Transmittal - 12/6/2022ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
CITY COUNCIL TRANSMITTAL
______________________________ Date Received:
Lisa Shaffer, Chief Administrative Officer
Date Sent to Council:
TO: Salt Lake City Council DATE: December 6, 2022
Dan Dugan, Chair
FROM: Debbie Lyons, Sustainability Director
SUBJECT: Electric Vehicle Readiness Off-Street Parking Stalls Amendment
STAFF CONTACTS: Peter Nelson
Sustainable Business Program Manager
Peter.Nelson@slcgov.com | 801-535-6477
DOCUMENT TYPE: Ordinance
RECOMMENDATION: Adopt the ordinance amending and updating Sections of the Salt
Lake City Code for Off-Street Parking, 21A.44.040, relating to electric vehicle readiness
parking stall requirements
BUDGET IMPACT: None
BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION:
Mayor Erin Mendenhall and the Salt Lake City Sustainability Department propose to amend the
text of Salt Lake City Code Subsection Chapter 21A.44.040.B.2 (Zoning: Off Street Parking,
Mobility and Loading; Required Off Street Parking; Electric Vehicle Parking) to require
properties with a multi-family use to implement electric vehicle (EV) readiness infrastructure
for 20% of required parking spaces, at the time of new construction or major reconstruction.
Policy background
In November 2016, the City Council and Mayor adopted a Joint Resolution establishing
renewable energy and carbon emissions reduction goals for Salt Lake City. Included in the
resolution is a community carbon emissions reduction goal of 80% by 2040, with an interim
goal of 50% reduction in greenhouse gases by 2030. Reductions in emissions from energy use
and transportation are specifically cited in the resolution, which includes on-road emissions
from private vehicles.
Lisa Shaffer (Dec 6, 2022 13:55 MST)12/06/2022
12/06/2022
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
In May 2017, the Salt Lake City Council approved an ordinance amendment requiring one EV
parking space, equipped with an EV charging station, for every 25 required parking spaces for
all multi-family use properties.
On December 8th, 2020, City Council and Mayor Mendenhall adopted the joint Electrified
Transportation Resolution, establishing a commitment to incorporate and promote clean energy
transportation technologies as an important solution to reduce carbon emissions and pollutants
that impact air quality. The proposed ordinance aligns directly with the resolution by expanding
greater adoption of electric vehicle technology, expanding EV charging infrastructure,
accelerating EV adoption rates, and supporting the inclusive development of clean
transportation options for community members.
In April 2022, Mayor Mendenhall signed a petition initiation request (PLNPCM2022- 00374)
for the Sustainability Department to begin the process of amending the zoning ordinance to add
requirements that a minimum of 20% of on-site parking spaces in new multifamily construction
projects be built electric vehicle-ready (EV-ready).
In July 2022, the Salt Lake City Planning Commission held a public hearing regarding
PLNPCM2022-00374 and reviewed the corresponding staff report from the Sustainability
Department. At the hearing, the Planning Commission unanimously passed a motion to forward
a recommendation to the City Council to approve the request to amend the zoning ordinance for
Electric Vehicle Readiness (PLNPCM2022-00374).
Electric Vehicles and Air Quality
The on-road transportation sector accounts for nearly 20% of greenhouse gas emissions in Salt
Lake City, contributing to air pollution and climate change and threatening the health and
wellbeing of residents and visitors of Salt Lake City. Petroleum-fueled on-road transportation
contributes significantly to the air pollution in the Wasatch Front airshed through criteria
pollutants emissions. Electric vehicles present a net benefit to the community in terms of air
quality improvements. Compared to a gasoline vehicle, electric vehicles offer the following
percent reduction in emissions (estimated): 99.7% for volatile organic compounds (VOCs);
76.1% for NOx; 49.3% for PM10; 64.8% for PM2.5; 95.7% for SO2; 99.8% for CO; and 1.8% for
GHG (greenhouse gases). EV readiness infrastructure supports the increased adoption of EVs by
multi-family tenants, which in turn will lead to reduction in local air quality pollutants, helping
Salt Lake City maintain its attainment status for compliance with federal health-based standards
for fine particulate matter and ozone.
Equitable Access to Charging Opportunities
Salt Lake City currently incentivizes electric vehicles by providing accessible public charging at
20 dual-port public EV charging stations at 15 sites within Salt Lake City, with more located at
the airport. The charging stations, which are owned and operated by the City, are currently free
to use for the posted time limit. Most of these stations were installed in 2017 and help serve
short-term charging needs, accessibly and conveniently, across the city.
Since the installation of these stations and the adoption of the first EV charging station
ordinance requirement in Salt Lake City in 2017, EV registrations have increased statewide by
152%, according to a data request from the Utah State Tax Commission. As of quarter 3 of 2022,
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
electric vehicles represent 5.7% of all vehicle purchases statewide for the year. As of February
2022, 1,665 EVs were registered in Salt Lake City across all applicable zip codes.
