Holladay’s water pipes are falling apart, leading to constant leaks and annoying service outages. It’s a sign that our aging infrastructure needs a major overhaul before it hits your wallet or leaves your tap dry.
At a glance
Rising — being discussed more frequently. 1 mention in the last 30 days, 1 the 90 before that.
The developer is responsible for ensuring drainage plans meet city engineering standards.
Downstream property owners benefit from reduced flood risk and maintained drainage capacity.
Residents on fixed incomes may find the fee increase challenging.
Neighbors raised concerns about how new development might affect natural drainage and existing storm drains. The city engineer is working with the developer to ensure these systems remain functional.
Residents are frustrated by high water bills from Salt Lake City Public Utilities, noting they pay significantly more than neighbors served by other providers.
The city is reviewing how water is delivered to residents by three different providers. The goal is to understand long-term plans and potential for better service coordination.
Holladay water meter leak led to mudslide KSL NewsRadio
The city is looking at raising stormwater fees to keep the system running properly. They are considering a gradual increase rather than one big jump to make it easier on residents.
The city needs more money to fix aging storm drains. They are considering raising the monthly fee residents pay to ensure the system doesn't fail.
Holladay residents frustrated with repeated water main breaks, outages KUTV
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