Read the full stored bill text
33
14-1-19
53H-1-402
53H-9-402
53H-9-504
53H-9-604
63A-5b-102
63A-5b-402
63A-5b-501
63A-5b-502
63A-5b-602
63A-5b-604
63A-5b-609
63G-6a-1103
0
State Facilities Modifications
2026 GENERAL SESSION
STATE OF UTAH
Chief Sponsor: Walt Brooks
Senate Sponsor: Don L. Ipson
Cosponsor:
Jill Koford
LONG TITLE
General Description:
This bill addresses state facilities.
Highlighted Provisions:
This bill:
establishes the Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee as the subcommittee to
hear and prioritize requests for state funding of capital facility projects within the Utah
System of Higher Education;
establishes requirements for the proposal of a technical college or degree-granting
institution for a capital facility project funding request;
requires compliance with the dedicated and non-dedicated project approval process for
higher education capital facility projects;
clarifies the process for requesting capital development appropriations by distinguishing
between architectural programming and design-and-construction phases;
authorizes an agency to request funding for architectural programming without requiring
the submission of a feasibility study;
requires an agency to complete architectural programming before requesting an
appropriation for the design and construction of a capital development project;
increases, from $100,000 to $1,500,000, the maximum project cost for which a state
entity may directly supervise the design and construction of a state facility and
establishes higher supervisory thresholds for certain institutions within the Utah System
of Higher Education;
requires a state entity that elects to directly supervise the design and construction of a
state facility project to enter into a memorandum of understanding with the Division of
Facilities Construction and Management (division) that addresses compliance with
division standards;
prohibits a state entity described above from accessing the division's statewide
contingency reserve or project reserve for the state facility project;
authorizes the director of the division to assume control of a project described above
when division inspection or review determines that the work is deficient or
noncompliant with division design, construction, or code inspection standards;
aligns revocation authority for delegated projects by allowing the director of the division
to revoke delegation to address inspection-based deficiencies;
requires that design criteria exceeding the state construction code to be appropriate for the
facility's intended use and cost-effective over the facility's expected useful life;
adds required components to a capital development feasibility study by requiring
inclusion of a space utilization plan and capital budget estimate approved by the division;
authorizes the Legislature to transfer any excess amount from the statewide contingency
reserve to the General Fund or the Income Tax Fund;
if the excess amount described above is attributable to a higher education or technical
college capital project, requires the Legislature to transfer the excess amount to the
applicable capital project fund;
requires the division to submit an annual request for appropriation to the Legislature for
each year covered by the five-year building plan;
authorizes the director of the division to approve certain design modifications for capital
development projects of institutions of higher education and to allocate resulting
construction cost savings between the institution and the state;
exempts construction contracts administered by the division from statutory performance
and payment bond requirements;
authorizes the division to require a performance or payment bond when necessary to
protect the division from financial loss or performance risk; and
makes technical and conforming changes.
Money Appropriated in this Bill:
None
Other Special Clauses:
This bill provides a special effective date.
Utah Code Sections Affected:
AMENDS:
14-1-19
Effective
05/06/26
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2012, Chapter 330
53H-1-402
Effective
05/06/26
Partially Repealed
07/01/27
, as renumbered and
amended by Laws of Utah 2025, First Special Session, Chapter 8
53H-9-402
Effective
05/06/26
, as renumbered and amended by Laws of Utah 2025,
First Special Session, Chapter 8
53H-9-504
Effective
05/06/26
, as renumbered and amended by Laws of Utah 2025,
First Special Session, Chapter 8
53H-9-604
Effective
05/06/26
, as renumbered and amended by Laws of Utah 2025,
First Special Session, Chapter 8
63A-5b-102
Effective
05/06/26
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, First Special
Session, Chapter 9
63A-5b-402
Effective
05/06/26
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2022, Chapter 421
63A-5b-501
Effective
05/06/26
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2020, Chapter 152
63A-5b-502
Effective
05/06/26
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2020, Chapter 152
63A-5b-602
Effective
05/06/26
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2020, Chapter 152
63A-5b-604
Effective
05/06/26
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, First Special
Session, Chapter 15
63A-5b-609
Effective
05/06/26
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2024, Chapter 368
63G-6a-1103
Effective
05/06/26
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2020, Chapter 257
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
Section 1. Section
14-1-19
is amended to read:
14-1-19
Effective
05/06/26
. Failure of government entity to obtain payment
bond -- Right of action -- Notice -- Exception.
(1)
If the state or a political subdivision fails to obtain a payment bond, it shall, upon
demand by a person who has furnished labor or supplied materials to the contractor or
subcontractor for the work provided for in a contract which is subject to Section
14-1-18
,
promptly make payment to that person.
(2)
A person described in Subsection
(1)
:
(a)
shall have a direct right of action against the state or the political subdivision in any
court having jurisdiction in any county in which the contract was to be performed,
upon giving written notice to the state or political subdivision within 90 days from
the date on which such person performed the last of the labor or supplied the last of
the material for which claim is made;
(b)
shall state in the notice a designation of the construction project and its location, the
amount claimed, and the name of the party for whom the labor was performed or to
whom the material was supplied; and
(c)
shall serve the notice by registered or certified mail, postage prepaid, on the state
agency or political subdivision that is a party to the contract.
(3)
An action described in this section may not be commenced later than one year after the
day on which the last of the labor was performed or material was supplied by the person
bringing the action.
(4)
Unless otherwise specified in a lawful contract between the state or the political
subdivision against which the claim is made and the person demanding payment, the
interest rate applicable to the payment or claim is the rate described in Subsection
15-1-1(2)
.
(5)
This section does not apply to a construction contract administered by the Division of
Facilities Construction and Management.
(6)
Subsection
(5)
does not affect a right of action that accrued under this section with
respect to a construction contract executed before the effective date of this bill.
Section 2. Section
53H-1-402
is amended to read:
53H-1-402
Effective
05/06/26
Partially Repealed
07/01/27
. Reports to and
actions of the Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee.
