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Herriman staff recommends trimming 10-year CIP after park impact-fee shortfall
Summary
City staff told the Herriman City Council that revised revenue projections leave a roughly $10 million shortfall in park impact fees and a larger general-fund gap, and recommended delaying or redesigning several parks and capital projects rather than raising taxes; no formal adoption occurred tonight.
Herriman City staff presented a revised 10-year Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) and recommended scaling back or redesigning multiple park projects after updating revenue projections that reduced expected park impact-fee receipts.
"We did revise the park impact fee over the 10 years down to 23,000,000, transportation impact to 31,000,000," Speaker 9, the staff presenter, told the council and said the general-capital fund lacks a dedicated revenue source and shows a projected negative balance beginning in 2026 unless changes are made.
The staff proposal trims or phases several projects. Mountain Ridge Park's immediate scope was described as a restroom, pavilion, sod and irrigation…
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