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Show ray, Wednesday, December 8, i 976 Page 3 Wales' Supply Said ToBo Sufficient Fes' Cabanas In preparation for a final approval request for the first phase of the Park City Racquet Club Cabanas, ; engineer Jack Johnson last -Wednesday night presented the Planning Commission with a water impact study. A prerequisite for approval, the report compares the city existing water supply and demand with the additional demand which would be created by the entire 180-dwelling 180-dwelling planned unit development. y Using "the most conservative conserva-tive peak usage criteria" which depicts a water demand situation "unlikely to happen at any one time," the report concluded that the city has sufficient water to support the project. After accepting the water study, the commission imposed other requirements which must be met before the 58 -unit first phase can be approved. A set of homeowners homeown-ers association bylaws must be submitted, along with a financial statement and a lighting plan for the development. develop-ment. In addition, disposition dispo-sition of street right-of-ways must be resolved. " The commission also noted that even if the Cabanas received the go-ahead at the next Wednesday's decisionmaking decision-making session, the landscape land-scape plan must be approved when it is completed. The Park Meadows Development Company has committed to spending 6,000 per unit for landscaping the project. With all phases completed, the Park City Racquet Club Cabanas would sit on 25acres of ground adjacent to the new indoor-outdoor tennis facility in the Holiday Ranch area. The two-bedroom, 93)-square-foot units are slated to sell for between $40,000 and $15000. New Name Johnson was also at the work session to represent a. familiar project with a new name. Prospector Village II is now Prospector Park. The 54-acre subdivision recently received a zone change which will allow single family development as opposed to the multi-family units previously proposed for the area. Before Prospector Park can receive preliminary approval, t however, the planning commission is requiring a landscape plan showing the buffer zone along Highway 248 and the five-acre part to be included in the development. develop-ment. It also appears there will be continuing discussion on the appropriate size of cul de sacs. The commission wants the subdivision cul de sacs to .. be large enough to" allow $ snow to be pushed into the f middle without blocking passage. , i HAL TAYLOR ASSOCIATES P.O. BOX 804 PARK CITY, UTAH 84060 PHONE (801 ) 649-8181 2.7 ACRES in Midway. All improvements in including in-cluding water terms. $21 ,500. ROSSI HILL, 5 lots, best view in the area. Excellent buy at $25,000 total. MAIN STREET SHOP restaurant with apartment. $75,000. $23,000 down. 1 i - - WOODSIDE RESIDENCE 3 bedroom older home. Beautiful condition $40,000. REAL ESTATE MIKE DONOVAN 654-2231 HEBER LOVELY 8 acre; bulding site h Francis with irrigation culnary water. Good owner terms, $18,250. . : SEE THIS PERFECTLY preser ved cute 3 bdrm. home wbasement on choice Park Avenue lot, $39,750. Now wh owner terms. BEAUTIFUL 820 ACRES near Peoa. Only $144.00 par acre. LOVELY FIVE ACRE buMng site with stream and trees h Kamas. Water, gas & sewer available. Good terms at $26,500. 2 SCENIC ONE acre building sites with culnary water jusi outside Kamas. $5,500 each. STATELY 4 BDRM. farmhouse on scenic acre site near Kamas, excellent terms. Reduced to $24,500 or offer. LOVELY ALMOST NEW 4 bdrm., 2 bath mini-farm with bam, workshop and 10 acres. $139,500. FIVE BEDROOM year round tVYish work ,00 w$4,000 home on atrearfyar Kamas New. required down. . PRISTINE 80 ACRES on. tie Strawberry River in midst of a national forest. What a buy at $28,000. Owner financed, BEAUTIFUL NEAR ACRE homesite in Francis, all uttlites. $6,500. CALL FOR FREE APPRAISALS County Makes Zoning Changes The Summit County Planning Plann-ing Commission met in a special work session November Novem-ber 30, for the purpose of polishing the proposed zoning zon-ing ordinance in light of comments and protests received since its promulgation promulga-tion to the public. Several changes were made to the Code at the Tuesday meeting. One of the most significant changes was the elimination of the requirement5 require-ment5 of a 'natural 60 foot-' biiffM- strip "6n 'each side of the road in the Environment Conservation Overlay zone. This change was basically precipitated by a letter of protest to this regulation by most of the property owners alqng Highway 224 leading into Park City where the Environment Conservation Overlay zone is proposed. The prohibition of non-accessory non-accessory signs however, will remain as the principal requirement of the Overlay zone. In addition, after hearing protests from- property owners in the South Summit area regarding the Water Conservation Overlay zone, the Planning Commission decided to amend the restrictions restric-tions in the Overlay zone to conform with State Board of Health requirements for protecting pro-tecting water sources of culinary water supplies. The Overlay zone will prohibit those land uses that threaten the purity of culinary water. , In. most, cases jthe water ''Conservation "Overlay 'ione of 19)0 feet above springs which contribute to the public water supplies. The Planning Commission , will reconvene in January to continue its analysis of the , proposed code and intends to have a final proposal for the Board of Commissioners sometime in January. Further information can be obtained by contacting County Planner Max Green-halgh Green-halgh at 336-2334 if mu? its BlIl::itMliVMv:W j I m.Tmfrmmm WWW WWPBTH Mill- - -JI--1 TOTAt TYPICAL AKNUAt f&OENfIAl BILL i III jg f 1 3? y 'A J . ' m &..... $300 $200 $100 $90 i $80 YEARS 1929 1940 1950 1960 , 1970 y $70 1976 paid fa Inn 1974 the rates yomi as were almost rfeeteall to 19 the year to rates we first begai serviig cmstoinniers to this area, What's happened since? Since January 1 , 1 975, Mountain Fuel has been forced to apply to increase your gas bill on 1 1 occasions. Ten of those 11 applications were the direct result of actions taken by the Federal Government and the Government of Canada. They were increases we had no control over-the only alternative to paying them was to give up the supply. The effect of these increases on our average residential customer (using 180,000 cubic feet of gas per year) was a 52 increase in rates, about $80.00 per year. : Of these increases, only 1 6 (about $ 1 3.00 a year) have gone to Mountain Fuel to pay for our own increased costs, for exploration and drilling and wages and postage and the hundreds hun-dreds of other things that cost us more today. 1 Even with these increases, natural gas remains your most economical and efficient source of energy. When compared to the cost of heating oil, coal, electricity or propane, natural gas is still a bargain. That doesn't mean you should waste it. We must all conserve all energies to insure a future supply. "Our typical residential customer uses 1B0,000 cubic feet of gas annually, and pays $233.32 for this service. To do a comparable job with another fuel, you -d pay: $646. 70 for propane, $445. 42 for heating oil. $248. 83 tor coal, and $596.91 for electricity. 5 IM MOUNTAIN FUEL 9 V.. |