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City utilities warn of snow-drought conditions, urge early conservation and institutional cutbacks
Summary
Salt Lake City water officials told the council that 2026 snow water equivalent stands at roughly 60% of median, streamflow forecasts range from ~29% to ~76% depending on creek, and staff urged the council to adopt proactive conservation measures—particularly for institutional users—before thresholds are reached.
Salt Lake City’s public-utilities leadership told the City Council on March 10 that a persistent snow drought and unusually warm winter have left the region’s snow-water equivalent (SWE) at roughly 60% of median for the water season, prompting calls for proactive conservation.
Laura Briefer, director of public utilities, introduced the water-resources and hydrology team and framed the technical briefing. Hydrologists and resource managers said the city’s major drinking-water tributaries are projecting variable runoff this year: Parley’s Creek was projected near 29% of average, while Little Cottonwood Creek was nearer 76% of average.…
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