Furthermore, electric vehicle ownership continues to increase. Many car manufacturers have
publicized their goals of making only all-electric vehicles over the next decade. For example,
General Motors has committed to only producing all-electric vehicles by 2035. With the passage
of the Inflation Reduction Act, ownership of these vehicles is expected to grow dramatically over
the next decade and beyond. The Inflation Reduction Act offers expanded $7,500 tax credits,
available at the point-of-sale, for certain new electric vehicles, as well as up to a $4,000 tax
credit for the purchase of a used EV.
These trends make it all the more important that Salt Lake City’s infrastructure is ready to serve
residents across the City, including those who rent, giving them the ability to charge their
vehicles.
This is important because EV charging most commonly takes places at home. In a study by the
Idaho National Laboratory (2015 study and press release), it was found that approximately 85%
of charging events take place at home; with access to workplace charging, the at -home charging
events accounted for approximately 61% on average. The proposed EV readiness ordinance
helps to create home-based charging opportunities to residents that live in multi-family
dwellings, where EV charging is often less accessible. Adoption of an EV-ready requirement for
new construction ensures lower EV charging installation costs in the future, as well as provides
residents with increased certainty that charging opportunities will be available when the need
arises.
The proposed EV readiness ordinance applies to any property with a multi-family use, including
mixed-use developments, at the time of new construction or major reconstruction. Twenty
percent (20%) of required or provided parking spaces shall be constructed as electric vehicle
ready (EV-ready). EV-ready infrastructure includes installed electrical panel capacity and
raceway with conduit to terminate in a junction box or 208- or 240-volt charging outlet. The
ordinance does not require an installed charging station to comply with
regulations; the intention of the proposed ordinance is to prepare parking spaces
for the future use of a Level 2 EV charging station.
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
Public Process
The following timeline lists key events in the public process:
Meetings with internal City stakeholders 2019-2020
Posted on Departmental project webpage Sept 2020 – Present
Public Comment Period 1 Oct 2020 – January 2021
Salt Lake City Sustainability Public EV Presentation October 2020
Presentation to Utah Commercial Real Estate (UCRE) working group December 2020
Presented at Utah Commercial Real Estate Task Force EV Workshop February 2021
Public Comment Period 2 June 2021 – August 2021
Public Comment Period 3 April 2022 – June 2022
Presentation to the Salt Lake City Planning Commission July 2022
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. ORDINANCE
2. COMMENTS RECEIVED FROM PROJECT PAGE FORM SUBMISSION
3. LETTER RECEIVED FROM SWEEP, UTAH CLEAN ENERGY, AND WRA
4. LETTER RECEIVED FROM TESLA
5. EMAIL MESSAGES SENT TO SUSTAINABILITY DEPARTMENT
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
ATTACHMENT 1
Ordinance – Red Lined
Ordinance – Final
LEGISLATIVE DRAFT
SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE 1
No. _____ of 2022 2
3
(Ordinance amending Section 21A.44.040 of the Salt Lake City Code 4
pertaining to EV-readiness for required off street parking) 5
6
WHEREAS, Chapter 21A.44 of the Salt Lake City Code (Zoning: Off Street Parking, Mobility, 7
and Loading) sets forth minimum and maximum requirements for off-street parking spaces for 8
different zoning districts within Salt Lake City; and 9
WHEREAS, Section 21A.44.040(B) of the Salt Lake City Code currently mandates the 10
inclusion of one (1) parking spaces dedicated to electric vehicles and equipped with an electric vehicle 11
(“EV”) charging station for every twenty-five (25) parking spaces for all multi-family use buildings 12
(the “EV Parking Ordinance”); and 13
WHEREAS, Salt Lake City Corporation (“City”) is committed to carbon emissions 14
reduction, and pursuant to Resolution No. 33 of 2016, a joint resolution of the Salt Lake City 15
Council and Mayor establishing renewable energy and carbon emissions reduction goals for Salt 16
Lake City, adopted a goal of reducing carbon emissions by 50% by 2030; and 17
WHEREAS, on December 8th, 2020 the City Council and the Mayor adopted Resolution 18
No. 45 of 2020, a joint resolution of Salt Lake City Council and Mayor establishing electrified 19
transportation goals for Salt Lake City, establishing a commitment to support the development of 20
electric vehicle charging infrastructure, plus other programs, policies, and projects that encourage 21
the purchase and use of electric vehicles by local residents; and 22
WHEREAS, the Salt Lake City Council finds that updates to the EV Parking Ordinance are 23
necessary to require new multi-family use developments or major reconstruction projects of multi-24
family buildings to include electric vehicle readiness infrastructure to support electric vehicle use for 25
Salt Lake City residents in advancement of the City’s carbon emissions reduction goals. 26
LEGISLATIVE DRAFT
NOW, THEREFORE, be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah: 27
SECTION 1. Amending Section 21A.44.040. Section 21A.44.040(B) of the Salt Lake City 28
Code shall be, and hereby is, amended to read as follows: 29
21A.44.040: REQUIRED OFF STREET PARKING: 30