(1)
In accordance with applicable provisions and Section
68-3-14
, the following recurring
reports are due to the Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee:
(a)
the reports described in Sections
53H-1-502
,
53H-1-503
, and
53H-1-504
;
(b)
the reports described in Section
53H-1-203
by the board on:
(i)
system wide responses to changing demographics and workforce; and
(ii)
the board's activities and performance against the board's goals and metrics;
(c)
the report described in Section
53H-5-205
;
(d)
the report described in Section
53H-8-202
by the board on recommended
appropriations for higher education institutions and the board, including the report
described in Section
53H-11-406
by the board on the effects of offering nonresident
partial tuition scholarships;
(e)
the report described in Section
53H-8-306
by the Department of Workforce Services
and the Governor's Office of Economic Opportunity on targeted jobs;
(f)
the reports described in Section
53H-8-303
by the board on performance;
(g)
the report described in Section
53H-11-402
by the board on the Opportunity
Scholarship Program;
(h)
the report described in
Section
53H-13-309
regarding the talent advisory councils;
(i)
the report described in Section
53H-11-414
by the board on the Utah Promise
Program;
(j)
the report described in Section
53H-6-202
by the board on an institution
compensating a student athlete for the use of the student athlete's name, image, or
likeness;
(k)
the report described in Section
53H-1-604
regarding the Higher Education and
Corrections Council; and
(l)
the report described in Section
53E-10-308
by the State Board of Education and
board on student participation in the concurrent enrollment program.
(2)
In accordance with applicable provisions and Section
68-3-14
, the following occasional
report is due to the Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee: the board's report
regarding each institution's strategic reinvestment plan described in Section
53H-8-210
.
(3)
In accordance with applicable provisions, the Higher Education Appropriations
Subcommittee shall complete the following:
(a)
an appropriation recommendation described in Section
53H-1-504
regarding
compliance with Subsections
53H-1-504(5)
and
(14)
; and
(b)
as required by Section
53H-8-304
, the review of performance funding described in
Section
53H-8-304
.
(4)
The Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee shall hear and prioritize any
requests for capital facilities within the Utah System of Higher Education described in
Section
53H-1-102
, in accordance with Chapter 9, Part 5, General Capital
Developments, and Chapter 9, Part 6, Technical College Leasing and Capital
Development.
(4)
(5)
In consultation with the board, the Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee
shall study a re-design of:
(a)
the performance funding model described in Chapter
8, Part 3
, Performance Funding,
to better ensure:
(i)
institutional alignment with the statewide system of higher education and the
institution's mission within the statewide system; and
(ii)
investment in meeting localized and statewide workforce demands and securing
post-graduation employment outcomes; and
(b)
enrollment-based funding, including, for technical colleges, funding distribution
models that:
(i)
include equivalent funding value for secondary and adult students; and
(ii)
reflect the full responsibility of the technical college's statutorily-required
services.
Section 3. Section
53H-9-402
is amended to read:
53H-9-402
Effective
05/06/26
. Buildings and facilities -- Board approval of
construction and purchases -- Rules.
(1)
The board shall approve all new construction, repair, or purchase of educational and
general buildings and facilities financed from any source at all institutions subject to the
jurisdiction of the board.
(2)
An institution may not
:
(a)
submit plans or specifications to the Division of Facilities Construction and
Management for the construction or alteration of buildings, structures, or facilities or
for the purchases of equipment or fixtures for the structure without the authorization
of the board
.
; or
(b)
request state funding for a dedicated or non-dedicated project except as provided in
Part 5, General Capital Developments, and Part 6, Technical College Leasing and
Capital Development.
(3)
The board shall make rules establishing the conditions under which facilities may be
eligible to request state funds for operations and maintenance.
(4)
Before approving the purchase of a building, the board shall:
(a)
determine whether or not the building will be eligible for state funds for operations
and maintenance by applying the rules adopted under Subsection
(3)
; and
(b)
if the annual request for state funding for operations and maintenance will be greater
than $100,000, notify the speaker of the House, the president of the Senate, and the
cochairs of the Transportation and Infrastructure Appropriations Subcommittee.
Section 4. Section
53H-9-504
is amended to read:
53H-9-504
Effective
05/06/26
. Funding request for capital development project
-- Legislative approval -- Board prioritization, approval, and review.
(1)
In accordance with this section, a degree-granting institution is required to receive
legislative approval in an appropriations act for a dedicated project or a nondedicated
project.
(2)
A degree-granting institution shall
:
(a)
submit to the board a proposal for a funding request for each dedicated project or
nondedicated project for which the institution seeks legislative approval
.
; and
(b)
ensure that the proposal described in Subsection
(2)(a)
includes:
(i)
the name of the project;
(ii)
a specification of the intent of the project as a dedicated project or a
non-dedicated project;
(iii)
the projected cost of the project and the sources of funding, including internal
funds, requested legislative appropriations, matching funds, or debt;
(iv)
a budget for the project, including:
(A)
any land cost;
(B)
architecture and engineering costs;
(C)
any impact fees;
(D)
horizontal development costs, including infrastructure and site work;
(E)
vertical construction costs;
(F)
furniture costs;
(G)
any plan to fund future operations, maintenance, and staffing costs;
(H)
financing costs;
(I)
construction management, project management, or other administrative costs;
and
(J)
costs associated with the demolition or remodeling of existing space;
(v)
a rendering of the project;
(vi)
a narrative explaining the use of the facility, including the facility's expected life
span;
(vii)
a facility utilization analysis demonstrating that the existing facilities are
inadequate to serve the program or function for which the institution is seeking
funding; and
(viii)
the amount of square feet of the project, including a breakdown of the uses of
the space by square footage, including any:
(A)
classroom space;
(B)
lab space;
(C)
office space;
(D)
meeting room space;
(E)
entertainment space;
(F)
residential space;
(G)
garage or storage space;
(H)
mechanical space; and
(I)
common areas, including any atrium, stairway, restroom, or commons.
