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Show The Salt Lake Tribune UTAH uesday’s Ballots Will Include Pigs agriculture-zoned area of town only. Stockton’s swine issue =,mong more unusual _ Pigs maybe raised in the ag- Ticulture and rural zone areas of town. _ M Pigs maybe raised in the agriculture and rural-residential zoned areasoftown after a permit hasbeen issued and onlyfor a petiodof three to four monthsfor an icommunity initiatives BY JOHN KEAHEY ‘THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE There will be the usual initiatives — can you say bonding? — on some community ballots in Utah on Tuesday. But grabbing most of the attention will be the FFAproject, Deputy Town Treasurer Dana Allred believes mostresidents in the town of 500 support the temporary-permit option. unusualones. “This would give our young *Takethe initiative that seeks to ban newalcohol permits in Draper, for example, and the measure calling for sound walls in Farmington. Riverton voters will choose who should putoutfiresin ‘their city. And Stockton? Resi- people a chanceto participate in their programs,”she says. Theballot issue may not be so clear-cut in Riverton, where residents are divided over whether the city or Salt Lake County should provide fire-protection dents there will decideif pigs be- services. ‘long in town. { Riverton already ownsonefire Thetiny Tooele County hamlet, truck and station. tseven miles south of Tooele, bansished pigs from thecity in 1990. ‘Other animals,such as horses and ‘cattle, are allowed in agricultursally zoned areas. . But the council approved a motion in August to pay the county nearly $620,000 a year for such services, plus the upkeep on the Riverton-owned equipment. Mayor Sandra Lioyd and But a group of residents com- ins the ban is preventing ‘youngsters from participating in Councilman Adam Bass opposed the switch. Bass, whois not up for re-election and whose term ends this year, believes the city could swine programs for Future Farm- vers of America and4-Hclubs. 4 So Stockton voters wil) get to choose from four options: “1 do not wantpigsin the town save $11,670 a year by scrapping the county deal and continuing to run its own fire department. Councilwoman Cherri White limit: @ Pigs may be raised in the points out the council nixed Bass’ plan after a committee of residents and volunteer firefighters reviewed the various proposals. “Nonecould comeinat a better cost than the proposal offered by the county,” she says. Before the council vote iast summer, members amended an ordinance that required residents, not the council, to vote on contracts with other government agencies. A lawsuit is pending on that issue. For now,the Riverton referendura will ask whether Riverton should have its own fire department or whether the county con- tract should stand. The sound-wall initiative in Farmington is similar to River- ton’s ballot measure in that it challenges a position already takenby elected council members. The ballot question asks: “Shall FarmingtonCity allow the Utah Department of Transportation to construct and place sound walls within certain areas of the 115 corridor within Farmington CRY.c.a7 The council, unconvinced that sound walls work, wants time to studyalternatives such as earthen berms andlandscaping. A successful initiative would force the council to choose soundmitigation measures now — UDOTis offering to pay for 17foot-high walls — rather than Sunday, October31, 1999 DraperPoll Finds Opposition To Alcohol Ban could block future requests for beer or alcohol permits through a simple majority vote. Right now, the council typically splits 3-2 whenapprovingrequests for such permits. Four of the six City Council candidates on Tuesday's ballot oppose the alcohol initiative. If anythree of those four — Bill Col- ® Continued from C-1 bert, Paul Edwards, Summer is a thing of that kind, we speak out, we exercise our influence.” The Churchof Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which has a health code that forbids alcohol consumption, has beenofficially ilent on Draper's ballot initiative. Draper’s ballot question asks voters: “Shall [the city] adopt an ordinance providing that after Jan. 1, 1999, Draper City shall not issue any additional class B or C beer licenses or grant local consent for the issuance of any additionalstate liquor licenses.” In essence, the proposal seeks to bar the city from issuing new licenses to serve alcoholic bever- ages in restaurants and taverns. Beersold in stores would not be affected. If voters approve the measure, the handful of alcohol permits issued since January would be revoked. That would leave Guadala. honky’s Mexican Restaurant as the only place in the city licensed to serve beerorliquor. Evenif the anti-alcoholinitiative fails, the City Council still later when state road builders maynotbe willingto footthebill. Towns Receive Disaster Grants Pugh and Ed Radke — prevail, the council would net be philosophically opposed to issuing alcohol permits. However, if incumbent Doug Bedke and initiative backer Den- nis Walker win, they could join with Councilman Paul McCartyin denying alcohol permits — even if voters reject the initiative Tuesday. Bedke declines to say how he would vote on the initiative but lately has voted against issuing beer permits. If the initiative fails, at least one anti-alcohol crusader isn't ready to surrender. “We will get better organized and try [a new ballot initiative] again next year,” says Larson. He believes thatif theinitiativefails, it is because he andhis colleagues did not do a good enough job educating voters about the evils of alcohol. “We are not a bunchof crazy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Moab and Logan have been namedrecipients of a nationwide grant designed to build disaster resistant communities. The two cities will share $300,000 from Project Impact, the Federal Emergency Management Agency announced Friday. The funds will go to prevent floods from the Logan and Blacksmith Fork rivers in Logan and to cur- tail the effects of flash floods in Moab. FEMA regional director Rick Weiland said many Western states have been hit badly by nat- ural disasters recently, from Salt Lake City’s Aug. 11 freak tornado to ice storms in Wyoming and wildfires in Montana. “Homes have been destroyed, businesses ruined, families sepa- rated andliveslost.” In the past decade, he said, FEMA hasspent more than $25 billion to help communities rebuild. Project impact is designed to stave off someoftheeffects. Last year, Salt Lake City was designated a Project Impactcity. weare getting support from Bap- ‘The money went to reduce flood threats, build morestable inter- the country, telling us to ‘go get [them].’” schools. Mormonterrorists out here, but tists and Methodists from around state highway bridges and stabilize soil around elementary LE CNG Cou ues Lass Sane fia sue Waterford is home to a new idea in fakeNotice, that on the 2nd day of November, 1999,a general election will be held in Layton City, Utah the places set out herein. Registered voters living within the boundaries of Layton City, Utah will be seniorliving. eligible to vote for candidates running for three (3) City Council seats. Polling places set outherein will be open from 7:06 a.m. To 8:00 p.m. November 2nd, 1999. 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