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Show A-4 Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, March 16-19, 2019 The Park Record YourParkCityAgent.com WHAT MY CLIENTS ARE SAYING “Sheila has a unique way of approaching real estate purchase that takes into account both the nuances of the neighborhoods and the lifestyle of the client. She is very informed and a delight to work with - I would definitely use her again.” -Zillow SH E I L A HA L L BRANCH BROKER 435.640.7162 | sheila @sheilahall.com 1700 Park Avenue | Park City, Utah 84060 © 2016 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc. Equal Housing Opportunity. NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS Northwest Association of Independent Schools Accredited and Candidate member schools and Subscriber and Affiliate schools admit students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. They do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of their educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school-administered programs. List of Schools: American Heritage School American Fork, Utah Rowland Hall Salt Lake City, Utah The McGillis School Salt Lake City, Utah Wasatch Academy Mt. Pleasant, Utah Park City Day School Park City, Utah The Waterford School Sandy, Utah Homeless sightings logged One of the cases was reported along Main Street JAY HAMBURGER The Park Record The Park City Police Department received three recent reports of people coming across someone who appeared to be homeless, cases that were logged during a winter that would have been especially difficult for someone living outdoors. The Police Department on March 10 at 2:41 p.m. was told of a person seen at City Park. The person who contacted the police said the person could be homeless. The person was seen leaving a shed at City Park, the police were told. The person was a man who appeared to be in his 60s. Phil Kirk, a Police Department captain, said an officer who investigated did not find the man. The Police Department requested the Parks Department secure the shed in an effort to prevent someone from staying there, Kirk said. The next day the police encountered a homeless person in a stairwell along Main Street, between a café and a nightclub on the lower stretch of the street. A police officer asked the person to leave. Kirk said it was not clear if the same person was involved in the two cases. The Police Department, meanwhile, at approximately 8:30 p.m. on Wednesday arrested a 50-year-old man at the Old Town transit center on a charge of intoxication after he was reported to be disoriented on a bus. The police said the man is homeless and “had no place to go and no one to call.” The Police Department has fielded few complaints in recent months regarding homelessness. It seems likely someone without a home could have left Park City early in the winter as the snow started to pummel the area. The winter has been one of the snowiest in years. The Park City area does not have a homeless shelter and offers few resources for someone without a place to live. Homelessness in recent years has appeared to be an issue in the Park City area in the spring, summer and fall rather than in the winter. Encampments have been found in the mountains surrounding Park City and along the Rail Trail, and the Police Department typically receives at least a few reports annually. The number of homeless people in the Park City area, though, is believed to be small. Continued from A-3 Housing outlined toward the beginning of the construction season. The booth dedicated to the Woodside Park project attracted a stream of interested Parkites on Tuesday evening as people quizzed City Hall staffers about the project. Some of the people spent extensive time studying the details and timelines. A poster board described City Hall’s broad housing efforts, showing completed projects and those that are planned. Park City is pursuing an aggressive housing program with the goal of adding 800 units to the affordable stock by 2026 and adding 220 of the overall goal by the end of 2020. Woodside Park is one of the key projects. A first phase of Woodside Park — four houses and four townhouses — is under construction. The 800-unit goal relies on a combination of City Hall projects, private sector requirements and potential public-private partnerships. The TANZI PROPST/PARK RECORD Jarett Moe, project manager for Method Studio, right, talks with Terri Loriaux as she explores City Hall’s plans for another phase of Woodside Park workforce or otherwise restricted housing during an open house organized by the municipal government at the Park City Library on Tuesday. Method Studio is assisting City Hall on the housing work. commuter traffic. Jason Glidden, the housing development manager at City Hall, spent time on Tuesday evening explaining Woodside Park to interested people throughout the event. He said in an interview he received numerous positive comments about the housing progress and the designs. “The design really fits the neighborhood with the look and the feel of it,” Glidden said, summarizing the opinions he gathered from the crowd. source of nearly 300 units of the overall goal, however, has not been identified and has not been funded, according to municipal materials that were on display at the open house. Park City leaders have for years pursued housing as a priority in a community where the resort-driven real estate market, the most expensive in the state, prices out many rank-and-file workers. Leaders say the housing efforts lead to benefits like socioeconomic diversity and reduced This ad placement is to satisfy tax code section 501(c)(3) requiring a Notice of Nondiscriminatory Policy as to Students. NWAIS member schools have adopted nondiscrimination policies which may be broader than this requirement. Managing much more than wealth. 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