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Cedar City Council weighs master-plan options for long-term water supply, directs budget priorities

2730055 · March 21, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Councilmembers reviewed a city water master plan presenting options — West Pump Station, canyon filtration, several well sites and Pine Valley participation — and asked staff to prioritize funding for canyon filtration, a Martin’s Flat test well and planning for the West Pump Station.

Cedar City Council members spent the meeting reviewing a multi-option water-supply master plan that lays out short- and long-term choices — including a West Pump Station project, filtration upgrades for Cedar Canyon springs, test drilling at Martin’s Flat, a Braffitts Creek well and a larger Pine Valley import — and directed staff to reflect immediate priorities in the upcoming budget.

The master plan’s presenters told the council that the most time-sensitive items are completing canyon filtration to meet state treatment expectations, funding a $1 million test well at Martin’s Flat, and advancing the West Pump Station because of interconnections and chlorination needs. Ridley, a staff member who led the presentation, summarized cost and capacity estimates and described the draft report’s near-term availability: “If we needed to get it to you next week, I think we could,” Ridley said.

Why it matters: City staff and consultants said state requirements to address chlorination and water treatment make some near-term upgrades mandatory. The consultants presented a range of capacity, cost and operational tradeoffs — from low-cost, near-infrastructure options such as a Braffitts Creek well (estimated near $5.1 million) to large regional buys or infrastructure like the Pine Valley project (published Central Iron County estimates used, whole-project figures not Cedar City’s share) — and warned that the city likely cannot meet long-term modeled demand without participation in a Pine Valley import or…

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