Lehi City, Utah
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City Council

City Council Meeting - March 10, 2026

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Meeting Summary

The Lehi City Council held its March 10, 2026 regular meeting, highlighted by several infrastructure agreements tied to the ongoing 2100 North Freeway expansion project. Council considered agreements with the Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) for the design, construction, and maintenance of both a pedestrian bridge over the Jordan River and a shared-use recreational path as part of the 2100 North Freeway Project. The council also took up a new interlocal cooperation agreement with Utah County for the Utah Lake Trail, continuing Lehi's efforts to build out its regional trail network. The regular agenda included multiple zone change requests: the Parker Zone Change (2.4 acres at 300 North Palomino Way, from A-1 agriculture to R1-22 residential/agriculture), the 1450 West 1220 North Zone Change (5.25 acres, also from A-1 to R1-22), the Snow Zone Change (0.66 acres at 151 East 1450 North, from TH-5 transitional holding to R1-Flex), and the 498 North 900 East Zone Change (0.91 acres, from R1-Flex to R1-8). The council also considered annexation intent resolutions for two properties — Slay Holdings (4 acres near 2300 West 300 South) and Cedar Hollow Holdings (15.31 acres near 400 South Center Street) — along with the Clark Meadows Subdivision concept plan, an 11-lot residential project by JDH Development requesting flexibility on setbacks. A development code amendment to add Automobile Accessories and Installation as a permitted use was also on the agenda. The consent agenda included approval of telecommunications franchise agreements with Emery Telcom and CenturyLink, a cell tower lease with AT&T at Lehi Sports Park, and an ordinance adjusting Mayor and City Council compensation. During the pre-council work session, the council discussed a proposed ordinance establishing term limits for the Mayor and City Council. The proposal was tabled, with council agreeing to revisit the idea in approximately one year after further legal research; some members expressed concern that term limits signal distrust of voters, while Councilor Harrison personally committed to no more than two terms. Also discussed was a $33,000 feasibility study proposal for a potential multi-rink ice center complex. The study — which would be funded from Redevelopment Agency (RDA) funds rather than the general fund — was not voted on at this meeting; several council members requested the item return for a vote at the next regular meeting. At the following council meeting, a vote on the ice center feasibility study is expected. The zone changes reviewed by the Planning Commission in February were advancing through final council action at this meeting.

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