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Show SPORTS The DEER VALLEY LIFTS TO START TURNING, B-2 www.parkrecord.com Park Record. Editor: Ben Ramsey sports@parkrecord.com 435.649.9014 ex.15704 Twitter: @ParkRecSports B-1 MEDICAL RESIDENTS WIN RAMBLER, B-3 WED/THURS/FRI, JUNE 12-14, 2019 Setting aside a ribbon of green through Oakley BASEBALL CAMPS The Park City High School baseball program is running two summer youth camps for players ages 8 to 14. One will run from June 17-19, the other from July 15-17. Camps are in session from 1-3 p.m. Campers will work on the fundamentals of hitting, fielding, pitching, catching and more. The last day of camp will be competitions and an activity on a slip and slide. Camps are held at the Park City High School baseball field and are run by PCHS head coach David Feasler and his coaching staff. To register for either camp, email david.feasler@gmail.com. ADULT CORNHOLE LEAGUE Basin Recreation is hosting a cornhole league on Fridays from 6 to 8 p.m. from June 14 to July 26 at City Park. Cost is $30 per team or $15 as a free agent. Learn more and register at basinrecreation.org. COMMUNITY FISHING EVENT On Saturday, June 15 from 9 a.m. to noon, Park City Recreation will host a community fishing day at the Deer Valley ponds. The event is free and open to the public. Registration is not required. Some equipment will be provided. For more information, call 435-615-5401. MOUNTAIN BIKE CAMPS Summit Bike Club is hosting two camps for all developing riders to experience a wide range of terrain, educational talks and two races. The camps are hosted at houses at roughly 9,000 feet near Park City trails. The first camp will run from June 25-30, the second from Aug. 6-11. For more information go to summitbikeclub.org and select the “Camps” tab. Please see Sports briefs, B-4 TANZI PROPST/PARK RECORD Solomon Truong, 4, holds a stick he found while walking on the Franson Trail Wednesday morning. Truong and his brother, Aberaham Truong, 6, explored the trail and took part in a nature lesson with a group of parents on one section of what is planned to become the Weber River Corridor. The Weber River Corridor could span five miles of area BEN RAMSEY The Park Record Oakley is growing its trails system. The city government has partnered with various organizations, including the South Summit Trails Foundation, to help create and expand trails over the past three years — including the Franson Lane Trail off Franson Lane, the Steven’s Grove trail off Millrace Road, a loop trail around the Rodeo Grounds and the Oakley Trail Park, which consists of a small network of mountain bike trails near the town water tower off Pinion Lane. The overarching goal of trailbuilders is to connect them into a single network called the Weber River Corridor Project, starting with Steven’s Grove on the west side of town and running the Oakley Trail Park on the east side that travels the length of the Weber River through Oakley — making five miles of trails that visits the riverside open to the public. Currently most of the five-mile zone is owned by private homeowners. “I’m all about private home ownership and we know that development is going to come, I’m not living under a rock,” said Corey Dutton, board secretary of the South Summit Trails Foundation. “But if we can get ahead of it a little bit, we’ll have a chance to create a better quality of life for the community.” The Franson Lane trail and the Steven’s Grove trail are both significant steps toward the Weber River Corridor Trail — each are a mile long and loop by a stretch of the river. They were acquired through grants from Summit County and the Utah Sports Commission with help from the Summit Land Conservancy, Mountain Trails Foundation and South Summit Trails Foundation. For example, Summit Land Conservancy was able to purchase a 23-acre chunk of land through negotiating with landowners and sell the parcel the Steven’s Grove trail is on to Oakley for some $230,000, which the city purchased via a $500,000 grant from Summit County. Tom Smart of the Oakley City Council is a big proponent of the trails system, along with others in the community like former mayor Doug Evans. But then, so are a lot of people. He says the town has something of a mandate to build trails. In February of 2017, the city held a public hearing on the Weber River Corridor Project. Out of 109 participants, 71.5 percent approved of the idea — 21.2 percent were against a trail system and 7.3 percent were undecided. 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