Miller and Rogers were elected unanimously by the board, which formally convened for the first time Monday after an attempt to seat the board last month stalled amid procedural and conflict-of-interest concerns.
Following his election, Miller remarked that the board had answered three out of potentially 100 questions surrounding the development of the inland port. And in his first formal action as chairman, he sought a motion that the board of directors be subject to Utah’s Government Records Access and Management Act, or GRAMA, and other open-records laws.
“This is an important project,” Miller said.