Herriman City Support

City Council Recap

Herriman City Councilmembers sit at the dais during the April 9, 2025 City Council meeting

Voting

  • 4-1 approving the Consent Agenda, which includes the following:
    • Declaration and disposal of surplus property (vehicles)
    • February 2025 financial summary
    • Amendment to the sales tax agreement with Elevated Acquisitions for The Commons at Herriman Towne Center project
    • March 26, 2025 special City Council meeting minutes
  • 5-0 authorizing a Rose Creek floodplain update
  • 5-0 approving a memorandum of understanding with Land Reserve, LLC

Note: no action was taken on a letter of support for the Utah BEAD program (Item 8.4) or a license agreement with All West Communications (item 9.1). Both items were withdrawn from the agenda.

 

General Meeting

Memorandum of Understanding with Land Reserve, LLC

The City Council approved an MOU with Land Reserve, LLC as part of the overall proposed land exchange to facilitate the possibility of a future athletic complex in northern Herriman. The MOU isn't binding but outlines the process and tentative terms for the Creek Ridge-area land swap with Land Reserve. More information about the full picture of the athletic complex project can be found at www.herriman.gov/athletic-complex.

Sales Tax Agreement for The Commons

The City has a sales tax incentive agreement with the Commons at Herriman Towne Center commercial development coming to 13400 South, west of Mountain View Corridor. The developer requested an amendment to adjust the process of how the incentive funds would be allocated on their end. City staff noted that this change would not impact Herriman’s potential economic benefit or future liabilities.

 

Work Meeting

10-Year Capital Improvement Plan

Executive, finance, and engineering staff presented an in-depth review of the City’s 10-year Capital Improvement Plan, outlining anticipated revenues, project priorities, and funding gaps. These funding gaps largely stem from changes in how future residential developments will finance their own infrastructure. While this new financing approach (public infrastructure districts, or PIDs) helps build infrastructure in advance of housing, it also reduces the City’s ability to collect impact fees as previously anticipated. As a result, staff recommended deferring or scaling back certain projects—such as park upgrades and major road construction. Councilmembers and staff discussed how to balance these long-term needs with limited tax and fee revenues. 

City Status Report

A monthly status report outlined key metrics such as building permits, business licensing trends, and budgetary updates. The Council requested for a future meeting a report outlining sales tax revenue from home-occupancy businesses with customers.

 

Video

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