OCR Text |
Show The Park Record B-6 assemble PARK CITY Corner offiCe with View The Summit Ski Team celebrates end of season The program held awards banquet to honor its success Submitted by the Summit Ski Team Large corner office with floor to ceiling windows and views of the Swaner Preserve and beyond. Your own private office in Park City’s premier coworking space. Reception Services Conference Rooms Business Center Kimball Junction Location For details please contact Angela at 435-200-1312 info@assembleparkcity.com | www.assembleparkcity.com DISCOVER HISTORIC PARK CITY Galleries | Boutiques | Bars & Restaurants Nightly Entertainment historicparkcityutah.com FREE parking voucher valid for any one 3-hour parking session from April 16 - May 26, 2017 DATE/TIME OF USE Post your best shots on Instagram with the hashtag: #ParkCityPics and we’ll put the best ones in The Park Record! Wed/Thurs/Fri, May 10-12, 2017 Last Sunday evening, athletes and their families filled the Double Tree Yarrow Ball Room for the annual end-ofthe-year awards banquet for the Summit Ski Team. Athletes and families started the evening off with a high-energy slide show that included athlete highlights, SST alumni and events throughout the season. The slide show was prepared by Summit Ski Team Intro Coach Laurel Vanthof. Program Director Matt Brown wrapped the season up by addressing the Summit Ski Team athletes, families, coaches and board members by speaking to the club’s Mission and Accomplishments over the last several years. Brown spoke to the importance on how family contribution helped grow the culture of the program in a family friendly environment with programing that allowed individual growth and athletic development. Awards were presented to athletes, board members and Community members. Senior Graduates Awards: Senior graduates Janell Donegan and Chloe Whalen where both honored with personalized custom blankets and a slide show created by teammate Lexi Laufer showing highlights of their accomplishments growing up on the Summit Ski Team. Bill McGrath Community Award: Brian House, owner of Alpenfit gym, received the Bill McGrath Community award. House has been crucial with developing and delivering Summit Ski Team’s strength and conditioning programing for U14 -U21 athletes. The award is in honor of the late Bill McGrath and how much he loved Summit Ski Team and the work he did to make Summit Ski Team an important part of the Park City Community. Summit Ski Team Service Award: Dean Heavrin received Summit Ski Team’s Service award for his commitment to serving the club and coaches with transporting athletes, helping carry gates, moving gates, maintaining B-net and anything and everything the coaches needed on a moment’s notice. Pete Dunmire Volunteer of the Year Award: Patty and Eddie McLaughlin received the Pete Dunmire Volunteer of the Year Award for years and years of ongoing volunteerism, including organizing Youth Sports Alliance auction items to moving B-net back and forth from the resort to Summit Ski Team’s storage unit. Spring conditions for the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache Forest Officials warning trail users of potential damage Submitted by the Utah Forest Service Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest officials are advising recreationists that forest roads and trails are muddy and wet, and snow covered at higher elevations. Saturated soils can cause unstable conditions, rock slides, slumps, and erosion which present hazards to visitors. Public health and safety are apriority for the Forest Service, which may necessitate road closures or delayed openings of campgrounds, trails, and recreation areas. Hikers should exercise good judgment in assessing trails and refrain from using trails when muddy conditions prevail. Consider the potential damage to trails when planning your visits after heavy precipitation. This caution applies to all user groups motorized and non-motorized for roads and trails. All users have the ability to cause damage to trail surfaces and corridors. Visitors should use extreme caution where water is flowing across roads and around fast moving streams or rivers. Flood water, resulting from snow melt in mountain streams, is extremely cold and fast moving. Streams and rivers carry hidden debris such as logs and rocks, and are filled with heavy silt, creating hazardous conditions. Parents should keep children and pets close-by and insure they understand the dangers of fast moving water. For the most current updates call your local Forest Service office, or visit https://www.fs.usda.gov/uwcnf |