is a lot; or

863          (ii) the adjustment is to the boundaries of a single person's parcels.
864          (b) "Parcel boundary adjustment" does not mean an adjustment of a parcel boundary
865     line that:
866          (i) creates an additional parcel; or
867          (ii) constitutes a subdivision.
868          (c) "Parcel boundary adjustment" does not include a boundary line adjustment made by
869     the Department of Transportation.
870          (50) "Person" means an individual, corporation, partnership, organization, association,
871     trust, governmental agency, or any other legal entity.
872          (51) "Plan for moderate income housing" means a written document adopted by a
873     county legislative body that includes:
874          (a) an estimate of the existing supply of moderate income housing located within the
875     county;
876          (b) an estimate of the need for moderate income housing in the county for the next five
877     years;
878          (c) a survey of total residential land use;
879          (d) an evaluation of how existing land uses and zones affect opportunities for moderate
880     income housing; and
881          (e) a description of the county's program to encourage an adequate supply of moderate
882     income housing.
883          (52) "Planning advisory area" means a contiguous, geographically defined portion of
884     the unincorporated area of a county established under this part with planning and zoning
885     functions as exercised through the planning advisory area planning commission, as provided in
886     this chapter, but with no legal or political identity separate from the county and no taxing
887     authority.
888          (53) "Plat" means an instrument subdividing property into lots as depicted on a map or
889     other graphical representation of lands that a licensed professional land surveyor makes and
890     prepares in accordance with Section 17-27a-603 or 57-8-13.
891          (54) "Potential geologic hazard area" means an area that:
892          (a) is designated by a Utah Geological Survey map, county geologist map, or other
893     relevant map or report as needing further study to determine the area's potential for geologic

894     hazard; or
895          (b) has not been studied by the Utah Geological Survey or a county geologist but
896     presents the potential of geologic hazard because the area has characteristics similar to those of
897     a designated geologic hazard area.
898          (55) "Public agency" means:
899          (a) the federal government;
900          (b) the state;
901          (c) a county, municipality, school district, special district, special service district, or
902     other political subdivision of the state; or
903          (d) a charter school.
904          (56) "Public hearing" means a hearing at which members of the public are provided a
905     reasonable opportunity to comment on the subject of the hearing.
906          (57) "Public meeting" means a meeting that is required to be open to the public under
907     Title 52, Chapter 4, Open and Public Meetings Act.
908          (58) "Public street" means a public right-of-way, including a public highway, public
909     avenue, public boulevard, public parkway, public road, public lane, public alley, public
910     viaduct, public subway, public tunnel, public bridge, public byway, other public transportation
911     easement, or other public way.
912          (59) "Receiving zone" means an unincorporated area of a county that the county
913     designates, by ordinance, as an area in which an owner of land may receive a transferable
914     development right.
915          (60) "Record of survey map" means a map of a survey of land prepared in accordance
916     with Section 10-9a-603, 17-23-17, 17-27a-603, or 57-8-13.
917          (61) "Residential facility for persons with a disability" means a residence:
918          (a) in which more than one person with a disability resides; and
919          (b) which is licensed or certified by the Department of Health and Human Services
920     under:
921          (i) Title 26B, Chapter 2, Part 1, Human Services Programs and Facilities; or
922          (ii) Title 26B, Chapter 2, Part 2, Health Care Facility Licensing and Inspection.
923          (62) "Residential roadway" means a public local residential road that:
924          (a) will serve primarily to provide access to adjacent primarily residential areas and

925     property;
926          (b) is designed to accommodate minimal traffic volumes or vehicular traffic;
927          (c) is not identified as a supplementary to a collector or other higher system classified
928     street in an approved municipal street or transportation master plan;
929          (d) has a posted speed limit of 25 miles per hour or less;
930          (e) does not have higher traffic volumes resulting from connecting previously separated
931     areas of the municipal road network;
932          (f) cannot have a primary access, but can have a secondary access, and does not abut
933     lots intended for high volume traffic or community centers, including schools, recreation
934     centers, sports complexes, or libraries; and
935          (g) primarily serves traffic within a neighborhood or limited residential area and is not
936     necessarily continuous through several residential areas.
937          (63) "Rules of order and procedure" means a set of rules that govern and prescribe in a
938     public meeting:
939          (a) parliamentary order and procedure;
940          (b) ethical behavior; and
941          (c) civil discourse.
942          (64) "Sanitary sewer authority" means the department, agency, or public entity with
943     responsibility to review and approve the feasibility of sanitary sewer services or onsite
944     wastewater systems.
945          (65) "Sending zone" means an unincorporated area of a county that the county
946     designates, by ordinance, as an area from which an owner of land may transfer a transferable
947     development right.
948          (66) "Site plan" means a document or map that may be required by a county during a
949     preliminary review preceding the issuance of a building permit to demonstrate that an owner's
950     or developer's proposed development activity meets a land use requirement.
951          (67) (a) "Special district" means an entity under Title 17B, Limited Purpose Local
952     Government Entities - Special Districts.
953          (b) "Special district" includes a governmental or quasi-governmental entity that is not a
954     county, municipality, school district, or the state.
955          (68) "Specified public agency" means:

956          (a) the state;
957          (b) a school district; or
958          (c) a charter school.
959          (69) "Specified public utility" means an electrical corporation, gas corporation, or
960     telephone corporation, as those terms are defined in Section 54-2-1.
961          (70) "State" includes any department, division, or agency of the state.
962          (71) (a) "Subdivision" means any land that is divided, resubdivided, or proposed to be
963     divided into two or more lots or other division of land for the purpose, whether immediate or
964     future, for offer, sale, lease, or development either on the installment plan or upon any and all
965     other plans, terms, and conditions.
966          (b) "Subdivision" includes:
967          (i) the division or development of land, whether by deed, metes and bounds
968     description, devise and testacy, map, plat, or other recorded instrument, regardless of whether
969     the division includes all or a portion of a parcel or lot; and
970          (ii) except as provided in Subsection (70)(c), divisions of land for residential and
971     nonresidential uses, including land used or to be used for commercial, agricultural, and
972     industrial purposes.
973          (c) "Subdivision" does not include:
974          (i) a bona fide division or partition of agricultural land for agricultural purposes;
975          (ii) a boundary line agreement recorded with the county recorder's office between
976     owners of adjoining parcels adjusting the mutual boundary in accordance with Section
977     17-27a-523 if no new lot is created;
978          (iii) a recorded document, executed by the owner of record:
979          (A) revising the legal descriptions of multiple parcels into one legal description
980     encompassing all such parcels; or
981          (B) joining a lot to a parcel;
982          (iv) a bona fide division or partition of land in a county other than a first class county
983     for the purpose of siting, on one or more of the resulting separate parcels:
984          (A) an electrical transmission line or a substation;
985          (B) a natural gas pipeline or a regulation station; or
986          (C) an unmanned telecommunications, microwave, fiber optic, electrical, or other

987     utility service regeneration, transformation, retransmission, or amplification facility;
988          (v) a boundary line agreement between owners of adjoining subdivided properties
989     adjusting the mutual lot line boundary in accordance with Sections 17-27a-523 and 17-27a-608
990     if:
991          (A) no new dwelling lot or housing unit will result from the adjustment; and
992          (B) the adjustment will not violate any applicable land use ordinance;
993          (vi) a bona fide division of land by deed or other instrument if the deed or other
994     instrument states in writing that the division:
995          (A) is in anticipation of future land use approvals on the parcel or parcels;
996          (B) does not confer any land use approvals; and
997          (C) has not been approved by the land use authority;
998          (vii) a parcel boundary adjustment;
999          (viii) a lot line adjustment;
1000          (ix) a road, street, or highway dedication plat;
1001          (x) a deed or easement for a road, street, or highway purpose; or
1002          (xi) any other division of land authorized by law.
1003          (72) (a) "Subdivision amendment" means an amendment to a recorded subdivision in
1004     accordance with Section 17-27a-608 that:
1005          (i) vacates all or a portion of the subdivision;
1006          (ii) alters the outside boundary of the subdivision;
1007          (iii) changes the number of lots within the subdivision;
1008          (iv) alters a public right-of-way, a public easement, or public infrastructure within the
1009     subdivision; or
1010          (v) alters a common area or other common amenity within the subdivision.
1011          (b) "Subdivision amendment" does not include a lot line adjustment, between a single
1012     lot and an adjoining lot or parcel, that alters the outside boundary of the subdivision.
1013          (73) "Substantial evidence" means evidence that:
1014          (a) is beyond a scintilla; and
1015          (b) a reasonable mind would accept as adequate to support a conclusion.
1016          (74) "Suspect soil" means soil that has:
1017          (a) a high susceptibility for volumetric change, typically clay rich, having more than a

1018     3% swell potential;
1019          (b) bedrock units with high shrink or swell susceptibility; or
1020          (c) gypsiferous silt and clay, gypsum, or bedrock units containing abundant gypsum
1021     commonly associated with dissolution and collapse features.
1022          (75) "Therapeutic school" means a residential group living facility:
1023          (a) for four or more individuals who are not related to:
1024          (i) the owner of the facility; or
1025          (ii) the primary service provider of the facility;
1026          (b) that serves students who have a history of failing to function:
1027          (i) at home;
1028          (ii) in a public school; or
1029          (iii) in a nonresidential private school; and
1030          (c) that offers:
1031          (i) room and board; and
1032          (ii) an academic education integrated with:
1033          (A) specialized structure and supervision; or
1034          (B) services or treatment related to a disability, an emotional development, a
1035     behavioral development, a familial development, or a social development.
1036          (76) "Transferable development right" means a right to develop and use land that
1037     originates by an ordinance that authorizes a land owner in a designated sending zone to transfer
1038     land use rights from a designated sending zone to a designated receiving zone.
1039          (77) "Unincorporated" means the area outside of the incorporated area of a
1040     municipality.
1041          (78) "Water interest" means any right to the beneficial use of water, including:
1042          (a) each of the rights listed in Section 73-1-11; and
1043          (b) an ownership interest in the right to the beneficial use of water represented by:
1044          (i) a contract; or
1045          (ii) a share in a water company, as defined in Section 73-3-3.5.
1046          (79) "Zoning map" means a map, adopted as part of a land use ordinance, that depicts
1047     land use zones, overlays, or districts.
1048          Section 4. Section 17-27a-508 is amended to read:

1049          17-27a-508. Applicant's entitlement to land use application approval --
1050     Application relating to land in a high priority transportation corridor -- County's
1051     requirements and limitations -- Vesting upon submission of development plan and
1052     schedule.
1053          (1) (a) (i) An applicant who has submitted a complete land use application, including
1054     the payment of all application fees, is entitled to substantive review of the application under the
1055     land use regulations:
1056          (A) in effect on the date that the application is complete; and
1057          (B) applicable to the application or to the information shown on the submitted
1058     application.
1059          (ii) An applicant is entitled to approval of a land use application if the application
1060     conforms to the requirements of the applicable land use regulations, land use decisions, and
1061     development standards in effect when the applicant submits a complete application and pays all
1062     application fees, unless:
1063          (A) the land use authority, on the record, formally finds that a compelling,
1064     countervailing public interest would be jeopardized by approving the application and specifies
1065     the compelling, countervailing public interest in writing; or
1066          (B) in the manner provided by local ordinance and before the applicant submits the
1067     application, the county formally initiates proceedings to amend the county's land use
1068     regulations in a manner that would prohibit approval of the application as submitted.
1069          (b) The county shall process an application without regard to proceedings the county
1070     initiated to amend the county's ordinances as described in Subsection (1)(a)(ii)(B) if:
1071          (i) 180 days have passed since the county initiated the proceedings; and
1072          (ii) (A) the proceedings have not resulted in an enactment that prohibits approval of the
1073     application as submitted; or
1074          (B) during the 12 months prior to the county processing the application or multiple
1075     applications of the same type, the application is impaired or prohibited under the terms of a
1076     temporary land use regulation adopted under Section 17-27a-504.
1077          (c) A land use application is considered submitted and complete when the applicant
1078     provides the application in a form that complies with the requirements of applicable ordinances
1079     and pays all applicable fees.

1080          (d) The continuing validity of an approval of a land use application is conditioned upon
1081     the applicant proceeding after approval to implement the approval with reasonable diligence.
1082          (e) A county may not impose on an applicant who has submitted a complete
1083     application a requirement that is not expressed in:
1084          (i) this chapter;
1085          (ii) a county ordinance in effect on the date that the applicant submits a complete
1086     application, subject to Subsection 17-27a-508(1)(a)(ii); or
1087          (iii) a county specification for public improvements applicable to a subdivision or
1088     development that is in effect on the date that the applicant submits an application.
1089          (f) A county may not impose on a holder of an issued land use permit or a final,
1090     unexpired subdivision plat a requirement that is not expressed:
1091          (i) in a land use permit;
1092          (ii) on the subdivision plat;
1093          (iii) in a document on which the land use permit or subdivision plat is based;
1094          (iv) in the written record evidencing approval of the land use permit or subdivision
1095     plat;
1096          (v) in this chapter;
1097          (vi) in a county ordinance; or
1098          (vii) in a county specification for residential roadways in effect at the time a residential
1099     subdivision was approved.
1100          (g) Except as provided in Subsection (1)(h), a county may not withhold issuance of a
1101     certificate of occupancy or acceptance of subdivision improvements because of an applicant's
1102     failure to comply with a requirement that is not expressed:
1103          (i) in the building permit or subdivision plat, documents on which the building permit
1104     or subdivision plat is based, or the written record evidencing approval of the building permit or
1105     subdivision plat; or
1106          (ii) in this chapter or the county's ordinances.
1107          (h) A county may not unreasonably withhold issuance of a certificate of occupancy
1108     where an applicant has met all requirements essential for the public health, public safety, and
1109     general welfare of the occupants, in accordance with this chapter, unless:
1110          (i) the applicant and the county have agreed in a written document to the withholding

1111     of a certificate of occupancy; or
1112          (ii) the applicant has not provided a financial assurance for required and uncompleted
1113     public landscaping improvements or infrastructure improvements in accordance with an
1114     applicable ordinance that the legislative body adopts under this chapter.
1115          (2) A county is bound by the terms and standards of applicable land use regulations and
1116     shall comply with mandatory provisions of those regulations.
1117          (3) A county may not, as a condition of land use application approval, require a person
1118     filing a land use application to obtain documentation regarding a school district's willingness,
1119     capacity, or ability to serve the development proposed in the land use application.
1120          (4) Upon a specified public agency's submission of a development plan and schedule as
1121     required in Subsection 17-27a-305(8) that complies with the requirements of that subsection,
1122     the specified public agency vests in the county's applicable land use maps, zoning map, hookup
1123     fees, impact fees, other applicable development fees, and land use regulations in effect on the
1124     date of submission.
1125          (5) (a) If sponsors of a referendum timely challenge a project in accordance with
1126     Subsection [20A-7-601(6)] 20A-7-601(7), the project's affected owner may rescind the
1127     project's land use approval by delivering a written notice:
1128          (i) to the local clerk as defined in Section 20A-7-101; and
1129          (ii) no later than seven days after the day on which a petition for a referendum is
1130     determined sufficient under Subsection 20A-7-607(5).
1131          (b) Upon delivery of a written notice described in Subsection(5)(a) the following are
1132     rescinded and are of no further force or effect:
1133          (i) the relevant land use approval; and
1134          (ii) any land use regulation enacted specifically in relation to the land use approval.
1135          Section 5. Section 20A-1-102 is amended to read:
1136          20A-1-102. Definitions.
1137          As used in this title:
1138          (1) "Active voter" means a registered voter who has not been classified as an inactive
1139     voter by the county clerk.
1140          (2) "Automatic tabulating equipment" means apparatus that automatically examines
1141     and counts votes recorded on ballots and tabulates the results.

