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‘Real, tangible action’: Young Utahns push lawmakers to rescue the Great Salt Lake

Author: Annie Knox

Knox, Annie. "‘Real, tangible action’: Young Utahns push lawmakers to rescue the Great Salt Lake" Utah News Dispatch, 10 Feb. 2026. https://utahnewsdispatch.com/2026/02/10/real-tangible-action-young-utahns-push-lawmakers-to-rescue-the-great-salt-lake/. Accessed 16 Feb. 2026.

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‘Real, tangible action’: Young Utahns push lawmakers to rescue the Great Salt Lake

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utahnewsdispatch.com/2026/02/10/real-tangible-action-young-utahns-push-lawmakers-to-rescue-the-great-salt-lake

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Annie Knox
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February 10, 2026
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Bills aim to help conserve water in a year kicking off with drought and dismal snowpack

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Demonstrators call for action to save the drying Great Salt Lake in a rally at the Utah State Capitol on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (Will Ruzanski/Utah News Dispatch)

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Mountains without snow. A start to February that feels like April. The Great Salt Lake so dry, scientists warn of “serious adverse effects” on people, wildlife and the landscape.

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This article is published through the Great Salt Lake Collaborative, a solutions journalism initiative that partners news, education and media organizations to help inform people about the plight of the Great Salt Lake — and what can be done to make a difference before it is too late.

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Taking it all into account, it’s hard for Joe Martindale of Kearns not to feel a little on edge.

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“I’m hopeful, but more on the anxious side,” said Martindale, 18, who’s among the high school and college students demanding lawmakers take big steps this year to save the lake.

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“We need real, tangible action,” added Autumn Featherstone, 20.

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State lawmakers say they feel the urgency, too.

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“We have a moment in time where we can get it right,” said Rep. Jill Koford, R-Ogden. “Great Salt Lake is the single most important issue I think we’re facing as a state.”

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Koford is sponsoring a proposal to remove red tape for farmers making deals with the state to conserve water. She said the bill would make it more attractive and faster for them to sign up to get paid for leaving some of their fields dry and unplanted for a time. And she’s behind another bill designed to help better track where exactly that water flows.

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“It’s a start, and it’s an important start,” Koford said. Agriculture uses the most water diverted from the lake — 65% — according to the Utah Division of Water Resources.

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Rep. Jill Koford, R-Ogden, speaks in the House Chamber about her bill, which addresses management of the Great Salt Lake, during a special legislative session at the Capitol in Salt Lake City on Monday, Oct. 6, 2025. (Photo by Spenser Heaps for Utah News Dispatch)
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Another bill under consideration would bar companies from using sprinklers on grass that is planted mainly for looks, rather than use. It would apply to new developments in northern and western Utah’s Great Salt Lake basin such as apartment buildings, but not schools, farms and houses.

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All three proposals sailed through their first test at the Legislature, advancing from House committees and to the full House of Representatives. Still more bills await a public hearing at the Capitol.

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Lee Creek flows through mudflats into the Great Salt Lake near Magna on Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2025. (Photo by Spenser Heaps for Utah News Dispatch)
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The state didn’t wait to make a different move cheered by Gov. Spencer Cox and conservationists. It bought an out-of-commission Magnesium plant on the southwest shores that state leaders say comes with a significant amount of water they can now make sure stays in the lake.

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Cox set an ambitious goal to get the lake back in top shape for the 2034 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. But in the meantime, lawmakers’ inboxes are filling with emails from voters about its poor health and the ripple effects on their families, birds and the future of the state, said Senate Minority Leader Luz Escamilla.

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GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

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Dust from the toxic lakebed and its effects on public health need to be “at the forefront of everything we do and say,” she recently told reporters. Utah poured $1 million into a dust monitoring program last year to capture dust particles and analyze them. The move followed other investments in recent years, including the creation of a trust in 2023 that began with $40 million in public funding.

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“The reality is, if the Great Salt Lake continues to deplete at this level, we can’t even be here,” said Escamilla, D-Salt Lake City.

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Drought and climate change are making matters worse. On Feb. 1, Utah hit a record low for snowpack, which melts in spring and summer to fill rivers and reservoirs, providing 95% of the state’s water.

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Autumn Featherstone (Will Freund)
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Martindale, a student at Kearns High School, and Featherstone, who attends the University of Utah, said the time for incremental steps has passed. Featherstone noted a version of the bill restricting sprinkler use on ornamental grass failed to pass last year.

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“I think it’s frustrating when even the lowest hanging fruit doesn’t get taken up,” she said.

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The students point out that by some estimates, restoration of the lake will take billions of dollars. With that in mind, they want lawmakers to embrace a longshot bill they helped to craft that would set aside $200 million in public money for the cause.

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Young Utahns played a “real role” in shaping the proposal that would reroute money from a Bear River development project to the lake, Sen. Nate Blouin, D-Millcreek, told colleagues on the Senate Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Committee Monday.

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High school and college students urged the committee to pass it, but the measure stalled. The panel decided not to vote on it, saying it needed more work and input from the office of the Great Salt Lake commissioner.

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People raise their hands to speak on behalf of a bill to divert money from a development project to help the Great Salt Lake at the Utah State Capitol on Monday, Feb. 9, 2026. (Will Ruzanski/Utah News Dispatch)
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Away from the Capitol, Featherstone and Martindale said they grew up witnesses to the tragedy of the lake’s decline. Now they are trying to fathom that they may be watching its last act.

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“Any time we’re talking about anything far off in the future — say, establishing a career or maybe having kids — it’s like, ‘Oh yeah, but the drying Great Salt Lake. I can’t be here,’” Featherstone said. “People aren’t trusting that they can have a future in this state.”

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Other bills to watch this session on water conservation and the Great Salt Lake:

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  • HB296: Allows water suppliers to include the Great Salt Lake in their conservation plans
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  • HB155: Sets up tiered water rates to persuade Utahns to knock off “excessive” lawn watering
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  • HB76: Requires data centers to report to the state how much water they use
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  • SB130: Pitches in $2 million for grants to maintain the Jordan River and remove invasive weeds
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  • HB247: Reroutes revenue from a brine shrimp tax to an account meant to benefit the lake
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YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.

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Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our website. AP and Getty images may not be republished. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of any other photos and graphics.

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DMU Timestamp: February 12, 2026 21:16

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Feb 16
Nel K's Question Nel K and/or Thinking Partner (Feb 16 2026 9:23AM) : Anecdotes about real life people who live in Utah and care about this issue because it will impact living situations for those in the state. more
Thinking Partner with Nel K's edits:
  • It looks like you’re noticing how this article uses real Utah people (like Martindale and Featherstone) to show what’s at stake for everyday life in the state.
  • Those short scenes—students testifying, people at rallies, quotes about not trusting they can have a future here—are all anecdotes that connect big policy moves to housing, health, and staying in Utah.
  • You might scan back and mark 2–3 moments where a named person talks about feeling anxious, thinking about leaving, or worrying about health, then ask: what exactly about living in Utah do they fear losing?
  • From there, you can explain how each anecdote shows a different part of “living situations”: breathing dust, paying for water, deciding whether to raise kids here, or being able to stay in certain neighborhoods.

If you had to pick ONE person or quote from this article to use as your main anecdote about Utahns’ living situations, who would you choose and why—want to click Continue with AI to talk that through here, or head to Create Document to start drafting or uploading your own source?

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