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Show A-4 The Park Record PARK CIT Y BUILDER’ S FORM E R CU STOM - BUILT PE RSONAL HOM E Homeless people reported One person found staying behind a Park City building – 3140 CRESTLINE DRIVE – JAY HAMBURGER The Park Record 4 Bedrooms | 5 Bathrooms | 4,280 Square Feet | 3-Car Garage | $2,590,000 This is the one everyone is looking for – the perfect primary or secondary home. Extremely low maintenance, with four bedrooms and four-and-a-half baths. Features include a chef’s dream kitchen, main-floor master, four fireplaces, brick courtyard with firepit, covered wraparound decks, and a three-car heated garage. Close to Park City schools and shopping, and only minutes to the resorts. The owners want this sold! Open house most days. Scott Kelly REALTOR ® 435.640.4340 | scott.kelly@sotheybsrealty.com This material is based upon information that we consider reliable, but because it has been supplied by third parties, we cannot represent that it is accurate or complete, including price, or withdrawal without notice; square footage is an estimate only. ©MMXVIII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a licensed trademark to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. An Equal Opportunity Company. Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated. Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, April 7-10, 2018 The Park City Police Department on Monday investigated a report of a homeless encampment outside a building along a busy street, an unusual location for such a find after a series of other cases involving spots on hillsides well away from traffic. Phil Kirk, a police captain, said the department received a report at 3 p.m. at a building on Kearns Boulevard close to the Park Avenue intersection. It is one of the busiest intersections in Park City as two state highways meet. Kirk said the building owner contacted the Police Department. He said the homeless person set up a campsite underneath the building’s air-conditioning sheltering. An officer who responded found clothes, food, alcohol and a backpack, Kirk said. There was also trash left at the location, he said. Nobody was at the encampment at the time of the initial police response. Kirk said an officer returned to the encampment at 1:10 a.m. on Tuesday to check on the location. The officer found a 49-year-old man sleeping behind the building, Kirk said. Kirk said the man told the police he had been staying at the location for approximately two weeks. The Police Department ordered the man to leave and told him he could be charged with trespassing if he returned, Kirk said. He agreed to leave. Kirk said it was the first time the Police Department had been contacted regarding the man. Another homelessness case involving a different man was reported on Thursday at 2:50 a.m. at the Old Town transit center, the police said. Kirk said the man at the transit center was cited on a criminal trespassing count. The police in Park City occasionally receive reports of homelessness, but there have been few in recent months. There have been cases at the Old Town transit center, in the vicinity of the Rail Trail and on hillsides. The Police Department says there are concerns about the COURTESY OF THE PARK CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT The Park City Police Department recently investigated a report of a homeless encampment outside a building on Kearns Boulevard. The person’s belongings were discovered initially and, later, an officer found the person at the location. safety of people living outdoors in frigid temperatures as well as worries about them starting fires and leaving their trash. There are no homeless shelters in Park City. Police officers offer to transport homeless people to a shelter in the Salt Lake Valley if they desire to relocate. Tickets issued at library lot GORGEOUS VIEWS ON EASY BUILD LOT Gorgeous views and easiest to build on lot in Rockport Estates, one of the few properties wide enough for a horseshoe driveway and gradual south facing slope with views of the beautiful Wasatch and Uinta Mountains. Water and Electricity already connected. This property also includes a percolation test and topo survey performed within the last year, approved by Summit County. This lot is 100% ready to build on with year-round access and a short drive to Park City, while still feeling secluded in your mountain oasis. See the attached home plans that have already been approved by the county and contact listing agent for more information. caylan rinck 612.978.1424 Caylan@cooperwynn.com $65,000 4405 S. Oakview MLS #11702113 cooperwynn.com JAY HAMBURGER The Park Record Park City in recent weeks has typically ticketed several vehicles per day after they were left parked outside the municipal library or a parking lot across the street from the library as City Hall continues enforcement associated with a revamped paid-parking system that debuted in December. The time limit is three hours outside the library and at the Mawhinney lot across Park Avenue from the library. The time limits were instituted alongside the paid-parking system. There is concern about people who work on Main Street leaving their vehicles in one of the two lots and then walking or taking a bus to their place of employment to avoid needing to pay for parking in the Main Street core. The worker vehicles would occupy spots that otherwise could be used by library patrons or City Park-goers, officials say. People headed to Park City Mountain Resort have also left vehicles in the lot, and some others have kept their cars overnight. A sign outside the library notes the parking there is dedicated for patrons. It also says vehicles in the lot could be ticketed or towed. Library patrons are able to park for longer than three hours but need to inform a librarian. City Hall says no vehicles have been towed from outside the library or the Mawhinney lot as a result of a violation of the restrictions. JAY HAMBURGER/PARK RECORD A sign outside the Park City Library informs drivers of restrictions in the parking lot. Threehour time limits were instituted in the library lot and a parking lot across Park Avenue alongside a revamped paid-parking system in the Main Street core. There are 200+ Restaurants in the Park City area... Narrow down your choices by cuisine, location or craving! check out the guide in today’s paper or Visit ParkRecord.com and click on the "Restaurants" tab |