B. Electric Vehicle Parking:31
1.Each multi-family use shall provide a minimum of one (1) parking space dedicated to electric 32
vehicles for every twenty-five (25) parking spaces provided on-site. Electric vehicle parking spaces 33
shall count toward the minimum required number of parking spaces. The electric vehicle parking 34
space shall be: 35
1.a. Located in the same lot as the principal use;36
2.b. Located as close to a primary entrance of the principal building as possible;37
3.c. Signed in a clear and conspicuous manner, such as special pavement marking or signage,38
indicating exclusive availability to electric vehicles; and 39
4.d. Outfitted with a standard electric vehicle charging station.40
2.In addition to Electric Vehicle Parking requirements, each multi-family use shall provide a 41
minimum of 20% electric vehicle ready (EV-ready) parking spaces of required parking spaces 42
provided on-site. EV-ready parking spaces are parking spaces that are equipped with electrical 43
conduit and sufficient electrical capacity for the future use of a minimum 200-volt electric vehicle 44
charging station. The location of proposed EV-ready parking spaces shall be indicated on submitted 45
site plans. 46
a. EV-ready parking requirements shall count toward the minimum required and maximum47
allowed number of parking spaces. 48
LEGISLATIVE DRAFT
b. Parking areas with four or fewer vehicle parking spaces are not required to identify an EV-49
ready parking space. 50
c. Where no minimum parking is required, the 20% EV-ready parking space requirement will51
be based on provided parking. 52
d. For new multi-family uses, a minimum of 20% of required Accessible (ADA) parking53
spaces shall be constructed as EV-ready. 54
e. Electric vehicle parking spaces provided in accordance with Subsection B.1 that exceed55
the minimum number of required spaces established in that subsection shall count towards the 56
required number of EV-ready parking spaces required in this Subsection B.2. 57
SECTION 2. Effective Date. This Ordinance shall become effective on the date of its first 58
publication. 59
60
Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah this __ day of ____________, 2022. 61
62
LEGISLATIVE DRAFT
63
64
CHAIRPERSON 65
ATTEST: 66
67
______________________________ 68
CITY RECORDER 69
70
71
Transmitted to Mayor on . 72
Mayor’s Action: _______Approved. _______Vetoed. 73
74
75
76
MAYOR 77
78
___________________________ 79
CITY RECORDER APPROVED AS TO FORM 80
(SEAL) Salt Lake City Attorney’s Office 81 82
Date: 83
Bill No. ________ of 2022 84
Published: ______________. _______________________________ 85
Sara Montoya, Senior City Attorney 86 87
SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE
No. _____ of 2022
(Ordinance amending Section 21A.44.040 of the Salt Lake City Code
pertaining to EV-readiness for required off street parking)
WHEREAS, Chapter 21A.44 of the Salt Lake City Code (Zoning: Off Street Parking, Mobility,
and Loading) sets forth minimum and maximum requirements for off-street parking spaces for
different zoning districts within Salt Lake City; and
WHEREAS, Section 21A.44.040(B) of the Salt Lake City Code currently mandates the
inclusion of one (1) parking spaces dedicated to electric vehicles and equipped with an electric vehicle
(“EV”) charging station for every twenty-five (25) parking spaces for all multi-family use buildings
(the “EV Parking Ordinance”); and
WHEREAS, Salt Lake City Corporation (“City”) is committed to carbon emissions
reduction, and pursuant to Resolution No. 33 of 2016, a joint resolution of the Salt Lake City
Council and Mayor establishing renewable energy and carbon emissions reduction goals for Salt
Lake City, adopted a goal of reducing carbon emissions by 50% by 2030; and
WHEREAS, on December 8th, 2020 the City Council and the Mayor adopted Resolution
No. 45 of 2020, a joint resolution of Salt Lake City Council and Mayor establishing electrified
transportation goals for Salt Lake City, establishing a commitment to support the development of
electric vehicle charging infrastructure, plus other programs, policies, and projects that encourage
the purchase and use of electric vehicles by local residents; and
WHEREAS, the Salt Lake City Council finds that updates to the EV Parking Ordinance are
necessary to require new multi-family use developments or major reconstruction projects of multi-
family buildings to include electric vehicle readiness infrastructure to support electric vehicle use for
Salt Lake City residents in advancement of the City’s carbon emissions reduction goals.
NOW, THEREFORE, be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah:
SECTION 1. Amending Section 21A.44.040. Section 21A.44.040(B) of the Salt Lake City
Code shall be, and hereby is, amended to read as follows:
21A.44.040: REQUIRED OFF STREET PARKING:
B. Electric Vehicle Parking:
1. Each multi-family use shall provide a minimum of one (1) parking space dedicated to electric
vehicles for every twenty-five (25) parking spaces provided on-site. Electric vehicle parking spaces
shall count toward the minimum required number of parking spaces. The electric vehicle parking
space shall be:
a. Located in the same lot as the principal use;
b. Located as close to a primary entrance of the principal building as possible;
c. Signed in a clear and conspicuous manner, such as special pavement marking or signage,
indicating exclusive availability to electric vehicles; and
d. Outfitted with a standard electric vehicle charging station.
