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Show NewsSeat Davis County Clipper Thursday, October Smith's wary of Cherry Hills proposal BY BOB MKXELSOM Clipper Staff Writer FARMINGTON - In a report to members of the Farmington City Council Oct. 6, city manager Max Forbush presented a letter from the local Smiths supermarket expressing concern about a retailresidential proposed near development Cherry Hill. The development would be located west of Main Street, east of the Highway 89 frontage road, north of the Smiths and development south of the Cherry Hill interchange. As originally presented by Gardner Development, the project would consist of 150,000 square feet of space together with 96 condominium units arranged in The development, tenta four-plexe- s. tively labeled Cherry Hill Village could include a neighborhood grocery store, bourestaurants and tiques, officeservices. While the suggestion of a grocery store, naturally, piqued Smiths interest, the supermarket chain also worried about other tenants of the Foxglove located Center, Shopping north of Shepard Lane and east of U.S. 89. According to Forbush, the letter questioned the idea of locating a major commercial center just to the north of at another. Businesses Foxglove are trying to recover from impacts imposed by extended highway construction in the area. Additional pressure from a new development might be more than some could stand. Pointing to the closure of the directly across Highway 89, Smiths letter asserted that many Foxglove businesses are, at least in part, on traffic the dependent supermarket generates. about Similar concerns Hill been have Cherry the by Boyer expressed Group, which also has development plans along Highway rt 89. Cherry Hill Village developers are, meanwhile, attempting to modify the project so as to be more in keeping with Farmingtons general plan for the area. They are also meeting with adjacent residents who, in the past, have opposed development of any thing other than single family homes along Main Street. In other development news from the Oct. 6 meeting, a final plat was approved for the Deer Point subdivision, submitted by Tom Morgan of Windfield, LLC. The project calls for three home lots on a 4.67-acr- e parcel located at 2000 North approximately Compton Road. Plans to implement a trail marker system in the city were given a boost by a pair of Boy Scouts who requested permission to begin the process as an Eagle project. Phillip Stone and Scott Hunter would raise funds to install trail kiosks and markers along some of the citys developed trails. Stone proposed two kiosks and four markers and Hunter 12 markers. Farmington Trails Committee representative George Chipman said about 100 markers would eventually be needed for the complete trails system. bmickelsondarisclipper. com Overcrowding affects jail's 'intake' BY TOM BUSSELBERG Clipper News Editor FARMINGTON - In- take facilities used to process incoming jail inmates often become very crowded, especially since they were designed for a 192-ce- ll jail that now sometimes houses 550. Thats the contention of Sheriff Bud Cox and jail officials, as they spread the word about needs for approval of a $24.8 million general obligation bond issue. Voters will have the chance to voice their opinion on that option as part of the Nov. 2 general election. With law enforcement accompanying personnel arrestees, the entranceexit becomes very sequence The crowded, Cox says. intake facilities also serve as waiting areas for non-viole- nt sonnel, and the segregation of detainees by the seriousness of their offense. Safety of jail staff and law enforcement officers is at risk without more intake facilities, he said. The jail also operates a work center under a U.S. the with contract which Marshals Service, expires in 2009. At that time, the county will own the work center. Some 120 federal inmates can be housed in the county jail with the federal government paying $2.2 million for construction of the work ceninmates ter where low-ris- k in a workrelease participate or inmate worker program. The county does not plan contracts to pursue long-tersuch as the work center plan, said Sheriff Cox. (The coun arrestees while awaiting formal booking. Currently the jail books approximately 190 inmates per week, far more than the facility was originally intended to handle, he says. Because of lack of space, the sheriff said all arrestees, from petty thieves to potentially violent felons, are held together while waiting for booking and processing. All booking and processing functions place arrestees within unsafe proximity to jail clerical staff and expensive electronic equipment. With two individual holding cells for extremely violent detainees and one padded cell for suicidal arrestees, the sheriff said additional individual holding cells are needed to provide more physical separation of detainees from jail per 10-ye- m your mindP Just e-m- ail i USED DEMO & NEW CLOSEOUTS SALT LAKE CTTY -- Milo Nimori, 39, Layton, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court on Y. to four counts of bank robbery and one count of possession of firearms in connection with four bank robWednesday beries. set for Sentencing is December 13. Nimori was arrested last February by the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Northern Utah Criminal Apprehension Team and Ogden Police at a Zions Bank branch at 4286 S. Harrison Blvd. Nimori was the security director for Kaysvillc-base- d Barnes Bank for about a year, during the time the robberies occurred. 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