1142          (3) (a) "Ballot" means the storage medium, including a paper, mechanical, or electronic
1143     storage medium, that records an individual voter's vote.
1144          (b) "Ballot" does not include a record to tally multiple votes.
1145          (4) "Ballot proposition" means a question, issue, or proposal that is submitted to voters
1146     on the ballot for their approval or rejection including:
1147          (a) an opinion question specifically authorized by the Legislature;
1148          (b) a constitutional amendment;
1149          (c) an initiative;
1150          (d) a referendum;
1151          (e) a bond proposition;
1152          (f) a judicial retention question;
1153          (g) an incorporation of a city or town; or
1154          (h) any other ballot question specifically authorized by the Legislature.
1155          (5) "Bind," "binding," or "bound" means securing more than one piece of paper
1156     together using staples or another means in at least three places across the top of the paper in the
1157     blank space reserved for securing the paper.
1158          (6) "Board of canvassers" means the entities established by Sections 20A-4-301 and
1159     20A-4-306 to canvass election returns.
1160          (7) "Bond election" means an election held for the purpose of approving or rejecting
1161     the proposed issuance of bonds by a government entity.
1162          (8) "Business reply mail envelope" means an envelope that may be mailed free of
1163     charge by the sender.
1164          (9) "Canvass" means the review of election returns and the official declaration of
1165     election results by the board of canvassers.
1166          (10) "Canvassing judge" means a poll worker designated to assist in counting ballots at
1167     the canvass.
1168          (11) "Contracting election officer" means an election officer who enters into a contract
1169     or interlocal agreement with a provider election officer.
1170          (12) "Convention" means the political party convention at which party officers and
1171     delegates are selected.
1172          (13) "Counting center" means one or more locations selected by the election officer in

1173     charge of the election for the automatic counting of ballots.
1174          (14) "Counting judge" means a poll worker designated to count the ballots during
1175     election day.
1176          (15) "Counting room" means a suitable and convenient private place or room for use
1177     by the poll workers and counting judges to count ballots.
1178          (16) "County officers" means those county officers that are required by law to be
1179     elected.
1180          (17) "Date of the election" or "election day" or "day of the election":
1181          (a) means the day that is specified in the calendar year as the day that the election
1182     occurs; and
1183          (b) does not include:
1184          (i) deadlines established for voting by mail, military-overseas voting, or emergency
1185     voting; or
1186          (ii) any early voting or early voting period as provided under Chapter 3a, Part 6, Early
1187     Voting.
1188          (18) "Elected official" means:
1189          (a) a person elected to an office under Section 20A-1-303 or Chapter 4, Part 6,
1190     Municipal Alternate Voting Methods Pilot Project;
1191          (b) a person who is considered to be elected to a municipal office in accordance with
1192     Subsection 20A-1-206(1)(c)(ii); or
1193          (c) a person who is considered to be elected to a special district office in accordance
1194     with Subsection 20A-1-206(3)(b)(ii).
1195          (19) "Election" means a regular general election, a municipal general election, a
1196     statewide special election, a local special election, a regular primary election, a municipal
1197     primary election, and a special district election.
1198          (20) "Election Assistance Commission" means the commission established by the Help
1199     America Vote Act of 2002, Pub. L. No. 107-252.
1200          (21) "Election cycle" means the period beginning on the first day persons are eligible to
1201     file declarations of candidacy and ending when the canvass is completed.
1202          (22) "Election judge" means a poll worker that is assigned to:
1203          (a) preside over other poll workers at a polling place;

1204          (b) act as the presiding election judge; or
1205          (c) serve as a canvassing judge, counting judge, or receiving judge.
1206          (23) "Election officer" means:
1207          (a) the lieutenant governor, for all statewide ballots and elections;
1208          (b) the county clerk for:
1209          (i) a county ballot and election; and
1210          (ii) a ballot and election as a provider election officer as provided in Section
1211     20A-5-400.1 or 20A-5-400.5;
1212          (c) the municipal clerk for:
1213          (i) a municipal ballot and election; and
1214          (ii) a ballot and election as a provider election officer as provided in Section
1215     20A-5-400.1 or 20A-5-400.5;
1216          (d) the special district clerk or chief executive officer for:
1217          (i) a special district ballot and election; and
1218          (ii) a ballot and election as a provider election officer as provided in Section
1219     20A-5-400.1 or 20A-5-400.5; or
1220          (e) the business administrator or superintendent of a school district for:
1221          (i) a school district ballot and election, including a ballot and election on a referendum
1222     under Subsection 20A-7-102(4); and
1223          (ii) a ballot and election as a provider election officer as provided in Section
1224     20A-5-400.1 or 20A-5-400.5.
1225          (24) "Election official" means any election officer, election judge, or poll worker.
1226          (25) "Election results" means:
1227          (a) for an election other than a bond election, the count of votes cast in the election and
1228     the election returns requested by the board of canvassers; or
1229          (b) for bond elections, the count of those votes cast for and against the bond
1230     proposition plus any or all of the election returns that the board of canvassers may request.
1231          (26) "Election returns" includes:
1232          (a) the pollbook, the military and overseas absentee voter registration and voting
1233     certificates, one of the tally sheets, any unprocessed ballots, all counted ballots, all excess
1234     ballots, all unused ballots, all spoiled ballots, the ballot disposition form, and the total votes

1235     cast form; and
1236          (b) the record, described in Subsection 20A-3a-401(8)(c), of voters contacted to cure a
1237     ballot.
1238          (27) "Electronic signature" means an electronic sound, symbol, or process attached to
1239     or logically associated with a record and executed or adopted by a person with the intent to sign
1240     the record.
1241          (28) "Inactive voter" means a registered voter who is listed as inactive by a county
1242     clerk under Subsection 20A-2-505(4)(c)(i) or (ii).
1243          (29) "Judicial office" means the office filled by any judicial officer.
1244          (30) "Judicial officer" means any justice or judge of a court of record or any county
1245     court judge.
1246          (31) "Local election" means a regular county election, a regular municipal election, a
1247     municipal primary election, a local special election, a special district election, and a bond
1248     election.
1249          (32) "Local political subdivision" means a county, a municipality, a special district, or
1250     a local school district.
1251          (33) "Local special election" means a special election called by the governing body of a
1252     local political subdivision in which all registered voters of the local political subdivision may
1253     vote.
1254          (34) "Manual ballot" means a paper document produced by an election officer on
1255     which an individual records an individual's vote by directly placing a mark on the paper
1256     document using a pen or other marking instrument.
1257          (35) "Mechanical ballot" means a record, including a paper record, electronic record, or
1258     mechanical record, that:
1259          (a) is created via electronic or mechanical means; and
1260          (b) records an individual voter's vote cast via a method other than an individual directly
1261     placing a mark, using a pen or other marking instrument, to record an individual voter's vote.
1262          (36) "Municipal executive" means:
1263          (a) the mayor in the council-mayor form of government defined in Section 10-3b-102;
1264          (b) the mayor in the council-manager form of government defined in Subsection
1265     10-3b-103(7); or

1266          (c) the mayor of a metro township form of government defined in Section 10-3b-102.
1267          (37) "Municipal general election" means the election held in municipalities and, as
1268     applicable, special districts on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November of each
1269     odd-numbered year for the purposes established in Section 20A-1-202.
1270          (38) "Municipal legislative body" means:
1271          (a) the council of the city or town in any form of municipal government; or
1272          (b) the council of a metro township.
1273          (39) "Municipal office" means an elective office in a municipality.
1274          (40) "Municipal officers" means those municipal officers that are required by law to be
1275     elected.
1276          (41) "Municipal primary election" means an election held to nominate candidates for
1277     municipal office.
1278          (42) "Municipality" means a city, town, or metro township.
1279          (43) "Official ballot" means the ballots distributed by the election officer for voters to
1280     record their votes.
1281          (44) "Official endorsement" means the information on the ballot that identifies:
1282          (a) the ballot as an official ballot;
1283          (b) the date of the election; and
1284          (c) (i) for a ballot prepared by an election officer other than a county clerk, the
1285     facsimile signature required by Subsection 20A-6-401(1)(a)(iii); or
1286          (ii) for a ballot prepared by a county clerk, the words required by Subsection
1287     20A-6-301(1)(b)(iii).
1288          (45) "Official register" means the official record furnished to election officials by the
1289     election officer that contains the information required by Section 20A-5-401.
1290          (46) "Political party" means an organization of registered voters that has qualified to
1291     participate in an election by meeting the requirements of Chapter 8, Political Party Formation
1292     and Procedures.
1293          (47) (a) "Poll worker" means a person assigned by an election official to assist with an
1294     election, voting, or counting votes.
1295          (b) "Poll worker" includes election judges.
1296          (c) "Poll worker" does not include a watcher.

1297          (48) "Pollbook" means a record of the names of voters in the order that they appear to
1298     cast votes.
1299          (49) "Polling place" means a building where voting is conducted.
1300          (50) "Position" means a square, circle, rectangle, or other geometric shape on a ballot
1301     in which the voter marks the voter's choice.
1302          (51) "Presidential Primary Election" means the election established in Chapter 9, Part
1303     8, Presidential Primary Election.
1304          (52) "Primary convention" means the political party conventions held during the year
1305     of the regular general election.
1306          (53) "Protective counter" means a separate counter, which cannot be reset, that:
1307          (a) is built into a voting machine; and
1308          (b) records the total number of movements of the operating lever.
1309          (54) "Provider election officer" means an election officer who enters into a contract or
1310     interlocal agreement with a contracting election officer to conduct an election for the
1311     contracting election officer's local political subdivision in accordance with Section
1312     20A-5-400.1.
1313          (55) "Provisional ballot" means a ballot voted provisionally by a person:
1314          (a) whose name is not listed on the official register at the polling place;
1315          (b) whose legal right to vote is challenged as provided in this title; or
1316          (c) whose identity was not sufficiently established by a poll worker.
1317          (56) "Provisional ballot envelope" means an envelope printed in the form required by
1318     Section 20A-6-105 that is used to identify provisional ballots and to provide information to
1319     verify a person's legal right to vote.
1320          (57) (a) "Public figure" means an individual who, due to the individual being
1321     considered for, holding, or having held a position of prominence in a public or private capacity,
1322     or due to the individual's celebrity status, has an increased risk to the individual's safety.
1323          (b) "Public figure" does not include an individual:
1324          (i) elected to public office; or
1325          (ii) appointed to fill a vacancy in an elected public office.
1326          (58) "Qualify" or "qualified" means to take the oath of office and begin performing the
1327     duties of the position for which the individual was elected.

1328          (59) "Receiving judge" means the poll worker that checks the voter's name in the
1329     official register at a polling place and provides the voter with a ballot.
1330          (60) "Registration form" means a form by which an individual may register to vote
1331     under this title.
1332          (61) "Regular ballot" means a ballot that is not a provisional ballot.
1333          (62) "Regular general election" means the election held throughout the state on the first
1334     Tuesday after the first Monday in November of each even-numbered year for the purposes
1335     established in Section 20A-1-201.
1336          (63) "Regular primary election" means the election, held on the date specified in
1337     Section 20A-1-201.5, to nominate candidates of political parties and candidates for nonpartisan
1338     local school board positions to advance to the regular general election.
1339          (64) "Resident" means a person who resides within a specific voting precinct in Utah.
1340          (65) "Return envelope" means the envelope, described in Subsection 20A-3a-202(4),
1341     provided to a voter with a manual ballot:
1342          (a) into which the voter places the manual ballot after the voter has voted the manual
1343     ballot in order to preserve the secrecy of the voter's vote; and
1344          (b) that includes the voter affidavit and a place for the voter's signature.
1345          (66) "Sample ballot" means a mock ballot similar in form to the official ballot,
1346     published as provided in Section 20A-5-405.
1347          (67) "Special district" means a local government entity under Title 17B, Limited
1348     Purpose Local Government Entities - Special Districts, and includes a special service district
1349     under Title 17D, Chapter 1, Special Service District Act.
1350          (68) "Special district officers" means those special district board members who are
1351     required by law to be elected.
1352          (69) "Special election" means an election held as authorized by Section 20A-1-203.
1353          (70) "Spoiled ballot" means each ballot that:
1354          (a) is spoiled by the voter;
1355          (b) is unable to be voted because it was spoiled by the printer or a poll worker; or
1356          (c) lacks the official endorsement.
1357          (71) "Statewide special election" means a special election called by the governor or the
1358     Legislature in which all registered voters in Utah may vote.

1359          (72) "Tabulation system" means a device or system designed for the sole purpose of
1360     tabulating votes cast by voters at an election.
1361          (73) "Ticket" means a list of:
1362          (a) political parties;
1363          (b) candidates for an office; or
1364          (c) ballot propositions.
1365          (74) "Transfer case" means the sealed box used to transport voted ballots to the
1366     counting center.
1367          (75) "Vacancy" means:
1368          (a) except as provided in Subsection (75)(b), the absence of an individual to serve in a
1369     position created by state constitution or state statute, whether that absence occurs because of
1370     death, disability, disqualification, resignation, or other cause; or
1371          (b) in relation to a candidate for a position created by state constitution or state statute,
1372     the removal of a candidate due to the candidate's death, resignation, or disqualification.
1373          (76) "Valid voter identification" means:
1374          (a) a form of identification that bears the name and photograph of the voter which may
1375     include:
1376          (i) a currently valid Utah driver license;
1377          (ii) a currently valid identification card that is issued by:
1378          (A) the state; or
1379          (B) a branch, department, or agency of the United States;
1380          (iii) a currently valid Utah permit to carry a concealed weapon;
1381          (iv) a currently valid United States passport; or
1382          (v) a currently valid United States military identification card;
1383          (b) one of the following identification cards, whether or not the card includes a
1384     photograph of the voter:
1385          (i) a valid tribal identification card;
1386          (ii) a Bureau of Indian Affairs card; or
1387          (iii) a tribal treaty card; or
1388          (c) two forms of identification not listed under Subsection (76)(a) or (b) but that bear
1389     the name of the voter and provide evidence that the voter resides in the voting precinct, which

1390     may include:
1391          (i) a current utility bill or a legible copy thereof, dated within the 90 days before the
1392     election;
1393          (ii) a bank or other financial account statement, or a legible copy thereof;
1394          (iii) a certified birth certificate;
1395          (iv) a valid social security card;
1396          (v) a check issued by the state or the federal government or a legible copy thereof;
1397          (vi) a paycheck from the voter's employer, or a legible copy thereof;
1398          (vii) a currently valid Utah hunting or fishing license;
1399          (viii) certified naturalization documentation;
1400          (ix) a currently valid license issued by an authorized agency of the United States;
1401          (x) a certified copy of court records showing the voter's adoption or name change;
1402          (xi) a valid Medicaid card, Medicare card, or Electronic Benefits Transfer Card;
1403          (xii) a currently valid identification card issued by:
1404          (A) a local government within the state;
1405          (B) an employer for an employee; or
1406          (C) a college, university, technical school, or professional school located within the
1407     state; or
1408          (xiii) a current Utah vehicle registration.
1409          (77) "Valid write-in candidate" means a candidate who has qualified as a write-in
1410     candidate by following the procedures and requirements of this title.
1411          (78) "Vote by mail" means to vote, using a manual ballot that is mailed to the voter, by:
1412          (a) mailing the ballot to the location designated in the mailing; or
1413          (b) depositing the ballot in a ballot drop box designated by the election officer.
1414          (79) "Voter" means an individual who:
1415          (a) meets the requirements for voting in an election;
1416          (b) meets the requirements of election registration;
1417          (c) is registered to vote; and
1418          (d) is listed in the official register book.
1419          (80) "Voter registration deadline" means the registration deadline provided in Section
1420     20A-2-102.5.

