Government Affairs

WFRC works closely with public and private partners, including local, regional, state, and federal government, to advance legislative priorities and implement policies that support the Wasatch Choice Vision and Utah’s Unified Transportation Plan. These efforts focus on policy areas such as transportation, land use, economic development, housing, parks and natural spaces, and air quality.

State Legislative Resources

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Bill Tracker
WFRC tracks bills that impact transportation and communities along the Wasatch Front during the legislative session.
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Appropriations Tracker

WFRC tracks relevant funding item information as appropriations make their way through the legislative budgeting process.

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Legislative Session Wrap-Up
Our comprehensive wrap-ups provide detailed information on the key budget and policy items tracked during the session.

2026 Legislative Summary Card

Recent and Archived State Legislation Policy Briefs

WFRC provides meaningful analysis of the most noteworthy pieces of legislation impacting transportation policy and our work at WFRC, including comprehensive bill summaries from the past decade.
S.B. 197 Transportation Funding and Governance Amendments (Harper/Christofferson)

S.B. 197 ties together governance changes to the Utah Transit Authority (UTA) with a funding mechanism that would provide additional funding into the Transit Transportation Investment Fund (TTIF).

S.B. 242 Transportation Amendments (Harper/Christofferson)

This “omnibus” bill includes changes to various transportation-related programs, including: the “5th5th” local option sales tax distribution, Highway Reduction Strategy requirements in Salt Lake City, and other programs.

H.B. 492 Transportation, Infrastructure, and Housing Amendments (Roberts/Cullimore)

H.B. 492 would create grant and loan programs to aid communities in funding and financing regional infrastructure, as well as reallocate certain funds for specific transportation/infrastructure projects.

Key State Policies

Station Area Planning (SAP)

State law requires cities with a fixed guideway transit station (rail or BRT) to develop a Station Area Plan (SAP) and update their zoning to implement the SAP. Station Area Plans (SAP) optimize future development in areas around rail and BRT transit stations in a way that fits the context for the specific city and area.

Housing and Transit Reinvestment Zones (HTRZ)

Housing and Transit Reinvestment Zones (HTRZ) Utah State law enables a portion of incremental tax revenue growth to be captured over a period of time to support mixed-use, multi-family, and affordable housing development within a 1/3-mile radius of UTA FrontRunner stations and ¼ mile of TRAX and BRT stations.

Transportation Reinvestment Zones (TRZ)

Utah State law authorizes the creation of a TRZ by two or more public agencies by interlocal agreement to capture increased property or sales tax revenue generated by a transportation infrastructure project. TRZs are a tool to assist local governments with the funding and implementation of transportation infrastructure.

First Home Investment Zones (FHIZ)

First Home Investment Zones are a new tool to encourage medium-density centered development and homeownership for first time home buyers within Utah’s municipalities. The bill allows for tax increment capture to accommodate project and system infrastructure costs of the center, and requires certain densities, affordability, deed restrictions, and other requirements.

Local Option Transportation Sales Taxes

Utah State law authorizes the imposition of local option sales taxes for transportation, which is sometimes referred to as “quarters” because generally they are 0.25% tax rates. These local options provide funding for city and county roads and active transportation needs, as well as public transit.

Federal Legislation and Policy

WFRC Policy

Federal Transportation Reauthorization (2026)

Utah’s transportation agencies and partners have jointly developed a set of Federal Transportation Reauthorization Principles. We worked together to develop these key principles for a multi-year reauthorization that reflects Utah priorities with an eye toward maintaining quality of life as Utah grows. Additionally, Utah’s four Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPOs) developed a set of specific policy priorities for consideration.

Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (2021)

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) provided $1.2 trillion in infrastructure funding, of which $550 billion is new funding above baseline levels over five years for roads, bridges, rail, transit, ports, airports, water, broadband, and other infrastructure programs. The bill also includes a 5-year surface transportation reauthorization. The IIJA expires in September of 2026.

Contact

For additional information, please contact:

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Miranda Jones Cox
Government Affairs Manager

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