Raising Great Salt Lake water levels is simple. Utah is America’s most wasteful municipal water user, meaning that reducing municipal water demand is relatively easy. Cities across the U.S. have been implementing an array of water conservation programs and policies successfully for decades, many of which can be implemented to provide water for the Great Salt Lake.

 One of the first steps to implementing water demand reduction in Utah’s cities is to create sensible water rate structures, starting by phasing out the current property tax collection policy that encourages water waste. Utah water districts over-collect property taxes on housing, businesses and automobiles at a rate nearly three times that of other western water suppliers. Phasing out these property taxes would raise the price of municipal water closer to the national average, thereby greatly lowering water demand and providing water transfer opportunities for the Lake.

Additionally, individuals can be incentivized to sell their water to the Great Salt Lake through conservation organizations and other parties by amending Utah’s flawed instream flow law.

Finally, establishing a levy system to raise water fees on the watershed’s most wasteful water users --with increasing user fees based on the water elevation needs of the Lake-- is relatively simple. Elevation-driven drought management plans have been used successfully elsewhere, most notably on Lake Mead, which places water use restrictions on specific users as a function of declining reservoir levels.

As water becomes available through these and other programs and technologies, a permanent funding stream to transfer available water rights to the Lake would be easy to institute by leveraging existing tax collection policies.

The Utah Rivers Council has authored legislation for these and other efforts to conserve water, however, the Utah Legislature has refused to pass the proposed bills, often preventing a legislative committee from even hearing our legislation. This refusal stems from the massive special interest of water lobbyists which line the hallways and backrooms of the Utah Legislature. Utahns and Americans across the country must now decide if we are going to let the aquatic treasure that is the Great Salt Lake disappear through the power of this special interest and its lobbyists who are preventing Utah legislators from acting for the best interest of all Utahns.

Utah Rivers Council proposed legislation such as the Concurrent Resolution Regarding the Great Salt Lake Elevation Targets and Great Salt Lake Funding Modifications to help save the Lake. Learn more about our bills and its current status by clicking on each one.