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Show Hi r Saturday, January 26, 2002 The Park Record A-3 City 'it r Had a Rough Day...? CITY EDITOR: Jay Hamburger 649-90 1 4 ext 1 1 1 citynewsparkrecord.com Guide outlines new routes Beat Ji :0 Park City to offer jbeefed-up service Muring the Olympics r , y Jay Hamburger F THE RECORD STAFF , IJus riders in Park City will have iaiitlitional transit choices during the Winter Olympics, with expanded routes and more huses. If Park City recently released a transit guide for the Olympics, Jvhicli outlines February's routes iilid how bus riders can travel ictween various points. t The routes will be in service from Feb.5-24. The map includes the following routes: A bus will run to Silver Lake i'rom the Old Town transit center icginning at 5 a.m. and ending at Sflidnight. 'llic Silver Lake bus will Wind its way up Royal Street with a number of routes on the way. 'I "he Silver Lake bus will run on 20-minute 20-minute intervals from 5 a.m. to 6 p.m. and 30-minute intervals from 6 "p.m. to midnight. On days that Olympic competitions are scheduled sched-uled at Deer Valley, the route to Silver Lake will shift from Royal Street to the Mine Road. ,. The city will run a Prospector "Square route that will circle the prospector neighborhood. The . route will largely follow Prospector Avenue and Kearns Boulevard and t includes stops at the Eccles Center. I Jie Prospector Square buses run . (rum 5 a.m. to 3 a.m. They will run oil 20-minute intervals from 5 a.m. , to. 6:30 a.m., 10-minute intervals i frpni 6:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. and 20-( 20-( iiunute intervals from 1 1 p.m. to 3 ! " A Park Meadows bus runs in the southern half of that neighbor- . iipod, including stops on Holiday ! Ranch Loop Road. Monitor Drive ;ind Lucky John Drive. The route j runs from 5 a.m. to 3 a.m. Its interval inter-val schedule is the same as that of , the Prospector Square route. Also in Park Meadows, the city will run what it is calling a "Deep , Park Meadows' route. 'Ilie "Deep Park Meadows' route. Buses on the route will drive into the northern dge of Park Meadows. (Hie route fcjudw fifty's oil; Evejyng "Star f ' nixTlJiiH Drive. 'Aint-riclin " Saddler Drive. Crest Line Drive. r . v V .. j i , SALT LAKE 2002 ft .099 ;f ' Et7ije February 5'h -. 20O2 PHOTO COURTESY OF PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORP Park City has released a bus schedule that will be in effect during dur-ing the Winter Olympics. The city's transit system will expand during the Games with new routes. information about routes that are necessary for some Olympic visitors. visi-tors. Buses will run between Park City at the Utah Olympic Park's park-and-walk lot. That route will run from the Old Town transit center cen-ter to the park-and-walk lot from 5:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. on a 10- to 15-minute 15-minute frequency. Buses will also run between the Old Town transit center and the park-and-ride lot on U.S. 40. The route to the U.S. 40 lot runs from 5:30 a.m. to 3 a.m. Buses will run at a 10- to 15-niinute frequency. A .bus will run between Deer Valley and Park City Mountain Resort from 5 a.m. to 7 p.m. on 10-minute 10-minute intervals. Park City hopes residents and visitors choose to use buses instead of driving their own vehicles. Some ; neighborhood streets: intluding Old ';Ww V-ill be cU)sldt lb. motorists wild do not have access passes. Lucky John Drive and Little Kate Road. The route will run on 20-minute 20-minute intervals from 5 a.m. to midnight. mid-night. Buses will run in Ridgeview and Thaynes Canyon on 20-minute intervals from 5 a.m. to midnight. The route through those neighborhoods neighbor-hoods includes Park Avenue, Meadows Drive, Thaynes Canyon Drive and Three Kings Drive and other streets. A shuttle will run between Park City and 'Hie Canyons on 20-miiiute 20-miiiute intervals from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The bus will run between the Old Town transit center and 'Hie Canyons on S.R. 224. The shuttle will make several stops in Park City, including at 'Ilie Yarrow and the Radisson Inn. and then head toward 'Hie Canyons. It makes several stops "in The Canyons: neiiihhor hood : ' -f 'Ilie transit guide also offers City Hall explains shredding policies 0 Depending on their sensitivity, documents ;are either trashed, shredded or burned by Jay Hamburger OF THE RECORD STAFF f i Officials at the Marsac Building regularly shred or have documents .'burned that they do not want to end up in the public domain, a practice that they say is a common method to destroy sensitive Materials. . With the Enron Corp.