1421          (81) "Voting area" means the area within six feet of the voting booths, voting
1422     machines, and ballot box.
1423          (82) "Voting booth" means:
1424          (a) the space or compartment within a polling place that is provided for the preparation
1425     of ballots, including the voting enclosure or curtain; or
1426          (b) a voting device that is free standing.
1427          (83) "Voting device" means any device provided by an election officer for a voter to
1428     vote a mechanical ballot.
1429          (84) "Voting precinct" means the smallest geographical voting unit, established under
1430     Chapter 5, Part 3, Duties of the County and Municipal Legislative Bodies.
1431          (85) "Watcher" means an individual who complies with the requirements described in
1432     Section 20A-3a-801 to become a watcher for an election.
1433          (86) "Write-in ballot" means a ballot containing any write-in votes.
1434          (87) "Write-in vote" means a vote cast for an individual, whose name is not printed on
1435     the ballot, in accordance with the procedures established in this title.
1436          Section 6. Section 20A-4-301 is amended to read:
1437          20A-4-301. Board of canvassers.
1438          (1) (a) Each county legislative body is the board of county canvassers for:
1439          (i) the county; and
1440          (ii) each special district whose election is conducted by the county if:
1441          (A) the election relates to the creation of the special district;
1442          (B) the county legislative body serves as the governing body of the special district; or
1443          (C) there is no duly constituted governing body of the special district.
1444          (b) The board of county canvassers shall meet to canvass the returns at the usual place
1445     of meeting of the county legislative body, at a date and time determined by the county clerk
1446     that is no sooner than seven days after the election and no later than 14 days after the election.
1447          (c) If one or more of the county legislative body fails to attend the meeting of the board
1448     of county canvassers, the remaining members shall replace the absent member by appointing in
1449     the order named:
1450          (i) the county treasurer;
1451          (ii) the county assessor; or

1452          (iii) the county sheriff.
1453          (d) Attendance of the number of persons equal to a simple majority of the county
1454     legislative body, but not less than three persons, shall constitute a quorum for conducting the
1455     canvass.
1456          (e) The county clerk is the clerk of the board of county canvassers.
1457          (2) (a) The mayor and the municipal legislative body are the board of municipal
1458     canvassers for the municipality.
1459          (b) The board of municipal canvassers shall meet to canvass the returns at the usual
1460     place of meeting of the municipal legislative body:
1461          (i) for canvassing of returns from a municipal general election, no sooner than seven
1462     days after the election and no later than 14 days after the election; or
1463          (ii) for canvassing of returns from a municipal primary election, no sooner than seven
1464     days after the election and no later than 14 days after the election.
1465          (c) Attendance of a simple majority of the municipal legislative body shall constitute a
1466     quorum for conducting the canvass.
1467          (3) (a) The legislative body of the entity authorizing a bond election is the board of
1468     canvassers for each bond election.
1469          (b) The board of canvassers for the bond election shall comply with the canvassing
1470     procedures and requirements of Section 11-14-207.
1471          (c) Attendance of a simple majority of the legislative body of the entity authorizing a
1472     bond election shall constitute a quorum for conducting the canvass.
1473          (4) (a) The local school board of a school district is the board of school district
1474     canvassers for a referendum election under Subsection 20A-7-102(4).
1475          (b) The board of school district canvassers shall meet to canvass the returns at the usual
1476     place of meeting of the local school board no sooner than seven days after the election and no
1477     later than 14 days after the election.
1478          (c) Attendance of a simple majority of the local school board shall constitute a quorum
1479     for conducting the canvass.
1480          Section 7. Section 20A-7-101 is amended to read:
1481          20A-7-101. Definitions.
1482          As used in this chapter:

1483          (1) "Approved device" means a device described in Subsection 20A-21-201(4) used to
1484     gather signatures for the electronic initiative process, the electronic referendum process, or the
1485     electronic candidate qualification process.
1486          (2) "Budget officer" means:
1487          (a) for a county, the person designated as finance officer as defined in Section 17-36-3;
1488          (b) for a city, the person designated as budget officer in Subsection 10-6-106(4);
1489          (c) for a town, the town council; [or]
1490          (d) for a metro township, the person described in Subsection (2)(a) for the county in
1491     which the metro township is located[.]; or
1492          (e) for a school district, the person appointed business administrator under Section
1493     53G-4-302.
1494          (3) "Certified" means that the county clerk has acknowledged a signature as being the
1495     signature of a registered voter.
1496          (4) "Circulation" means the process of submitting an initiative petition or a referendum
1497     petition to legal voters for their signature.
1498          (5) "Electronic initiative process" means:
1499          (a) as it relates to a statewide initiative, the process, described in Sections 20A-7-215
1500     and 20A-21-201, for gathering signatures; or
1501          (b) as it relates to a local initiative, the process, described in Sections 20A-7-514 and
1502     20A-21-201, for gathering signatures.
1503          (6) "Electronic referendum process" means:
1504          (a) as it relates to a statewide referendum, the process, described in Sections
1505     20A-7-313 and 20A-21-201, for gathering signatures; or
1506          (b) as it relates to a local referendum, the process, described in Sections 20A-7-614 and
1507     20A-21-201, for gathering signatures.
1508          (7) "Eligible voter" means a legal voter who resides in the jurisdiction of the county,
1509     city, or town that is holding an election on a ballot proposition.
1510          (8) "Final fiscal impact statement" means a financial statement prepared after voters
1511     approve an initiative that contains the information required by Subsection 20A-7-202.5(2) or
1512     20A-7-502.5(2).
1513          (9) "Initial fiscal impact statement" means

1514          a financial statement prepared under Section 20A-7-202.5 after the filing of a statewide
1515     initiative application.
1516          (10) "Initial fiscal impact and legal statement" means a financial and legal statement
1517     prepared under Section 20A-7-502.5 or 20A-7-602.5 for a local initiative or a local
1518     referendum.
1519          (11) "Initiative" means a new law proposed for adoption by the public as provided in
1520     this chapter.
1521          (12) "Initiative application" means:
1522          (a) for a statewide initiative, an application described in Subsection 20A-7-202(2) that
1523     includes all the information, statements, documents, and notarized signatures required under
1524     Subsection 20A-7-202(2); or
1525          (b) for a local initiative, an application described in Subsection 20A-7-502(2) that
1526     includes all the information, statements, documents, and notarized signatures required under
1527     Subsection 20A-7-502(2).
1528          (13) "Initiative packet" means a copy of the initiative petition, a copy of the proposed
1529     law, and the signature sheets, all of which have been bound together as a unit.
1530          (14) "Initiative petition":
1531          (a) as it relates to a statewide initiative, using the manual initiative process:
1532          (i) means the form described in Subsection 20A-7-203(2)(a), petitioning for
1533     submission of the initiative to the Legislature or the legal voters; and
1534          (ii) if the initiative proposes a tax increase, includes the statement described in
1535     Subsection 20A-7-203(2)(b);
1536          (b) as it relates to a statewide initiative, using the electronic initiative process:
1537          (i) means the form described in Subsections 20A-7-215(2) and (3), petitioning for
1538     submission of the initiative to the Legislature or the legal voters; and
1539          (ii) if the initiative proposes a tax increase, includes the statement described in
1540     Subsection 20A-7-215(5)(b);
1541          (c) as it relates to a local initiative, using the manual initiative process:
1542          (i) means the form described in Subsection 20A-7-503(2)(a), petitioning for
1543     submission of the initiative to the legislative body or the legal voters; and
1544          (ii) if the initiative proposes a tax increase, includes the statement described in

1545     Subsection 20A-7-503(2)(b); or
1546          (d) as it relates to a local initiative, using the electronic initiative process:
1547          (i) means the form described in Subsection 20A-7-514(2)(a), petitioning for
1548     submission of the initiative to the legislative body or the legal voters; and
1549          (ii) if the initiative proposes a tax increase, includes the statement described in
1550     Subsection 20A-7-514(4)(a).
1551          (15) (a) "Land use law" means a law of general applicability, enacted based on the
1552     weighing of broad, competing policy considerations, that relates to the use of land, including
1553     land use regulation, a general plan, a land use development code, an annexation ordinance, the
1554     rezoning of a single property or multiple properties, or a comprehensive zoning ordinance or
1555     resolution.
1556          (b) "Land use law" does not include a land use decision, as defined in Section
1557     10-9a-103 or 17-27a-103.
1558          (16) "Legal signatures" means the number of signatures of legal voters that:
1559          (a) meet the numerical requirements of this chapter; and
1560          (b) have been obtained, certified, and verified as provided in this chapter.
1561          (17) "Legal voter" means an individual who is registered to vote in Utah.
1562          (18) "Legally referable to voters" means:
1563          (a) for a proposed local initiative, that the proposed local initiative is legally referable
1564     to voters under Section 20A-7-502.7; or
1565          (b) for a proposed local referendum, that the proposed local referendum is legally
1566     referable to voters under Section 20A-7-602.7.
1567          (19) "Local attorney" means the county attorney, city attorney, [or] town attorney, or
1568     local school district attorney in whose jurisdiction a local initiative or referendum petition is
1569     circulated.
1570          (20) "Local clerk" means:
1571          (a) the county clerk, city recorder, or town clerk in whose jurisdiction a local initiative
1572     or referendum petition is circulated[.]; or
1573          (b) for a referendum petition under Subsection 20A-7-102(4), the business
1574     administrator or the superintendent of the school district in which the referendum petition is
1575     circulated.

1576          (21) (a) "Local law" includes:
1577          (i) an ordinance;
1578          (ii) a resolution;
1579          (iii) a land use law;
1580          (iv) a land use regulation, as defined in Section 10-9a-103; [or]
1581          (v) a local tax law; or
1582          [(v)] (vi) other legislative action of a local legislative body.
1583          (b) "Local law" does not include:
1584          (i) a land use decision, as defined in Section 10-9a-103[.]; or
1585          (ii) a local school tax law.
1586          (22) (a) "Local legislative body" means the legislative body of a county, city, town, or
1587     metro township.
1588          (b) "Local legislative body" does not include the local school board of a school district.
1589          (23) "Local obligation law" means a local law passed by the local legislative body
1590     regarding a bond that was approved by a majority of qualified voters in an election.
1591          (24) "Local school board" means a board elected under Chapter 14, Part 2, Election of
1592     Members of Local Boards of Education.
1593          [(24)] (25) (a) "Local tax law" means a law, passed by a [political subdivision] county,
1594     city, town, or metro township with an annual or biannual calendar fiscal year, that increases a
1595     tax or imposes a new tax.
1596          (b) "Local tax law" does not include a local school tax law.
1597          (26) (a) "Local school tax law" means a law passed by a local school board that
1598     increases a tax or levy or imposes a new tax or levy.
1599          (b) "Local school tax law" includes:
1600          (i) a board local levy under Section 53F-8-302;
1601          (ii) a capital local levy under Section 53F-8-303;
1602          (iii) a judgment levy imposed by a local school board under Section 59-2-1330; or
1603          (iv) any other tax or levy that is within a local school board's discretion to impose.
1604          (c) "Local school tax law" does not include a law passed by a local school board that
1605     increases a tax or levy or imposes a new tax or levy, if the increased tax or levy or new tax or
1606     levy:

1607          (i) relates to a voted local levy under Section 53F-8-301, or to the issuance of a bond
1608     that was approved by a majority of the qualified voters within a school district; or
1609          (ii) is required to be imposed by state law or rule, or is otherwise not within a local
1610     school board's discretion to impose.
1611          [(25)] (27) "Manual initiative process" means the process for gathering signatures for
1612     an initiative using paper signature packets that a signer physically signs.
1613          [(26)] (28) "Manual referendum process" means the process for gathering signatures
1614     for a referendum using paper signature packets that a signer physically signs.
1615          [(27)] (29) "Measure" means a proposed constitutional amendment, an initiative, or
1616     referendum.
1617          [(28)] (30) "Referendum" means a process by which a law passed by the Legislature
1618     [or by a], a local legislative body, or a local school board is submitted or referred to the voters
1619     for their approval or rejection.
1620          [(29)] (31) "Referendum application" means:
1621          (a) for a statewide referendum, an application described in Subsection 20A-7-302(2)
1622     that includes all the information, statements, documents, and notarized signatures required
1623     under Subsection 20A-7-302(2); or
1624          (b) for a local referendum, an application described in Subsection 20A-7-602(2) that
1625     includes all the information, statements, documents, and notarized signatures required under
1626     Subsection 20A-7-602(2).
1627          [(30)] (32) "Referendum packet" means a copy of the referendum petition, a copy of
1628     the law being submitted or referred to the voters for their approval or rejection, and the
1629     signature sheets, all of which have been bound together as a unit.
1630          [(31)] (33) "Referendum petition" means:
1631          (a) as it relates to a statewide referendum, using the manual referendum process, the
1632     form described in Subsection 20A-7-303(2)(a), petitioning for submission of a law passed by
1633     the Legislature to legal voters for their approval or rejection;
1634          (b) as it relates to a statewide referendum, using the electronic referendum process, the
1635     form described in Subsection 20A-7-313(2), petitioning for submission of a law passed by the
1636     Legislature to legal voters for their approval or rejection;
1637          (c) as it relates to a local referendum, using the manual referendum process, the form

1638     described in Subsection 20A-7-603(2)(a), petitioning for submission of a local law or a local
1639     school tax law to legal voters for their approval or rejection; or
1640          (d) as it relates to a local referendum, using the electronic referendum process, the form
1641     described in Subsection 20A-7-614(2), petitioning for submission of a local law or a local
1642     school tax law to legal voters for their approval or rejection.
1643          [(32)] (34) "Signature":
1644          (a) for a statewide initiative:
1645          (i) as it relates to the electronic initiative process, means an electronic signature
1646     collected under Section 20A-7-215 and Subsection 20A-21-201(6)(c); or
1647          (ii) as it relates to the manual initiative process:
1648          (A) means a holographic signature collected physically on a signature sheet described
1649     in Section 20A-7-203; and
1650          (B) does not include an electronic signature;
1651          (b) for a statewide referendum:
1652          (i) as it relates to the electronic referendum process, means an electronic signature
1653     collected under Section 20A-7-313 and Subsection 20A-21-201(6)(c); or
1654          (ii) as it relates to the manual referendum process:
1655          (A) means a holographic signature collected physically on a signature sheet described
1656     in Section 20A-7-303; and
1657          (B) does not include an electronic signature;
1658          (c) for a local initiative:
1659          (i) as it relates to the electronic initiative process, means an electronic signature
1660     collected under Section 20A-7-514 and Subsection 20A-21-201(6)(c); or
1661          (ii) as it relates to the manual initiative process:
1662          (A) means a holographic signature collected physically on a signature sheet described
1663     in Section 20A-7-503; and
1664          (B) does not include an electronic signature; or
1665          (d) for a local referendum:
1666          (i) as it relates to the electronic referendum process, means an electronic signature
1667     collected under Section 20A-7-614 and Subsection 20A-21-201(6)(c); or
1668          (ii) as it relates to the manual referendum process:

1669          (A) means a holographic signature collected physically on a signature sheet described
1670     in Section 20A-7-603; and
1671          (B) does not include an electronic signature.
1672          [(33)] (35) "Signature sheets" means sheets in the form required by this chapter that are
1673     used under the manual initiative process or the manual referendum process to collect signatures
1674     in support of an initiative or referendum.
1675          [(34)] (36) "Special local ballot proposition" means a local ballot proposition that is
1676     not a standard local ballot proposition.
1677          [(35)] (37) "Sponsors" means the legal voters who support the initiative or referendum
1678     and who sign the initiative application or referendum application.
1679          [(36)] (38) (a) "Standard local ballot proposition" means a local ballot proposition for
1680     an initiative or a referendum.
1681          (b) "Standard local ballot proposition" does not include a property tax referendum
1682     described in Section 20A-7-613.
1683          [(37)] (39) "Tax percentage difference" means the difference between the tax rate
1684     proposed by an initiative or an initiative petition and the current tax rate.
1685          [(38)] (40) "Tax percentage increase" means a number calculated by dividing the tax
1686     percentage difference by the current tax rate and rounding the result to the nearest thousandth.
1687          [(39)] (41) "Verified" means acknowledged by the person circulating the petition as
1688     required in Section 20A-7-105.
1689          Section 8. Section 20A-7-102 is amended to read:
1690          20A-7-102. Initiatives and referenda authorized -- Restrictions.
1691          By following the procedures and requirements of this chapter, Utah voters may, subject
1692     to the restrictions of Utah Constitution, Article VI, [Sec. 1, Utah Constitution] Section 1, and
1693     this chapter:
1694          (1) initiate any desired legislation and cause it to be submitted to:
1695          (a) the Legislature or to a vote of the people for approval or rejection if it is a proposed
1696     state law; or
1697          (b) a local legislative body or to a vote of the people if it is a local law;
1698          (2) require any law passed by the Legislature, except those laws passed by a two-thirds
1699     vote of the members elected to each house of the Legislature, to be referred to the voters for