2. In addition to Electric Vehicle Parking requirements, each multi-family use shall provide a
minimum of 20% electric vehicle ready (EV-ready) parking spaces of required parking spaces
provided on-site. EV-ready parking spaces are parking spaces that are equipped with electrical
conduit and sufficient electrical capacity for the future use of a minimum 200-volt electric vehicle
charging station. The location of proposed EV-ready parking spaces shall be indicated on submitted
site plans.
a. EV-ready parking requirements shall count toward the minimum required and maximum
allowed number of parking spaces.
b. Parking areas with four or fewer vehicle parking spaces are not required to identify an EV-
ready parking space.
c. Where no minimum parking is required, the 20% EV-ready parking space requirement will
be based on provided parking.
d. For new multi-family uses, a minimum of 20% of required Accessible (ADA) parking
spaces shall be constructed as EV-ready.
e. Electric vehicle parking spaces provided in accordance with Subsection B.1 that exceed
the minimum number of required spaces established in that subsection shall count towards the
required number of EV-ready parking spaces required in this Subsection B.2.
SECTION 2. Effective Date. This Ordinance shall become effective on the date of its first
publication.
Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah this __ day of ____________, 2022.
CHAIRPERSON
ATTEST:
______________________________
CITY RECORDER
Transmitted to Mayor on .
Mayor’s Action: _______Approved. _______Vetoed.
MAYOR
___________________________
CITY RECORDER APPROVED AS TO FORM
(SEAL) Salt Lake City Attorney’s Office
Date:
Bill No. ________ of 2022
Published: ______________. _______________________________ Sara Montoya, Senior City Attorney
December 6, 2022
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
ATTACHMENT 2
COMMENTS RECEIVED FROM PROJECT PAGE FORM SUBMISSION
Feedback, Comments, and Questions Date
1 This ordinance is a bit pre-mature, especially for multi- family projects. Most apartment owners cannot
afford an electric vehicle and the EV stations installed don't get used. While I like the concept, the
ordinance will increase costs for housing at a time when we need to
make housing more affordable.
9/23/2020
21:05
2 I certainly appreciate the need to move things in a clean energy direction, however, I cannot support
pushing such a high percentage of required EV stalls. Electric vehicles are not a fully viable means of
transportation at this point, and won't be for some time. Until owning an electric vehicle makes practical
and economic sense, 20% of the population will not be driving these types of vehicles. Implementing
reasonable EV station requirements, providing incentives for developers that go beyond the
requirements, and/or stepping up requirements over time, all prove that the city is thoughtful on both
sides of the situation. It is important to stay ahead of demand, however, having managed properties with
EV stations, we are very far from a 20% use of these
stations.
1/6/2021
21:25
3 We appreciate the City working to push forward sustainability ordinances, as we all are stewards of our
cities. However, requiring 20% of residential parking to cater to electric vehicles appears quite high in
relation to the actual users. We do live in an area where ownership of an electric vehicle is a luxury. In
addition to being economically prohibitive, residents live in Utah in order to enjoy a state full of natural
wonders, in which the current electric vehicle options are not viable. We recognize that this need is
forthcoming, however, recommend an incentive program, rather than a % requirement, be initiated. If an
EV station requirement ordinance is inevitable, we suggest that the % is substantially reduced and applied
to only specific types/sizes of multi-family, matching the actual needs of the potential residents/general
public. These requirements could then step as demand increases.
1/7/2021
19:26
4 Hello, I have a question about this ordinance. Is this only applicable to new build? Or does it apply to
existing multi-family dwellings? I live in an existing building and would love to push our HOA to install
charging stations, two of us own electric vehicles.
1/22/2021
16:03
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
ATTACHMENT 3
LETTER FROM SWEEP, UTAH CLEAN ENERGY, AND WRA
1
Williams, Shannon
From:Matt Frommer <mfrommer@swenergy.org>
Sent:Friday, November 20, 2020 12:04 PM
To:Williams, Shannon
Cc:aaron.kressig@westernresources.org; Josh Craft; Travis Madsen
Subject:(EXTERNAL) Feedback on Electric Vehicle Readiness Ordinance
Attachments:SLC EV Infrastructure Building Codes Letter.docx
Hi Shannon,
Please find our attached support letter for Salt Lake City’s proposed EV Readiness Ordinance. As you’ll see, our letter
includes 3 recommendations to improve the proposed Ordinance:
1. Clarify the ‘EV-Capable parking space’ and ‘EV-Ready parking space’ definitions and infrastructure specifications.
2. Add EV infrastructure requirements for single-family residential and commercial buildings.
3. Make sure the EV infrastructure requirements apply to both new and renovated buildings.
I’d suggest reviewing SWEEP’s EV Infrastructure Building Codes Adoption Toolkit for more information on infrastructure
costs and sample code language. Let us know if you have any questions.