-Arthur Corp.-Arthur Andersen relationship relation-ship ending, in part because Andersen employees reportedly destroyed documents. docu-ments. Park City Manager loby Ross and Administrative Services Djrector Bob Stephens said the city also destroys some documents. docu-ments. ".'if there are a lot of documents and it would lake too long to shred, we take it to a burn center," Stephens said. The documents are burned in Laylon. he said, j- Stephens said the city saves some i of its printed documents. Once they laYe not needed, they arc either trashed or destroyed. He said the. city does not have enough space to t-keep all its material. "Our biggest problem is we kept stuff long past we needed to," Stephens said. He is unsure how many pages of documents are destroyed annually. Many, old documents are stored at the Public Works Building. If there are a lot of documents and it would take too long to shred, we take it to a burn center," ' - Bob Stephens, Administrative Services director "As those things can be purged, we generally purge those. That's about space as much as anything," he said. Ross said laws require the city to save some documents forcer-tain forcer-tain amounts of time. "We have some legal requirements require-ments to retain some documents. When we no longer need to retain .them, we dispose of them." he said. 'Ilie city picks how to dispose of documents depending on how sensi tive material is. Some material, such as. general information about finance or junk mail is trashed. However, documents docu-ments that contain information about personnel issues, including outdated resumes, are destroyed. Documents that are thrown away are typically recycled. "With the exception of certain, items in the Finance Department or the Legal Department, the vast majority gets recycled." Ross said. City Hall does not employ a document-destruction company. Stephens dos not know how many paper shredders are in the Marsac Building. State law regulates which documents a city can destroy. City Attorney Mark Harrington said the city operates oper-ates within the rules of the Utah Municipal General Records Retention Schedule. He says documents such as legal drafts and pages that include personnel per-sonnel information are frequently destroyed. Harrington said a city employee has never posed a question to him about whether a dixument should be destroyed or saved. p. r I rr I hiic is Now Avicenna am & Restoring Normal Function h SPlNfc & XJtNT INSTITUTE Aad led by Itw Aiwkoii ALOtfewy of Pan Munugwwflf Non-Surgical Care For Spine & Joint Orthopedic Evaluation Hydrotherapy & Treatment Balneotherapy Disc Herniation , Cryotherapy Sciatica Electro Therapy Osteoarthritis Manucd Therapy Sports Injuries Acupuncture Prolotherapy Nerve Blockage r. Simon Vbitanik, MD, PhD Thomas Trauba, MD Beverly Hurwitz, MD Kenneth Hurwitz, MD Medicd Dirdw Simon Voitanik. MD. PtiD M4 3 51655-9000 ?6Q Sidewinder Suite 106 Park City mm! t l y f p ! J 1 ...Come to The Grub Steak! Join us for lunch, featuring our famous soup, (."feKT- I .ivc entertainment l'iklay sandwich and salad War! flKIJD ulf.Ul & Sanmlav nilirs. lisvnnd fr.v mrkiin'. .t. m Mn n j t v i r Mon-Sat 1 1:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Open nightly 'tor dinner from 5:00 to 10:00 p.m. Located at Prospector Square on the tree city bus route. 649-8060 KLKCiANT COUNTRY HARK IN I HF. COZY ATMOSI'HKRF, OH AN HISTORIC HUII.DINC. Open Tuesday - Sunday 5:00 p.m.- on. Jl Only 20 minutes from Park City via on I lighway 40 i R ILL E 1 435-657-1 1 00 98 South Main Street ! leber fjj i """ l,'T''"'? Summit ('omily time 1880 eFark Record. PARK CITY, UTAH Is sleppln' up with one EXTRA issue a week! We are stepping up our commitment to covering the momentous 2002 Olympic Games publishing Hires editions per week during the eventi The papers will be mailed to subscribers and distributed to . . .. - , ; -a -." ..:. i- ' . - newsstands MOMS. WEDMSPflfS and FBlPilYS from February 4-23. The four extra editions will allow the editorial staff to keep residents apprised of the latest Olympic developments and It will expand oppor- t i . . . (unities to share Park City's perspective on the events with visitors! m lei 1 1 1 1 1 I- 1 ! I m m 1 I Holly Mae Pendergast Recent Paintings I I . I 6 l- II Uii I l if 9 113 1 II I ft j 1 ) j (i j i ! i S "h li ! !i ! - "mm:: A Now Showing at CP fine art OLD TOWN GALLERY 444 Main SL 645-7724 Visit our Gallery Old Town Main St www.oldtowngallery.com jflAi j. 5 h 1 1 f. I |