Park City, UT
Home MenuPCMC Newsletter-May, 2011
May, 2011 Community E-Newsletter
Flooding Update
The worst case scenario for individuals keeping an eye out for flooding is heavy rain on top of melting snow. The heavy rain predicted for Sunday and Monday fortunately didn’t materialize. There is still some isolated flooding on the Blacksmith Fork River near Logan Utah and high flows in other tributaries around the state but the National Weather Service has canceled the flood watch issued for Sunday and Monday.
The long range forecast is showing temperatures slowly climbing into the mid to upper 60’s over the next 7 days. With rising temperatures residents will begin to see creeks and streams rise gradually beginning May 13th and level off on the 15th. Rivers and streams will be running high, fast with extremely cold water so keep yourself and children away from these areas.
Sandbags are available for Park City residents and businesses. If you need to arrange pick up of sandbags at Public Works, contact the front desk at 615-5301. (Please do not remove sandbags from the pallets stored throughout the community).
As always, sudden thunderstorms or sustained heavy rain on top of melting snow could create a situation for flooding.
Building Department
Park City Municipal would like to congratulate Dave Thacker on his achievement of receiving the Master Code Professional Certification.
As the highest level of certification the Code Council has to offer, Master Code Professional (MCP) designation has become the gold standard for demonstrating proficiency in the building and fire safety profession. Earning the MCP credential is a significant personal accomplishment as well, requiring successful completion of an extensive series of objective and written examinations.
Of the many thousands of people certified by the Code Council, fewer than 500 in the world have attained this professional level and only 14 in Utah. Congratulations, Dave!
BC Hockey League Champions
The Park City Shooters won the Winter BC Hockey League. City employees on the team include: Jon Weidenhamer, Ken Fisher, Michael Kovacs, and Jason Glidden. The Shooters beat the Flakes in the Championship Game in overtime 2-1.
Public Service 101
Are you contemplating serving on an advisory board or commission . . . maybe even a run for public office? Then this free seminar is for you. Join the Park Record and Park City Municipal Thursday, May 19, 5:00 - 7:30 p.m. at The Yarrow to learn how to get more involved in your local government.
Speakers include:
• A former elected official will talk about the emotional ups and downs of public service
• A public relations expert will outline what to do and what not to do when running a local campaign
• Park City and Summit County officials will list the volunteer and appointed positions that are essential for local government
• Summit County’s Democratic and Republican party chairmen will explain the partisan process
• A rundown on rules: how and when to file for a spot on the ballot and Utah laws about campaigns and contributions
Planning Commission Vacancies
There are two (2) available seats on the Park City Planning Commission effective immediately. Deadline to apply: May 13, 2011, 5:00 p.m. More
Recreation Advisory Board
There are three (3) seats available on the Recreation Advisory Board effective immediately. Deadline to apply: May 20, 2011, 5:00 p.m. More
Public Art Advisory Board Openings
The Mayor and City Council invite residents of Park City to apply for the Public Art Advisory Board. This board makes recommendations to City Council regarding public art expenditures. More
Chief Building Official Hired
Chad Root has been selected as Park City’s Chief Building Official. His prior experience includes working in the communities of Town of Mountain Village and Wheat Ridge, Colorado as Chief Building Official, as well as working with the United States Environmental Protection Agency. Chad was selected from a field of 52 candidates and is filling the vacancy created when Ron Ivie retired after more than 30 years of service. Contractors and the public are welcome to stop by the Marsac building to meet Chad.
Quinn’s Junction Water Treatment Plant
Construction of the Quinn’s Junction Water Treatment Plant (QJWTP) began during the summer of 2010 and will continue throughout the summer and fall of 2011. Final completion and start up of the QJWTP will be in late 2011/early 2012. This project consists of a main treatment building and a separate maintenance building. The main building will contain all of the water treatment process equipment including piping, valves, membrane filters, finish water pumps and a 155,000 gallon reservoir. The maintenance building will be used by the Water Department to store spare parts such as pipes, valves, meters, and other equipment necessary to maintain the water system. Once online, the QJWTP will treat raw water imported from the Weber River at a rate of up to 3 million gallons per day. The QJWTP design includes provisions for future expansion to a capacity of 9 million gallons per day and space for hydropower turbines.
Legislative Actions Pose Risks for Park City
State legislative actions continue to pose a major fiscal risk to Park City’s ability to deliver high-quality services in the future. State action is anticipated to continue to focus on efforts to redistribute tax revenues from wealthier towns and school districts to poorer ones. Several efforts were defeated this year with active City involvement, but it is likely these efforts will continue and intensify. The State Legislature is likely to consider the following issues in 2012:
• Sales Tax Redistribution: A bill was filed last session and is anticipated to be filed again in a similar form, to remove an additional quarter of our municipal general fund sales taxes and distribute them to other cities based on population counts. The effect of this would require over a million dollars in service cuts and/or tax adjustments to balance Park City’s budget.
• Property Taxes: Legislation to redistribute school property taxes was also defeated, but is anticipated to return in 2012. The effect of numerous cumulative state efforts to weaken public education through funding of homeschooling, charter schools, and continued redistribution of revenues from wealthy districts to poorer districts will put significant upward pressures on school property tax rates for the Park City School District. A major redistribution bill passage for school property taxes would drastically impact our school district, triggering large service cuts and tax increases. It is uncertain how the Park City public will respond to those impacts in relation to how they would view future City bond proposals and operating tax rate adjustments. The total tax bill would be much higher, putting a downward pressure on the City’s tax rate (which is only 15% of the total).
• Building Permit Fee Standardization: Both Park City and Salt Lake City charge more in permit fees for large homes than many of the cities around the state, and a move to standardize permit fee rates statewide could significantly alter our ability to recover costs for providing a high-level of service to the public in this area. A measure to accomplish this standardization was defeated this year, but an interim session study is likely and it will be very difficult for Park City to defend its position on this issue. The impact could be several hundred thousand dollars annually to the City’s general fund, necessitating major cuts in development services or other reductions or adjustments.
Impacts of Important 2010 State Action to Bolster the Public Retirement System are as follows:
• City Pension Costs: The State made a series of important changes in 2010 to bolster the retirement system of which Park City is a member. Contribution rates will continue to rise for the next several years to insure the full-funding of the system, reducing the City’s ability to use revenue gains being realized in the recovery to enhance services for residents and guests at the rates we have in the past. The Utah public retirement system is now the fiscally healthiest state system in the United States.
Recreation Center Update
The Recreation Center project, despite the significant weather impacts is scheduled for a mid-November completion date. The last sections of steel framing are now being completed. The roofing and wall systems, plumbing, mechanical, and electrical work are well underway. The sustainable efforts continue on the project, where 91% of the waste since demolition has been recycled. The recycled waste diverted from the landfill consisted of 19,560 pounds of concrete, 13,520 pounds of wood, 880 pounds of mixed metals, 710 pounds of plastics, 410 pounds of cardboard and 260 pounds of paper. The project team will continue to track and provide updates on the recycling and sustainable practices employed on the project.
Comstock-Sidewinder Walkability Project
The Comstock/Sidewinder Walkability project represents the final segment of the Park Meadows-Prospector ‘spine’ system. This ‘spine’ trail will provide a continuous pedestrian and bike facility from the McLeod Creek Trail to the Rail Trail, through the two neighborhoods and the school area. Projects included in the ‘spine’ consist of the Holiday Ranch Loop Pathway (2010), the Little Kate/Lucky John Sidewalk (2009) and the Comstock Underpass (2010). These projects are part of the overall Walkability recommendations list, approved by City Council and funded by the 2007 Walkability Bond.
Specifically, the Comstock-Sidewinder Walkability Project consists of construction of a new separated pathway on the east side of Comstock Drive, a new concrete sidewalk on the south side of Sidewinder, added pedestrian crossings and other traffic calming features throughout the area. These improvements are designed to improve pedestrian and bicycle safety, as well as access.
View conceptual plans for Comstock Drive
View conceptual plans Sidewinder Drive
Construction dates are June 13th to October 10th, 2011. For more information, please visit the project website www.parkcity.org/walkability
Additional contact information:
Hotline: (435) 200-3257
Email: parkcitywalkability@horrocks.com
Armstrong Recreational Trail
The Armstrong recreational trail is a back country recreational trail, starting near the base of the Silver Star development, traversing through the recently purchased Armstrong Open Space Parcel (2009) in Thaynes Canyon and finally intersecting with the Mid-Mountain Trail.
The trail is scheduled to be completed by mid-summer 2011, and will provide additional access to the mid-mountain and PCMR trail system.
Due to the popularity and increasing number of conflicts between ascending and descending users on the Spiro trail, the Armstrong trail has been designed and will be signed as a ‘uphill directional’ trail. The designation will state that cyclists will be able to climb but not descend the trail from the base at Silver Star to the mid-mountain trail. Hikers and equestrians will be allowed multi-directional use of the trail.
The Spiro trail will remain as a multi-directional trail with signs reminding users to yield to uphill traffic and to always control their speed.
News You Can Use
In April, City Council . . .
• Approved a contract with URS Corporation for a solar feasibility study to determine technical potential for solar PV energy generation at City facilities.
• Approved a Resolution proclaiming May 7, 2011, as Arbor Day in Park City and acknowledging the extraordinary accomplishments of the Parks Department.
• Approved an extension to the Letter of Intent with the MPE, Inc., for the Treasure Hill Project.
Municipal Budget Public Hearing Dates
Scheduled dates for public hearings regarding the municipal budget are: May 12 and 2; June 2, 9 and 16.
Public hearings are held during City Council meetings, 6:00 p.m. , Council Chambers, lower level, Marsac Building, 445 Marsac Avenue.
Green Your Routine
Saving water goes beyond low-flow toilets. Take the next step in being water-conscious by considering how much H2O goes into our food and the products we buy. For example, it takes about 576 gallons of water to produce one pound of pork and a new t-shirt needs about 713 gallons. Learn more at National Geographic’s website.
Recreation
Summer Programs
Get your summer game on and register for youth and recreation programs. Youth camps, classes, & clinics offered are summer camp, adventure, tennis and soccer camps, skateboard & dirt jump bike lessons.
Adult programs include softball, volleyball, kickball, futsal & basketball leagues, tennis camps & clinics.
New this summer are youth kickball, women’s softball league and adult coed team building league which plays afternoons.
Space is limited. Register today on line or call the staff at the Racquet Club, 615-5401.
Pride in Your Park/Arbor Day
Last Saturday, Parkites gathered at City Park to help pick up trash and discarded recyclables throughout the community at the annual Pride in Your Park/Community Clean-Up Day. Representatives from Park City’s Parks Department were present to give out free seedlings in celebration of Arbor Day. Park City has been designated a Tree City for 18 consecutive years!
Departments » Sustainability » For Homes
Cleaning Supplies
When looking for natural and non-toxic cleaning products, avoid anything with synthetic ingredients or fragrances, petrochemicals, VOCs, chlorine bleach, phthalates, formaldehydes and more. You should always read the labels of any product, and if a product does not have a label with ingredients then it almost surely has harmful chemicals inside. Look out for words like Caution, Warning, Notice and Danger, which could signal a potential harmful chemical. Learn more about healthy cleaning products here.
When purchasing natural cleaning products make sure they bottle includes a list of ingredients. You should be able to pronounce the names of all of them and should know exactly what each one is. The best kind of natural cleaning product you can buy should be made with simple ingredients that you could find in the store and make yourself.
Exposure to these toxins indoors can cause eye, nose, and throat irritation; headaches; loss of coordination; nausea; and damage to liver, kidney, and central nervous systems. And we certainly don't want ourselves, our family or our pets to come in contact with these toxins or experience any of these health problems. Children and pets are especially at risk because they experience a higher dose of toxins, not to mention their immune systems are still developing and not able to shed toxins from the bodies as quickly as adults.
There are three categories into which most of the hazardous ingredients in household cleaning products fall are:
1. Carcinogens – Carcinogens cause cancer and/or promote cancer’s growth.
2. Endocrine disruptors – Endocrine disruptors mimic human hormones, confusing the body with false signals. Exposure to endocrine disruptors can lead to numerous health concerns including reproductive, developmental, growth and behavior problems. Endocrine disruptors have been linked to reduced fertility, premature puberty, miscarriage, menstrual problems, challenged immune systems, abnormal prostate size, ADHD, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and certain cancers.
3. Neurotoxins – Neurotoxins alter neurons, affecting brain activity, causing a range of problems from headaches to loss of intellect.
Here are some startling facts about the chemicals found in cleaning products.
- 17,000: the number of petrochemicals available for home use, only 30 percent of which have been tested for exposure to human health and the environment.
- 63: the number of synthetic chemical products found in the average American home, translating to roughly 10 gallons of harmful chemicals.
- 100: the number of times higher that indoor air pollution levels can be above outdoor air pollution levels, according to US EPA estimates.
- 275: the number of active ingredients in antimicrobials that the EPA classifies as pesticides because they are designed to kill microbes.
- 5 billion: the number of pounds of chemicals that the institutional cleaning industry uses each year.
- 23: the average gallons of chemicals (that's 87 liters) that a janitor uses each year, 25 percent of which are hazardous.
- White Vinegar
- Baking Soda
- Borax
- Hydrogen Peroxide (3% concentration)
- Club Soda (plain)
- Lemon Juice
- Liquid Castile Soap
- Corn Meal
- Olive Oil or Walnut Oil
- Toothpaste
- Pure Essential Oils - like lavender, lavender, peppermint, eucalyptus, lemongrass, and tea tree oils
With all of these ingredients you can make your own natural and non-toxic cleaning supplies, which cost a lot less as well.
- All-Purpose Cleaners: This cleaner can be used for just about every surface in your home, from kitchen counters and appliances to bathroom surfaces and walls.
- Carpet Cleaner: To clean and disinfect your carpet, blend 1/2 cup baking soda, 1 cup borax, and 1 cup cornmeal. Sprinkle mixture over rug and rub with a cloth. Let rest for several hours or overnight, then vacuum. An even simpler way to clean your carpet is to sprinkly plain baking soda on your carpet, let rest for an hour and then vacuum up. You can also add dry lavender buds to the baking soda for an extra fresh smell.
- Hard Floor Cleaner: This solution can be used for all hard floors (except when directed by the manufacturer to avoid even mild detergents): Combine 1/4 liquid castile soap, up to 1/2 cup white vinegar or lemon juice, and 2 gallons of warm water in a large plastic bucket. Use with a mop or sponge.
- Glass Cleaner: To make your windows shine, you can simply use club soda in a spray bottle. Add 1 tsp. of lemon juice to increase your window cleaner’s degreasing power. Leftover newspaper works very well to reduce streaks
- Bathroom Surface Cleaners: You can use the all-purpose cleaners recommended above or, for even simpler bathroom cleaning, use baking soda or borax as a scouring powder. For a softer scrub, combine 1/2 cup baking soda with enough liquid soap to achieve a frosting-like consistency. You may want to add 5-10 drops of an essential oil for fragrance. Club soda works wonders on plumbing fixtures.
- Toilet Cleaner: Sprinkle baking soda or borax, or pour white vinegar into the toilet, and let sit for a few minutes. Scrub with a good toilet brush.
- Oven Cleaner: Cover the oven floor with baking soda, spray with water until very damp, and let set overnight. Spray with water every few hours before you go to bed to keep damp. In the morning, clean out the baking soda, and the stuck-on gunk will be loosened and ready to scrub off.
- Drain Cleaner: Put two tablespoons of baking soda into/over the drain of your sink or tub. Then pour one cup of vinegar on the baking soda. This will begin to fizz a lot and is completely normal. Wait a few minutes, and then pour a kettle of boiling water over the soda/vinegar residue.
- Mold Remover: Combe 1/2 cup hydrogen peroxide or white vinegar with 1 cup water. Spray on mold and do not rinse. You can also treat mold with a spray mixture of 2 tsp. tea tree oil and 2 cups water.
- Wood Polish: To polish wood furniture, dab olive oil or walnut oil onto a soft cloth and rub.
- Silver Polish: Just put some toothpaste on an old toothbrush or wet cloth and go to town. When you’re done polishing, rinse the item well in warm water and then dry with a soft cloth.