Search Murray City Phone Directory
The Murray Phone Directory works best when you start with the city itself. Murray keeps city hall, customer service, finance, community and economic development, fire, police, public works, and the recorder in a clear official system, so a caller can move from one office to the right desk without guessing. That matters in a city where utility questions, permit questions, safety calls, and public records requests all belong to different people. This page keeps the search local and practical so you can find the office that actually owns the work.
Murray Phone Directory Facts
Murray Phone Directory Basics
The official Murray City homepage is the best broad entry point for a Murray Phone Directory search because it keeps the city on one local site instead of scattering the work across stale lists. The homepage routes visitors through Services, Government, Departments, and How Do I? pages, which is exactly the kind of structure a real caller needs when the office is not yet clear. Murray City Hall is at 10 East 4800 South, and the homepage keeps the city name, address, and public navigation in one place.
The city staff directory at Murray City staff directory is even more useful when you need a phone rather than a name. It lists the mayor's office, council, attorney, community and economic development, finance, recorder, fire, police, and public works in one searchable page. That is a strong directory layout because it shows how Murray actually routes public calls. The page below uses the city homepage as the source for the local screenshot.
The Murray City homepage is the source for the image below, which shows the city starting point for this Phone Directory search.
The image gives a quick look at Murray's official front door, which helps before a search moves into a department or a records request.
Murray Phone Directory Departments
Murray's directory works well because it separates office families without hiding the city structure. Community and Economic Development is a good example. The department page says it oversees orderly growth, planning, zoning, subdivision review, code enforcement, and business licensing. It also gives direct numbers for the department at Murray Community and Economic Development, including 801-270-2400 for the department, 801-270-2431 for building division and inspections, 801-270-2425 for business licensing, and 801-270-2417 for code enforcement. That is not generic city routing. It is a set of local desks tied to real city work.
Finance is just as specific. The Finance and Administration page says the department handles budgeting, accounting, payroll, billing, and city financial reporting. It also notes the department moved to 10 East 4800 South, Suite 160, and lists the contact number as 801-264-2626. That same number appears in the staff directory for customer service, utility payments, utility billing, and utilities. For a Murray Phone Directory search, that matters because billing calls often start at customer service before they move to the exact finance lane.
The staff directory also keeps other city service numbers in one place. The recorder is 801-264-2660, purchasing is 801-264-2662, and the treasurer department is 801-264-2668. When a city directory is this direct, a caller can stay local instead of bouncing through county or third-party pages that do not know which office actually owns the task.
Murray Phone Directory Fire And Police
Public safety is a major part of the Murray Phone Directory, and the city keeps fire and police separate for a reason. The Murray Fire Department page lists the department at 4848 South Box Elder Street with phone 801-264-2780 and emergency phone 911. It also explains that Murray Fire provides fire protection, EMS, emergency management, inspection services, hazardous materials response, and public education. That makes the fire desk useful for more than emergencies. It is also the right place for safety questions that belong with the city fire office.
The Murray Police page gives the police line at 801-264-2673, the non-emergency dispatch line at 801-840-4000, and the emergency number at 911. That is a practical split. A caller with a crime in progress should call 911. A caller with a report or a property question should use the non-emergency path. A Murray Phone Directory page should keep those lanes clear so the wrong call does not slow down the right one.
The police page also makes the city's public safety routing feel real instead of generic. It is one thing to know Murray has police services. It is better to know which line handles the call, which line handles records, and which line is for a live emergency. That kind of detail makes the directory more useful on the first try.
Murray Phone Directory Records
Records work in Murray should begin with the City Recorder. The staff directory lists the recorder at 801-264-2660, and the Murray Recorder page explains that the office keeps official city records and the proceedings of city council meetings. It also names the recorder and deputy recorder, which helps when a caller needs the right office instead of just a switchboard. That is the right first step for agendas, minutes, public documents, and general records questions tied to city government.
Murray's public records path is not limited to the recorder. The homepage links to Agendas, Minutes, & Public Hearings, the city code, and the document center. That means a caller can move from a general question to the city file that matters without leaving the official site. The city directory also gives a strong clue that records work belongs with the same office family that handles finance, council support, and public notices. A Murray Phone Directory search is most useful when it follows that structure instead of treating every document as if it came from the same desk.
If the issue is a utility bill, the finance and customer service numbers are usually the better first call. If the issue is a council minute or an official city record, the recorder is the better first call. If the issue is a police report, the police office is the right lane. The city's own pages make those distinctions clear, and that saves time for everyone on the line.
Murray Phone Directory Search Tips
Search by office name first. That is the fastest way through a Murray Phone Directory search. "Murray city recorder," "Murray police non-emergency," "Murray public works," and "Murray community and economic development" are more useful than a broad search for the city name alone. The city directory is built around office families, so a targeted query usually lands on the right page faster than a generic search result page.
It also helps to give the call one clear detail. If you have an address, a permit type, a meeting topic, or a service issue, say it early. Murray's departments are organized enough that the right office can usually tell you where the call belongs, but only if the caller gives the office enough context. That is one reason a local Phone Directory page needs to stay local and specific.
Note: If the office you reach cannot finish the request, ask which Murray office owns the record or the service before you hang up.
Murray Phone Directory County
Murray City Hall sits inside Salt Lake County, so some calls that begin on a city desk will eventually move to county services. That does not mean the Murray search failed. It usually means the caller identified the city office first and then discovered that the matter belongs to a county desk. The point of a Murray Phone Directory page is to make that boundary clear before the call starts, not after a caller has already spent time on the wrong office.
When the issue belongs to Salt Lake County, move to the county page below and keep the search going there. When the issue belongs to Murray, stay with the city directory, use the named department, and avoid forcing a county office to answer a city question. That simple split is what makes a local directory useful.