Utah Healthy Soils Policy

State Flower: Flower

Legislative Status Update

Updates in 2023:

None


Updates in 2022:

HCR001 [LS], Concurrent Resolution to Work Together to Address the Climate, Public Lands, and Carbon Sequestration, includes “soil and ecosystem health“, “the Legislature and the Governor find that the standard of responsible federal land and resources stewardship should be to achieve on federally-managed public lands the highest level of soil and ecosystem health and productivity that is being achieved on comparable land by tribal, state, local, and private managers or make a public report on why the agency is unable to restore this level of ecosystem health and productivity” and “the Legislature and the Governor urge all state agencies with authority to manage state-managed public lands to continue to manage them in ways that increase soil carbon sequestration and to the extent they can, to encourage greater soil carbon sequestration on private lands” (resolutions in Utah such as these tend to result in positive action) – adopted 2/2/2022


Updates in 2021:

HB0296, adds soil health to purpose of Conservation Commission and creates Soil Health Program and Advisory Committee – signed into law on 3/16/2021 by Governor Cox

Healthy Soils Program

Legislative Information

Program Summary

Funding Sources

Lessons Learned

State Contacts & Resources

Agencies Involved

State Universities & Researchers

Agricultural Organizations & Technical Assistance

Education & Advocacy Groups

Soil Health Amendments

Date:

Signed into law on March 16th, 2021.


Legislation:

HB 296


Sponsors:


Description:

This bill addresses programs related to the health of soil, modifies the purposes of the Conservation Commission Act, and establishes the Soil Health Advisory Committee.

The Utah Soil Health Program is created under the Conservation Commission to provide voluntary incentives through a grant program for eligible entities to implement soil health practices, raise awareness of soil health benefits through demonstration projects, outreach and education, establish a state soil health monitoring and inventory platform and advance soil health research. 


Soil Health Definition:

The Utah Soil Health Program is created under the Conservation Commission to provide voluntary incentives through a grant program for eligible entities to implement soil health practices, raise awareness of soil health benefits through demonstration projects, outreach and education, establish a state soil health monitoring and inventory platform and advance soil health research. 


States Goals:

“The Legislature finds that soil health is essential to protecting the state’s soil and water resources, bolstering the state’s food supply, and sustaining the state’s agricultural industry.”


Program Required Measurements:

A recipient of a grant for research, educational, or demonstration projects is required to “conduct outreach and educational activities regarding the projects, including field day visits; and disclose information related to the projects, including the locations of the projects, the soil health practices implemented, and the environmental or economic outcomes.”


Tools:

The bill mentions a “State soil health inventory and platform”, including a geospatial inventory, documenting: (a) the condition of agricultural soils; (b) the implementation of soil health practices; or (c) the environmental and economic impacts, including current and potential future carbon holding capacity of soils, or other information the department considers appropriate.


Funding Source:

The Conservation Commission can accept “grants, gifts, services, donations, or other

resources from the United States government or a corporation or agency created or designed by the United States to lend or grant money; the state or any of the state’s political subdivisions; or any other source.”


Funding Type

Monetary incentives provided through the program include grants and loans. Non-monetary incentives include “equipment, technical assistance, educational materials, outreach, and market development assistance for market premiums or ecosystem services.”


Practices for Funding

Practices that may contribute to soil health, including:

  • no-tillage;
  • conservation tillage;
  • crop rotations;
  • intercropping;
  • cover cropping;
  • planned grazing;
  • the application of soil amendments that add carbon or organic matter, including biosolids, manure, compost, or biochar;
  • revegetation;
  • other practices the department determines contribute or have the potential to contribute to soil health.

Also listed are the 5 soil health principles:

  1. Maximizing soil cover,
  2. Minimizing soil disturbance, 
  3. Maximizing biodiversity, 
  4. Maintaining a continual live plant or root in the soil, 
  5. Integrating

Agencies involved:

Utah Department of Agriculture and Food

Utah Conservation Commission


Rulemaking process:

The Conservation Commission sets guidelines by rule for the administration of the Healthy Soil Program. The Soil Health Advisory Committee serves as an advisory committee to the commission.


State Universities & Researchers: 

Utah Agricultural Experiment Station, Utah State University


Agricultural Organizations & Technical Assistance:

As defined in the bill: “Technical assistance organization means a person, including an eligible entity, who has demonstrated technical expertise in implementing soil health practices and soil health principles, as determined by the department.”