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Show 3x A-4 VOTE The Park Record NOW Dogs dig at grave in the city Paws were muddy at the cemetery on Kearns Boulevard Jay Hamburger PARK CITY’S BEST 2017 C H O O S E Y O U R F AV O R I T E PA R K C I T Y B U S I N E S S E S O N L I N E AT PARKRECORD.COM/PARKCITYSBEST Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, May 13-16, 2017 The Park Record Two dogs may have been digging at a gravesite at the Park City Cemetery in early May, the Park City Police Department was told. The police received the complaint at 8:45 a.m. on May 4 at the cemetery on Kearns Boulevard. Rick Ryan, a department captain, said one dog was reported to be loose in the cemetery while another one was tied to the fence. The person who contacted the police said it appeared the dogs were digging at a gravesite, Ryan said. The police were told the dogs did not have tags, their paws were muddy and nobody was there with the animals. Ryan said someone is not allowed to tether a dog to a fence and leave it there. He said allowing a dog off a leash in a public place like the cemetery is also prohibited. Leashed dogs are allowed in the cemetery, he said. Public police logs indicated the dogs were Labradoodles. “It is disturbing someone’s grave would be disrupted,” Ryan said, adding, “We don’t certainly want anyone or animals disturbing someone’s burial site or gravesite.” Diamond ring lost on a trail Piece of jewelry is valued at up to $6,000, police say Jay Hamburger The Park Record A hiker lost a diamond ring on a trail toward Quinn’s Junction in early May and did not immediate- Continued From A-3 Panel taps gas pedal crowds of past ones centered on Treasure. It seems that the crowds could return for the June meeting if the anticipated detailed traffic discussion is scheduled. A hearing on Wednesday lasted just a few minutes. Nikki Deforge, an attorney representing an opposition group known as the Treasure Hill Impact Neighborhood Coalition, told the Planning Commission the group will wait to provide detailed ly realize it was missing, the Park City Police Department said. Rick Ryan, a police captain, said the department received the report at 1 p.m. on May 6. The woman, who is 63 years old and a Park City resident, lost the ring on a trail in the Park City Heights development. Ryan said she reached into a pocket for a cellphone while she was hiking and might have lost the ring when she reached for the phone. She did not realize the ring fell off at the time. When she dis- covered it was missing, she backtracked on the trail looking for the ring, Ryan said. The ring has a .75-carat diamond and an adjustable gold band. He said the inside of the band is engraved with “TKP 20.” Ryan said the ring is estimated to be valued at between $5,000 and $6,000. Ryan said it is a criminal offense for someone to keep lost property they find. Anybody with information may contact the Police Department at 615-5500. comments about the traffic study. She said the group wants to review the City Hall staff report that will be prepared in response to the traffic study. In an interview after the meeting, Deforge questioned whether the Treasure side’s plans to reduce traffic will be as effective as the developer envisions. She said, as an example, the prospects of the cabriolet reducing traffic significantly is “based on speculation.” Deforge said the group is concerned about “the assumptions that were made” and said there are flaws in the traffic study. Deforge plans to draft a written response to the study results. “I anticipate a long meeting with a number of hard questions for the developer,” she said about the June gathering of the Plan- ning Commission. Planning Commission chair Adam Strachan said in an interview after the meeting he wants the Treasure side at the June meeting to provide a “comprehensive display of what they believe what the traffic problems are and how they mitigate them.” Strachan also said he wants the developers to delineate differences between traffic reports or addendums to the reports drafted over the decade-plus of the Treasure discussions. He mentioned documents dating to 2003, 2004 and 2005. “Are we supposed to just take all the old studies and assume all the assumptions of the old studies still stand,” he asked. “Which assumptions did you make in the old report we should assume carry forward to today, if any?” FREE DINNER ENTRÉE When you purchase another entrée of equal or greater value. Limit two coupons per party or table. Not valid with other coupon or offer. Dine in only. An 18% gratuity will be applied based on the original amount. Payment must be made with credit card. Valid through December 7, 2017 Best Thai Fine Dining UTAH 2014 605 Main Street • Park Hotel • 435.649.THAI (8424) • bangkokthaionmain.com |