(3)
The board shall:
(a)
review each proposal submitted under Subsection
(2)
to ensure the proposal:
(i)
is cost effective and an efficient use of resources;
(ii)
is consistent with the degree-granting institution's mission and master plan; and
(iii)
fulfills a critical institutional facility need;
(b)
based on the results of the board's review under Subsection
(3)(a)
, create:
(i)
a list of approved dedicated projects; and
(ii)
a list of approved nondedicated projects, prioritized in accordance with
Subsection
(5)
; and
(c)
submit the lists described in Subsection
(3)(b)
, including the relevant proposals,
to:
(i)
the governor;
(ii)
the Transportation and Infrastructure Appropriations Subcommittee;
(iii)
(ii)
the Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee; and
(iv)
(iii)
the Division of Facilities Construction and Management for a:
(A)
recommendation, for the list described in Subsection
(3)(b)(i)
; or
(B)
recommendation and prioritization, for the list described in Subsection
(3)(b)(ii)
.
(4)
A dedicated project:
(a)
is subject to the recommendation of the Division of Facilities Construction and
Management as described in Section
63A-5b-403
; and
(b)
is not subject to the prioritization of the Division of Facilities Construction and
Management as described in Section
63A-5b-403
.
(5)
(a)
Subject to Subsection
(6)
, the board shall prioritize institution requests for funding
for nondedicated projects based on:
(i)
capital facility need;
(ii)
utilization of facilities;
(iii)
maintenance and condition of facilities; and
(iv)
any other factor determined by the board.
(b)
The board shall establish how the board will prioritize institution requests for
funding for nondedicated projects, including:
(i)
how the board will measure each factor described in Subsection
(5)(a)
; and
(ii)
procedures for prioritizing requests.
(6)
(a)
Subject to Subsection
(6)(b)
, and in accordance with Subsection
(5)
, the board
may annually prioritize:
(i)
up to three nondedicated projects if the ongoing appropriation to the fund is less
than $50,000,000;
(ii)
up to two nondedicated projects if the ongoing appropriation to the fund is at least
$50,000,000 but less than $100,000,000; or
(iii)
one nondedicated project if the ongoing appropriation to the fund is at least
$100,000,000.
(b)
For each calendar year, the dollar amounts described in Subsection
(6)(a)
shall be
adjusted by an amount equal to the percentage difference between:
(i)
the Consumer Price Index for the 2019 calendar year; and
(ii)
the Consumer Price Index for the previous calendar year.
(7)
(a)
A degree-granting institution may request operations and maintenance funds for a
capital development project approved under this section.
(b)
A degree-granting institution shall make the request described in Subsection
(7)(a)
at
the same time the degree-granting institution submits the proposal described in
Subsection
(2)
.
(c)
The Legislature shall consider a degree-granting institution's request described in
Subsection
(7)(a)
.
(8)
After a degree-granting institution completes a capital development project described in
this section, the board shall review the capital development project, including the costs
and design of the capital development project.
Section 5. Section
53H-9-604
is amended to read:
53H-9-604
Effective
05/06/26
. Legislative approval -- Capital development
projects -- Prioritization.
(1)
As used in this section:
(a)
"Consumer Price Index" means the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers
as published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the United States Department of
Labor.
(b)
"Fund" means the Technical Colleges Capital Projects Fund created in Section
53H-9-605
.
(2)
In accordance with this section, a technical college is required to receive legislative
approval in an appropriations act for a dedicated project or a nondedicated project.
(3)
In accordance with Section
53H-9-603
, a technical college shall
:
(a)
submit to the board a proposal for a funding request for each dedicated project or
nondedicated project for which the technical college seeks legislative approval
.
; and
(b)
ensure that the proposal described in Subsection
(3)(a)
includes:
(i)
the name of the project;
(ii)
a specification of the intent of the project as a dedicated project or a
non-dedicated project;
(iii)
the projected cost of the project and the sources of funding, including internal
funds, requested legislative appropriations, matching funds, or debt;
(iv)
a budget for the project, including:
(A)
any land cost;
(B)
architecture and engineering costs;
(C)
any impact fees;
(D)
horizontal development costs, including infrastructure and site work;
(E)
vertical construction costs;
(F)
furniture costs;
(G)
any plan to fund future operations, maintenance, and staffing costs;
(H)
financing costs;
(I)
construction management, project management, or other administrative costs;
and
(J)
costs associated with the demolition or remodeling of existing space;
(v)
a rendering of the project;
(vi)
a narrative explaining the use of the facility, including the facility's expected life
span;
(vii)
a facility utilization analysis demonstrating that the existing facilities are
inadequate to serve the program or function for which the institution is seeking
funding; and
(viii)
the amount of square feet of the project, including a breakdown of the uses of
the space by square footage, including any:
(A)
classroom space;
(B)
lab space;
(C)
office space;
(D)
meeting room space;
(E)
entertainment space;
(F)
residential space;
(G)
garage or storage space;
(H)
mechanical space; and
(I)
common areas, including any atrium, stairway, restroom, or commons.
(4)
The board shall:
(a)
review each proposal submitted under Subsection
(3)
to ensure that the proposal
complies with Section
53H-9-603
;
(b)
based on the results of the board's review under Subsection
(4)(a)
, create:
(i)
a list of approved dedicated projects, prioritized in accordance with Subsection
(6)
;
and
(ii)
a list of approved nondedicated projects, prioritized in accordance with
Subsection
(6)
; and
(c)
submit the lists described in Subsection
(4)(b)
, including the relevant proposals,
to:
(i)
the governor;
(ii)
the Transportation and Infrastructure Appropriations Subcommittee;
(iii)
(ii)
the Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee; and
(iv)
(iii)
the Division of Facilities Construction and Management for a:
(A)
recommendation, for the list described in Subsection
(4)(b)(i)
; or
(B)
recommendation and prioritization, for the list described in Subsection
(4)(b)(ii)
.
(5)
A dedicated project:
(a)
is subject to the recommendation of the Division of Facilities Construction and
Management as described in Section
63A-5b-403
; and
(b)
is not subject to the prioritization of the Division of Facilities Construction and
Management as described in Section
63A-5b-403
.
