Park City is Gathering Input on Elements of the Transportation Plan

Post Date:02/15/2011

Park City, Utah -- Park City Municipal Corporation (PCMC) has been working on a plan to address mobility in the City to 2040 and is getting ready to pull together a draft plan. City leaders will have elements of the draft plan available for public review and comment at a public open house scheduled for Monday, February 28th from 4:30pm to 6:30pm in the Eccles Theater at Park City High School, 1750 Kearns Boulevard, Park City.

Topics that will be included and will be available for review and comment include:

· Transportation Goals and Objectives

· Street Cross-section Standards

· Functional Classification of Roads

· “Gateway Corridors” such as Guardsman’s Pass and a Deer Valley connection

· “Neighborhood Connections” such as the North 40 road, a Solamere connection, among others

· Transit, both within Park City and to areas outside the City

· Non-motorized Trails

Attendees will have the opportunity to talk with PCMC staff and transportation consultants about all of these topics. No formal presentations will be made and people are invited to come and go at their convenience.

The transportation plan builds upon elements expressed by the public in the Vision Park City planning process in 2009 and an earlier public meeting on the transportation held in October 2010. Public comment will be used to finalize the plan for City approval in approximately April 2011.

For more information http://www.interplanco.com/current-projects/parkcity or contact Andrea Olson (1-801-307-3400) or Matt Cassel (435-615-5075).
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Regenerative agriculture

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Soils can potentially trap a large amount of carbon away from the atmosphere. One method of driving more carbon into soils is through regenerative agriculture.

For example, in the summer of 2018 Park City decided to initiate regenerative agriculture on the iconic piece of land at McPolin Barn. This piece of land had remained relatively undisturbed since it was set aside under easement in 1991. The lack of disturbance on the land led to the grasses that grow and die each year to thatch together, never properly decomposing into the soil.

In partnership with Bill White Farms, a local non-profit organization, cattle were reintroduced to the former dairy. Rather than allowing them to spread out and graze on their favorite species, the cattle were herded together which forced them to eat down the grasses and weeds indiscriminately. The disturbance by the cows hooves, as well as what comes out of their tail ends, helped to mix dead matter with the soil and facilitate the decomposition process. This accelerated decomposition is key in releasing nutrients, thus creating a healthy environment for microbiota to trap more carbon away from the atmosphere and build up the health of our soils. The healthy soils are also more able to retain water, and allow for better growth of native species instead of noxious weeds.