1700     their approval or rejection before the law takes effect; [and]
1701          (3) require any [law or ordinance] local law passed by a local legislative body to be
1702     referred to the voters for their approval or rejection before the local law takes effect[.]; or
1703          (4) require any local school tax law passed by a local school board to be referred to the
1704     voters for their approval or rejection before the local school tax law takes effect.
1705          Section 9. Section 20A-7-401.3 is amended to read:
1706          20A-7-401.3. Voter participation areas.
1707          (1) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (2):
1708          (i) a metro township with a population of 65,000 or more, a city of the first or second
1709     class, or a county of the first or second class shall, no later than January 1, 2020, again on
1710     January 1, 2022, and January 1 each 10 years after 2022, divide the metro township, city, or
1711     county into eight contiguous and compact voter participation areas of substantially equal
1712     population; and
1713          (ii) a metro township with a population of 10,000 or more, a city of the third or fourth
1714     class, or a county of the third or fourth class shall, no later than January 1, 2020, again on
1715     January 1, 2022, and January 1 each 10 years after 2022, divide the metro township, city, or
1716     county into four contiguous and compact voter participation areas of substantially equal
1717     population.
1718          (b) A metro township, city, or county shall use the voter participation areas described
1719     in Subsection (1)(a) or (2)(b) for the purpose described in Sections 20A-7-501 and 20A-7-601.
1720          (2) (a) This section does not apply to a metro township with a population of less than
1721     10,000, a county of the fifth or sixth class, a city of the fifth class, [or] a town, or a school
1722     district.
1723          (b) A metro township, city, or county that has established council districts that are not
1724     at-large districts may, regardless of the number of council districts that are not at-large districts,
1725     use the council districts as voter participation areas under this section.
1726          Section 10. Section 20A-7-401.5 is amended to read:
1727          20A-7-401.5. Proposition information pamphlet.
1728          (1) (a) (i) Within 15 days after the day on which an eligible voter files an application to
1729     circulate an initiative petition under Section 20A-7-502 or an application to circulate a
1730     referendum petition under Section 20A-7-602:

1731          (A) the sponsors of the proposed initiative or referendum may submit a written
1732     argument in favor of the proposed initiative or referendum to the election officer of the county
1733     [or], municipality, or school district to which the petition relates; and
1734          (B) the county [or], municipality, or school district to which the application relates may
1735     submit a written argument in favor of, or against, the proposed initiative or referendum to the
1736     county's [or], municipality's, or school district's election officer.
1737          (ii) If a county [or], municipality, or school district submits more than one written
1738     argument under Subsection (1)(a)(i)(B), the election officer shall select one of the written
1739     arguments, giving preference to a written argument submitted by a member of a local
1740     legislative body or a local school board, as applicable, if a majority of the local legislative body
1741     or the local school board supports the written argument.
1742          (b) Within one business day after the day on which an election officer receives an
1743     argument under Subsection (1)(a)(i)(A), the election officer shall provide a copy of the
1744     argument to the county [or], municipality, or school district described in Subsection (1)(a)(i)(B)
1745     or (1)(a)(ii), as applicable.
1746          (c) Within one business day after the date on which an election officer receives an
1747     argument under Subsection (1)(a)(i)(B), the election officer shall provide a copy of the
1748     argument to the first three sponsors of the proposed initiative or referendum described in
1749     Subsection (1)(a)(i)(A).
1750          (d) The sponsors of the proposed initiative or referendum may submit a revised version
1751     of the written argument described in Subsection (1)(a)(i)(A) to the election officer of the
1752     county [or], municipality, or school district to which the petition relates within 20 days after the
1753     day on which the eligible voter files an application to circulate an initiative petition under
1754     Section 20A-7-502 or an application to circulate a referendum petition under Section
1755     20A-7-602.
1756          (e) The author of a written argument described in Subsection (1)(a)(i)(B) submitted by
1757     a county [or], municipality, or school district may submit a revised version of the written
1758     argument to the county's [or], municipality's, or school district's election officer within 20 days
1759     after the day on which the eligible voter files an application to circulate an initiative petition
1760     under Section 20A-7-502 or an application to circulate a referendum petition under Section
1761     20A-7-602.

1762          (2) (a) A written argument described in Subsection (1) may not exceed 500 words.
1763          (b) Except as provided in Subsection (2)(c), a person may not modify a written
1764     argument described in Subsection (1)(d) or (e) after the written argument is submitted to the
1765     election officer.
1766          (c) The election officer and the person that submits the written argument described in
1767     Subsection (1)(d) or (e) may jointly agree to modify the written argument to:
1768          (i) correct factual, grammatical, or spelling errors; or
1769          (ii) reduce the number of words to come into compliance with Subsection (2)(a).
1770          (d) An election officer shall refuse to include a written argument in the proposition
1771     information pamphlet described in this section if the person who submits the argument:
1772          (i) fails to negotiate, in good faith, to modify the argument in accordance with
1773     Subsection (2)(c); or
1774          (ii) does not timely submit the written argument to the election officer.
1775          (e) An election officer shall make a good faith effort to negotiate a modification
1776     described in Subsection (2)(c) in an expedited manner.
1777          (3) An election officer who receives a written argument described in Subsection (1)
1778     shall prepare a proposition information pamphlet for publication that includes:
1779          (a) a copy of the application for the proposed initiative or referendum;
1780          (b) except as provided in Subsection (2)(d), immediately after the copy described in
1781     Subsection (3)(a), the argument prepared by the sponsors of the proposed initiative or
1782     referendum, if any;
1783          (c) except as provided in Subsection (2)(d), immediately after the argument described
1784     in Subsection (3)(b), the argument prepared by the county or municipality, if any; and
1785          (d) a copy of the initial fiscal impact statement and legal impact statement described in
1786     Section 20A-7-502.5 or 20A-7-602.5.
1787          (4) (a) A proposition information pamphlet is a draft for purposes of Title 63G,
1788     Chapter 2, Government Records Access and Management Act, until the earlier of when the
1789     election officer:
1790          (i) complies with Subsection (4)(b); or
1791          (ii) publishes the proposition information pamphlet under Subsection (5) or (6).
1792          (b) Within 21 days after the day on which the eligible voter files an application to

1793     circulate an initiative petition under Section 20A-7-502, or an application to circulate a
1794     referendum petition under Section 20A-7-602, the election officer shall provide a copy of the
1795     proposition information pamphlet to the sponsors of the initiative or referendum and each
1796     individual who submitted an argument included in the proposition information pamphlet.
1797          (5) An election officer for a municipality shall publish the proposition information
1798     pamphlet as follows:
1799          (a) within the later of 10 days after the day on which the municipality or a court
1800     determines that the proposed initiative or referendum is legally referable to voters, or, if the
1801     election officer modifies an argument under Subsection (2)(c), three days after the day on
1802     which the election officer and the person that submitted the argument agree on the
1803     modification:
1804          (i) by sending the proposition information pamphlet electronically to each individual in
1805     the municipality for whom the municipality has an email address, unless the individual has
1806     indicated that the municipality is prohibited from using the individual's email address for that
1807     purpose; and
1808          (ii) by posting the proposition information pamphlet on the Utah Public Notice
1809     Website, created in Section 63A-16-601, and the home page of the municipality's website, if
1810     the municipality has a website, until:
1811          (A) if the sponsors of the proposed initiative or referendum or an agent of the sponsors
1812     do not timely deliver any verified initiative packets or any verified referendum packets under
1813     Section 20A-7-105, the day after the date of the deadline for delivery of the verified initiative
1814     packets or verified referendum packets;
1815          (B) the local clerk determines, under Section 20A-7-507 or 20A-7-607, that the
1816     number of signatures necessary to qualify the proposed initiative or referendum for placement
1817     on the ballot is insufficient and the determination is not timely appealed or is upheld after
1818     appeal; or
1819          (C) the day after the date of the election at which the proposed initiative or referendum
1820     appears on the ballot; and
1821          (b) if the municipality regularly mails a newsletter, utility bill, or other material to the
1822     municipality's residents, including, in the next mailing, an Internet address[,] where a resident
1823     may view the proposition information pamphlet[, in the next mailing,] for which the

1824     municipality has not begun preparation, that falls on or after the later of:
1825          (i) 10 days after the day on which the municipality or a court determines that the
1826     proposed initiative or referendum is legally referable to voters; or
1827          (ii) if the election officer modifies an argument under Subsection (2)(c), three days
1828     after the day on which the election officer and the person that submitted the argument agree on
1829     the modification.
1830          (6) An election officer for a county shall, within the later of 10 days after the day on
1831     which the county or a court determines that the proposed initiative or referendum is legally
1832     referable to voters, or, if the election officer modifies an argument under Subsection (2)(c),
1833     three days after the day on which the election officer and the person that submitted the
1834     argument agree on the modification, publish the proposition information pamphlet as follows:
1835          (a) by sending the proposition information pamphlet electronically to each individual
1836     in the county for whom the county has an email address obtained via voter registration; and
1837          (b) by posting the proposition information pamphlet on the Utah Public Notice
1838     Website, created in Section 63A-16-601, and the home page of the county's website, until:
1839          (i) if the sponsors of the proposed initiative or referendum or an agent of the sponsors
1840     do not timely deliver any verified initiative packets or any verified referendum packets under
1841     Section 20A-7-105, the day after the date of the deadline for delivery of the verified initiative
1842     packets or verified referendum packets;
1843          (ii) the local clerk determines, under Section 20A-7-507 or 20A-7-607, that the number
1844     of signatures necessary to qualify the proposed initiative or referendum for placement on the
1845     ballot is insufficient and the determination is not timely appealed or is upheld after appeal; or
1846          (iii) the day after the date of the election at which the proposed initiative or referendum
1847     appears on the ballot.
1848          (7) An election officer for a school district shall, within the later of 10 days after the
1849     day on which the school district or a court determines that the proposed referendum is legally
1850     referable to voters, or, if the election officer modifies an argument under Subsection (2)(c),
1851     three days after the day on which the election officer and the person that submitted the
1852     argument agree on the modification, publish the proposition information pamphlet as follows:
1853          (a) by sending the proposition information pamphlet electronically to each individual
1854     in the school district for whom the school district has an email address, unless the individual

1855     has indicated that the school district is prohibited from using the individual's email address for
1856     that purpose;
1857          (b) by posting the proposition information pamphlet on the Utah Public Notice
1858     Website, created in Section 63A-16-601, and the home page of the school district's website, if
1859     the school district has a website, until:
1860          (i) if the sponsors of the proposed referendum or an agent of the sponsors do not timely
1861     deliver any verified referendum packets under Section 20A-7-105, the day after the date of the
1862     deadline for delivery of the verified referendum packets;
1863          (ii) the local clerk determines, under Section 20A-7-607, that the number of signatures
1864     necessary to qualify the proposed referendum for placement on the ballot is insufficient and the
1865     determination is not timely appealed or is upheld after appeal; or
1866          (iii) the day after the date of the election at which the proposed referendum appears on
1867     the ballot; and
1868          (c) if the school district regularly mails a newsletter or other material to the school
1869     district's residents, including, in the next mailing, an Internet address where a resident may
1870     view the proposition information pamphlet for which the school district has not begun
1871     preparation, that falls on or after the later of:
1872          (i) 10 days after the day on which the school district or a court determines that the
1873     proposed referendum is legally referable to voters; or
1874          (ii) if the election officer modifies an argument under Subsection (2)(c), three days
1875     after the day on which the election officer and the person that submitted the argument agree on
1876     the modification.
1877          Section 11. Section 20A-7-402 is amended to read:
1878          20A-7-402. Local voter information pamphlet -- Notice -- Contents -- Limitations
1879     -- Preparation -- Statement on front cover.
1880          (1) The county [or], municipality, or school district that is subject to a ballot
1881     proposition shall prepare a local voter information pamphlet that complies with the
1882     requirements of this part.
1883          (2) (a) [Within the time requirements described in Subsection (2)(c)(i), a] A county,
1884     municipality, or school district that is subject to a special local ballot proposition shall provide
1885     a notice that complies with the requirements of Subsection [(2)(c)(ii)] (2)(b)(ii) to the county's,

1886     municipality's, or school district's residents by publishing the notice for the municipality, as a
1887     class A notice under Section 63G-30-102, for the time period set under Subsection [(2)(c)(i)]
1888     (2)(b)(i).
1889          [(b) A county that is subject to a special local ballot proposition shall publish a notice
1890     that complies with the requirements of Subsection (2)(c)(ii) for the county, as a class A notice
1891     under Section 63G-30-102.]
1892          [(c)] (b) A [municipality or county] county, municipality, or school district that
1893     publishes a notice under Subsection (2)(a) [or (b)] shall:
1894          (i) publish the notice:
1895          (A) not less than 90 days before the date of the election at which a special local ballot
1896     proposition will be voted upon; or
1897          (B) if the requirements of Subsection [(2)(c)(i)(A)] (2)(b)(i)(A) cannot be met, as soon
1898     as practicable after the special local ballot proposition is approved to be voted upon in an
1899     election; and
1900          (ii) ensure that the notice contains:
1901          (A) the ballot title for the special local ballot proposition;
1902          (B) instructions on how to file a request under Subsection [(2)(d)] (2)(c); and
1903          (C) the deadline described in Subsection [(2)(d)] (2)(c).
1904          [(d)] (c) To prepare a written argument for or against a special local ballot proposition,
1905     an eligible voter shall file a request with the election officer before 5 p.m. no later than 64 days
1906     before the day of the election at which the special local ballot proposition is to be voted on.
1907          [(e)] (d) If more than one eligible voter requests the opportunity to prepare a written
1908     argument for or against a special local ballot proposition, the election officer shall make the
1909     final designation in accordance with the following order of priority:
1910          (i) sponsors have priority in preparing an argument regarding a special local ballot
1911     proposition; and
1912          (ii) members of the local legislative body or the local school board have priority over
1913     others if a majority of the local legislative body or the local school board supports the written
1914     argument.
1915          [(f)] (e) The election officer shall grant a request described in Subsection [(2)(d)] (2)(c)
1916     or [(e)] (d) no later than 60 days before the day of the election at which the ballot proposition is

1917     to be voted on.
1918          [(g)] (f) (i) A sponsor of a special local ballot proposition may prepare a written
1919     argument in favor of the special local ballot proposition.
1920          (ii) Subject to Subsection [(2)(e)] (2)(d), an eligible voter opposed to the special local
1921     ballot proposition who submits a request under Subsection [(2)(d)] (2)(c) may prepare a written
1922     argument against the special local ballot proposition.
1923          [(h)] (g) An eligible voter who submits a written argument under this section in
1924     relation to a special local ballot proposition shall:
1925          (i) ensure that the written argument does not exceed 500 words in length, not counting
1926     the information described in Subsection [(2)(h)(ii)] (2)(g)(ii) or (iv);
1927          (ii) list, at the end of the argument, at least one, but no more than five, names as
1928     sponsors;
1929          (iii) submit the written argument to the election officer before 5 p.m. no later than 55
1930     days before the election day on which the ballot proposition will be submitted to the voters;
1931          (iv) list in the argument, immediately after the eligible voter's name, the eligible voter's
1932     residential address; and
1933          (v) submit with the written argument the eligible voter's name, residential address,
1934     postal address, email address if available, and phone number.
1935          [(i)] (h) An election officer shall refuse to accept and publish an argument submitted
1936     after the deadline described in Subsection [(2)(h)(iii)] (2)(g)(iii).
1937          (3) (a) An election officer who timely receives the written arguments in favor of and
1938     against a special local ballot proposition shall, within one business day after the day on which
1939     the election office receives both written arguments, send, via mail or email:
1940          (i) a copy of the written argument in favor of the special local ballot proposition to the
1941     eligible voter who submitted the written argument against the special local ballot proposition;
1942     and
1943          (ii) a copy of the written argument against the special local ballot proposition to the
1944     eligible voter who submitted the written argument in favor of the special local ballot
1945     proposition.
1946          (b) The eligible voter who submitted a timely written argument in favor of the special
1947     local ballot proposition:

