Sadly, the Governor's "Coordinated Action Plan for Water" is Nothing New

On January 13, Governor Cox released his Coordinated Action Plan for Water. Branded as a “groundbreaking effort,” the document is meant to show that Utah’s executive office is on the cutting edge of water policy. However, the governor has not announced large new plans, programs, or strategies for addressing water issues in the state. There is nothing substantially new in the Governor’s plan.

The majority of the document is spent summarizing water management practices that the state has already implemented, and it is done in a way that emphasizes favorable activities like water conservation and downplays unfavorable ones like the Lake Powell Pipeline and Bear River Development. While in reality, the state has spent much more time and effort advancing these diversion projects than it has conservation.

The only novel aspects in the governor’s document are his five “Action Plan” objectives. Not all of these objectives are bad, but they are all fairly feeble and include vague measures like “creating a framework,” “developing needs assessments,” and continuing programs the state is already running. The steps are unfortunately too minor to achieve any significant water savings.

We took a deep dive into the governor’s plan and found some issues: