OCR Text |
Show Enterprise Review , May 79, 1976 Commission Hears Firms Interested in Garbage Project Liquor Zoning Pleas Continued from lb options to work within their economic parameters, Clark said. Wilson asked Clark, How do you write an ordinance to allow the kinds of activities youre talking about, but combat the negative aspects?. I dont know, Clark res- ponded, but the question Im asking is how do we make downtown viable in the evening? People Ive talked to are willing to work with Utahs liquor laws. That's enough. The city shouldnt go beyond the liquor laws to impose further restrictions, Clark added. Competition is Bad Continued from lb said they are willing to provide Were competing for the same element of the population: people who want hard liquor, he added. He said the effect of the proposed ordinance changes would be an increase in the number of private clubs in the city. any kind of disposal service, Eckhoff added. Salt Lake County and Citv have applied to the Environmental Protection Agency for a grant to study preliminary engineering requirements for developing a modern waste disposal system in the valley. The grant would fund a study of alternative methods of collecting and processing the valleys garbage. Salt Lake is competing with four other communities for the grant. Garbage can be burned in its raw form along with coal in electricity generator boilers, Eckhoff said. He added that converting garbage to oil or gas through pyrolysis would mean it could be stored longer without decomposition stench. A representative from the H and H Cafe told the city commission a change in the 0 ratio for food and beer consumption to qualify as a restaurant would put a squeeze on the small operations. We run a clean beer business. Its a very competitive business. The change to a 0 ratio would just be impossible for us, she said. Wilson told the Mayor group the commission would COMPLETE PRINTING SERVICE 60-4- oeic 70-3- take the matter under adviseBill Papanikolas, represenment, and asked the licensing tative of the Private Clubs and zoning departments to Association, told commission- consider making the suggesters that competition in the ed changes in the proposed You have ordinance. liquor business is not good. The liquor business is not brought new thoughts to mind like other businesses. With about how these ordinances competition, the good people might affect small operastay, but the marginal people tions, Wilson told the group. find other ways to stay afloat. Commissioner Jess Agraz These people cause problems said the commission should for the city. The more clubs hold another hearing only if you have, the more marginal the departments decided to operations you have, he said. amend the proposed changes. PRINTING TELEPHONE: eller ePMice mmum 322-344- 7 255 West 800 SouthSalt Lake City, Utah FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY Interiors Coal Rules (R-U- t) said, would lock a rigid national standard onto all the States and destroy necessary flexibility. The Senator noted that both the Council on Environ- mental Quality and the Having not studied them yet in detail, he said they appeared to be adequate to the twin tasks of providing for development of needed coal Protection Environmental Agency approved the regulations. "These agencies have accepted the limitation of Federal authority to Federal United States and the protection of an often fragile envi- we must continue to insist. The states are quite capable of resources in the western lands, ronment. Interior Secretary Kleppe says that will meet President Fords goal to insure that only those Federal lands that can be mined in an environmentally sound manner are mined. The Secretary also says the standards reflect his previous assurances that the regulations of individual states will apply to coal mining and reclamation on the public lands when the regulations of a state are as stringent as Federal rules. the-regulatio- ns Gam commented that the regulatory approach, limited as it is to Federal land, is much better than the shotgun approach of the legislation that was vetoed last year and has been proposed again this That legislation, he year. ro freight bili Meet Gam s Approval Senator Jake Gam last week expressed general of the Interior approval Department's regulations on the leasing, exploration, mining and reclamation of Federal coal lands. or a principle upon which protecting the state and private lands within their borders. Utah, for instance, has a perfectly adequate law that needs no strengthening. Garn expressed hope that these regulations will head off the strip mining bill which is again being pushed in the House of Representatives. That measure, like the one we killed last year, is simply too inflexible to allow us to attain the energy idependence he said. we so badly need, Senator Gam said the regulations would apply to 537 existing Federal land coal leases covering 799,000 acres and encompassing an estimated 16.4 billion tons of recoverable coal; most of it, including high quality, low sulfur coal, is on Western coal lands. ITS PROBABLY 10 TO 20 PERCENT TOO HIGH If we cant won't save you money on your shipping costs- -a lot of money-- we a charge you thing. We can afford to make this guarantee because we know that you are probably being overcharged. Freight rates are enormously complex (over 20,000 changes just last month) and freight companies often overcharge shippers unknowingly. NJS Associates are specialists, distribution consultants. We have saved some of our clients over $100,000 annually in distribution costs. Chances are-- if you spend can save your firm 10 to 20 a minimum of $10,000 each year in freight-- we if an use even auditing company. And, because our fee is you already percent, of a the money that we save you, we wont cost you nothing more than percentage a dime. Don't assume your distribution costs are correct. It wont cost you a thing to have us check it out. It may save you a bundle. Call us today. ASSOCIATES 2161 S. Regent St., Suite 7 Salt Lake City, Utah 84115 phone (801) 485-265- 1 |