1948          (i) may submit to the election officer a written rebuttal argument of the written
1949     argument against the special local ballot proposition;
1950          (ii) shall ensure that the written rebuttal argument does not exceed 250 words in length,
1951     not counting the information described in Subsection [(2)(h)(ii)] (2)(g)(ii) or (iv); and
1952          (iii) shall submit the written rebuttal argument before 5 p.m. no later than 45 days
1953     before the election day on which the special local ballot proposition will be submitted to the
1954     voters.
1955          (c) The eligible voter who submitted a timely written argument against the special local
1956     ballot proposition:
1957          (i) may submit to the election officer a written rebuttal argument of the written
1958     argument in favor of the special local ballot proposition;
1959          (ii) shall ensure that the written rebuttal argument does not exceed 250 words in length,
1960     not counting the information described in Subsection [(2)(h)(ii)] (2)(g)(ii) or (iv); and
1961          (iii) shall submit the written rebuttal argument before 5 p.m. no later than 45 days
1962     before the election day on which the special local ballot proposition will be submitted to the
1963     voters.
1964          (d) An election officer shall refuse to accept and publish a written rebuttal argument in
1965     relation to a special local ballot proposition that is submitted after the deadline described in
1966     Subsection (3)(b)(iii) or (3)(c)(iii).
1967          (4) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (4)(b), in relation to a special local ballot
1968     proposition:
1969          (i) an eligible voter may not modify a written argument or a written rebuttal argument
1970     after the eligible voter submits the written argument or written rebuttal argument to the election
1971     officer; and
1972          (ii) a person other than the eligible voter described in Subsection (4)(a)(i) may not
1973     modify a written argument or a written rebuttal argument.
1974          (b) The election officer, and the eligible voter who submits a written argument or
1975     written rebuttal argument in relation to a special local ballot proposition, may jointly agree to
1976     modify a written argument or written rebuttal argument in order to:
1977          (i) correct factual, grammatical, or spelling errors; and
1978          (ii) reduce the number of words to come into compliance with the requirements of this

1979     section.
1980          (c) An election officer shall refuse to accept and publish a written argument or written
1981     rebuttal argument in relation to a special local ballot proposition if the eligible voter who
1982     submits the written argument or written rebuttal argument fails to negotiate, in good faith, to
1983     modify the written argument or written rebuttal argument in accordance with Subsection (4)(b).
1984          (5) In relation to a special local ballot proposition, an election officer may designate
1985     another eligible voter to take the place of an eligible voter described in this section if the
1986     original eligible voter is, due to injury, illness, death, or another circumstance, unable to
1987     continue to fulfill the duties of an eligible voter described in this section.
1988          (6) Sponsors whose written argument in favor of a standard local ballot proposition is
1989     included in a proposition information pamphlet under Section 20A-7-401.5:
1990          (a) may, if a written argument against the standard local ballot proposition is included
1991     in the proposition information pamphlet, submit a written rebuttal argument to the election
1992     officer;
1993          (b) shall ensure that the written rebuttal argument does not exceed 250 words in length;
1994     and
1995          (c) shall submit the written rebuttal argument no later than 45 days before the election
1996     day on which the standard local ballot proposition will be submitted to the voters.
1997          (7) (a) A county [or], municipality, or school district that submitted a written argument
1998     against a standard local ballot proposition that is included in a proposition information
1999     pamphlet under Section 20A-7-401.5:
2000          (i) may, if a written argument in favor of the standard local ballot proposition is
2001     included in the proposition information pamphlet, submit a written rebuttal argument to the
2002     election officer;
2003          (ii) shall ensure that the written rebuttal argument does not exceed 250 words in length;
2004     and
2005          (iii) shall submit the written rebuttal argument no later than 45 days before the election
2006     day on which the ballot proposition will be submitted to the voters.
2007          (b) If a county [or], municipality, or school district submits more than one written
2008     rebuttal argument under Subsection (7)(a)(i), the election officer shall select one of the written
2009     rebuttal arguments, giving preference to a written rebuttal argument submitted by a member of

2010     a local legislative body or a local school board.
2011          (8) (a) An election officer shall refuse to accept and publish a written rebuttal argument
2012     that is submitted after the deadline described in Subsection (6)(c) or (7)(a)(iii).
2013          (b) Before an election officer publishes a local voter information pamphlet under this
2014     section, a written rebuttal argument is a draft for purposes of Title 63G, Chapter 2, Government
2015     Records Access and Management Act.
2016          (c) An election officer who receives a written rebuttal argument described in this
2017     section may not, before publishing the local voter information pamphlet described in this
2018     section, disclose the written rebuttal argument, or any information contained in the written
2019     rebuttal argument, to any person who may in any way be involved in preparing an opposing
2020     rebuttal argument.
2021          (9) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (9)(b), a person may not modify a written
2022     rebuttal argument after the written rebuttal argument is submitted to the election officer.
2023          (b) The election officer, and the person who submits a written rebuttal argument, may
2024     jointly agree to modify a written rebuttal argument in order to:
2025          (i) correct factual, grammatical, or spelling errors; or
2026          (ii) reduce the number of words to come into compliance with the requirements of this
2027     section.
2028          (c) An election officer shall refuse to accept and publish a written rebuttal argument if
2029     the person who submits the written rebuttal argument:
2030          (i) fails to negotiate, in good faith, to modify the written rebuttal argument in
2031     accordance with Subsection (9)(b); or
2032          (ii) does not timely submit the written rebuttal argument to the election officer.
2033          (d) An election officer shall make a good faith effort to negotiate a modification
2034     described in Subsection (9)(b) in an expedited manner.
2035          (10) An election officer may designate another person to take the place of a person who
2036     submits a written rebuttal argument in relation to a standard local ballot proposition if the
2037     person is, due to injury, illness, death, or another circumstance, unable to continue to fulfill the
2038     person's duties.
2039          (11) (a) The local voter information pamphlet shall include a copy of the initial fiscal
2040     impact estimate and the legal impact statement prepared for each initiative under Section

2041     20A-7-502.5.
2042          (b) If the initiative proposes a tax increase, the local voter information pamphlet shall
2043     include the following statement in bold type:
2044          "This initiative seeks to increase the current (insert name of tax) rate by (insert the tax
2045     percentage difference) percent, resulting in a(n) (insert the tax percentage increase) percent
2046     increase in the current tax rate."
2047          (12) (a) In preparing the local voter information pamphlet, the election officer shall:
2048          (i) ensure that the written arguments are printed on the same sheet of paper upon which
2049     the ballot proposition is also printed;
2050          (ii) ensure that the following statement is printed on the front cover or the heading of
2051     the first page of the printed written arguments:
2052          "The arguments for or against a ballot proposition are the opinions of the authors.";
2053          (iii) pay for the printing and binding of the local voter information pamphlet; and
2054          (iv) not less than 15 days before, but not more than 45 days before, the election at
2055     which the ballot proposition will be voted on, distribute, by mail or carrier, to each registered
2056     voter entitled to vote on the ballot proposition:
2057          (A) a voter information pamphlet; or
2058          (B) the notice described in Subsection (12)(c).
2059          (b) (i) If the language of the ballot proposition exceeds 500 words in length, the
2060     election officer may summarize the ballot proposition in 500 words or less.
2061          (ii) The summary shall state where a complete copy of the ballot proposition is
2062     available for public review.
2063          (c) (i) The election officer may distribute a notice printed on a postage prepaid,
2064     preaddressed return form that a person may use to request delivery of a voter information
2065     pamphlet by mail.
2066          (ii) The notice described in Subsection (12)(c)(i) shall include:
2067          (A) the address of the Statewide Electronic Voter Information Website authorized by
2068     Section 20A-7-801; and
2069          (B) the phone number a voter may call to request delivery of a voter information
2070     pamphlet by mail or carrier.
2071          Section 12. Section 20A-7-405 is amended to read:

2072          20A-7-405. Public meeting.
2073          (1) A county [or], municipality, or school district may not discuss a proposed initiative,
2074     an initiative, a proposed referendum, or a referendum at a public meeting unless the county
2075     [or], municipality, or school district complies with the requirements of this section.
2076          (2) The legislative body of a county [or], municipality, or school district may hold a
2077     public meeting to discuss a proposed initiative, an initiative, a proposed referendum, or a
2078     referendum if the legislative body:
2079          (a) allows equal time, within a reasonable limit, for presentations on both sides of the
2080     proposed initiative, initiative, proposed referendum, or referendum;
2081          (b) provides interested parties an opportunity to present oral testimony within
2082     reasonable time limits; and
2083          (c) holds the public meeting:
2084          (i) during the legislative body's normal meeting time; or
2085          (ii) for a meeting time other than the legislative body's normal meeting time, beginning
2086     at or after 6 p.m.
2087          (3) This section does not prohibit a working group meeting from being held before 6
2088     p.m.
2089          Section 13. Section 20A-7-601 is amended to read:
2090          20A-7-601. Referenda -- General signature requirements -- Signature
2091     requirements for land use laws, subjurisdictional laws, and transit area land use laws --
2092     Time requirements.
2093          (1) As used in this section:
2094          (a) "Number of active voters" means the number of active voters in the county, city,
2095     [or] town, or school district on the immediately preceding January 1.
2096          (b) "Qualifying county" means a county that has created a small public transit district,
2097     as defined in Section 17B-2a-802, on or before January 1, 2022.
2098          (c) "Qualifying transit area" means:
2099          (i) a station area, as defined in Section 10-9a-403.1, for which the municipality with
2100     jurisdiction over the station area has satisfied the requirements of Subsection
2101     10-9a-403.1(2)(a)(i), as demonstrated by the adoption of a station area plan or resolution under
2102     Subsection 10-9a-403.1(2); or

2103          (ii) a housing and transit reinvestment zone, as defined in Section 63N-3-602, created
2104     within a qualifying county.
2105          (d) "Subjurisdiction" means an area comprised of all precincts and subprecincts in the
2106     jurisdiction of a county, city, or town that are subject to a subjurisdictional law.
2107          (e) (i) "Subjurisdictional law" means a local law or local obligation law passed by a
2108     local legislative body that imposes a tax or other payment obligation on property in an area that
2109     does not include all precincts and subprecincts under the jurisdiction of the county, city, town,
2110     or metro township.
2111          (ii) "Subjurisdictional law" does not include a land use law.
2112          (f) "Transit area land use law" means a land use law that relates to the use of land
2113     within a qualifying transit area.
2114          (g) "Voter participation area" means an area described in Subsection 20A-7-401.3(1)(a)
2115     or (2)(b).
2116          (2) Except as provided in Subsections (3) through (5), an eligible voter seeking to have
2117     a local law passed by the local legislative body submitted to a vote of the people shall, after
2118     filing a referendum application, obtain legal signatures equal to:
2119          (a) for a county of the first class:
2120          (i) 7.75% of the number of active voters in the county; and
2121          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 7.75% of the number of active voters in at least
2122     75% of the county's voter participation areas;
2123          (b) for a metro township with a population of 100,000 or more, or a city of the first
2124     class:
2125          (i) 7.5% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2126          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 7.5% of the number of active voters in at least 75%
2127     of the metro township's or city's voter participation areas;
2128          (c) for a county of the second class:
2129          (i) 8% of the number of active voters in the county; and
2130          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 8% of the number of active voters in at least 75%
2131     of the county's voter participation areas;
2132          (d) for a metro township with a population of 65,000 or more but less than 100,000, or
2133     a city of the second class:

2134          (i) 8.25% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2135          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 8.25% of the number of active voters in at least
2136     75% of the metro township's or city's voter participation areas;
2137          (e) for a county of the third class:
2138          (i) 9.5% of the number of active voters in the county; and
2139          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 9.5% of the number of active voters in at least 75%
2140     of the county's voter participation areas;
2141          (f) for a metro township with a population of 30,000 or more but less than 65,000, or a
2142     city of the third class:
2143          (i) 10% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2144          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 10% of the number of active voters in at least 75%
2145     of the metro township's or city's voter participation areas;
2146          (g) for a county of the fourth class:
2147          (i) 11.5% of the number of active voters in the county; and
2148          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 11.5% of the number of active voters in at least
2149     75% of the county's voter participation areas;
2150          (h) for a metro township with a population of 10,000 or more but less than 30,000, or a
2151     city of the fourth class:
2152          (i) 11.5% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2153          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 11.5% of the number of active voters in at least
2154     75% of the metro township's or city's voter participation areas;
2155          (i) for a metro township with a population of 1,000 or more but less than 10,000, a city
2156     of the fifth class, or a county of the fifth class, 25% of the number of active voters in the metro
2157     township, city, or county; or
2158          (j) for a metro township with a population of less than 1,000, a town, or a county of the
2159     sixth class, 35% of the number of active voters in the metro township, town, or county.
2160          (3) Except as provided in Subsection (4) or (5), an eligible voter seeking to have a land
2161     use law or local obligation law passed by the local legislative body submitted to a vote of the
2162     people shall, after filing a referendum application, obtain legal signatures equal to:
2163          (a) for a county of the first, second, third, or fourth class:
2164          (i) 16% of the number of active voters in the county; and

2165          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 16% of the number of active voters in at least 75%
2166     of the county's voter participation areas;
2167          (b) for a county of the fifth or sixth class:
2168          (i) 16% of the number of active voters in the county; and
2169          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 16% of the number of active voters in at least 75%
2170     of the county's voter participation areas;
2171          (c) for a metro township with a population of 100,000 or more, or a city of the first
2172     class:
2173          (i) 15% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2174          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 15% of the number of active voters in at least 75%
2175     of the metro township's or city's voter participation areas;
2176          (d) for a metro township with a population of 65,000 or more but less than 100,000, or
2177     a city of the second class:
2178          (i) 16% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2179          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 16% of the number of active voters in at least 75%
2180     of the metro township's or city's voter participation areas;
2181          (e) for a metro township with a population of 30,000 or more but less than 65,000, or a
2182     city of the third class:
2183          (i) 27.5% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2184          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 27.5% of the number of active voters in at least
2185     75% of the metro township's or city's voter participation areas;
2186          (f) for a metro township with a population of 10,000 or more but less than 30,000, or a
2187     city of the fourth class:
2188          (i) 29% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2189          (ii) [beginning on January 1, 2020,] 29% of the number of active voters in at least 75%
2190     of the metro township's or city's voter participation areas;
2191          (g) for a metro township with a population of 1,000 or more but less than 10,000, or a
2192     city of the fifth class, 35% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; or
2193          (h) for a metro township with a population of less than 1,000 or a town, 40% of the
2194     number of active voters in the metro township or town.
2195          (4) A person seeking to have a subjurisdictional law passed by the local legislative

2196     body submitted to a vote of the people shall, after filing a referendum application, obtain legal
2197     signatures of the residents in the subjurisdiction equal to:
2198          (a) 10% of the number of active voters in the subjurisdiction if the number of active
2199     voters exceeds 25,000;
2200          (b) [12-1/2] 12.5% of the number of active voters in the subjurisdiction if the number
2201     of active voters does not exceed 25,000 but is more than 10,000;
2202          (c) 15% of the number of active voters in the subjurisdiction if the number of active
2203     voters does not exceed 10,000 but is more than 2,500;
2204          (d) 20% of the number of active voters in the subjurisdiction if the number of active
2205     voters does not exceed 2,500 but is more than 500;
2206          (e) 25% of the number of active voters in the subjurisdiction if the number of active
2207     voters does not exceed 500 but is more than 250; [and] or
2208          (f) 30% of the number of active voters in the subjurisdiction if the number of active
2209     voters does not exceed 250.
2210          (5) An eligible voter seeking to have a transit area land use law passed by the local
2211     legislative body submitted to a vote of the people shall, after filing a referendum application,
2212     obtain legal signatures equal to:
2213          (a) for a county:
2214          (i) 20% of the number of active voters in the county; and
2215          (ii) 21% of the number of active voters in at least 75% of the county's voter
2216     participation areas;
2217          (b) for a metro township with a population of 100,000 or more, or a city of the first
2218     class:
2219          (i) 20% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2220          (ii) 20% of the number of active voters in at least 75% of the metro township's or city's
2221     voter participation areas;
2222          (c) for a metro township with a population of 65,000 or more but less than 100,000, or
2223     a city of the second class:
2224          (i) 20% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2225          (ii) 21% of the number of active voters in at least 75% of the metro township's or city's
2226     voter participation areas;

2227          (d) for a metro township with a population of 30,000 or more but less than 65,000, or a
2228     city of the third class:
2229          (i) 34% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2230          (ii) 34% of the number of active voters in at least 75% of the metro township's or city's
2231     voter participation areas;
2232          (e) for a metro township with a population of 10,000 or more but less than 30,000, or a
2233     city of the fourth class:
2234          (i) 36% of the number of active voters in the metro township or city; and
2235          (ii) 36% of the number of active voters in at least 75% of the metro township's or city's
2236     voter participation areas; or
2237          (f) for a metro township with a population less than 10,000, a city of the fifth class, or a
2238     town, 40% of the number of active voters in the metro township, city, or town.
2239          (6) An eligible voter seeking to have a local school tax law passed by the local school
2240     board of a school district submitted to a vote of the people shall, after filing a referendum
2241     application, obtain legal signatures equal to:
2242          (a) 10% of the number of active voters in the school district if the number of active
2243     voters exceeds 25,000;
2244          (b) 12.5% of the number of active voters in the school district if the number of active
2245     voters does not exceed 25,000 but is more than 10,000;
2246          (c) 15% of the number of active voters in the school district if the number of active
2247     voters does not exceed 10,000 but is more than 2,500;
2248          (d) 20% of the number of active voters in the school district if the number of active
2249     voters does not exceed 2,500 but is more than 500;
2250          (e) 25% of the number of active voters in the school district if the number of active
2251     voters does not exceed 500 but is more than 250; or
2252          (f) 30% of the number of active voters in the school district if the number of active
2253     voters does not exceed 250.
2254          [(6)] (7) Sponsors of any referendum petition challenging, under Subsection (2), (3),
2255     (4), [or] (5), or (6), any local law or any local school tax law passed by a local legislative body
2256     or a local school board shall file the application before 5 p.m. within seven days after the day
2257     on which the local law or the local school tax law was passed.

