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Show r w v v r r ' - v 'wrNr 'w hp - ir Lake Tribune, Thursday, September 20, 1973 24 A Hie Salt WVTI Ml Ml SPROUSE REIT AT tl Land Use Presents By Garry J. Moes Associated Press Writer OF THESE AND Now, 126 years later, state and community officials are again wTestlmg with the problem. SALE STARTS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20th, 9 A.M. If I were from Kansas, I be so concerned about land-usplanning. But we depend for our total existence on our watersheds. Its a lot more urgent for use, wouldnt Were reaping the fruits of pretty good planning here in Utah, says William G Bruhn, executive director e some mmm , TAPE MEASURES ... land ownership rights and claims of need for regulation and preservation in the name of public good. Between the poles lie what officials say is a largely indifferent public and highly partisan developers. Private land use and a of interest have community 10e 60" Cloth, gold frMm&t After the lots were given out to the people, a united effort was made to fence the The streets were city kept open, but not at them present width. The owners of lots cultivated the streets m front of them premises, leaving no more than a sufficient space for travel. Tnere was no monopoly of land allowed, he wrote. No man was permitted to take up a city lot or farming land for purposes of speculation . . Farming land was divided and given out in small parcels, so that all could have a proper proportion . . . The enforcement of this nile made the settlement of the city and the farming lands very compact, and created a community of interest which would not have been felt under omer circumstances, Cannon wrote. the poles of the controversy are claims of private SAFETY PINS 20-cou- nt 10e assorted sizes, nickel plated A later-daofficial, Karl O. MacFarlane, vice mayor of Ogden, says many of the chief planning objections to land-usvoiced by individuals today concern matters which have been law for many years He says most citizens lack knowledge of what is involved m y NAIL & HAND BRUSH Assorted colors. i i3tXuE jb,!4 lylon bristles W1. fit to hand. fersam e I PLASTIC MUGS Assorted colors white, green, gold. 3" high B land-us- e planning. the kind of thing that the average individual doesnt know about or concern himself with until it directly affects him, says MacFarlane, advichairman of a three-masory committee of local elected officials studying state land-us- e legislation. Its flc 3x5'J TOOT J- SPIRAL NOTEBOOK Assorted 1 colors, lined - i lotas'0"9 Top Priority Such legislation will likely have a top pnonty during next years budget session of the 40th Utah Legislature. The general session wrestled with the matter early this year. A strong land use regulation bill was submitted by the administration of Gov. Calvin L. Rampton, greatly watered down and passed in the Senate and died with adjournment in the House. "D" BAnERY rtR.Tirfsv 10e Mobility 1, 5 volts BSP fits 90 Ck m&xmm 00- BATTERIES 10c 9-v- Nobility '48-ffE- II- ? w - CHARGE IX on W 10 m and types Exoert Installation Satisfaction Guaranteed SCARS. ROEBUCK or Your Money Back Salt lake, Murray, Logan, Ogden, Provo. Centers Open 8 am. Monday thru Saturday. Open Sunday Noon till 5 p.m. (Logan and Provo Closed Sunday). Tire end Avte Center i il r areas of critical multi-count- mum 1Qe ORMMEMAL IHlKlWIliH DISH CLOTHS 12"x 12", striped assorted color )0 4-D0- 10 &S3T r uBEkiMkiij; war- RAILING 60 BOBBY PINS Rubber-tippe- fir IM 48"x80" 2046 60x80 3 141 72x80 3438 I i You can stores accept BankAmericards find all your everyday needs faster and easier conveniently stores. Storeside parking. at Sprouse-Reit- z 6S EA. BRIGHAM CITY MOAB OGDEN AM. FORK LOGAN PROVO RICHFIELD ROOSEVELT SPRINGVIllE IDAHO FALLS PRESTON PANELING 3 t if FLANGE L 801 ij SHINYl 1 HAND EA. EA. RAIL S3. YD. 275 49 BAG LINOLEUM - , mu HAUL ; end SAVE! 440 QCJ 3') MW x 4tSBWW ir 4 1 i mmrnmx KiiHIipijp STWJ Z -- jf" ' open (admMMY SOUTH REDWOOD RD. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Open Hours: Monday thru Friday 8 o.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. y mm f'4 It tilWihfclV i PATIO BARK VINYL ' CLEARFIELD HEBER CITY TREMONTON WOOD VENEER 12-F- NEWELL Sf- i 3 mm LAUAN 12-F- T. Sprouse-Reit- z 6155 So. Highland Dr. 3577 So. Market St. 4x8 CQNG0LEUM RAILING NEWELL POST & ld EA. d, black & bronze. 