OCR Text |
Show WASATCH Continued from page 8 been elected to two-year terms, and so a year later they faced yet another election. Disenchanted and exhausted, two of the three chose to avoid another campaign and left office when their terms expired. The third councilman was DON’T yet they were, by New And mary LEFT OUT IN THE COLD badly ETN Oy Ue 801-649-8046 in part at least, elect- Moab. there of BE TIMES Reserve your fall and winter advertising now and request our special pre-season discount in the beaten by a longtime Moabite who ran with a pro-development theme. .Ultimately, all three seats were filled by citizens of the Old Moab; ed MOUNTAIN is Moab’s the great “old timers,” irony: HOTTOPICS the ones that came here with the uranium boom more than 40 years ago, lament the changes and complain bitterly about all the damn bikers and the espresso shops and the never-ending traffic jams on Main Street. Yet they did everything they could to encourage this new boom and condemn those who tried to slow it down. Meanwhile, many of the New Moab residents may wear Patagonia and Birkenstocks and the men may sport pony tails, but they have more in common with their uranium boom predecessors than they realize. More specifically, some of Moab’s oldest citizens have been making a killing by listing vacant H ave the “other” papers you pay to carry your message gained the attention of news organizations like National Public Radio? The Wasatch Mountain Times has. Why? Because our reporting is being recognized as balanced, investigative and important to the mountain region of Utah. Dare to be ~ De noticed. Reserve advertising space in the Wasatch Mountain Times. property they've owned for years at utterly ridiculous prices. When some rich guy from Aspen or Telluride or Park City shows up and finds the asking price downright reasonable (by his home standard), all similar properties rise to that inflated value, property taxes rise just as ridiculously and fewer and fewer local dents can afford to make Moab home. Will this boom last? Will there be a day when, like Park City, Moab’s working class has to live 30 miles from town and commute to work? Some realtors and developers are wary. Speculative land rushes have gone bust before. And Moab, a town with miserable summers and erratic winters and relentless spring winds, a town who's popularity has been driven more by media hype than anything else, could be victim to just such a collapse. But deep down, I know I’m just trying to make myself feel better. Urbanites will continue to flee their crowded, polluted, congested, crime-ridden cities in search of places like Moab. Once they arrive, they will oe luxuries demand and the services infrastructure and what? @ Y¥ our audience the mountains, loves right? So does ours. That’s why we print 25,000 copies every month. Everyone from Park City to Salt Lake City stays informed and entertained. What Advertising “Mu We Make a match. in the Wasatch WARM improve- ments they left behind. And one day they'll discover they’ve turned their destination into exactly the kind of community they were running from. Then COOL RATES resi- Thanks, What Mountain a value Times makes sense. RECEPTION Wasatch ees Mountain Times.” hear this every day from folks who care about living, recreating, or working in the mountains of Utah. the connection with our readers {and your customers) by advertising in the Wasatch Mountain Times. 4 |