2258          [(7)] (8) Nothing in this section authorizes a local legislative body to impose a tax or
2259     other payment obligation on a subjurisdiction in order to benefit an area outside of the
2260     subjurisdiction.
2261          Section 14. Section 20A-7-602.5 is amended to read:
2262          20A-7-602.5. Initial fiscal and legal impact statement -- Preparation of statement.
2263          (1) Within three business days after the day on which the local clerk receives a
2264     referendum application, the local clerk shall submit a copy of the referendum application to the
2265     county, city, [or town's] town, or school district's budget officer.
2266          (2) (a) The budget officer, together with legal counsel, shall prepare an unbiased, good
2267     faith initial fiscal and legal impact statement for repealing the law the referendum proposes to
2268     repeal that contains:
2269          (i) a dollar amount representing the total estimated fiscal impact of repealing the law;
2270          (ii) if repealing the law would increase or decrease taxes, a dollar amount representing
2271     the total estimated increase or decrease for each type of tax that would be impacted by the law's
2272     repeal and a dollar amount representing the total estimated increase or decrease in taxes that
2273     would result from the law's repeal;
2274          (iii) if repealing the law would result in the issuance or a change in the status of bonds,
2275     notes, or other debt instruments, a dollar amount representing the total estimated increase or
2276     decrease in public debt that would result;
2277          (iv) a listing of all sources of funding for the estimated costs that would be associated
2278     with the law's repeal, showing each source of funding and the percentage of total funding that
2279     would be provided from each source;
2280          (v) a dollar amount representing the estimated costs or savings, if any, to state and
2281     local government entities if the law were repealed;
2282          (vi) the legal impacts that would result from repealing the law, including:
2283          (A) any significant effects on a person's vested property rights;
2284          (B) any significant effects on other laws or ordinances;
2285          (C) any significant legal liability the city, county, [or] town, or school district may
2286     incur; and
2287          (D) any other significant legal impact as determined by the budget officer and the legal
2288     counsel; and

2289          (vii) a concise explanation, not exceeding 100 words, of the information described in
2290     this Subsection (2)(a) and of the estimated fiscal impact, if any, if the law were repealed.
2291          (b) (i) If repealing the law would have no fiscal impact, the local budget officer shall
2292     include a summary statement in the initial fiscal impact and legal statement in substantially the
2293     following form:
2294          "The (title of the local budget officer) estimates that repealing the law this referendum
2295     proposes to repeal would have no significant fiscal impact and would not result in either an
2296     increase or decrease in taxes or debt."
2297          (ii) If repealing the law is estimated to have a fiscal impact, the local budget officer
2298     shall include a summary statement in the initial fiscal and legal impact statement describing the
2299     fiscal impact.
2300          (iii) If the estimated fiscal impact of repealing the law is highly variable or is otherwise
2301     difficult to reasonably express in a summary statement, the local budget officer may include in
2302     the summary statement a brief explanation that identifies those factors impacting the variability
2303     or difficulty of the estimate.
2304          (3) Within 20 calendar days after the day on which the local clerk submits a copy of the
2305     application under Subsection (1), the budget officer shall:
2306          (a) deliver a copy of the initial fiscal impact and legal statement to the local clerk's
2307     office; and
2308          (b) mail a copy of the initial fiscal impact and legal statement to the first three sponsors
2309     named in the referendum application.
2310          Section 15. Section 20A-7-602.7 is amended to read:
2311          20A-7-602.7. Referability to voters of a local school tax law, or a local law other
2312     than land use law.
2313          (1) Within 20 days after the day on which an eligible voter files a referendum
2314     application under Section 20A-7-602 for a local school tax law, or a local law other than a land
2315     use law, counsel for the county, city, town, [or] metro township, or school district to which the
2316     referendum pertains shall:
2317          (a) review the referendum application to determine whether the proposed referendum is
2318     legally referable to voters; and
2319          (b) notify the first three sponsors, in writing, whether the proposed referendum is:

2320          (i) legally referable to voters; or
2321          (ii) rejected as not legally referable to voters.
2322          (2) For a local school tax law, or a local law other than a land use law, a proposed
2323     referendum is legally referable to voters unless:
2324          (a) the proposed referendum challenges an action that is administrative, rather than
2325     legislative, in nature;
2326          (b) the proposed referendum challenges more than one law passed by the local
2327     legislative body or the local school board; or
2328          (c) the referendum application was not timely filed or does not comply with the
2329     requirements of this part.
2330          (3) After the end of the 20-day period described in Subsection (1), a county, city, town,
2331     [or] metro township, or school district may not, for a local school tax law, or a local law other
2332     than a land use law:
2333          (a) reject a proposed referendum as not legally referable to voters; or
2334          (b) except as provided in Subsection (4), challenge, in a legal action or otherwise, a
2335     proposed referendum on the grounds that the proposed referendum is not legally referable to
2336     voters.
2337          (4) (a) If, under Subsection (1)(b)(ii), a county, city, town, [or] metro township, or
2338     school district rejects a proposed referendum concerning a local school tax law, or a local law
2339     other than a land use law, a sponsor of the proposed referendum may, within 10 days after the
2340     day on which a sponsor is notified under Subsection (1)(b), challenge or appeal the decision to:
2341          (i) the Supreme Court, by means of an extraordinary writ, if possible; or
2342          (ii) a district court, if the sponsor is prohibited from pursuing an extraordinary writ
2343     under Subsection (4)(a)(i).
2344          (b) Failure of a sponsor to timely challenge or appeal a rejection under Subsection
2345     (4)(a) terminates the referendum.
2346          (5) If, on a challenge or appeal, the court determines that the proposed referendum
2347     described in Subsection (4) is legally referable to voters, the local clerk shall comply with
2348     Subsection 20A-7-604(3), or give the sponsors access to the website defined in Section
2349     20A-21-101, within five days after the day on which the determination, and any challenge or
2350     appeal of the determination, is final.

2351          Section 16. Section 20A-7-603 is amended to read:
2352          20A-7-603. Manual referendum process -- Form of referendum petition and
2353     signature sheet.
2354          (1) This section applies only to the manual referendum process.
2355          (2) (a) Each proposed referendum petition shall be printed in substantially the
2356     following form:
2357          "REFERENDUM PETITION To the Honorable ____, County Clerk/City
2358     Recorder/Town Clerk/Business Administrator/Superintendent:
2359          We, the undersigned citizens of Utah, respectfully order that (description of the local
2360     law or the local school tax law, or portion of the local law or the local school tax law, being
2361     challenged), passed by the ____ be referred to the voters for their approval or rejection at the
2362     regular/municipal general election to be held on __________(month\day\year);
2363          Each signer says:
2364          I have personally signed this referendum petition;
2365          The date next to my signature correctly reflects the date that I actually signed the
2366     petition;
2367          I have personally reviewed the entire statement included with this packet;
2368          I am registered to vote in Utah; and
2369          My residence and post office address are written correctly after my name."
2370          (b) The sponsors of a referendum or an agent of the sponsors shall attach a copy of the
2371     law that is the subject of the referendum to each referendum petition.
2372          (3) Each referendum signature sheet shall:
2373          (a) be printed on sheets of paper 8-1/2 inches long and 11 inches wide;
2374          (b) be ruled with a horizontal line three-fourths inch from the top, with the space above
2375     that line blank for the purpose of binding;
2376          (c) include the title of the referendum printed below the horizontal line, in at least
2377     14-point type;
2378          (d) include a table immediately below the title of the referendum, and beginning .5 inch
2379     from the left side of the paper, as follows:
2380          (i) the first column shall be .5 inch wide and include three rows;
2381          (ii) the first row of the first column shall be .85 inch tall and contain the words "For

2382     Office Use Only" in 10-point type;
2383          (iii) the second row of the first column shall be .35 inch tall;
2384          (iv) the third row of the first column shall be .5 inch tall;
2385          (v) the second column shall be 2.75 inches wide;
2386          (vi) the first row of the second column shall be .35 inch tall and contain the words
2387     "Registered Voter's Printed Name (must be legible to be counted)" in 10-point type;
2388          (vii) the second row of the second column shall be .5 inch tall;
2389          (viii) the third row of the second column shall be .35 inch tall and contain the words
2390     "Street Address, City, Zip Code" in 10-point type;
2391          (ix) the fourth row of the second column shall be .5 inch tall;
2392          (x) the third column shall be 2.75 inches wide;
2393          (xi) the first row of the third column shall be .35 inch tall and contain the words
2394     "Signature of Registered Voter" in 10-point type;
2395          (xii) the second row of the third column shall be .5 inch tall;
2396          (xiii) the third row of the third column shall be .35 inch tall and contain the words
2397     "Email Address (optional, to receive additional information)" in 10-point type;
2398          (xiv) the fourth row of the third column shall be .5 inch tall;
2399          (xv) the fourth column shall be one inch wide;
2400          (xvi) the first row of the fourth column shall be .35 inch tall and contain the words
2401     "Date Signed" in 10-point type;
2402          (xvii) the second row of the fourth column shall be .5 inch tall;
2403          (xviii) the third row of the fourth column shall be .35 inch tall and contain the words
2404     "Birth Date or Age (optional)" in 10-point type;
2405          (xix) the fourth row of the third column shall be .5 inch tall; and
2406          (xx) the fifth row of the entire table shall be the width of the entire table, .4 inch tall,
2407     and contain the following words, "By signing this referendum petition, you are stating that you
2408     have read and understand the law that this referendum petition seeks to overturn." in 12-point
2409     type;
2410          (e) the table described in Subsection (3)(d) shall be repeated, leaving sufficient room at
2411     the bottom of the sheet or the information described in Subsection (3)(f); and
2412          (f) at the bottom of the sheet, include the word "Warning," in 12-point, bold type,

2413     followed by the following statement in not less than eight-point type:
2414          "It is a class A misdemeanor for an individual to sign a referendum petition with a name
2415     other than the individual's own name, or to knowingly sign the individual's name more than
2416     once for the same referendum petition, or to sign a referendum petition when the individual
2417     knows that the individual is not a registered voter.
2418          Birth date or age information is not required, but it may be used to verify your identity
2419     with voter registration records. If you choose not to provide it, your signature may not be
2420     verified as a valid signature if you change your address before petition signatures are verified
2421     or if the information you provide does not match your voter registration records."
2422          (4) The final page of each referendum packet shall contain the following printed or
2423     typed statement:
2424          "Verification of signature collector
2425          State of Utah, County of ____
2426          I, _______________, of ____, hereby state, under penalty of perjury, that:
2427          I am a resident of Utah and am at least 18 years old;
2428          All the names that appear in this packet were signed by individuals who professed to be
2429     the individuals whose names appear in it, and each of the individuals signed the individual's
2430     name on it in my presence;
2431          I did not knowingly make a misrepresentation of fact concerning the law this petition
2432     seeks to overturn;
2433          I believe that each individual has printed and signed the individual's name and written
2434     the individual's post office address and residence correctly, that each signer has read and
2435     understands the law that the referendum seeks to overturn, and that each signer is registered to
2436     vote in Utah.
     
2437     ________________________________________________________________________
     
2438          (Name)
(Residence Address)           (Date)

2439          Each individual who signed the packet wrote the correct date of signature next to the
2440     individual's name.
2441          I have not paid or given anything of value to any individual who signed this referendum

2442     packet to encourage that individual to sign it.
2443          _____________________________________________________________________
2444          (Name)
(Residence Address)           (Date)".

2445          (5) If the forms described in this section are substantially followed, the referendum
2446     petitions are sufficient, notwithstanding clerical and merely technical errors.
2447          (6) An individual's status as a resident, under Subsection (4), is determined in
2448     accordance with Section 20A-2-105.
2449          Section 17. Section 20A-7-604 is amended to read:
2450          20A-7-604. Manual referendum process -- Circulation requirements -- Local
2451     clerk to provide sponsors with materials.
2452          (1) This section applies only to the manual referendum process.
2453          (2) In order to obtain the necessary number of signatures required by this part, the
2454     sponsors or an agent of the sponsors shall, after the sponsors receive the documents described
2455     in Subsections (3) and 20A-7-401.5(4)(b), circulate referendum packets that meet the form
2456     requirements of this part.
2457          (3) Within five days after the day on which a county, city, town, metro township,
2458     school district, or court determines, in accordance with Section 20A-7-602.7, that a proposed
2459     referendum is legally referable to voters, the local clerk shall provide the sponsors with
2460          a copy of the referendum petition and a signature sheet.
2461          (4) The sponsors of the referendum petition shall:
2462          (a) arrange and pay for the printing of all documents that are part of the referendum
2463     packets; and
2464          (b) ensure that the referendum packets and the documents described in Subsection
2465     (4)(a) meet the form requirements of this section.
2466          (5) (a) The sponsors or an agent of the sponsors may prepare the referendum packets
2467     for circulation by creating multiple referendum packets.
2468          (b) The sponsors or an agent of the sponsors shall create referendum packets by
2469     binding a copy of the referendum petition with the text of the law that is the subject of the
2470     referendum and no more than 50 signature sheets together at the top in a manner that the
2471     referendum packets may be conveniently opened for signing.
2472          (c) A referendum packet is not required to have a uniform number of signature sheets.

