FAQs

Online Bill Payment

  • Not at all. You can pay your bill from anywhere in the world! All you need is access to the Internet through a Web browser. You then log in to your account using your e-mail address and password. No need to worry about late payments if you’re out of town when your bill is due.

  • No. It’s free to sign up for online bill payment and to use the service.

  • After you complete the transaction, you can receive an e-mail receipt to confirm that your payment went through.

  • Absolutely. All the transactions are handled on secure servers. As long as you don’t give out your password, only you will be able to access your account. Plus, your personal information or e-mail address will not be sold or rented to third parties for marketing purposes without your permission.

  • Xpress Bill Pay is the company we have partnered with to handle our online bill payment. You access your account from their website, Xpress Bill Pay.

  • You can view up to a year’s history of your account online, so you can compare your current bill to a year ago.

  • You can pay your bills with a credit or debit card, or you can transfer funds directly from your checking account.

  • We try to match the look of your paper statement as much as possible, so you’ll find it easy to read your bill onscreen.

Public Records Request

  • As defined in Utah Code Ann. § 63G-2-103, public record means a record that is not private, controlled, or protected and is prepared, owned, received, or retained by the governmental entity. Records requested must be able to be reproduced from the original record.

  • A private record generally relates to an individual’s private interests, and disclosure of such to the public would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of privacy. A record is considered “controlled” if it contains medical, psychiatric, or psychological data about an individual. A protected record covers a variety of records, some of which are trade secrets and information that would impair governmental procurement proceedings. For a detailed list, see Utah Code Ann. § 63G-2, Part 3.

  • A governmental entity has ten (10) business days after receiving a written request to provide the record, deny the request, or notify the requester that it cannot immediately provide a response due to extraordinary circumstances. Extraordinary circumstances may require more processing time. The media is entitled to any record that is deemed to be a public record pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 63G-2-301. A governmental entity has five (5) business days after receiving a written request to provide the record, deny the request, or notify the requester that it cannot immediately provide a response due to extraordinary circumstances.

    If you would like to request a record from Delta City, please complete and submit back the application available through this link.

  • Any person can make a public records request. However, public disclosure is regulated by several different statutes dependent upon the record. If you are the subject of the record, you may be entitled to information not available to the general public.