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Show 4A Lakeside Review, Wednesday, July 24, 1985 wv v TT .43 c 4' -- , .v ;W ' 4S ''V X - : ; -- ' . Vjr s ' & . , ' j,. ?r--, ' ; 5 Cars for Sale Irk 1 v tfy ' f "' 'V ' . , p vv ' Review Correspondent 11: Cu SUNSET Mayor Norm Sfant said used cars for sale along the citys Main Street do not add dis- $ '! -- r 'M :; ' v . y V -- , v f ' sf' AA 4 'W sV ,V' 4 ? V'' fc ' ' ' y ?, tinction to the citys atmosphere, and he wants the problem con- ;, , ?Ai'y: v. ?. s ; ? ,,, , ft' ' ' 0,- - i1 trolled. Cars parked along property near 2400 North are supposedly given permission by the landowner, but Sant said he wants an ordi- -, ,- i ' ' Y' ferv ju rv p tn 7sSS fc, '' ',f '?;' fiv. 5. ? nance passed that requires proof of permission. He said the ordinance would require written permission be displayed on the windshield of the ;' sj. . -- s V' Staff Photo by Robert Regan inch pipe will be used by the Iomega Corp. in Roy where the work was performed by Kevin Sorensen and Kelly Nielsen of and dustpan, two bright yellow front-en- d loaders push a load of dirt into each others scoops after excavating a trench for a telephone and power conduit. The 4- PLAYING BROOM Sorensen Construction. Financial Details Completed CHERYL ARCHIBALD tures on all documents. An access road to the site of the planned facility is now under construction by Brown and Root Construction Company. The to company is under designers and engineers of the plant that will turn Review Staff FARMINGTON Money for y a Davis County burn plant will be out of escrow by this Friday after Solid Waste Special Service District officials obtain New York bankers signa waste-to-energ- the countys mounting refuse to steam to sell to Hill Air Force Base. A fence is also under construc- tion between the base and the burn plant site. When finished by November, concrete should be poured for the constroversial sub-contra- ct Katy-Segher- s, hazardous cargos. It also limited the time a truck could be parked along city streets. Under the ordinance, hazardous vehicle trucks could only deviate from the appointed routes to traverse to another street" for the purpose of loading or unloading at specified stopping GRAHAM Review Correspondent LAYTON Laytons newly passed hazardous vehicle ordinance could have put two of the citys largest trucking firms out of business, but an amendment corrected an oversight and allowed the firms to continue operation. Several weeks ago an ordinance was passed designating the routes to be used by vehicles carrying Request for Down-Sizin- companies in Layton, May Trucking and Bangerter Trucking,-wa- s recognized when Steve Nixon, of May Trucking called the city with concerns about the effect of the ordinance on the companies with business locations in the Layton Industrial Park. He said neither of the two firms load or unload hazardous materials at the Layton sites but do have trucks come into the indus places. The problem the ordinance posed for the two major trucking g Layton to Study Lot Change Developers of subdivisions are required to give the city a percentage of their property or its cash equivalent, for green space. The acreage Nilson proposed to give the city is a strip of ground with two major pipelines under LYNDIA GRAHAM Review Correspondent More homewill need to be done by the City Council before it makes a decision about allowing a local lots in the developer to down-siz- e next phase of Oak Forrest subdiLAYTON work Ezra Nilson asked the city to allow him to reduce the size of the lots he plans to develop to 8,000 home-buyer- s, square feet from the current 10,000 square feet required. The newest phase of develop- Nil-so- ment borders the Oak Forest church, school, park, complex of the Oak Forest subdivision. The decision to wait to grant or deny approval of the lot size changes stemmed not so much from the proposed size of the lots, as from the question of how best to develop the three acres Nilson would give the city for a park site. : JW j) - v T' v Jacobson. He was also concerned about the lot size reduction and the type of homes that would be built. Nilson said he would enter into restrictive convenants to build the surface. The pipelines homes of size and comparable wouldnt create a problem for the as those he is currently quality city but could discourage in the area with at least due to easement rights, if building 1050 square feet and a double gahomes were constructed over that rage. area of ground. A meeting will be held with the Most of the council members n