2473          (d) The sponsors or an agent of the sponsors shall include, with each packet, a copy of
2474     the proposition information pamphlet provided to the sponsors under Subsection
2475     20A-7-401.5(4)(b).
2476          (6) (a) The sponsors or an agent of the sponsors shall, before gathering signatures:
2477          (i) contact the county clerk to receive a range of numbers that the sponsors may use to
2478     number referendum packets;
2479          (ii) sign an agreement with the local clerk, specifying the range of numbers that the
2480     sponsor will use to number the referendum packets; and
2481          (iii) number each referendum packet, sequentially, within the range of numbers
2482     provided by the county clerk, starting with the lowest number in the range.
2483          (b) The sponsors or an agent of the sponsors may not:
2484          (i) number a referendum packet in a manner not directed by the county clerk; or
2485          (ii) circulate or submit a referendum packet that is not numbered in the manner
2486     directed by the county clerk.
2487          Section 18. Section 20A-7-607 is amended to read:
2488          20A-7-607. Evaluation by the local clerk -- Determination of election for vote on
2489     referendum.
2490          (1) In relation to the manual referendum process, when the local clerk receives a
2491     referendum packet from a county clerk, the local clerk shall record the number of the
2492     referendum packet received.
2493          (2) The county clerk shall:
2494          (a) in relation to the manual referendum process:
2495          (i) post the names, voter identification numbers, and dates of signatures described in
2496     Subsection 20A-7-105(6)(a)(iii) on the lieutenant governor's website, in a conspicuous location
2497     designated by the lieutenant governor, for at least 45 days; and
2498          (ii) update on the local clerk's website the number of signatures certified as of the date
2499     of the update; or
2500          (b) in relation to the electronic referendum process:
2501          (i) post the names, voter identification numbers, and dates of signatures described in
2502     Subsection 20A-7-616(3) on the lieutenant governor's website, in a conspicuous location
2503     designated by the lieutenant governor, for at least 45 days; and

2504          (ii) update on the lieutenant governor's website the number of signatures certified as of
2505     the date of the update.
2506          (3) The local clerk:
2507          (a) shall, except as provided in Subsection (3)(b), declare the referendum petition to be
2508     sufficient or insufficient:
2509          (i) in relation to the manual referendum process, no later than 111 days after the day of
2510     the deadline, described in Subsection 20A-7-105(5)(a)(iv), to submit a referendum packet to
2511     the county clerk; or
2512          (ii) in relation to the electronic referendum process, no later than 111 days after the day
2513     of the deadline, described in Subsection 20A-7-616(2), to collect a signature; or
2514          (b) may declare the referendum petition to be insufficient before the day described in
2515     Subsection (3)(a) if:
2516          (i) in relation to the manual referendum process, the total of all valid signatures on
2517     timely and lawfully submitted referendum packets that have been certified by the county clerk,
2518     plus the number of signatures on timely and lawfully submitted referendum packets that have
2519     not yet been evaluated for certification, is less than the number of names required under
2520     Section 20A-7-601;
2521          (ii) in relation to the electronic referendum process, the total of all timely and lawfully
2522     submitted valid signatures that have been certified by the county clerks, plus the number of
2523     timely and lawfully submitted valid signatures received under Subsection 20A-21-201(6)(b)
2524     that have not yet been evaluated for certification, is less than the number of names required
2525     under Section 20A-7-601; or
2526          (iii) a requirement of this part has not been met.
2527          (4) (a) If the total number of names certified under Subsection (3) equals or exceeds
2528     the number of names required under Section 20A-7-601, and the requirements of this part are
2529     met, the local clerk shall mark upon the front of the referendum petition the word "sufficient."
2530          (b) If the total number of names certified under Subsection (3) does not equal or
2531     exceed the number of names required under Section 20A-7-601 or a requirement of this part is
2532     not met, the local clerk shall mark upon the front of the referendum petition the word
2533     "insufficient."
2534          (c) The local clerk shall immediately notify any one of the sponsors of the local clerk's

2535     finding.
2536          (d) After a referendum petition is declared insufficient, a person may not submit
2537     additional signatures to qualify the referendum for the ballot.
2538          (5) (a) If the local clerk refuses to declare a referendum petition sufficient, any voter
2539     may, no later than 10 days after the day on which the local clerk declares the referendum
2540     petition insufficient, apply to the appropriate court for an order finding the referendum petition
2541     legally sufficient.
2542          (b) If the court determines that the referendum petition is legally sufficient, the local
2543     clerk shall mark the referendum petition "sufficient" and consider the declaration of sufficiency
2544     effective as of the date on which the referendum petition should have been declared sufficient
2545     by the local clerk's office.
2546          (c) If the court determines that a referendum petition filed is not legally sufficient, the
2547     court may enjoin the local clerk and all other officers from:
2548          (i) certifying or printing the ballot title and numbers of that referendum on the official
2549     ballot for the next election; or
2550          (ii) [as it relates to a local tax law] if the referendum petition relates to a local tax law,
2551     or a local school tax law, that is conducted entirely by mail, certifying, printing, or mailing the
2552     ballot title and numbers of that referendum under Section 20A-7-609.5.
2553          (6) A referendum petition determined to be sufficient in accordance with this section is
2554     qualified for the ballot.
2555          (7) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (7)(b) or (c), if a referendum relates to
2556     legislative action taken after April 15, the election officer may not place the referendum on an
2557     election ballot until a primary election, a general election, or a special election the following
2558     year.
2559          (b) The election officer may place a referendum described in Subsection (7)(a) on the
2560     ballot for a special, primary, or general election held during the year that the legislative action
2561     was taken if the following agree, in writing, on a timeline to place the referendum on that
2562     ballot:
2563          (i) the local clerk;
2564          (ii) the county clerk; and
2565          (iii) the attorney for the county [or], municipality, or school district that took the

2566     legislative action.
2567          (c) For a referendum on a land use law, if, before August 30, the local clerk or a court
2568     determines that the total number of certified names equals or exceeds the number of signatures
2569     required in Section 20A-7-601, the election officer shall place the referendum on the election
2570     ballot for:
2571          (i) the next general election; or
2572          (ii) another election, if the following agree, in writing, on a timeline to place the
2573     referendum on that ballot:
2574          (A) the affected owners, as defined in Section 10-9a-103 or 17-27a-103, as applicable;
2575          (B) the local clerk;
2576          (C) the county clerk; and
2577          (D) the attorney for the county or municipality that took the legislative action.
2578          Section 19. Section 20A-7-608 is amended to read:
2579          20A-7-608. Short title and summary of referendum -- Duties of local clerk and
2580     local attorney.
2581          (1) Upon receipt of a referendum petition, the local clerk shall deliver a copy of the
2582     referendum petition and the law to which the referendum relates to the local attorney.
2583          (2) The local attorney shall:
2584          (a) entitle each county [or], municipal, or school district referendum that qualifies for
2585     the ballot "Proposition Number __" and give the referendum a number assigned in accordance
2586     with Section 20A-6-107;
2587          (b) prepare for the referendum:
2588          (i) an impartial short title, not exceeding 25 words, that generally describes the subject
2589     of the law to which the referendum relates; and
2590          (ii) an impartial summary of the contents of the law to which the referendum relates,
2591     not exceeding 125 words;
2592          (c) file the proposed short title, summary, and the numbered referendum title with the
2593     local clerk within 20 days after the day on which an eligible voter submits the referendum
2594     petition to the local clerk; and
2595          (d) promptly provide notice of the filing of the proposed short title and summary to:
2596          (i) the sponsors of the petition; and

2597          (ii) the local legislative body or the local school board for the jurisdiction where the
2598     referendum petition was circulated.
2599          (3) (a) The short title and summary may be distinct from the title of the law that is the
2600     subject of the referendum petition.
2601          (b) In preparing a short title, the local attorney shall, to the best of the local attorney's
2602     ability, give a true and impartial description of the subject of the referendum.
2603          (c) In preparing a summary, the local attorney shall, to the best of the local attorney's
2604     ability, give a true and impartial summary of the contents of the referendum.
2605          (d) The short title and summary may not intentionally be an argument, or likely to
2606     create prejudice, for or against the referendum.
2607          (4) (a) Within five calendar days after the day on which the local attorney files a
2608     proposed short title and summary under Subsection (2)(c), the local legislative body or local
2609     school board for the jurisdiction where the referendum petition was circulated and the sponsors
2610     of the referendum petition may file written comments in response to the proposed short title
2611     and summary with the local clerk.
2612          (b) Within five calendar days after the last date to submit written comments under
2613     Subsection (4)(a), the local attorney shall:
2614          (i) review any written comments filed in accordance with Subsection (4)(a);
2615          (ii) prepare a final short title and summary that meets the requirements of Subsection
2616     (3); and
2617          (iii) return the referendum petition and file the short title and summary with the local
2618     clerk.
2619          (c) Subject to Subsection (6), for each county [or], municipal, or school district
2620     referendum, the following shall be printed on the official ballot:
2621          (i) the short title; and
2622          (ii) except as provided in Subsection (4)(d):
2623          (A) the summary;
2624          (B) a copy of the ordinance, resolution, or written description of the local law or the
2625     local school tax law; and
2626          (C) a link to a location on the election officer's website where a voter may review
2627     additional information relating to each referendum, including the information described in

2628     Subsection 20A-7-602(2) and the arguments relating to the referendum that are included in the
2629     local voter information pamphlet.
2630          (d) Unless the information described in Subsection (4)(c)(ii) is printed on the official
2631     ballot, the election officer shall include with the ballot a separate ballot proposition insert that
2632     includes the short title and summary for each referendum on the ballot and a link to a location
2633     on the election officer's website where a voter may review the additional information described
2634     in Subsection (4)(c)(ii)(C).
2635          (e) Unless the information described in Subsection 20A-7-508(4)(c)(ii) for all
2636     initiatives on the ballot, and the information described in Subsection (4)(c)(ii) for all referenda
2637     on the ballot, is printed on the ballot, the ballot shall include the following statement at the
2638     beginning of the portion of the ballot that includes ballot measures, "The ballot proposition
2639     sheet included with this ballot contains an impartial summary of each initiative and referendum
2640     on this ballot, unless the summary is printed directly on the ballot."
2641          (5) Immediately after the local attorney files a copy of the short title and summary with
2642     the local clerk, the local clerk shall serve a copy of the short title and summary by mail upon
2643     the sponsors of the referendum petition and the local legislative body or the local school board
2644     for the jurisdiction or school district where the referendum petition was circulated.
2645          (6) (a) If the short title or summary provided by the local attorney is unsatisfactory or
2646     does not comply with the requirements of this section, the decision of the local attorney may be
2647     appealed to the appropriate court by:
2648          (i) at least three sponsors of the referendum petition; or
2649          (ii) a majority of the local legislative body or the local school board for the jurisdiction
2650     where the referendum petition was circulated.
2651          (b) The court:
2652          (i) shall examine the short title and summary and consider the arguments; and
2653          (ii) enter an order consistent with the requirements of this section.
2654          (c) The local clerk shall include the short title and summary in the ballot or ballot
2655     proposition insert, as required by this section.
2656          Section 20. Section 20A-7-609 is amended to read:
2657          20A-7-609. Form of ballot -- Manner of voting.
2658          (1) The local clerk shall ensure that the number and ballot title are presented upon the

2659     official ballot with, immediately adjacent to them, the words "For" and "Against," each word
2660     presented with an adjacent square in which the elector may indicate the elector's vote.
2661          (2) (a) Except as provided in Subsection [(2)(c)(i)] (2)(d)(i) or Section 20A-7-609.5,
2662     and unless the county legislative body calls a special election, the county clerk shall ensure that
2663     a county referenda that [have] has qualified for the ballot [appear] appears on the next regular
2664     general election ballot.
2665          (b) Except as provided in Subsection [(2)(c)(ii)] (2)(d)(ii) or Section 20A-7-609.5, and
2666     unless the municipal legislative body calls a special election, the municipal recorder or clerk
2667     shall ensure that a municipal referenda that [have] has qualified for the ballot [appear] appears
2668     on the next regular municipal election ballot.
2669          (c) Except as provided in Subsection (2)(d)(iii) or Section 20A-7-609.5, and unless the
2670     local school board calls a special election, the business administrator or superintendent shall
2671     ensure that a school district referenda that has qualified for the ballot appears on the next
2672     regular general election ballot.
2673          [(c)] (d) [(i)] Except as provided in Section 20A-7-609.5[,]:
2674          (i) if a local law passes after January 30 of the year in which there is a regular general
2675     election, the county clerk shall ensure that a county referendum that has qualified for the ballot
2676     appears on the ballot at the second regular general election immediately following the passage
2677     of the local law unless the county legislative body calls a special election[.];
2678          (ii) [Except as provided in Section 20A-7-609.5,] if a local law passes after January 30
2679     of the year in which there is a municipal general election, the municipal recorder or clerk shall
2680     ensure that a municipal referendum that has qualified for the ballot appears on the ballot at the
2681     second municipal general election immediately following the passage of the local law unless
2682     the municipal legislative body calls a special election[.]; or
2683          (iii) if a local school tax law passes after January 30 of the year in which there is a
2684     regular general election, the business administrator or superintendent shall ensure that a school
2685     district referendum that has qualified for the ballot appears on the ballot at the second regular
2686     general election immediately following passage of the local school tax law unless the local
2687     school board calls a special election.
2688          (3) (a) (i) A voter desiring to vote in favor of the law that is the subject of the
2689     referendum shall mark the square adjacent to the word "For."

2690          (ii) The law that is the subject of the referendum is effective if a majority of voters
2691     mark "For."
2692          (b) (i) A voter desiring to vote against the law that is the subject of the referendum
2693     shall mark the square following the word "Against."
2694          (ii) The law that is the subject of the referendum is not effective if a majority of voters
2695     mark "Against."
2696          Section 21. Section 20A-7-609.5 is amended to read:
2697          20A-7-609.5. Election on referendum challenging a local tax law or a local school
2698     tax law conducted entirely by mail.
2699          (1) An election officer may administer an election on a referendum challenging a local
2700     tax law or a local school tax law entirely by mail.
2701          (2) For purposes of an election conducted under this section, the election officer shall:
2702          (a) designate as the election day the day that is 30 days after the day on which the
2703     election officer complies with Subsection (2)(b); and
2704          (b) within 30 days after the day on which the referendum described in Subsection (1)
2705     qualifies for the ballot, mail to each registered voter within the voting precincts or school
2706     district to which the local tax law or the local school tax law applies:
2707          (i) a manual ballot;
2708          (ii) a statement that there will be no polling place for the election;
2709          (iii) a statement specifying the election day described in Subsection (2)(a);
2710          (iv) a business reply mail envelope;
2711          (v) instructions for returning the ballot that include an express notice about any
2712     relevant deadlines that the voter must meet in order for the voter's vote to be counted;
2713          (vi) a warning, on a separate page of colored paper in boldface print, indicating that if
2714     the voter fails to follow the instructions included with the manual ballot, the voter will be
2715     unable to vote in that election because there will be no polling place for the election; and
2716          (vii) (A) a copy of the proposition information pamphlet relating to the referendum if a
2717     proposition information pamphlet relating to the referendum was published under Section
2718     20A-7-401.5; or
2719          (B) a website address where an individual may view a copy of the proposition
2720     information pamphlet described in Subsection (2)(b)(vii)(A).

2721          (3) An election officer who administers an election under this section shall:
2722          (a) (i) obtain, in person, the signatures of each voter within that voting precinct or
2723     school district before the election; or
2724          (ii) obtain the signature of each voter within the voting precinct or school district from
2725     the county clerk; and
2726          (b) maintain the signatures on file in the election officer's office.
2727          (4) (a) Upon receiving a returned manual ballot under this section, the election officer
2728     shall compare the signature on each return envelope with the voter's signature that is
2729     maintained on file and verify that the signatures are the same.
2730          (b) If the election officer questions the authenticity of the signature on the return
2731     envelope, the election officer shall immediately contact the voter to verify the signature.
2732          (c) If there is not a signature on the return envelope or if the election officer determines
2733     that the signature on the return envelope does not match the voter's signature that is maintained
2734     on file, the election officer shall:
2735          (i) disqualify the ballot; and
2736          (ii) notify the voter of the disqualification and the reason for the disqualification.
2737          Section 22. Section 20A-7-610 is amended to read:
2738          20A-7-610. Return and canvass -- Conflicting measures -- Law effective on
2739     proclamation.
2740          (1) The votes on the law that is the subject of the referendum petition shall be counted,
2741     canvassed, and delivered as provided in Title 20A, Chapter 4, Part 3, Canvassing Returns.
2742          (2) After the local board of canvassers completes the canvass, the local clerk shall
2743     certify to the local legislative body or the local school board the vote for and against the law
2744     that is the subject of the referendum petition.
2745          (3) (a) The local legislative body or the local school board shall immediately issue a
2746     proclamation that:
2747          (i) gives the total number of votes cast in the local jurisdiction for and against each law
2748     that is the subject of a referendum petition; and
2749          (ii) in accordance with Section 20A-7-611, declares those laws that are the subject of a
2750     referendum petition that are approved by majority vote to be in full force and effect as the law
2751     of the local jurisdiction.

