Mayors for West Valley City, Layton, Midvale,
Tremonton, Brigham City and Perry say they want residents to decide.
“Looking
at a public-private partnership ... is about the only way we can get out of the
weeds and start providing appropriate service to everyone who wants it,”
Midvale Mayor JoAnn Seghini said. “But if it’s something our residents want,
they’re going to have to vote for it.”
Exact
wording of the referendum, Stevenson said, will be worked out in the coming
days. Deadlines for getting any measure on this fall’s ballots, meanwhile, are
only a few weeks away, said a spokeswoman at the Salt Lake County clerk’s
office. The six
cities all have agreed to let an Australian investment company, Macquarie
Capital, continue to develop its proposal for taking over completion, operation
and upgrading of UTOPIA’s fiber-optic network under a 30-year contract.
The
Macquarie plan also calls for charging all households within participating
cities a monthly utility fee of up to $20. The
global company’s next report to the Utah cities on various financial, technical
and legal aspects of the deal is expected by year’s end. A top
Macquarie official said Wednesday the company “fully supports informing the
residents of each partner city and seeking consensus agreement on the best path
forward.”
Nick
Hahn, senior managing director for Macquarie Capital, said the Sydney-based
company’s own research shows “city residents overwhelmingly favor this proposed
project and understand why the fee is justified. They also believe strongly in
a private-sector solution for construction and operations.”
Five
other UTOPIA cities — Murray, Centerville, Orem, Lindon and Payson — have
rejected Macquarie’s proposal. Leaders in those cities are debating their next
moves, while UTOPIA struggles to turn a profit and start relieving member
cities of their obligation to pay off nearly $500 million in bond debt.
The
business-backed Utah Taxpayers Association, which opposes UTOPIA, has pressed
for giving taxpayers a chance to weigh in. “It’s
thrilling to hear that these cities are now looking for that opportunity,”
association Vice President Royce Van Tassell said Wednesday.
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