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Murray Journal | April 2025

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April 2025 | Vol. 35 Iss. 4

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Murray

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Murray City Council approves water rate hikes amid rising infrastructure costs By Shaun Delliskave | s.delliskave@mycityjournals.com

Water rates will increase by 20% over the next two years.

T

he Murray City Council has approved a series of water rate increases aimed at addressing the city’s aging infrastructure, ensuring future water supply and keeping up with rising operational costs. The decision, reached during the council’s March 4 meeting, will raise water fees incrementally over the next several years, despite concerns from residents and local officials about affordability. The approved rate hikes will begin with a 20% increase for the next two years, followed by 10% in 2027, 5% in 2028, and 2% annually thereafter. City officials emphasized that without these adjustments, the water fund would face a deficit by 2026, making essential infrastructure upgrades impossible. “We end up not being able to fund our internal capital projects that need to take place,” Murray City Wastewater Superintendent Ben Ford said, referencing the impact of inaction on infrastructure improvements. “A project that’s going to cost $3 million today, three years down the road is going to cost $3.5 million.” The decision comes as Murray City faces mounting challenges with its water infrastructure. The October 2024 Water Master Plan, a key guiding document for water management, identified multiple deficiencies, including aging pipelines, declining well capacities and outdated storage reservoirs. Among the proposed capital projects is the development of a new well at Winchester and 1200 West, which would provide additional water supply for the city’s growing southwest region. Officials also cited the need to replace older steel water mains, rehabilitate aging reservoirs and improve well efficiencies. “We’d like to develop a new well at Winchester and 1200 West to support a new park, peak day demand issues and provide the source redundancy in the southwest area of our city,” Water Superintendent Aron Frisk said. “We will meet projected demands at buildout in 2065 with a 20% water source reserve.” City officials argued that Murray will continue to have some of the lowest water rates in Salt Lake Valley. A typical

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A comparison of Murray’s current and future water rates compared to other Salt Lake County cities. (Graph courtesy Murray City) single-family home will see an average increase of about $4 per month, with commercial users experiencing higher adjustments based on consumption. “With our proposed rates we will remain the most affordable water in Salt Lake Valley. The average single-family home will see an increase of about $4 per month from this rate increase,” Frisk said. “It’s comparable to one of my cheeseburgers… I had at lunch today.” In addition to residential rate hikes, the council approved an update to the city’s impact fee structure, shifting more of the financial burden onto developers. Previously, impact fees were calculated based solely on meter size; the new structure bases

fees on historical water usage patterns, differentiating between single-family homes, multi-family developments and non-residential users. Under the revised fee schedule, a new single-family home will now pay a $3,800 impact fee, a slight increase from the previous $3,720 charge. Developers of multi-family units will now be assessed fees based on per-door indoor usage, while outdoor water use will be charged per irrigated acre. To mitigate financial strain on residents, city leaders are exploring additional funding mechanisms, including a potenContinued page 15


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