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Utah Senate District 14

Members of the Utah State Senate serve four-year terms and are not subject to term limits. Half of the Senators are up for re-election every two years. Utah legislators assume office the first or second day of session (January). Utah's state senators represent an average of 95,306 residents.

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  • Candidate picture

    Tayler Khater
    (Dem)

  • Candidate picture

    Stephanie Pitcher
    (Dem)

Biographical Information

How should cities balance water rates with stricter limits on non-functional turf with expanded investment in water reuse systems, and what timeline should be set for implementing these changes?

What policies would you support to improve winter inversion air quality in urban districts?

How should the state mitigate health risks from the shrinking Great Salt Lake (dust, toxins)?

What additional incentives or requirements should the state use to encourage cities to approve more affordable housing?

Should Utah prioritize investment across nuclear, wind, and solar energy to ensure reliable, affordable, and clean power over the next 20–30 years? Why or why not?

Campaign Email Address khaterforsenate@gmail.com
Campaign Phone 8016646082
Current Employment Granite School District
Education M.Ed.
Campaign Website https://khaterforutah.com/
Water Rates: Tiered water rates for commercial and residential should be assessed against state wide water needs and applied as uniformly as is reasonable across all retail water providers as well as mandating all retail water providers use a seasonal rate structure. (2027-2029) Non-Functional Turf: Uniform non-functional turf bans for commercial spaces, commercial park strips, and residential park strips with investment for subsidies in residential communities to use water wise landscaping. Direct potable reuse systems like the one currently being developed in South Jordan should be invested in via state and local funding as well as adopted across major cities via legislation in tandem with the above conservation measures. (2028-2032)

I support policies that include meaningful incentives for electric vehicle use, expansion of public transportation to facilitate a reduction in individual transit emissions and stricter controls for vehicle emissions. However, it is also critical that as these policies are developed, they are created in conjunction with equitable solutions that don't simply criminalize already marginalized communities for not having access to transportation that may not pass a emissions standards but provides instead subsidies to ensure that all members of the community can access either public transportation or ensure they have an avenue to update issues with their vehicle's emissions.
Three Pronged Approach 1. Increase funding for the Office of the Commissioner: Great Salt Lake to purchase or lease more water rights. 2. Invest in sustainable agricultural practices such as Regenerative Agriculture currently being used in ranches across the state that allows water to eventually percolate at a sustainable rate back to the lake. 3. State wide education via a standard for 4th and 7th grade students to learn about the health of the Great Salt Lake and why its existence is critical for our environment.
1. Currently, many cities do work to encourage more affordable housing but often lack significant tools in holding developers accountable for how affordable housing materializes. State legislation that allows cities greater scope in keeping development projects on target and within the original parameters has the ability to yield housing projects that are actually affordable. 2. It is also important to revisit the Area Median Income metric as a standalone tool that is relied on heavily to determine affordability. While the metric can be helpful and convenient, as a measurement of income alone there needs to be additional metrics utilized to determine affordability.
Yes, with an upward trajectory of renewable energy use (Utah currently uses renewable energy for 22% of its energy needs) we absolutely need to continue trajectory of clean energy with investment in reliable and safe renewable technologies. However, ensuring the sustainable growth and spread of renewable energy requires a strategic and phased approach similar to the Utah Renewable Communities coalition efforts currently underway. It is also important that in a rush to achieve clean power, we don't inadvertently rush to embrace nuclear power until we better understand its effects and significant costs here in Utah.
Campaign Email Address stephanie@electstephanie.com
Campaign Phone 801-791-1124
Twitter @steph_pitcher
Current Employment Attorney
Education JD
Campaign Website www.electstephanie.com
Water pricing should reflect scarcity, and right now it often doesn't. Cities should adopt tiered rate structures that charge more for excessive water use while keeping basic household needs affordable. On turf, we should accelerate the transition away from water-intensive grass on both public and private property. I passed SB252 this session, requiring low-water-use turf on new state landscaping projects; cities should adopt the same standard. Water reuse investment needs to happen in parallel efforts, not after. A five-year implementation timeline is achievable if the Legislature treats this with the urgency it requires.
Inversion along the Wasatch Front is a public health crisis. We need to close the loopholes that let polluting vehicles stay on the road. This session I passed SB208, which cracks down on individuals who evade the emissions testing process. Beyond that, we need stronger vehicle emissions standards and we must accelerate the transition to electric landscaping equipment. I proposed SB176 this session to move the state to electric lawn equipment. The bill narrowly failed but I plan to bring it back. I’m also pushing for cleaner energy sources that reduce the industrial emissions that settle into our valleys every winter. Air quality disproportionately impacts kids and elderly residents. That urgency should drive our timeline.
The exposed lakebed is already releasing arsenic, mercury, and other toxic dust into communities along the Wasatch Front. The state needs to fund dust suppression efforts on exposed lakebed as an immediate public health measure, increase air quality monitoring near affected communities, and invest urgently in getting more water to the lake. I've worked with Stewardship Utah on conservation policy and I also passed water conservation legislation this session. But mitigation only buys time; the only real solution is reversing the Lake's decline. That requires water rights reform, smarter growth planning, and the political will to say no to projects like the proposed Stratos data center that works against our environmental stewardship goals.
On incentives: tie state infrastructure funding to housing production targets, reward cities that approve density near transit, and expand programs that help first-time buyers build credit. For example, I sponsored SB187 this session, introducing renter credit reporting to help families build credit and work toward affordable homeownership. On requirements: the state should set clear affordability benchmarks and hold cities accountable for meeting them. Exclusionary zoning that blocks density near jobs and transit is a policy choice, and the state has leverage to change it. I'll keep pushing on both fronts.
Utah should prioritize wind and solar as the foundation of its long-term energy strategy, backed by investment in battery storage and grid modernization to ensure reliability. These are the fastest to deploy, the most cost-competitive, and cleanest for our air and water. On nuclear, I'm cautiously supportive. Advancing reactor technology and small modular reactors have real potential as part of a clean energy transition, and I want to make sure we're weighing that seriously alongside costs, nuclear waste management, and safety. Utah's energy future has to balance reliability, affordability, and environmental responsibility. I don't think any single source gets us there alone.