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SCR009 • 2026

Concurrent Resolution Regarding Critical Minerals Development and Funding

Concurrent Resolution Regarding Critical Minerals Development and Funding

Land
Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Sen. Millner, Ann
Last action
2026-03-24
Official status
Governor Signed
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Concurrent Resolution Regarding Critical Minerals Development and Funding

This resolution addresses Utah's critical minerals industry.

What This Bill Does

  • This resolution addresses Utah's critical minerals industry.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-24 Lieutenant Governor's office for filing

    Governor Signed

  2. 2026-03-11 Senate Secretary

    Senate/ received enrolled bill from Printing

  3. 2026-03-11 Executive Branch - Governor

    Senate/ to Governor

  4. 2026-03-05 Legislative Research and General Counsel / Enrolling

    Bill Received from Senate for Enrolling

  5. 2026-03-05 Legislative Research and General Counsel / Enrolling

    Draft of Enrolled Bill Prepared

  6. 2026-03-05 Senate Secretary

    Enrolled Bill Returned to House or Senate

  7. 2026-03-05 Senate Secretary

    Senate/ enrolled bill to Printing

  8. 2026-03-04 House Consent Calendar

    House/ 3rd reading

  9. 2026-03-04 House Speaker

    House/ passed 3rd reading

  10. 2026-03-04 Senate President

    House/ signed by Speaker/ returned to Senate

  11. 2026-03-04 Senate President

    House/ to Senate

  12. 2026-03-04 Senate President

    Senate/ received from House

  13. 2026-03-04 Legislative Research and General Counsel / Enrolling

    Senate/ signed by President/ sent for enrolling

  14. 2026-03-02 House Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Committee

    House Comm - Favorable Recommendation

  15. 2026-03-02 House 3rd Reading Calendar for Senate bills

    House/ 2nd reading

  16. 2026-03-02 House Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Committee

    House/ committee report favorable

  17. 2026-02-26 House Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Committee

    House/ to standing committee

  18. 2026-02-24 House Rules Committee

    House/ 1st reading (Introduced)

  19. 2026-02-24 Clerk of the House

    House/ received from Senate

  20. 2026-02-24 Senate 3rd Reading Calendar

    Senate/ 3rd reading

  21. 2026-02-24 Clerk of the House

    Senate/ passed 3rd reading

  22. 2026-02-24 Clerk of the House

    Senate/ to House

  23. 2026-02-23 Senate 2nd Reading Calendar

    Senate/ 2nd reading

  24. 2026-02-23 Senate 3rd Reading Calendar

    Senate/ passed 2nd reading

  25. 2026-02-23 Senate 2nd Reading Calendar

    Senate/ substituted

  26. 2026-02-11 Released

    LFA/ fiscal note publicly available for SCR009S01

  27. 2026-02-11 Version Sponsor

    LFA/ fiscal note sent to sponsor for SCR009S01

  28. 2026-02-10 Legislative Fiscal Analyst

    LFA/ bill assigned to staff for fiscal analysis for SCR009S01

  29. 2026-02-10 Legislative Fiscal Agency

    LFA/ bill sent to agencies for fiscal input for SCR009S01

  30. 2026-02-10 Senate Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Committee

    Senate/ committee report favorable

  31. 2026-02-10 Senate 2nd Reading Calendar

    Senate/ placed on 2nd Reading Calendar

  32. 2026-02-09 Senate Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Committee

    Senate Comm - Favorable Recommendation

  33. 2026-02-09 Senate Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Committee

    Senate/ received fiscal note from Fiscal Analyst

  34. 2026-02-06 Released

    LFA/ fiscal note publicly available for SCR009

  35. 2026-02-06 Version Sponsor

    LFA/ fiscal note sent to sponsor for SCR009

  36. 2026-02-06 Senate Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Committee

    Senate/ to standing committee

  37. 2026-02-05 Legislative Research and General Counsel

    Bill Numbered but not Distributed

  38. 2026-02-05 Legislative Fiscal Analyst

    LFA/ bill assigned to staff for fiscal analysis for SCR009

  39. 2026-02-05 Legislative Fiscal Agency

    LFA/ bill sent to agencies for fiscal input for SCR009

  40. 2026-02-05 Legislative Research and General Counsel

    Numbered Bill Publicly Distributed

  41. 2026-02-05 Senate Rules Committee

    Senate/ 1st reading (Introduced)

