The Growing Water Smart workshop unites key city and county staff in water and land use planning to collaborate on building a sustainable and resilient water future in Utah. The workshop is designed to facilitate discussion related to the implementation of policy tools to help water efficiency, smart growth, watershed health and water resiliency.
Growing Water Smart workshops
Each Growing Water Smart Workshop brings key community staff and decision-makers on water and land use planning together for three consecutive days of collaborative work. Team members commit to actively participate in all sessions together. A variety of public engagement, planning, communication and policy implementation tools are used to help community teams develop an action plan with quarterly goals. An action plan enables communities to integrate water considerations into the land planning efforts as they grow and redevelop property.
Completed Utah Growing Water Smart Workshops
Four successful workshops have been completed since the program was introduced in Utah. The inaugural workshop, held at Wheeler Farm in Murray, Utah in November 2022, included five teams. Next was a northern Utah workshop held in June 2023 on the Utah State University campus with seven teams representing two water conservancy districts and nineteen communities from urban and rural areas. The largest workshop was completed in January 2024 on the Southern Utah University campus with eight teams representing communities within Washington County Water Conservancy District’s service area. Most recently, in northern Utah at Utah State University campus, Weber Basin Water Conservancy District held a workshop in May 2024 that included four cities and Hill Air Force Base.
Future Growing Water Smart Workshops
As the Growing Water Smart program expands, the Division of Water Resources is proud to promote and sponsor workshops throughout the state to integrate water considerations at the local level into planning efforts, policy development and decision-making.
To support responsible growth in Utah communities
As we adapt to a changing climate alongside population and economic growth, we must build resiliency into our water demand and planning efforts. This requires adjusting water use habits in ways that provide for responsible growth. Acknowledging Great Salt Lake as a beneficial user is one of the first steps toward responsible growth planning.
There is broad consensus within the water community that optimizing and reducing demand for urban (municipal, commercial, institutional and industrial) water use is critical to ensuring that Utah’s limited water supply can equitably meet the needs of people, agriculture, business and nature. Integrated water and land planning is the foundation for effective water use policies.
A program to help communities integrate water into planning considerations
Integrating water into land planning at the concept and design stages of development planning creates an opportunity to significantly reduce municipal and industrial (M&I) water use. Too often, land use planning is undertaken independently of water use planning efforts, even though the two can and should inform one another.
Utah Growing Water Smart is one way for communities to begin water and land use planning integration. The Utah Legislature passed SB 110, Water as Part of General Plan, during the 2022 session. SB 110 enacts Utah Code 73-10-36 and modifies the Municipal Land Use, Development and Management Act and the County Land Use, Development and Management Act to require a municipal or county general plan provide for the efficient and economical use, conservation and production of the supply of water. While some communities have begun such an effort, there are many opportunities to improve water efficiencies, reduce M&I water use and advance coordinated water and land use planning even beyond the general or master plan.
Strengthening the nexus of land use and water planning and advancing efforts to optimize and reduce M&I water use have been advocated in the following reports:
- Envision Utah’s 2017 Recommended State Water Strategy
- Utah Legislature’s 2020 State Water Policy
- The Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands’ Great Salt Lake Resolution
- Great Salt Lake Advisory Council studies and reports
Start including water considerations at the beginning of the planning process
Following on the footsteps of the Great Salt Lake HCR10 Steering Group Recommendations, the Utah legislature allocated funding beginning July 1, 2022 to assist municipalities and counties in their efforts to incorporate water into their land planning processes.
Phase 1 – Integrated Water and Land Use Planning Framework
Phase 1 was funded through the Great Salt Lake Advisory Council in 2021. During Phase 1, The Babbitt Center for Land and Water Policy and Western Resource Advocates developed a framework for Integrated Water and Land Use Planning. The Framework for Community Action illustrates the many ways communities can better integrate water and land use planning. It includes four stages and resources to aid in implementation. Two additional resources–a Stakeholder Checklist and the Community Self-Assessment–provide tangible guidance for communities to form a team for integrating water and land use and to track their progress on integration activities.
You can access each document separately below, or as one complete pdf.
A Phase 1 progress update was presented to the Utah Water Task Force at the November 2021 meeting.
Workshop Guidebooks
Guidebooks and materials from completed workshops are available as resources for integrating water into land planning processes. The November 2022 Growing Water Smart Workshop Guidebook and the June 2023 Growing Water Smart Workshop Guidebook provide resources to bring water resource management and land use planning into alignment, allowing Utah communities to shift to implementing integrated water and land use planning.
Phase 2 – Collaborative Implementation
Phase 2 of the Integrating Water and Land Planning Project builds upon the work completed in Phase 1. Using the Utah Integrated Water and Land Use Planning Assessment Framework and materials developed in Phase 1, Phase 2 focuses on collaborative approaches guided by facilitators in a workshop setting. Example cases that demonstrate successful programs are presented.
Planners, water managers, developers, locally elected officials and other key stakeholders are brought together to examine the results of their community self-assessment. Small group discussion sessions are used to develop their ideas into practices for integrating water planning with land use and economic planning processes. Opportunities for collaboration across stakeholder groups occur during the three-day workshop in Phase 2.
Opportunities for communities to participate in workshops
If your municipality or county is interested in learning more, or participating in a facilitated workshop to find ways to better integrate water considerations into planning processes, please contact the Division of Water Resources at WaterAndLand@utah.gov.
Other information regarding water and land planning can be found through the integrating land and water landing page.