Thanks and have a good weekend!
Matt
--
Matt Frommer
Senior Transportation Associate
Southwest Energy Efficiency Project (SWEEP)
M: 908-432-1556
mfrommer@swenergy.org
Follow us at: @SouthwestEE
Sign-up for SWEEP news
--
November 20, 2020
Subject: Support the Adoption of Salt Lake City’s Proposed Electric Vehicle Readiness Ordinance
Dear Salt Lake City Sustainability Department,
The signatories of this letter submit the following comments for consideration by the Salt Lake City
Sustainability Department in the development of the City’s Electric Vehicle Readiness Ordinance. We
strongly support the City’s proposed Ordinance, which will lower critical barriers to EV adoption by
reducing the cost of installing EV charging stations. We also believe the Ordinance could be clarified,
strengthened, and expanded to better align with the charging needs of Salt Lake City residents and
businesses. To improve the proposed Ordinance, the City should:
1. Clarify the ‘EV-Capable parking space’ and ‘EV-Ready parking space’ definitions and
infrastructure specifications.
The proposed Ordinance calls for 20% of new parking spaces to be “electric vehicle ready (EV-ready)”,
but then describes EV-ready parking spaces to include “electrical conduit and sufficient electrical
capacity for the future use of a minimum 200V EV charging station”. This definition better resembles the
language for “EV-Capable parking spaces” from the Sustainability Department’s EV Readiness Ordinance
presentation on October 14, 2020. The Department should clarify these requirements and add the
following technical specifications, which were vetted by the ICC as part of the 2021 IECC code
development process and have been adopted by a number of municipalities across the country:
EV Capable Space. Electrical panel capacity and space to support a minimum 40-ampere,
208/240-volt branch circuit for each EV parking space, and the installation of raceways, both
underground and surface mounted, to support the EVSE.
EV Ready Space. A designated parking space which is provided with one 40-ampere, 208/240-
volt dedicated branch circuit for EVSE servicing Electric Vehicles. The circuit shall terminate in a
suitable termination point such as a receptacle, junction box, or an EVSE, and be located in close
proximity to the proposed location of the EV parking spaces.
We recommend maintaining the EV-Ready parking requirements, which includes a full 240V/40A circuit
terminating in a receptacle, junction box, or EV charging station. A fully operational receptacle will allow
residents to quickly and easily charge their EVs with an affordable and portable EV charging cable, which
are typically included in the purchase or lease of a new EV.
2. Add EV infrastructure requirements for single-family residential and commercial buildings.
The City’s justification for EV infrastructure requirements in multifamily buildings is well-reasoned and
the same logic should be extended to single-family residential and commercial buildings. The
Sustainability Department’s October 14th presentation includes data showing that well over 80% of EV
charging takes place in the home with most of the remaining charging at the workplace. Like charger
installations in multifamily buildings, the cost to install EV infrastructure at single-family homes and
commercial buildings is significantly more expensive to complete during a stand-alone retrofit versus
new construction (See SWEEP’s 2020 EV Infrastructure Building Codes Adoption Toolkit for most
information on costs.)
EV-Ready infrastructure in commercial buildings drastically improves charging access, especially for
residents of existing multifamily residential buildings, where the installation of a home-charger is often
cost-prohibitive or logistically unfeasible. According to the U.S. DOE’s Workplace Charging Challenge,
employees are six times more likely to drive an EV if their workplace offers EV charging. To better
support residential and commercial EV adoption, the Ordinance should include the following
requirements:
● One- and two-family dwellings: At least one EV-Ready parking space per dwelling unit.
● Commercial buildings (Groups A, B, E, I, M, S-2): Provide a minimum of 20% EV-ready parking
spaces.*
The City might also consider a DC Fast-charger provision to allow developers to substitute up to five
Level 2 charging spaces with one DC fast-charging space (minimum 20kW).
3. EV infrastructure requirements must apply to both new and renovated buildings.
Governments and automakers around the world have signaled a total market transformation to electric
transportation over the next 2-3 decades and we’re going to need millions of new plugs in our homes
and businesses to charge all these new EVs. EV infrastructure requirements for new buildings is an
important first step, but according to a recent study from UC-Berkeley, just 6% of all homes in the U.S.
were built in the last 10 years. As a result, the Sustainability Department should consider lowering the
threshold for EV infrastructure requirements. The City and County of Denver applies their EV
infrastructure requirements to ‘Level 3 Alterations’, “where the work area exceeds 50 percent of the
original building area or more than 10 parking spaces are substantially modified are subject to the EV
infrastructure requirements listed above.”
In conclusion, we applaud Salt Lake City for advancing policies that support greater EV adoption and we
recommend extending these important EV infrastructure requirements to new and renovated
residential and commercial buildings. Thank you very much for the opportunity to comment.