concerned parties and the site and the mayor agreed with will be analysed before the counthat the best use of the property would be as a city park cil takes further action on the readdition. quest. A problem came up when nearNilson reminded the council by residents told the council they and the homeowners that he did not want the property used as would have no control over what a parking area for the park althe city did with the park ground ready in existence. It would bor- once he deeded it to the city and der three homes and could cause that problem would need to be a traffic problem, according to worked out within the city deone of the homeowners, Vaughn partments. vision. t i Vi H H U V) ir u V H i V) ) v U DECORATIVE MIRRORS Oval Rectangle HI -- I Several PVC PIPE Frame " to 2" Class 200 or po Styles Schedule 40 (1 OFF 50 O-i W MIRROR STRIPS SET OF 4 Our List Price Lengths In Full 89 i-- Yl v pj WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF SPRINKLING ONLY SYSTEM SUPPLIES pD SHI0HAM O0DN CLEARFIELD SOS So. Maia 1SS0 WtU 3 7737830 7237744 1475 So. Stats 34-77- 85 Store Hours 8- -i Weekday, CLOSED SUNDAY 6-- 4 u M&i - . Set. Councilman Clifford Spendlove feels there is definately a problem but argued the responsibility should go to the landowner.. The worst thing is that its not a lighted lot, the parked vehicles are subject to pilferage, said Spendlove. He said the owners are taking an awful responsibility by putting them there. He said the vehicles are drawing cards for kids as safety hazards. Isnt it a nuisance and the landowners responsibility for having them there, Spendlove the ordinance would ascertain that permission was given. Sant told the city council he counted 27 motor homes, trucks, cars, trailers and flatbeds for sale on the property one day. It can get out of hand," he said. More cars were on the private property than a licensed car deal problem. Sant said he had the same frustrations and has pursued other alternatives with Police Chief Archie Searle and City Attorney Steve Bailey but they (other solutions) have not borne fruit. The proposed ordinance seems like the only answer, said Sant. Dance Ensemble for Plant includes County Man plant. Construction will take two years from the time the foundation is poured. Bankers holding the letter of credit, and the Chemical Bank, bond trustee for the $54 million in bonds will sign the documents this week. Indo-Sue- z, BYU KAYSVILLE Clark E. Hir-scof Kaysville, a sophomore at hi Brigham Young University, returned recently from performing for six weeks in Scandinavia with the BYU Folk Dancers. This was the 20th anniversary tour to Europe of the Folk Dancers under the direction of Mary Bee Jensen, founder and director of the group who retired recently BYU faculty. For that trial park locations to be serviced. from the first Scandinavia in 1965, tour to After consultation with City AtJensen personally took out a loan torney Bruce Barton and Fire to guarantee the trips success. Chief John Adams, the council passed an amendment to the orPerforming 55 concerts this dinance allowing trucks to stop in summer in 45 days throughout the city for servicing or repower- Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Finland was an appropriate and ing. The amendment will allow nostalgic Finale to my career at trucks to go into the May and BYU, Jensen said. While in a hamlet in Finland, Bangerter terminals for switching the purposes. performers participated in a Hazardous Vehicle Law Gets Attention LYNDIA cate. vehicle. Cars without the notice would said. be cited. He said if the owner is put unYou cant deny individuals the right to sell property on their own der the gun to control the vehiproperty, said Sant. However, cles it could help reduce the 7s :;;uL:L "' - -C - ,Mtbt v,- i-'A'- er lot located across the street that has since been forced to relo- CHERILYN KAWA , s , Mayor of Sunset cultural exchange. We shared dances, songs and instrument playing, developing a real feeling of friendship as the evening progressed, she said. The group entertains with a variety of dances, including elaborate square dancing, mountain clogging, ragtime and western hoedown dancing. Hirschi, a son of Max and Patricia Hirschi, graduated ,with honors in 1981 from Davis High SChool where he was a member of the National Honor Society, a letterman in cross counheld leads in musicals and try, school plays and was on the seminary council. He performed with the Folk Dancers on tours to California and Canada before serving an LDS Church mission to two-ye- ar |