60 count to each card Bi-Fo- UNITS wHARDWARE 10 combinations 0R LAUAN PURSE MIRRORS 4866 So. Redwood Rd. 2355 last 39th So. 626 No. 11th West 2684 So. 20th East 3731 So. 9th lost 9471 So. 7th lest m iMLY FALL SPECIALS! vvi9;sjr?:B 1155 Glendale Drive 4715 S. 40th West role concern which involve all Utah citizens and not just parochial interests He said y associations must also deal with such problems. He cites uncontrolled development of the Cedar Mountain area in southwestern Utah where people from Las Vegas are coming out of the desert to settle throughout the area which crosses several southwestern Utah county lines. "''fi luL, ij COMBS Assorted colors 'tEiHSta? He says the state must play a QGKEGB. era! 2V2"high tW3 (f $40,000. pwuj umm eO FIGURES 2x3 He cites, for example, heavy pressures of development around Bear Lake in northern Utah and the fact that Rich County has little money to deal with a problem which he says is bigger than one county. He says Rich Countys 1973 budget is only 'tmmm FURRY ANIMAL sizes need governments the resources to handle the problems. The state should be he court of last resort, Bruhn says. TX? 10 tv e Scare Revolving Charge Sears ANDCO. "jIT11111 and There were a lot of myths about Senate Bill 130, says Bruhn, one of its architects, myths about a state takeover of land-usplanning Leading the attack against a strong state role were officials of local governments. Their battle continues. In a proposed position paper being considered the Utah by League of Cities and Towns Automotive 3" high, assorted colors (glass) W jf SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE MINIATURE BOHLES INCENSE All i Muffler GuirantM If muffler fail while Ihe original purchaser owns the car, it will be replaced upon return, free of charge. It the defective muffler was installed by Sears, we will install the new muffler with no charge for labor. coin PURSE Assorted colors 0 TRANSISTOR - Need Resources Local n II offi- The argument of a strong state role appears to be that the state must now step in to a function which perform local governments have refused. We reject that notion. The facts are that municipalities have sought authority for several decades to plan both within their boundaries and m areas adjacent to their boundaries and for the lands which affect municipal water supplies and sewage systems. Such authority has too long been denied. We would remind those who say that local governments have defaulted on their obligations to restrict land development and use, the municipalities have been denied the power to annex land because of complex and restrictive annexation laws, that they have been denied planning and zoning powers in unincorporated areas adjacent to and that the municipalities, archaic state statutes too often render municipal ordiineffective nances against land developers and users, because such ordinances have no basis in state law. Bruhn and MacFarlane both point out that local governments, under the Utah Constitution, receive their authority from the state, and both officials agree that state legislation should give local governments the tools needed to deal with land-us- No Monopoly At are the stewards of Weve got future generations to think about. We cant denude our canyons. this land. 'y'' some local this month, cials say: been part of land planning from the beginning in Utah, as the writings of pioneer George Q. Cannon in 1847 note. Citizens and officials have lined up on both sides of the question whether a government hand in use of private and public lands m Utan is necessary. Think of Future We r- - ,yr' Problem Across State Bruhn says. e m the of land-us- e planning Beehive State Grooving of the State Department of Community Affairs and a leadplaning proponent of land-usThe wide streets, the ning orderly Mormon city plans we see here and throughout the West Im not sure weve kept faith w ith that It was less than a week after the Mormon pioneers steered their wagons into the barren valley of the Great Salt Lake that their leader, Young, set forth Brigham what must be the first record SAVE MANY DOLLARS OF YOUR HARD EARNED MONEY BY COMING IN AND TAKING ADVANTAGE MANY MORE VALUES. rw 1 hcrlan:! Lurr.r PHONE kO all It fill fVWW hi A I V. t. xt tk. jFk. Ak Ak As A. 4N. Aft. ' |