(6)
(a)
Subject to Subsection
(7)
, the board shall prioritize funding requests for capital
development projects described in this section based on:
(i)
growth and capacity;
(ii)
effectiveness and support of critical programs;
(iii)
cost effectiveness;
(iv)
building deficiencies and life safety concerns; and
(v)
alternative funding sources.
(b)
The board shall establish:
(i)
how the board will measure each factor described in Subsection
(6)(a)
; and
(ii)
procedures for prioritizing funding requests for capital development projects
described in this section.
(7)
(a)
Subject to Subsection
(7)(b)
, and in accordance with Subsection
(6)
, the board
may annually prioritize:
(i)
up to three nondedicated projects if the ongoing appropriation to the fund is less
than $7,000,000;
(ii)
up to two nondedicated projects if the ongoing appropriation to the fund is at least
$7,000,000 but less than $14,000,000; or
(iii)
one nondedicated project if the ongoing appropriation to the fund is at least
$14,000,000.
(b)
For each calendar year, the dollar amounts described in Subsection
(7)(a)
shall be
adjusted by an amount equal to the percentage difference between:
(i)
the Consumer Price Index for the 2019 calendar year; and
(ii)
the Consumer Price Index for the previous calendar year.
(8)
(a)
A technical college may request operations and maintenance funds for a capital
development project approved under this section.
(b)
A technical college shall make the request described in Subsection
(8)(a)
at the same
time the technical college submits the proposal described in Subsection
(3)
.
(c)
The Legislature shall consider a technical college's request described in Subsection
(8)(a)
.
Section 6. Section
63A-5b-102
is amended to read:
63A-5b-102
Effective
05/06/26
. Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(1)
"Capitol hill" means the same as that term is defined in Section
63O-1-101
.
(2)
"Compliance agency" means the same as that term is defined in Section
15A-1-202
.
(3)
"Director" means the division director, appointed under Section
63A-5b-302
.
(4)
"Division" means the Division of Facilities Construction and Management created in
Section
63A-5b-301
.
(5)
"Institution of higher education" means the same as that term is defined in Section
53H-1-101
.
(6)
"Program document" means a final document that contains programming information.
(7)
"Programming" means services to define the scope and purpose of an anticipated
project, and may include:
(a)
researching criteria applicable to the scope and purpose of an anticipated project;
(b)
identifying the scale of the project and the type of facilities and the level of
specialized functions that will be required;
(c)
identifying and prioritizing values and goals that will impact the project, including
institutional purposes, growth objectives, and cultural, technological, temporal,
aesthetic, symbolic, economic, environmental, safety, sustainability, and other
relevant criteria;
(d)
evaluating functional efficiency, user comfort, building economics, environmental
sustainability, and visual quality;
(e)
identifying objectives for the project, including such elements as image, efficiencies,
functionality, cost, and schedule;
(f)
identifying and evaluating the constraints that will have an impact on the project such
as legal requirements, financial constraints, location, access, visibility, and building
services;
(g)
developing standards such as area allowances, space allocation, travel distances, and
furniture and equipment requirements;
(h)
establishing general space quality standards related to such elements as lighting
levels, equipment performance, acoustical requirements, security, and aesthetics;
(i)
identifying required spaces;
(j)
establishing sizes and relationships;
(k)
establishing space efficiency factors or the ratio of net square footage to gross square
footage; and
(l)
documenting particular space requirements such as special HVAC, plumbing, power,
lighting, acoustical, furnishings, equipment, or security needs.
(6)
(8)
"Trust lands administration" means the School and Institutional Trust Lands
Administration established in Section
53C-1-201
.
(7)
(9)
"Utah Board of Higher Education" means the Utah Board of Higher Education
established in Section
53H-1-203
.
Section 7. Section
63A-5b-402
is amended to read:
63A-5b-402
Effective
05/06/26
. Capital development process -- Approval
requirements.
(1)
Except as provided in Section
63A-5b-404
, the division shall, on behalf of all agencies,
submit capital development project recommendations and priorities to the Legislature
for approval and prioritization.
(2)
An agency that requests an appropriation for a capital development project shall submit
to the division for transmission to the Legislature a capital development project request
and a feasibility study relating to the capital development project.
(2)
(a)
An agency may request an appropriation for the programming of a capital
development project by submitting the request to the division for transmittal to the
Legislature.
(b)
An agency may, but is not required to, submit a completed feasibility study in
connection with a request described in Subsection
(2)(a)
.
(c)
An agency may request an appropriation for the design and construction of a capital
development project by submitting the request and a program document to the
division for transmittal to the Legislature.
(3)
The division may not transmit to the Legislature a request described in Subsection
(2)(c)
unless the agency submits a program document for the capital development project.
(3)
(4)
(a)
The division shall, in accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah
Administrative Rulemaking Act
, make rules that establish standards and
requirements for
a capital development project request and feasibility study.
:
(i)
a capital development project; and
(ii)
if submitted, a feasibility study.
(b)
The rules shall include:
(i)
a deadline by which an agency is required to submit a capital development project
request;
(ii)
conditions under which an agency may modify the agency's capital development
project request after the agency submits the request, and requirements applicable
to a modification; and
(iii)
requirements for the contents of a feasibility study, including:
(A)
the need for the capital development project;
(B)
the appropriateness of the scope of the capital development project;
(C)
any private funding for the capital development project;
and
(D)
the economic and community impacts of the capital development project
.
;
(E)
a space utilization plan developed in accordance with rules made by the
division under Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act; and
(F)
a capital budget estimate approved by the division.
(4)
(5)
The division shall verify the completion and accuracy of a feasibility study
or
program document
that an agency submits under Subsection
(2)
prior to submitting
capital development project recommendations and priorities under Subsection
(1)
.
Section 8. Section
63A-5b-501
is amended to read:
63A-5b-501
Effective
05/06/26
. Five-year building plan.
