『Utah 2026 Legislative Session: Education Reforms, Tax Cuts, and Major Development Projects Drive State Growth』のカバーアート

Utah 2026 Legislative Session: Education Reforms, Tax Cuts, and Major Development Projects Drive State Growth

Utah 2026 Legislative Session: Education Reforms, Tax Cuts, and Major Development Projects Drive State Growth

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Utah's 2026 legislative session wrapped up with key wins for education, including stronger literacy programs and clearer career pathways for students, as reported by ExcelinEd in Action. Lawmakers also passed Senate Bill 60, trimming the state income tax rate from 4.5 percent to 4.45 percent effective this year, alongside House Bill 290 changes, according to PolicyEngine. In local government, Utah County is advancing a land swap with Juab County to consolidate the Summit Ridge development in Santaquin fully within its borders, avoiding split homes and services; Utah County Commissioner Skyler Beltran noted six planned houses currently straddle the line, with finalization expected by late May, per the Daily Herald.

On the business front, Vineyard's Utah City project is gaining momentum, with its first phase opening to emphasize wellness and sustainability—featuring 50 acres of parks, geothermal energy, a Huntsman Cancer Institute, and the 12-acre Greenline park connecting to Utah Lake and FrontRunner, as detailed by KSL.com. Powder Haven in Eden announced a $157 million investment in new chairlifts, a lodge, and ski-in/ski-out neighborhoods set for the 2026-27 season, according to TownLift. Economic pressures persist nationally, though Utah-specific foreclosure data remains stable amid a 28 percent national jump in March filings.

Infrastructure advances include construction on the Utah Trail Network's inaugural 0.7-mile paved link along State Route 128 near Moab, closing a dangerous highway gap for cyclists and part of a 2,600-mile statewide vision, per the Utah Department of Transportation. Public safety saw a unique case in which a New Zealand national in Utah was convicted of assaulting a child over a doorbell prank and ordered to self-deport for four years, as covered by the NZ Herald. No major weather events have disrupted the state recently.

Looking Ahead: Watch for the Utah Jazz's NBA Draft decision at No. 5, debating prospects like Darius Acuff, alongside Powder Haven's ski upgrades and the Utah Trail Network's next phases.

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