Sincerely,
Matt Frommer
Senior Transportation Associate
Southwest Energy Efficiency Project
mfrommer@swenergy.org
Aaron Kressig
Transportation Electrification Manager
Western Resource Advocates
aaron.kressig@westernresources.org
Josh Craft
Government Relations Manager
Utah Clean Energy
josh@utahcleanenergy.org
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
ATTACHMENT 4
LETTER FROM TESLA
1
Williams, Shannon
From:Noelani Derrickson <nderrickson@tesla.com>
Sent:Monday, January 25, 2021 10:53 AM
To:Council Comments; Williams, Shannon
Cc:Craig Hulse; Francesca Wahl
Subject:(EXTERNAL) Salt Lake City EV Ready Ordinance - Tesla Letter of Support
Attachments:Salt Lake City EV Ready Ordinance - Tesla Letter of Support 1.25.pdf
Salt Lake City Council,
Please find attached a letter of support from Tesla on Salt Lake City’s proposed Electric Vehicle Ready Parking ordinance
for multi-family units. Passage of the proposed ordinance is an important step in supporting higher levels of electric
vehicles.
Thank you,
Noelani Derrickson | Public Policy and Business Development
3500 Deer Creek Rd, Palo Alto, CA 94304
m. (808) 220-8990 | nderrickson@tesla.com
Tesla, Inc.
3500 Deer Creek Road, Palo Alto, CA 94304
p +650 681 5100 f +650 681 5101
January 25, 2021
Salt Lake City Council
451 South State Street,
Room 304
Salt Lake City, UT 84111
council.comments@slcgov.com
RE: Salt Lake City EV Readiness Ordinance – 21.A.44.050.B.3
Salt Lake City Council,
I am writing on behalf of Tesla to express our support for Salt Lake City’s proposed electric
vehicle (EV) readiness ordinance, which requires that multi-family developments provide a
minimum of 20% EV-ready1 parking spaces.
Tesla’s mission is to accelerate the world’s transition to sustainable energy, and we are proud
to be helping Salt Lake City meet our shared goals. As both a manufacturer of EVs and a
provider of charging infrastructure for our customers, Tesla brings a unique perspective to the
discussion on EV readiness measures for new buildings and construction on existing buildings.
Access to EV charging represents one of the more fundamental challenges impairing demand
for electric vehicles. Without easy and convenient access to EV charging, drivers will be less
inclined to choose an EV over a conventional vehicle. Since most charging occurs at home or
at work (80%), ensuring that Level-2 charging is generally available in residential and
workplace parking structures provides an additional sense of reliability and convenience for
current and future EV drivers.
We commend Salt Lake City for its leadership in accelerating transportation electrification and
proposing EV-readiness requirements for multifamily buildings. Salt Lake City will join a growing
1 EV-ready is defined by Salt Lake City as meaning a parking space that is designed and constructed to include an electrical panel capacity
with a dedicated branch circuit, a continuous raceway from the panel to the future EV parking space, and conduit to terminate in a junction box
or 240-volt charging outlet. Available at
http://www.slcdocs.com/slcgreen/Proposed%20EV%20Readiness%20Ordinance%20Presentation%20Slides%20-%20Oct%2014%202020.pdf
list of cities across North America including Atlanta, Chicago, and Vancouver, that are adopting
EV readiness requirements at 20% or higher for new parking spaces. Given the important role
EV charging infrastructure will play in helping Salt Lake City meet its pollution and emission
reduction goals, we urge the adoption of this EV-readiness ordinance.
Sincerely,
Noelani Derrickson
Policy and Business Development Advisor
nderrickson@tesla.com
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
ATTACHMENT 5
COMMENTS EMAILED TO SUSTAINABILITY DIVISION
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
Williams, Shannon
From: Dustin Holt
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2020 9:05 AM
To: Williams, Shannon
Subject: (EXTERNAL) EV Stall Readiness Ordinance -
Ms. Williams,
As both a Salt Lake City resident and someone who develops multi-family projects in SLC, let me
start by saying I am a huge proponent of SLC, and Electric Vehicles. I absolutely support Electric
Vehicles and I support the Cities current requirements for projects to provide 1 EV stall per 25
Stalls the project provides (required or not).
However, I have concerns about this new proposed ordinance. While it may not seem like a big
deal, in a recent 100 unit Multi-Family project, we priced running conduit, upsizing power panels
and up-sizing transformers / generators, so that each parking stall could accommodate an EV stall
in the future. I can share with you that our findings were in excess of $3,000 per stall just in
infrastructure cost. The exact infrastructure this ordinance is proposing. By the time you purchase
the EV charging station itself, this could add $6-10K per STALL - depending on which EV station
one goes with. Ultimately in a time when affordability is of major concern, having a required
burden of an additional $6,000 per unit will force someone looking for a 5-6% return on
investment (ROI) to increase rents by $250-300 / yr. While this "MIGHT" promote more EV cars /
EV usage in the City, it "WILL" impact affordability.
I am not in support of this change as a requirement. Thanks.