(1)
The director shall:
(a)
in cooperation with agencies, prepare a master plan of structures built or
contemplated;
(b)
submit to the governor and the Legislature a comprehensive five-year building plan
for the state containing the information required by Subsection
(2)
;
(c)
amend and keep current the five-year building plan that complies with the
requirements described in Subsection
(2)
, for submission to the governor and
subsequent legislatures;
and
(d)
as part of the long-range plan, recommend to the governor and Legislature any
changes in the law that are necessary to ensure an effective, well-coordinated
building program for all agencies
.
; and
(e)
for each fiscal year covered by the five-year building plan, submit to the Legislature
a request for appropriation for that fiscal year.
(2)
(a)
The director shall ensure that the five-year building plan required by Subsection
(1)(b)
includes:
(i)
a list that prioritizes construction of new buildings for all structures built or
contemplated based upon each agency's present and future needs;
(ii)
information and space use data for all state-owned and leased facilities;
(iii)
substantiating data to support the adequacy of any projected plans;
(iv)
a summary of all statewide contingency reserve and project reserve balances as
of the end of the most recent fiscal year;
(v)
a list of buildings that have completed a comprehensive facility evaluation by an
architect or engineer or are scheduled to have an evaluation;
(vi)
for those buildings that have completed the evaluation, the estimated costs of
needed improvements; and
(vii)
for projects recommended in the first two years of the five-year building plan:
(A)
detailed estimates of the cost of each project;
(B)
the estimated cost to operate and maintain the building or facility on an annual
basis;
(C)
the cost of capital improvements to the building or facility, estimated at 1.1%
of the replacement cost of the building or facility, on an annual basis;
(D)
the estimated number of new agency full-time employees expected to be
housed in the building or facility;
(E)
the estimated cost of new or expanded programs and personnel expected to be
housed in the building or facility;
(F)
the estimated lifespan of the building with associated costs for major
component replacement over the life of the building; and
(G)
the estimated cost of any required support facilities.
(b)
In accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act
, the
director may make rules prescribing the format for submitting the information
required by this Subsection
(2)
.
(3)
To provide adequate information to enable the director to make a recommendation
described in Subsection
(1)
, an agency requesting new full-time employees for the next
fiscal year shall report those anticipated requests to the director at least 90 days before
the annual general session in which the request is made.
Section 9. Section
63A-5b-502
is amended to read:
63A-5b-502
Effective
05/06/26
. Programming.
(1)
As used in this section:
(a)
"Program document" means a final document that contains programming
information.
(b)
"Programming" means services to define the scope and purpose of an anticipated
project, and may include:
(i)
researching criteria applicable to the scope and purpose of an anticipated project;
(ii)
identifying the scale of the project and the type of facilities and the level of
specialized functions that will be required;
(iii)
identifying and prioritizing values and goals that will impact the project,
including institutional purposes, growth objectives, and cultural, technological,
temporal, aesthetic, symbolic, economic, environmental, safety, sustainability, and
other relevant criteria;
(iv)
evaluating functional efficiency, user comfort, building economics,
environmental sustainability, and visual quality;
(v)
identifying objectives for the project, including such elements as image,
efficiencies, functionality, cost, and schedule;
(vi)
identifying and evaluating the constraints that will have an impact on the project
such as legal requirements, financial constraints, location, access, visibility, and
building services;
(vii)
developing standards such as area allowances, space allocation, travel
distances, and furniture and equipment requirements;
(viii)
establishing general space quality standards related to such elements as
lighting levels, equipment performance, acoustical requirements, security, and
aesthetics;
(ix)
identifying required spaces;
(x)
establishing sizes and relationships;
(xi)
establishing space efficiency factors or the ratio of net square footage to gross
square footage; and
(xii)
documenting particular space requirements such as special HVAC, plumbing,
power, lighting, acoustical, furnishings, equipment, or security needs.
(2)
(1)
A program document may:
(a)
incorporate written and graphic materials; and
(b)
include:
(i)
an executive summary;
(ii)
documentation of the methodology used to develop the programming;
(iii)
value and goal statements;
(iv)
relevant facts upon which the programming was based;
(v)
conclusions derived from data analysis;
(vi)
relationship diagrams;
(vii)
flow diagrams;
(viii)
matrices identifying space allocations and relationships;
(ix)
space listings by function and size; and
(x)
space program sheets, including standard requirements and special HVAC,
plumbing, power, lighting, acoustical, furnishings, equipment, or security needs.
(3)
(2)
In accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act
, the
director may make rules:
(a)
establishing the types of projects for which programming and a program document
are required;
(b)
establishing the scope of programming required for defined categories of projects;
(c)
establishing the circumstances under which an agency must obtain authorization
from the director to engage in programming;
(d)
governing the funding of programming;
(e)
relating to the administration of programming; and
(f)
regarding any restrictions that may be imposed on a person involved in programming
from participating in the preparation of construction documents for a project that is
the subject of the programming.
Section 10. Section
63A-5b-602
is amended to read:
63A-5b-602
Effective
05/06/26
. Design criteria, standards, and procedures.
(1)
The director shall establish design criteria, standards, and procedures for the planning,
design, and construction of a new facility and for improvements to an existing facility,
including life-cycle costing, cost-effectiveness studies, and other methods and
procedures that address:
(a)
the need for the facility;
(b)
the effectiveness of the facility's design;
(c)
the efficiency of energy use; and
(d)
the usefulness of the facility over the facility's lifetime.
(2)
Before proceeding with construction, the director and the officials charged with the
administration of the affairs of the particular agency shall approve the location, design,
plans, and specifications.
(3)
The director shall prepare or have prepared by one or more private persons the designs,
plans, and specifications for the projects administered by the division.
(4)
Before construction may begin, the director shall review the design of projects
exempted from the division's administration under Section
63A-5b-604
to determine if
the design:
(a)
complies with any restrictions placed on the project by the director; and
(b)
is appropriate for the purpose and setting of the project.
(5)
Notwithstanding the requirements of
Title 63J, Chapter 1, Budgetary Procedures Act
,
the director may:
(a)
accelerate the design of a project funded by an appropriation act passed by the
Legislature in the Legislature's annual general session;
(b)
use an unencumbered existing account balance to fund that design work; and
(c)
reimburse the account balance from the amount funded for the project when the
appropriation act funding the project becomes effective.
