Senate approves substitute to centralize Great Salt Lake leadership but keeps governor appointment authority

Utah State Senate · March 1, 2023

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Summary

Third substitute of H.B. 491 passed after sponsors revised appointment language; the bill creates a Great Salt Lake Commissioner to coordinate agency action but preserves the governor’s ability to appoint and remove that commissioner, and sponsors said records would remain subject to GRAMA.

The Utah Senate on March 1 passed the third substitute of House Bill 491, a measure sponsors described as providing strategic, centralized leadership for Great Salt Lake policy while preserving the governor’s appointment authority.

Sponsor Senator Sandel explained that earlier drafts sought greater legislative control over the Great Salt Lake Commissioner appointment, but negotiations with the governor’s office led to language that leaves the appointment "at his pleasure." The substitute creates a commissioner role intended to coordinate multiple state agencies that have discrete responsibilities affecting lake health and to ensure a unified strategic direction.

During floor discussion Senator Bleuen asked about transparency and whether records would be subject to Utah’s Government Records Access and Management Act (GRAMA). The sponsor replied that records would remain subject to GRAMA and that the bill includes legislative safeguards requiring reporting back to the Legislature. Proponents characterized the change as a coordination and leadership fix for a problem where individual agency actions can unintentionally harm the lake’s overall health.

The third substitute was passed on a roll call vote and will be returned to the House for further consideration. The floor record includes no substantive amendment to funding allocations on the Senate floor; sponsors said reporting and legislative oversight provisions are included in the substitute.