• Email Updates

    Enter your email and click Subscribe to receive email alerts on issues affecting you.

     

Interactive District Map

Daggett County

Daggett County is located on the north slope of the Uinta Mountains, which contain the highest peaks in the state. The Uintas are the source of much of the water for the Green River, which cuts through them at the east end of the range. Learn more »

Duchesne County

The settlement of Duchesne County is unique in Utah history. The name "Duchesne" is believed to be that of an early French Canadian trapper. Unlike other communities that sprang up from pioneering members of the Mormon Church, ... Learn more »

Uintah County

Named after the Uinta-Ats Ute Indians that inhabited Utah's eastern corner, Uintah County lies in the Basin formed by the Uinta Mountains, the Wasatch Mountains and southern rim of the Book Cliffs. . The Basin is the geographic remains... Learn more »

Grand County

The 2002 Winter Olympic Games helped familiarize the world with one of Grand Counties most impressive landmarks–Delicate Arch, inside Arches National Park just two miles from Moab. Grand County is situated on the Colorado Plateau... Learn more »

San Juan County

This sprawling county is part of the Colorado Plateau, a geologic region formed mostly of sandstone and limestone, carved in many places into deep canyons by the Colorado and San Juan Rivers. The unusual rock forms–arches, turrets... Learn more »

Kane County

The high desert landscape of Kane County belongs to the Colorado Plateau geographical province. Lake Powell forms the county's eastern boarder. Kane County's prehistoric Indian dwellers were part of the Anasazi Culture. Learn more »

Washington County

Nicknamed "Utah's Dixie" for its sunny, warm climate the early Mormon efforts to cultivate cotton, Washington County lies in Utah's southwest corner. The eastern third, including Zion National Park, is part of the Colorado Plateau... Learn more »

Iron County

Coal in the eastern canyons and iron ore in the mountains to the west provided the early Mormon pioneers with an industry and the county with a name. The pioneers' first settlement outside of the Salt Lake valley - Parowan–became the county seat... Learn more »

Piute County

Piute County was split off from Beaver county in 1865. Its western boundary follows the crest of the Tushar Mountains. Most of the population is concentrated in the Sevier River Valley. Grass Valley (Otter Creek) lies between the Sevier Plateau... Learn more »

Garfield County

The Colorado River and Lake Powell mark Garfield County's eastern boundary. In the northeast, the Henry Mountains–the last range within the continental US to be mapped–include several 10,000-foot peaks... Learn more »

Wayne County

Wayne County lies entirely within the colorful Colorado Plateau geographical province. It includes portions of Capitol Reef and Canyonlands National Parks. The Fremont River flows south from Fish Lake and then... Learn more »

Emery County

Emery County was named after territorial governor George W. Emery. Its eastern boundary is the Green River, which was first explored by the one-armed Civil War veteran, Gen. John Wesley Powell in a fabled journey in 1869... Learn more »

Carbon County

The county seat – Price–lies in the Price River Valley, at the foot of the Book Cliffs. Bounded by the Wasatch Plateau on the north and west and the Book Cliffs to the east, the first residents belonged to the ancient Fremont Culture... Learn more »

Wasatch County

Wasatch, in Ute means "mountain pass" or "low pass over high range." Heber Valley, one of several back valleys in the Wasatch Mountains, is often called Utah's Switzerland because of the rugged beauty of Mt. Timpanogos, and a large ... Learn more »

Utah County

The most striking geographical features of Utah County are the Wasatch Mountains along the eastern boundary and Utah Lake–the state's largest freshwater lake–to the west. Timpanogos Peak rises to more than 11,000 feet... Learn more »

Salt Lake County

The Salt Lake Valley lies between the Wasatch Mountains on the east and the Oquirrhs on the west. The active Wasatch Fault runs through the eastern part of the county. When the Mormon pioneers entered the valley in 1847, following their historic ... Learn more »