(6)
If the director establishes design criteria or standards that exceed the minimum
requirements of the State Construction Code adopted under Title 15A, State
Construction and Fire Codes Act, the director shall ensure that the additional criteria or
standards are:
(a)
appropriate for the intended use and setting of the facility; and
(b)
cost-effective over the expected useful life of the facility.
Section 11. Section
63A-5b-604
is amended to read:
63A-5b-604
Effective
05/06/26
. Construction, alteration, and repair of state
facilities -- Powers of director -- Exceptions -- Expenditure of appropriations --
Compliance agency role.
(1)
(a)
Except as provided in this section and Section
63A-5b-1101
, the director shall
exercise direct supervision over the design and construction of all new facilities, and
all alterations, repairs, and improvements to existing facilities, if the total project
construction cost, regardless of the funding source, is greater than
$100,000
$1,500,000
.
(b)
A
Subject to Subsections
(1)(c)
and
(d)
, a
state entity may exercise direct
supervision over the design and construction of all new facilities, and over all
alterations, repairs, and improvements to existing facilities, if:
(i)
except as provided in Subsection
(1)(e)
,
the total project construction cost,
regardless of the funding sources, is
$100,000
$1,500,000
or less; and
(ii)
the state entity assures compliance with the division's forms and contracts and the
division's design, construction, alteration, repair, improvement, and code
inspection standards.
(c)
Before exercising direct supervision under Subsection
(1)(b)
, a state entity shall enter
into a memorandum of understanding with the division, in a form developed by the
division, that addresses:
(i)
the state entity's compliance with Subsection
(1)(b)(ii)
; and
(ii)
other matters the division considers necessary and appropriate to facilitate the
state entity's supervision of the project, including provisions governing the use of
capital improvement funds to ensure expenditures are consistent with legislative
appropriations and the five-year building plan.
(d)
The director may assume direct supervision over the design and construction of a
project described in Subsection
(1)(b)
if the division determines, through inspection
or review conducted in accordance with the division's design, construction, or code
inspection standards, that the work is deficient, substandard, or noncompliant.
(e)
For purposes of Subsection
(1)(b)(i)
, a state entity that is an institution of higher
education described in Subsection
53H-1-102(1)(a)
or
(b)
may exercise direct
supervision if the total project construction cost is:
(i)
$30,000,000 or less for the University of Utah;
(ii)
$10,000,000 or less for Utah State University;
(iii)
$2,500,000 or less for a university described in Subsections
53H-1-102(1)(a)(iii)
,
(iv), (vi), or (vii); or
(iv)
$1,000,000 or less for:
(A)
Snow College;
(B)
Salt Lake Community College; or
(C)
a technical college described in Subsection
53H-1-102(1)(b)
.
(f)
A state entity that exercises direct supervision under Subsection
(1)(b)
may not
access, for the supervised project, the division's statewide contingency reserve or
project reserve authorized in Section
63A-5b-609
.
(2)
The director may enter into a capital improvement partnering agreement with an
institution of higher education that permits the institution of higher education to exercise
direct supervision for a capital improvement project with oversight from the division.
(3)
(a)
Subject to Subsection
(3)(b)
, the director may delegate control over design,
construction, and other aspects of any project to entities of state government on a
project-by-project basis.
(b)
With respect to a delegation of control under Subsection
(3)(a)
, the director may:
(i)
impose terms and conditions on the delegation that the director considers
necessary or advisable to protect the interests of the state; and
(ii)
revoke the delegation and assume control of the design, construction, or other
aspect of a delegated project if the director considers the revocation and
assumption of control to be necessary to
:
(A)
address a circumstance described in Subsection
(1)(d)
; or
(B)
otherwise
protect the interests of the state.
(4)
(a)
In accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act
,
the director may delegate control over design, construction, and all other aspects of
any project to entities of state government on a categorical basis for projects within a
particular dollar range and a particular project type.
(b)
Rules adopted by the director under Subsection
(4)(a)
may:
(i)
impose the terms and conditions on categorical delegation that the director
considers necessary or advisable to protect the interests of the state;
(ii)
provide for the revocation of the delegation on a categorical basis and for the
division to assume control of the design, construction, or other aspect of a
category of delegated projects or a specific delegated project if the director
considers revocation of the delegation and assumption of control to be necessary
to protect the interests of the state;
(iii)
require that a categorical delegation be renewed by the director on an annual
basis; and
(iv)
require the division's oversight of delegated projects.
(5)
(a)
A state entity to which project control is delegated under this section shall:
(i)
assume fiduciary control over project finances;
(ii)
assume all responsibility for project budgets and expenditures; and
(iii)
receive all funds appropriated for the project, including any contingency funds
contained in the appropriated project budget.
(b)
Notwithstanding a delegation of project control under this section, a state entity to
which control is delegated is required to comply with the division's codes and
guidelines for design and construction.
(c)
A state entity to which project control is delegated under this section may not access,
for the delegated project, the division's statewide contingency reserve and project
reserve authorized in Section
63A-5b-609
.
(d)
For a facility that will be owned, operated, maintained, and repaired by an entity that
is not an agency and that is located on property that the state owns or leases as a
tenant, the director may authorize the facility's owner to administer the design and
construction of the project relating to that facility.
(6)
(a)
A project for the construction of a new facility and a project for alterations,
repairs, and improvements to an existing facility are not subject to Subsection
(1)
if
the project:
(i)
occurs on property under the jurisdiction of the State Capitol Preservation Board;
(ii)
is within a designated research park at the University of Utah or Utah State
University;
(iii)
occurs within the boundaries of This is the Place State Park and is administered
by This is the Place Foundation; or
(iv)
is for the creation and installation of art under
Title 9, Chapter 6, Part 4, Utah
Percent-for-Art Act
.
(b)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(6)(a)(iii)
, the This is the Place Foundation may request
the director to administer the design and construction of a project within the
boundaries of This is the Place State Park.
