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Show A-4 The Park Record Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, February 29-March 3, 2020 PUBLIC NOTICE OF 2020 SUMMIT COUNTY VOTER ASSISTANCE CENTER LOCATIONS Public Notice is hereby given regarding open voter assistance center locations for the 2020 Presidential Primary Election to be held March 3, 2020. Centers are open from 7:00AM to 8:00PM for those registered voters who did not receive a by mail ballot, or who need assistance, and for ADA purposes: Location Coalville City Hall 10 North Main Coalville, Utah Marsac Building 445 Marsac Avenue Park City, Utah Kamas County Services Building 110 North Main Kamas, Utah Sheldon Richins Building 1885 West Ute Blvd. Park City, Utah CLEANER NEEDED $600/Weekly Working Days: 3 days Time Schedule: 7AM - 1PM Email: sgt.paulglenn@gmail.com PARK RECORD FILE PHOTO The Egyptian Theatre has for years been an iconic Sundance Film Festival screening room. Arts, culture and the Park City economy are some of the topics Parkites have addressed as a vision for the community’s future is crafted. Continued from A-3 Pillars outlined efforts like creating a fleet of vehicles powered by electricity. The report also says Park City should “pursue zero waste by 2030 by embracing a circular economy, where we reduce the consumption culture, design out waste and pollution; keep products and materials in use; and regenerate our natural systems.” • transportation innovation, designed to create transportation solutions that rely on multiple forms of transit. One of the details includes a crucial statement regarding Main Street. It says: “Transition Main Street and other key nodes, to be pedestrian oriented and largely car-free, by repurpose streets to pedestrians and away from single occupancy transit.” The report also mentions continuing to build transit routes for pedestrians, bicyclists and scooter riders as well as the possibility of Park City by 2030 offering a “’car-optional’ lifestyle.” • sustainable tourism, designed to balance the quality of life of Park City residents and the experience of visitors. One of the details calls for the adoption of an approach for management of the impacts of tourism. It says Park City should “undertake a comprehensive review of the tourism property development pipeline, including the scale and penetration of nightly rental market, to set parameters and policies that shape workforce housing options, commercial housing requirements and accommodation balance at neighborhood levels.” It also wants Park City to “create deliberate gaps in event schedules and develop more community ‘protected spaces’ that provide locals with respite and enhance locals sense of contentment.” • arts, culture and the Park City economy, designed to foster a diverse economy with entrepreneurship. One of the details outlines the possibility of leveraging a planned arts and culture district “to bolster our artisan cluster, adds extra dimension to the tourism economy and supplements the existing Main Street destination.” It also says the small businesses of Park City could grow “by stimulating a thriving ‘local scene’ of artists, fostering a strong local food network, and an encouraging entrepreneurial outdoor recreation and sustainable tourism industry.” The idea of exploring the potential of attracting additional businesses in the medical field is mentioned. The visioning efforts are the first in Park City since 2009, a stretch of 11 years of change in a community that emerged from the recession with economic strength. The 11 years cover the realignment of the ski industry, including a change in ownership of Park City Mountain Resort and Deer Valley Resort, traffic increases across Park City and gains in real estate prices. The Park Record’s “Help Wanted” section has the jobs you need to support your gear addiction |