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Show X' T- V i !f)ft . -- :r. ' v; .IT .'' 4 V P'0 ' Lakeside Review, Wednesday, September Majority favors jail, poll shows : i asr-f- 9, 1987 3A BRYON SAXTON value for the house and lot, he said. FARMINGTON A Salt Lake Tippetts said the poll also reCity firms survey indicates 53 vealed that a majority of people in the county will tolerate a percent of the Davis County ulation favors a new jail facility county fair, but the public does in their community, while 1 7 per--' not want to spend additional cent of those polled feel educa- - funds for a permanent fair site. tion is the countys biggest Other responses that placed a concern and few want money feather in the hat of county government were to questions respent on a new fair grounds. According to Davis County offi- - garding the type of service county cials, a recent Dan Jones and As- - officials are providing. sociates survey revealed to Davis By large, people felt were docommissioners a lot of ing an adequate job...and county County data on items concerning county employees also received high government. marks, he said. Commissioner Harold Tippetts said Davis County said the survey, which polled 400 government is worth the taxes county residents and has an accu- they are paying, and, Tippetts d of the 400 polled racy rate of plus or minus 5 persaid, cent, is will used as a tool to feel Davis County is a better base decisions on. place to live than it used to be. The $4,000 survey conducted He said the same percentage feel by the firm that posts election it is about the same, while 16 perpredictions posed questions rang- cent feel the condition of the ing from do you favor a jail facounty has worsened. And when asked what is Davis cility? to how do you feel about your county government? Countys biggest concern, 17 pere surcent said education, 15 percent Tippetts said the vey was motivated by a need to said taxes, and nine percent said find the attitude of people toboth roads and growth. ward their county government. However, not every reponse For example, 53 percent of the was favorable to county government countys population favored the Tippetts said a majority of the jail facility, with no dollar figure people feel we need to communilisted. cate with the public, while 1 1 per- -' cent said we need to listen to the However, approximately of those polled were not people and be reponsive. A question regarding effiency interested in condemning properwas described by the eight-yeeven if for the facility, ty jail they were to receive fair market county commissioner as tricky. ' Lakeside Review staff : - Two-thir- ds one-thir- - first-tim- two-thir- Equipment clears ground on Highway 91 for new Shopko shopping center. $8 million Shopko project starte and parking area and the remaining nine would be developed into business LAYTON shops suitable for a mix of tenLaytons base got a shot in the financial ants. arm recently when ground was According to Milner, the Shopbroken for a major $8 million ko chain stores are very successdollar retail development at ful in the Midwest and the move 1050 about North Main. Utah will include construcinto An site will be develtion of several stores slated to oped into a Shopko store and simultaneously in the fall of open several strip outlets, according to Joe Milner, spokesman for 1988. Shopko is a large variety similar in concept to K Woodbury Corporation. He said store Fred Meyer. or Mart the Shopko complex would utiWoodbury Corp. will develop lize nine of the acres for the store LYNDIA GRAHAM Lakeside Review correspondent about 75,000 square feet of retail space in the strip of stores accompanying Shopko. The stores will face west to Highway 91, Laytons main street. Those stores could include clothing stores, small businesses, and other retail outlets. are under way with tenants at this time, Milner said. According to Milner the Layton site was selected after a demographic study showed high traffic flows on Laytons Main Street to the front of the project and on the propertys rear. Milner said studies projected that between 1987 and 1991 Lay-to- n would outperform any other areas in the county or state in growth making a good location for business expansion. I-- 15 18-ac- re Milner said his firm hopes to see about 14,000 square feet developed into three pad buildings which might draw financial institutions and fast food tenants. Negotiations free-standi- t ds ar Landfill, Lagoon officials at odds BRYON SAXTON Lakeside Review staff Officials of FARMINGTON the North Area Refuse Disposal (NARD) and Lagoon Corporation management are trying to resolve a problem before it falls to the waste-sid- e. Jonathan Jensen, spokesman for Lagoon Corporation, said Lagoon managment is making an effort to get NARD to extend its hours, allowing Lagoon to dump waste after operating hours. Jensen said in the past Lagoon has hauled its waste to the Bay Area Refuge Disposal (BARD) in Bountiful, whose directors provided extended hours for the amusement parks benefit. Since then, BARD now only serves the Bountiful area and Lagoon is forced to deal with NARD. Were interested in being allowed to use NARD like we did the Bountiful dump, Jensen said. In Bountiful we were allowed to dump our garbage late at night. But at the present time NARD is open no later than 6 p.m. on weekdays, and closed Sundays. Farmington Mayor Robert who is a member of the NARD committee, said in an effort to cooperate they have ask Lagoon for suggestions. We need to make it so they (Lagoon) can bring their garbage within reason, Arbuckle said, adding, but we dont want to incur additional expense. Arbuckle said to rectify the situation there is going to have to be some give and take on both ends. However, according to Jensen, Lagoon can only give so much. Arbuckle said an operations committee under the direction of Layton Mayor Richard McKenzie is working with Lagoon and two other south Davis cities that have requested extended hours. McKenzie said the landfill service will attempt to accommodate Lagoon for the rest of this season, solution to be with a long-terimplemented for next year. 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