(7)
(a)
The role of compliance agency under
Title 15A, State Construction and Fire
Codes Act
, shall be filled by:
(i)
the director, for a project administered by the division;
(ii)
the entity designated by the State Capitol Preservation Board, for a project under
Subsection
(6)(a)(i)
;
(iii)
the local government, for a project that is:
(A)
not subject to the division's administration under Subsection
(6)(a)(ii)
; or
(B)
administered by This is the Place Foundation under Subsection
(6)(a)(iii)
;
(iv)
the compliance agency designated by the director, for a project under Subsection
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
, or
(5)(d)
; and
(v)
for the installation of art under Subsection
(6)(a)(iv)
, the entity that is acting as
the compliance officer for the balance of the project for which the art is being
installed.
(b)
A local government acting as the compliance agency under Subsection
(7)(a)(iii)
may:
(i)
only review plans and inspect construction to enforce the state construction code
or an approved code under
Title 15A, State Construction and Fire Codes Act
; and
(ii)
charge a building permit fee of no more than the amount the local government
could have charged if the land upon which the improvements are located were not
owned by the state.
(8)
(a)
The zoning authority of a local government under Title 10, Chapter 20, Municipal
Land Use, Development, and Management Act, or Title 17, Chapter 79, County Land
Use, Development, and Management Act, does not apply to the use of property that
the state owns or any improvements constructed on property that the state owns,
including improvements constructed by an entity other than a state entity.
(b)
A state entity controlling the use of property that the state owns shall consider any
input received from a local government in determining how the property is to be used.
Section 12. Section
63A-5b-609
is amended to read:
63A-5b-609
Effective
05/06/26
. Expenditure of appropriated funds supervised
by director -- Contingencies -- Disposition of project reserve funds -- Set aside for Utah
Percent-for-Art Program -- Distribution of cost savings.
(1)
The director shall:
(a)
(i)
supervise the expenditure of funds in providing plans, engineering
specifications, sites, and construction of the buildings for which legislative
appropriations are made; and
(ii)
specifically allocate money appropriated if more than one project is included in
any single appropriation without legislative directive;
(b)
(i)
expend the amount necessary from appropriations for planning, engineering,
and architectural work; and
(ii)
(A)
allocate amounts from appropriations necessary to cover expenditures
previously made from the planning fund under Section
63A-5b-503
in the
preparation of plans, engineering, and specifications; and
(B)
return the amounts described in Subsection
(1)(b)(ii)(A)
to the planning fund;
and
(c)
hold in a statewide contingency reserve the amount budgeted for contingencies:
(i)
in appropriations for the construction or remodeling of facilities; and
(ii)
that are over and above all amounts obligated by contract for planning,
engineering, architectural work, sites, and construction contracts.
(2)
(a)
The director shall base the amount budgeted for contingencies on a sliding scale
percentage of the construction cost ranging from:
(i)
4.5% to 6.5% for new construction; and
(ii)
6% to 9.5% for remodeling projects.
(b)
The director shall hold the statewide contingency funds to cover:
(i)
costs of change orders; and
(ii)
unforeseen, necessary costs beyond those specifically budgeted for the project.
(c)
(i)
The Legislature shall annually review the percentage and the amount held in
the statewide contingency reserve.
(ii)
The Legislature may reappropriate to other building needs, including the cost of
administering building projects, any amount from the statewide contingency
reserve that is in excess of the reserve required to meet future contingency needs.
(d)
If any amount from the statewide contingency reserve is in excess of the amount
required to meet future contingency needs, the Legislature:
(i)
may reappropriate the excess amount to other building needs, including the cost of
administering building projects;
(ii)
may transfer the excess amount to the General Fund or the Income Tax Fund, in
proportion to the amounts originally appropriated from each fund for the projects
to which the excess amount is attributable; or
(iii)
if the excess amount is attributable to an appropriation for the programming or
design and construction of a project described in Title 53H, Chapter 9, Part 5,
General Capital Developments, or Title 53H, Chapter 9, Part 6, Technical College
Leasing and Capital Development, shall, instead of taking the action described in
Subsection
(2)(d)(i)
or
(ii)
, transfer the excess amount, as applicable, to:
(A)
the Higher Education Capital Projects Fund, created in Section
53H-9-502
; or
(B)
the Technical Colleges Capital Projects Fund, created in Section
53H-9-605
.
(3)
(a)
The director shall hold in a separate project reserve state appropriated funds
accrued through bid savings and project residual.
(b)
The director shall account for the funds accrued under Subsection
(3)(a)
in separate
accounts as follows:
(i)
bid savings and project residual from a capital improvement project, as defined in
Section
63A-5b-401
; and
(ii)
bid savings and project residual from a capital development project, as defined in
Section
63A-5b-401
.
(c)
The director may use project reserve funds in the account described in Subsection
(3)(b)(i)
for a capital improvement project:
(i)
approved under Section
63A-5b-405
; and
(ii)
for which funds are not allocated.
(d)
The director may:
(i)
authorize the use of project reserve funds in the accounts described in Subsection
(3)(b)
for the award of contracts in excess of a project's construction budget if the
use is required to meet the intent of the project;
(ii)
transfer money from the account described in Subsection
(3)(b)(i)
to the account
described in Subsection
(3)(b)(ii)
if a capital development project has exceeded its
construction budget; and
(iii)
use project reserve funds for any emergency capital improvement project,
whether or not the emergency capital improvement project is related to a project
that has exceeded its construction budget.
(e)
The director shall report to the Office of the Legislative Fiscal Analyst within 30
days:
(i)
an expenditure under Subsection
(3)(c)
; or
(ii)
a transfer under Subsection
(3)(d)
.
(f)
The Legislature shall annually review the amount held in the project reserve for
possible reallocation by the Legislature to other building needs, including the cost of
administering building projects.