Dustin E. Holt,
Co-Founder dbURBAN Communities
801.573.9054
Williams, Shannon
From: Peter Corroon
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2020 9:36 AM
To: Williams, Shannon
Subject: (EXTERNAL) RE: Reminder: SLC Electric Vehicle
Readiness Ordinance Presentation - October 14th
Shannon,
Thanks for sending this over. I sent a comment previously but thought I should correspond directly.
As someone who builds affordable housing, I have never seen anyone use our EV charging stations
that we have installed. I have never actually seen any electric vehicles at our buildings. While I am a
big fan of the conversion to electric vehicles, I think requiring additional infrastructure for EV
charging stations is probably premature for affordable housing projects. I think that they should be
exempted from the proposed ordinance. This adds an additional cost when it is already difficult to
make these projects pencil financially.
Sincerely,
Peter Corroon
Real Estate Division
Sentry Financial
201 S. Main St. Suite 1400 Salt Lake City, Utah 84111
mobile +1.801.597.7471
office +1.801.303.1114
From: Williams, Shannon <Shannon.Williams@slcgov.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2020 8:21 AM
Subject: RE: Reminder: SLC Electric Vehicle Readiness Ordinance Presentation - October 14th
Hello all,
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
I am writing to let you know that the presentation materials for Salt Lake City’s proposed
Electric Vehicle Readiness Ordinance are now available. Thank you all who attended the
presentation live. Feel free to view the presentation recording or presentation slides at your
convenience.
There is still an opportunity to provide feedback on the proposed changes!
Visit www.slcgreen.com/EVready or email directly shannon.williams@slcgov.com to
submit your feedback, comments, and questions.
If you are interested in Salt Lake City Sustainability presenting at your organization,
please email Shannon Williams at the email above. We are happy to answer questions,
collect your feedback, and provide additional information.
We hope to hear your feedback on the proposed EV Readiness ordinance. Your
voice and ideas are important to us and will help create a stronger and more resilient
ordinance. Find more at www.slcgreen.com/EVready.
Best regards,
Shannon Williams
SHANNON WILLIAMS
Special Projects Assistant
DEPARTMENT of SUSTAINABILITY
SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION
From: Williams, Shannon
Subject: Reminder: SLC Electric Vehicle Readiness Ordinance Presentation - October 14th
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
Developers and Building Professionals,
Reminder: Join Salt Lake City’s Sustainability Department on Wednesday, October 14 to learn
about the City’s proposed Electric Vehicle (EV) Readiness Ordinance. Learn how the ordinance
helps to avoid costly retrofits, promotes clean air in Salt Lake City, and meets increasing EV
charging demand.
The EV Readiness Ordinance is a proposed addition to the City zoning ordinance chapter for
Off Street Parking, Mobility, and Loading (21A.44) and applies to properties with a multifamily use,
including mixed-use developments.
In this presentation, Sustainability staff will cover:
• Economic and air quality benefits of the ordinance
• Proposed ordinance requirements
• How to provide feedback to Salt Lake City
Find additional information at www.slcgreen.com/EVready.
Presentation Details
We hope to see you next week. The presentation will be made available as a recording for
anyone unable to attend the live event.
Presentation: Electric Vehicle Readiness Ordinance
Date: Wednesday, October 14 from 2 PM – 3 PM
Who Should Attend: Developers and stakeholders of multifamily developments
How to Join the Presentation:
1. Click the WebEx link below to join the presentation at the specified time and date:
https://saltlakecity.webex.com/saltlakecity/onstage/g.php?MTID=ec94196cbf9470d5
eaa53dea6c2024f80 Password: wqMCvBPY589
2. Choose one of the following audio options:
Video Address: 1462090718@saltlakecity.webex.com
You can also dial 173.243.2.68 and enter your meeting number.
Audio Conference:
+1-408-418-9388 (United States Toll)
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
Access code: 146 209 0718
DEPARTMENT of SUSTAINABILITY
SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION
801.535.7761
Williams, Shannon
From: Paul Smith
Sent: Wednesday, December 9, 2020 11:02 AM
To: Williams, Shannon
Cc: Otto, Rachel
Subject: (EXTERNAL) RE: Salt Lake City Proposed EV Readiness Ordinance
Shannon –
Thank you so much for reaching out. I missed your first email in November,
Our position on this issue will be similar to the legislature’s position several years ago when a similar
thing was tried by Salt Lake City:
• It is inappropriate for any municipality to mandate this (the market should guide
if there is demand and feasibility for electric charging stations in multi-family)
• In an affordable housing crisis it is a particularly bad time to mandate anything that increases
cost of housing Even if there is political will in the city, I think the legislature might
overrule such a policy, should you put it in effect. What is your timeline here?
Thanks again for including us as a stakeholder. We really appreciate it and to the extent we could
work together to educate owners about environmentally friendly policies and electric vehicle
charging station issues, we would love to help. Perhaps through education and persuasion we
could effect more change than a doomed ordinance would bring.