  42. 2026-02-05 Waiting for Introduction in the Senate

    Senate/ received bill from Legislative Research

Official Summary Text

This resolution addresses Utah's critical minerals industry.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
2
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Concurrent Resolution Regarding Critical Minerals Development and Funding
2026 GENERAL SESSION
STATE OF UTAH
Chief Sponsor: Ann Millner
House Sponsor: David Shallenberger
LONG TITLE
General Description:
This resolution addresses Utah's critical minerals industry.
Highlighted Provisions:
This resolution:
highlights the urgency to develop domestic supplies of critical minerals;
describes Utah's position as a top mining jurisdiction;
outlines the role of the proposed Minerals for Industrial, National, and Economic Security
Center (MINES Center) in establishing Utah as a critical minerals hub;
expresses support for the creation of the MINES Center;
encourages the federal government to distribute federal money for critical minerals
development through block grants; and
calls on the state's congressional delegation to support the state's efforts to create a
MINES Center and to achieve a designation and funding for a critical minerals national
lab in the state.
Money Appropriated in this Bill:
None
Other Special Clauses:
None
Be it resolved by the Legislature of the state of Utah, the Governor concurring therein:
WHEREAS, in 2024, the United States was 100% net import reliant for 12 critical minerals
and greater than 50% net import reliant for an additional 29 critical minerals, according to the
United States Geological Survey;
WHEREAS, the United States faces an urgent national security and economic need to
secure access to critical minerals through development of domestic supplies;
WHEREAS, access to a domestic supply of critical minerals is essential for development,
deployment, and scaling of advanced energy technologies, strengthening the United States'
energy reliability, resilience, and global competitiveness;
WHEREAS, the United States can mitigate supply-chain risks by leveraging international
partnerships with allies to develop diversified supply chains;
WHEREAS, Utah has the most diverse mineral estate of any state, hosting 50 of the 60
minerals listed as critical by the United States Geological Survey;
WHEREAS, Utah was recently named the number one global mining jurisdiction in a
survey of mining executives conducted by the Fraser Institute, a prestigious Canadian policy
institute;
WHEREAS, the University of Utah has one of only 14 accredited mining engineering
programs in the nation;
WHEREAS, Utah, as the crossroads of the West, is geographically positioned to serve as a
hub for mining exploration and development, mining services, logistics, and infrastructure for
the mining industry;
WHEREAS, in the 2025 General Session, the Legislature passed S.J.R. 11, Joint Resolution
Regarding Critical Minerals, which called on private industry to form a technical working
group to develop a strategy to position Utah as a national leader in critical minerals;
WHEREAS, the working group recommended the creation of an open-access user research
facility, provisionally called the Minerals for Industrial, National, and Economic Security
Center (MINES Center);
WHEREAS, the MINES Center would provide shared laboratory facilities to de-risk and
accelerate the commercialization of new mineral extraction and processing technologies;
WHEREAS, the MINES Center would partner with industry and academia to advance
extraction and processing technologies, including by providing for pilot-scale demonstrations
and scale up, technology benchmarking and performance validation, and autonomous sampling
and real-time analysis;
WHEREAS, the MINES Center would serve as the state's primary partner in moving
extraction and processing technologies from research to commercialization, including through
workforce training, testing and piloting of technology, federal grant coordination, and
development of processing capacity;
WHEREAS, the MINES Center would facilitate coordinated statewide critical minerals
development and maximize Utah's leadership in the domestic critical minerals supply chain;
WHEREAS, the MINES Center would further establish Utah as the nation's critical
minerals mining, refining, recycling, and research capital;
WHEREAS, the MINES Center would lay the foundation for the establishment of a critical
minerals national lab in the state;
WHEREAS, funding from the federal government is an essential component of successful
and timely development of domestic critical minerals supplies and the MINES Center's efforts
to accelerate critical minerals research and development;
WHEREAS, block grants to the states, a funding mechanism the federal government has
used since the 1960s, would be the most efficient way to distribute federal money to the states
for critical minerals development;
WHEREAS, a block grant would give the state the flexibility required for coordinated and
strategic critical minerals development; and
WHEREAS, a block grant would also allow the state to quickly identify and fund shovel
ready projects, immediately accelerating the extraction and processing of critical minerals in
the state:
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Legislature of the state of Utah, the
Governor concurring therein, supports the creation of a MINES Center within the state.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature and the Governor support efforts by the
following to provide resources, information, and assistance to the MINES Center:
Division of Oil, Gas, and Mining;
Office of Energy Development;
Department of Environmental Quality;
Governor's Office of Economic Opportunity;
University of Utah; and
other relevant agencies and institutions of higher education.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature and the Governor support the MINES
Center's work laying the foundation for the establishment of a critical minerals national lab
within the state.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature and the Governor encourage the federal
government to utilize block grants for the distribution of critical minerals funding.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature and the Governor encourage the state's
congressional delegation to support the state's efforts to create a MINES Center and to position
Utah as a national leader in critical minerals research and development.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature and the Governor also call on the
state's congressional delegation to work with the state to achieve a designation and funding for
a critical minerals national lab in the state.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this resolution be prepared and submitted to
the six members representing Utah in the United States Congress.
3-5-26 7:44 AM