(4)
If any part of the appropriation for a building project, other than the part set aside for the
Utah Percent-for-Art Program under Title 9, Chapter 6, Part 4, Utah Percent-for-Art Act,
remains unencumbered after the award of construction and professional service contracts
and establishing a reserve for fixed and moveable equipment, the balance of the
appropriation is dedicated to the project reserve and does not revert to the General Fund.
(5)
(a)
(i)
One percent of the amount appropriated for the construction of any new state
building or facility may be appropriated and set aside for the Utah Percent-for-Art
Program administered by the Division of Fine Arts under Title 9, Chapter 6, Part
4, Utah Percent-for-Art Act.
(ii)
The total amount appropriated and set aside under Subsection
(5)(a)(i)
may not
exceed:
(A)
$200,000, if the new state building or facility is not located in a county of the
first class; and
(B)
$250,000, if the new state building or facility is located in a county of the first
class.
(b)
The director shall release to the Division of Fine Arts any funds included in an
appropriation to the division that are designated by the Legislature for the Utah
Percent-for-Art Program.
(c)
Funds from appropriations for a state building or facility may not be set aside:
(i)
if any part of the funds is derived from the issuance of bonds; and
(ii)
to the extent the set aside of funds would jeopardize the federal income tax
exemption otherwise allowed for interest paid on bonds.
(6)
(a)
After funds are appropriated for a non-dedicated project of an institution of higher
education, the director may approve a modification to the design of the project before
final project closeout if:
(i)
the modification is requested by the institution of higher education; and
(ii)
the modification does not:
(A)
result in a material reduction in the legislatively approved program scope,
capacity, performance standards, durability, intended useful life, or intended
use of the project; or
(B)
eliminate or defer legislatively approved program elements, including through
downsizing or removal of project components.
(b)
If a modification approved under Subsection
(6)(a)
results in a documented reduction
in the total project cost attributable to efficiencies in design refinement, engineering
optimization, procurement strategy, material selection, scheduling, or construction
methodology, the director shall distribute the resulting cost savings as follows:
(i)
an amount, as determined by the director, not to exceed 50% of the cost savings:
(A)
for a degree-granting institution described in Subsection
53H-1-102(1)(a)
, to
the institution's allocation within the Higher Education Capital Projects Fund;
or
(B)
for a technical college described in Subsection
53H-1-102(1)(b)
, to the
technical college for use on a capital improvement project; and
(ii)
the remaining amount to the state, to be deposited into the General Fund or the
Income Tax Fund in proportion to the amounts originally appropriated from each
fund for the project.
(c)
Cost savings allocated under Subsection
(6)(b)
are not bid savings, including bid
savings that result from competitive procurement, or project residual under
Subsection
(3)
.
Section 13. Section
63G-6a-1103
is amended to read:
63G-6a-1103
Effective
05/06/26
. Bonds or security necessary when contract is
awarded -- Waiver -- Action -- Attorney fees -- Exception.
(1)
When
Except as provided in Subsection
(5)
, if
a construction contract is awarded under
this chapter, the contractor to whom the contract is awarded shall deliver the following
bonds or security to the procurement unit, which shall become binding on the parties
upon the execution of the contract:
(a)
a performance bond satisfactory to the procurement unit that is in an amount equal to
100% of the price specified in the contract and is executed by a surety company
authorized to do business in the state or any other form satisfactory to the
procurement unit; and
(b)
a payment bond satisfactory to the procurement unit that is in an amount equal to
100% of the price specified in the contract and is executed by a surety company
authorized to do business in the state or any other form satisfactory to the
procurement unit, which is for the protection of each person supplying labor, service,
equipment, or material for the performance of the work provided for in the contract.
(2)
(a)
When a construction contract is awarded under this chapter, the procurement
official responsible for carrying out the construction project may not require a
contractor to whom a contract is awarded to obtain a bond of the types
referred to
described
in Subsection
(1)
from a specific insurance or surety company, producer,
agent, or broker.
(b)
A person who violates Subsection
(2)(a)
is guilty of an infraction.
(3)
Rules of a rulemaking authority may provide for waiver of the requirement of a bid,
performance, or payment bond for circumstances in which the procurement official
considers any or all of the bonds to be unnecessary to protect the procurement unit.
(4)
(a)
A
If a payment bond is required to be delivered under Subsection
(1)(b)
or
(5)(c)
,
a
person has a right of action on
a
the
payment bond under this section for any
unpaid amount due to the person if:
(a)
(i)
the person has furnished labor, service, equipment, or material for the work
provided for in the contract for which the payment bond is furnished under this
section; and
(b)
(ii)
the person has not been paid in full within 90 days after the last day on which
the person performed the labor or service or supplied the equipment or material
for which the claim is made.
(5)
(b)
An action upon a payment bond may only be brought in a court of competent
jurisdiction in a county where the construction contract was to be performed.
(c)
The action is barred if not commenced within one year after the last day on which the
claimant performed the labor or service or supplied the equipment or material on
which the claim is based.
(d)
The obligee named in the bond need not be joined as a party to the action.
(6)
(e)
In any suit upon a payment bond, the court shall award reasonable attorney fees
to the prevailing party, which fees shall be taxed as costs in the action.
(5)
(a)
As used in this Subsection
(5)
, "division" means the Division of Facilities
Construction and Management created in Section
63A-5b-301
.
(b)
The division is not required to obtain from a contractor a performance bond or
payment bond for a construction contract administered by the division.
(c)
Subject to Subsection
(2)
, the division may require a performance bond, payment
bond, or both for a construction contract administered by the division if the division
determines that the bond is necessary to protect the division from financial loss or
performance risk.
(6)
Subsection
(5)(b)
does not affect the validity or enforceability of a performance bond or
payment bond required under this section with respect to a construction contract
executed before the effective date of this bill.
Section 14.
Effective Date.
This bill takes effect:
(1)
except as provided in Subsection (2), May 6, 2026; or
(2)
if approved by two-thirds of all members elected to each house:
(a)
upon approval by the governor;
(b)
without the governor's signature, the day following the constitutional time limit of
Utah Constitution, Article VII, Section 8; or
(c)
in the case of a veto, the date of veto override.
3-12-26 1:48 PM