Paul Smith
Executive Director
Utah Apartment Association
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
230 W Towne Ridge Pkwy #175,
Sandy, UT 84070 Phone: 801-487-
5619 l www.uaahq.org
From: Williams, Shannon <Shannon.Williams@slcgov.com>
Sent: Wednesday, December 9, 2020 8:17 AM
To: Paul Smith
Subject: RE: Salt Lake City Proposed EV
Readiness Ordinance
Hi Paul,
I’m writing to follow-up on the information I provided below. Do you have any questions about the
proposed ordinance? Would you or the organizations you work with wish to provide feedback?
Please let me know if you’re interested in having further discussion.
Best,
Shannon Williams
SHANNON WILLIAMS
Special Projects Assistant
DEPARTMENT of SUSTAINABILITY
SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION
o. 801.535.7761
c. 541.740.5915
From: Williams, Shannon
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2020 8:39 AM
To: Paul Smith
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
Subject: Salt Lake City Proposed EV
Readiness Ordinance Hi Paul,
I’m writing to let you know about a proposed Salt Lake City ordinance change for electric vehicle
readiness. The Salt Lake City Sustainability Department is in the process of collecting feedback from
stakeholder groups and would greatly appreciate your review of the proposed language, as well as
any comments, questions, and other feedback you have.
To provide some context, the EV Readiness Ordinance is a proposed addition to the City zoning
ordinance chapter for Off Street Parking, Mobility, and Loading (21A.44) and applies to properties
with a multifamily use, including mixed-use developments. For new applicable developments,
20% of required parking spaces will be required to be built to “electric vehicle ready” specifications,
in order to prepare for future installation of charging stations. More information, including the
proposed language, can be found at www.slcgreen.com/EVready.
We presented the proposed ordinance in October, but I am unsure if you or your partners were
able to make the event. The recorded presentation and presentation materials are available online.
There are a couple of ways for you to submit feedback. You can provide feedback (anonymously, if
preferred) at the project page at www.slcgreen.com/EVready. Alternatively you can email your
feedback to me directly, at shannon.williams@slcgov.com. If you feel that a presentation or Q&A
session might be useful for your organization, I am more that willing to present, field questions, and
collect feedback. Your input is important to us and will create a more resilient and informed
ordinance.
Please reach out with any questions. Best regards,
Shannon Williams
SHANNON WILLIAMS
Special Projects Assistant
DEPARTMENT of SUSTAINABILITY
SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION
o. 801.535.7761
c. 541.740.5915
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
Williams, Shannon
From: Tiffany Morris
Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2021 12:10 PM
To: Williams, Shannon
Subject: (EXTERNAL) Question about EV Ordinance
Hi Shannon,
I attended the UCRE workshop yesterday about the proposed EV ordinance. I had to leave the call
early, but I was wondering if this ordinance will just apply to Salt Lake City or beyond that? I think it
is a great initiative and excited to do my part to help.
Thank you,
Tiffany Morris Asset Manager
Triton Investments Inc.
www.apartmentsinuta.com
www.apartmentsinidaho.com
Nelson, Peter
August 23, 2021
TO: Salt Lake City Planning Commission
FROM: Judi Short, First Vice Chair and Land Use Chair Sugar House Community Council
RE: 21A.44.050.B.3 Electric Vehicle Ready Parking Text Amendment
We received notification of this proposed Text Amendment, and it was put on our website and in the
Sugar House Community Council Newsletter for August. It is also in the newsletter going out tomorrow
for September. We have received no written comments, but everyone seems to agree with this
concept. If electric vehicles are the wave of the future, we need to make sure that our parking garages
are welcoming, and there is no better way to do that than to have charging stations available.
We approve of the idea that requiring a minimum of 20% of on-site parking spaces be constructed EV
ready, including electrical conduit and sufficient electrical capacity for the future use of a minimum 200-
ERIN MENDENHALL
Mayor
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
P.O. BOX 145474
451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474
WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM
TEL 801-535-7704
volt electric vehicle charging station. And, that the requirement is in addition to the existing EVSE-
related requirement of one electric vehicle charging station per 25 required parking spaces for multi-
family properties.
The only negative comment came from a developer who complained about the huge expense this would
add to the cost of his buildings, but then said it was the right thing to do.
Nelson, Peter
From: george chapman
To: Nelson, Peter
Subject: (EXTERNAL) I am against increasing cost of housing for EV charging
Date: Thursday, May 19, 2022 3:41:29 PM
The text amendment PLNPCM2022-00374 will significantly increase costs of
housing in SLC. EV penetration is not close to 5% and Utah is not getting many
more EV. The cost almost requires so much money that they buy a home.
Don't increase housing costs for a questionable dream of having everyone drive
EVs.
Nelson, Peter
From: george chapman
To: Nelson, Peter
Subject: (EXTERNAL) Comment against 20% EV infrastructure
Date: Monday, June 13, 2022 12:20:15 PM
PLNPCM2022-00374
Since EVs in Utah are still around 4%, adding this requirement now will
significantly increase the cost of housing without benefits. Maybe in 10 years it
may make sense but we can't even buy an EV in Utah (easily).