2752          (b) When the local legislative body or the local school board determines that two laws,
2753     or that parts of two laws approved by the people at the same election are entirely in conflict, the
2754     local legislative body or local school board shall proclaim to be law the law that received the
2755     greatest number of affirmative votes, regardless of the difference in the majorities which those
2756     approved laws received.
2757          (4) (a) Within 10 days after the day on which the local legislative body or the local
2758     school board issues the proclamation described in Subsection (3), any qualified voter residing
2759     in the jurisdiction for a law that is declared by the local legislative body or the local school
2760     board to be superseded by another law approved at the same election may bring an action in the
2761     appropriate court to review the decision.
2762          (b) The court shall:
2763          (i) consider the matter and decide whether the approved laws are entirely in conflict;
2764     and
2765          (ii) issue an order, consistent with the court's decision, to the local legislative body or
2766     the local school board.
2767          (5) Within 10 days after the day on which the court enters an order under Subsection
2768     (4)(b)(ii), the local legislative body or the local school board shall:
2769          (a) proclaim as law all those laws approved by the people that the court determines are
2770     not in conflict; and
2771          (b) of all those laws approved by the people as law that the court determines to be in
2772     conflict, proclaim as law the one that receives the greatest number of affirmative votes,
2773     regardless of the difference in majorities.
2774          Section 23. Section 20A-7-611 is amended to read:
2775          20A-7-611. Temporary stay -- Effective date -- Effect of repeal by local legislative
2776     body or local school board.
2777          (1) Any law submitted to the people by referendum petition that is rejected by the
2778     voters at any election is repealed as of the date of the election.
2779          (2) If, at the time during the process described in Subsection 20A-7-607(2), the local
2780     clerk determines that, at that point in time, an adequate number of signatures are certified to
2781     comply with the signature requirements, the local clerk shall:
2782          (a) issue an order temporarily staying the law from going into effect; and

2783          (b) continue the process of certifying signatures and removing signatures as required by
2784     this part.
2785          (3) The temporary stay described in Subsection (2) remains in effect, regardless of
2786     whether a future count falls below the signature threshold, until the day on which:
2787          (a) if the local clerk declares the referendum petition insufficient, five days after the
2788     day on which the local clerk declares the referendum petition insufficient; or
2789          (b) if the local clerk declares the referendum petition sufficient, the day on which the
2790     local legislative body or the local school board issues the proclamation described in Section
2791     20A-7-610.
2792          (4) A law submitted to the people by referendum that is approved by the voters at an
2793     election takes effect the later of:
2794          (a) five days after the date of the official proclamation of the vote by the local
2795     legislative body or the local school board; or
2796          (b) the effective date specified in the approved law.
2797          (5) If, after the local clerk issues a temporary stay order under Subsection (2)(a), the
2798     local clerk declares the referendum petition insufficient, the law that is the subject of the
2799     referendum petition takes effect the later of:
2800          (a) five days after the day on which the local clerk declares the petition insufficient; or
2801          (b) the effective date specified in the proposed law.
2802          (6) (a) A law approved by the people under this part is not subject to veto.
2803          (b) The local legislative body or the local school board may amend any laws approved
2804     by the people under this part after the people approve the law.
2805          (7) If the local legislative body or the local school board repeals a law challenged by
2806     referendum petition under this part, the referendum petition is void and no further action on the
2807     referendum petition is required.
2808          Section 24. Section 20A-7-613 is amended to read:
2809          20A-7-613. Property tax referendum petition.
2810          (1) As used in this section[,]:
2811          (a) ["certified tax rate"] "Certified tax rate" means the same as that term is defined in
2812     Section 59-2-924.
2813          (b) "Taxing entity" means a county, city, town, metro township, or school district with

2814     the authority to levy a tax on property.
2815          (2) Except as provided in this section, the requirements of this part apply to a
2816     referendum petition challenging a taxing entity's legislative body's vote to impose a tax rate that
2817     exceeds the certified tax rate.
2818          (3) Notwithstanding Subsection 20A-7-105(5)(a)(iv), the sponsors or an agent of the
2819     sponsors shall deliver a signed and verified referendum packet to the county clerk of the county
2820     in which the packet was circulated before 5 p.m. no later than the earlier of:
2821          (a) 30 days after the day on which the first individual signs the packet; or
2822          (b) 40 days after the day on which the local clerk complies with Subsection
2823     20A-7-604(3).
2824          (4) Notwithstanding Subsections 20A-7-105(6)(a) and (9), the county clerk shall take
2825     the actions required in Subsections 20A-7-105(6)(a) and (9) within 10 working days after the
2826     day on which the county clerk receives the signed and verified referendum packet as described
2827     in Subsection (3).
2828          (5) The local clerk shall take the actions required by Section 20A-7-607 within two
2829     working days after:
2830          (a) in relation to the manual referendum process, the day on which the local clerk
2831     receives the referendum packets from the county clerk; or
2832          (b) in relation to the electronic referendum process, the deadline described in
2833     Subsection 20A-7-616(2).
2834          (6) Notwithstanding Subsection 20A-7-608(2), the local attorney shall prepare the
2835     ballot title within two working days after the day on which the referendum petition is declared
2836     sufficient for submission to a vote of the people.
2837          (7) Notwithstanding Subsection [20A-7-609(2)(c)] 20A-7-609(2)(d), a referendum that
2838     qualifies for the ballot under this section shall appear on the ballot for the earlier of the next
2839     regular general election or the next municipal general election unless a special election is
2840     called.
2841          (8) The election officer shall mail manual ballots on a referendum under this section
2842     the later of:
2843          (a) the time provided in Section 20A-3a-202 or 20A-16-403; or
2844          (b) the time that ballots are prepared for mailing under this section.

2845          (9) Section 20A-7-402 does not apply to a referendum described in this section.
2846          (10) (a) If a majority of voters does not vote against imposing the tax at a rate
2847     calculated to generate the increased revenue budgeted, adopted, and approved by the taxing
2848     entity's legislative body:
2849          (i) the certified tax rate for the fiscal year during which the referendum petition is filed
2850     is its most recent certified tax rate; and
2851          (ii) the proposed increased revenues for purposes of establishing the certified tax rate
2852     for the fiscal year after the fiscal year described in Subsection (10)(a)(i) are the proposed
2853     increased revenues budgeted, adopted, and approved by the taxing entity's legislative body
2854     before the filing of the referendum petition.
2855          (b) If a majority of voters votes against imposing a tax at the rate established by the
2856     vote of the taxing entity's legislative body, the certified tax rate for the taxing entity is the
2857     taxing entity's most recent certified tax rate.
2858          (c) If the tax rate is set in accordance with Subsection (10)(a)(ii), a taxing entity is not
2859     required to comply with the notice and public hearing requirements of Section 59-2-919 if the
2860     taxing entity complies with those notice and public hearing requirements before the referendum
2861     petition is filed.
2862          (11) The ballot title shall, at a minimum, include in substantially this form the
2863     following: "Shall the [name of the taxing entity] be authorized to levy a tax rate in the amount
2864     sufficient to generate an increased property tax revenue of [amount] for fiscal year [year] as
2865     budgeted, adopted, and approved by the [name of the taxing entity].".
2866          (12) A taxing entity shall pay the county the costs incurred by the county that are
2867     directly related to meeting the requirements of this section and that the county would not have
2868     incurred but for compliance with this section.
2869          (13) (a) An election officer shall include on a ballot a referendum that has not yet
2870     qualified for placement on the ballot, if:
2871          (i) sponsors file an application for a referendum described in this section;
2872          (ii) the ballot will be used for the election for which the sponsors are attempting to
2873     qualify the referendum; and
2874          (iii) the deadline for qualifying the referendum for placement on the ballot occurs after
2875     the day on which the ballot will be printed.

2876          (b) If an election officer includes on a ballot a referendum described in Subsection
2877     (13)(a), the ballot title shall comply with Subsection (11).
2878          (c) If an election officer includes on a ballot a referendum described in Subsection
2879     (13)(a) that does not qualify for placement on the ballot, the election officer shall inform the
2880     voters by any practicable method that the referendum has not qualified for the ballot and that
2881     votes cast in relation to the referendum will not be counted.
2882          Section 25. Section 20A-7-614 is amended to read:
2883          20A-7-614. Electronic referendum process -- Form of referendum petition --
2884     Circulation requirements -- Signature collection.
2885          (1) This section applies only to the electronic referendum process.
2886          (2) (a) The first screen presented on the approved device shall include the following
2887     statement:
2888          "This REFERENDUM PETITION is addressed to the Honorable ____, County
2889     Clerk/City Recorder/Town Clerk/Business Administrator/Superintendent:
2890          The citizens of Utah who sign this petition respectfully order that (description of the
2891     local law or the local school tax law, or portion of the local law or the local school tax law,
2892     being challenged), passed by the ____ be referred to the voters for their approval or rejection at
2893     the regular/municipal general election to be held on __________(month\day\year)."
2894          (b) An individual may not advance to the second screen until the individual clicks a
2895     link at the bottom of the first screen stating, "By clicking here, I attest that I have read and
2896     understand the information presented on this screen."
2897          (3) (a) The second screen presented on the approved device shall include the entire text
2898     of the law that is the subject of the referendum petition.
2899          (b) An individual may not advance to the third screen until the individual clicks a link
2900     at the bottom of the second screen stating, "By clicking here, I attest that I have read and
2901     understand the entire text of the law that is the subject of the referendum petition."
2902          (4) (a) The third screen presented on the approved device shall include a statement
2903     indicating whether persons gathering signatures for the referendum petition may be paid for
2904     gathering signatures.
2905          (b) An individual may not advance to the fourth screen until the individual clicks a link
2906     at the bottom of the third screen stating, "By clicking here, I attest that I have read and

2907     understand the information presented on this screen."
2908          (5) The fourth screen presented on the approved device shall include the following
2909     statement, followed by links where the individual may click "yes" or "no":
2910          "I have personally reviewed the entirety of each statement presented on this device;
2911          I am personally signing this referendum petition;
2912          I am registered to vote in Utah; and
2913          All information I enter on this device, including my residence and post office address, is
2914     accurate.
2915          It is a class A misdemeanor for an individual to sign a referendum petition with a name
2916     other than the individual's own name, or to knowingly sign the individual's name more than
2917     once for the same referendum petition, or to sign a referendum petition when the individual
2918     knows that the individual is not a registered voter.
2919          Do you wish to continue and sign this referendum petition?"
2920          (6) (a) If the individual clicks "no" in response to the question described in Subsection
2921     (5), the next screen shall include the following statement, "Thank you for your time. Please
2922     return this device to the signature-gatherer."
2923          (b) If the individual clicks "yes" in response to the question described in Subsection
2924     (5), the website, or the application that accesses the website, shall take the signature-gatherer
2925     and the individual signing the referendum petition through the signature process described in
2926     Section 20A-21-201.
2927          Section 26. Section 63G-30-102 is amended to read:
2928          63G-30-102. Public notice classifications and requirements.
2929          (1) A public body or a government official that is required to provide a class A notice:
2930          (a) shall publish the public notice on the Utah Public Notice Website;
2931          (b) shall publish the public notice on the public body's or government official's official
2932     website, if the public body or government official:
2933          (i) maintains an official website; and
2934          (ii) has an annual operating budget of $250,000 or more; and
2935          (c) except as provided in Subsection (4), and subject to Subsection (5), post the public
2936     notice in connection with the affected area as follows:
2937          (i) if the affected area is a municipality with a population of less than 2,000, in a public

2938     location in or near the affected area that is reasonably likely to be seen by residents of the
2939     affected area;
2940          (ii) if the affected area is a proposed municipality with a population of less than 2,000,
2941     in a public location in or near the affected area that is reasonably likely to be seen by residents
2942     of the affected area;
2943          (iii) if the affected area is an area other than an area described in Subsections (1)(c)(i),
2944     (1)(c)(ii), or (1)(c)(iv) through [(viii),] (ix), in a public location in or near the affected area that
2945     is reasonably likely to be seen by:
2946          (A) residents of the affected area; or
2947          (B) if there are no residents within the affected area, individuals who pass through or
2948     near the affected area;
2949          (iv) if the affected area is a county, in a public location within the county that is
2950     reasonably likely to be seen by residents of the county;
2951          (v) if the affected area is a municipality with a population of 2,000 or more, or a
2952     proposed municipality with a population of 2,000 or more, in a public location within the
2953     municipality or proposed municipality that is reasonably likely to be seen by residents of the
2954     municipality or proposed municipality;
2955          (vi) if the affected area is a public street, on or adjacent to the public street;
2956          (vii) if the affected area is an easement:
2957          (A) on or adjacent to the easement; or
2958          (B) in a public location that is reasonably likely to be seen by persons who are likely to
2959     be impacted by the easement; [or]
2960          (viii) if the affected area is an interlocal entity, within, or as applicable near, each
2961     jurisdiction that is part of the interlocal entity, in accordance with the provisions of this
2962     Subsection (1) that apply to that jurisdiction[.]; or
2963          (ix) if the affected area is a school district, in a public location within the school
2964     district that is reasonably likely to be seen by residents of the school district.
2965          (2) Subject to Subsection (5), a public body or a government official that is required to
2966     provide a class B notice shall:
2967          (a) comply with the requirements described in Subsection (1) for a class A notice;
2968          (b) if a statute, county ordinance, or municipal ordinance requires that the notice be

2969     provided for a designated geographic area, mail or otherwise deliver the public notice or a
2970     notice summary statement to each residence within, and, in accordance with Subsection (3), to
2971     each owner of real property located within, the designated geographic area; and
2972          (c) if a statute, county ordinance, or municipal ordinance requires that the notice be
2973     provided to one or more designated persons or real property owners, mail or otherwise deliver
2974     the public notice or a notice summary statement, in accordance with Subsection (3), to each
2975     designated person and real property owner.
2976          (3) When providing notice to a real property owner under Subsection (2)(b) or (c), the
2977     public body or government official shall:
2978          (a) use the current residential or business address of the real property owner;
2979          (b) if the public body or government official is not reasonably able to obtain the
2980     address described in Subsection (3)(a), use the last known address of the real property owner
2981     that the public body or government official is able to obtain via a reasonable inquiry into public
2982     records; or
2983          (c) if the public body or government official is not reasonably able to obtain an address
2984     described in Subsection (3)(a) or (b), post the notice on the real property.
2985          (4) A government official, a public body, or any other body that is required to post
2986     notice under Subsection (1) is not required to comply with Subsection (1)(c) if:
2987          (a) the affected area is the state;
2988          (b) the body is a specified body, as defined in Section 52-4-103;
2989          (c) the public body is the Legislature or a public body within the state legislative
2990     branch; or
2991          (d) the government official is required to post the notice on behalf of a body described
2992     in Subsection (4)(b) or (c).
2993          (5) If a statute, ordinance, or rule requires a public body or government official to
2994     provide notice for a period of time:
2995          (a) in relation to posting the notice on the Utah Public Notice Website, the requirement
2996     is not violated due to temporary technological issues that interrupt the posting, unless the
2997     posting is interrupted for more than 25% of the required posting time;
2998          (b) in relation to posting the notice in a physical location, the requirement is fulfilled if:
2999          (i) the notice is posted at or, except to the extent prohibited by law, before the

3000     beginning of the period of time;
3001          (ii) the public body or government official does not remove the posting before the end
3002     of the period of time; and
3003          (iii) until the end of the period of time, the public body or government official:
3004          (A) periodically verifies that the notice remains in place; and
3005          (B) replaces the notice within a reasonable time after discovering that the notice has
3006     been removed or damaged; and
3007          (c) in relation to mailing, sending, or otherwise delivering notice to a person, the
3008     mailing is made at or, except to the extent prohibited by law, before, the beginning of the
3009     period of time.
3010          Section 27. Effective date.
3011          This bill takes effect on May 1, 2024.