Senate panel clears Point of the Mountain land authority changes to allow sales and revise tax capture
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Senate committee unanimously passed SB 278 to clarify sale/lease language, allow negotiated privilege-tax capture outside phase 1 and revise tax-capture splits for a Point of the Mountain development, noting the project is uniquely state-owned and tied to Draper City.
The Senate Economic Development and Workforce Services Standing Committee unanimously passed Senate Bill 278, which updates statutory language for the Point of the Mountain State Land Authority to better accommodate land sales, developer agreements and privilege-tax capture arrangements as the large state-owned redevelopment moves forward.
Mike Ambray, executive director of the Point of the Mountain State Land Authority, described the bill as a cleanup measure addressing three drafting oversights: clarifying that initial sale language applied to the first 105 acres of phase 1, authorizing negotiation for tax-capture outside phase 1, and revising the distribution of privileged tax capture so local taxing entities receive a larger share outside the initial phase.
Sponsor Senator Stevenson and Authority staff framed the changes around practical finance and governance for a complex project on wholly state-owned land. Committee members raised questions about notice and municipal roles if additional land were sold in the future; presenters said the current drafting is tied to Draper City and the first 50 acres currently contemplated for owner-occupied housing, and they committed to clarifying language before floor action.
Public witnesses including Jeff Hartley (Draper City) and Soren Simonson (Jordan River Commission) testified in support. The committee voted unanimously to forward SB 278 to the Senate with a favorable recommendation.
