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Summit County official has zero aspiration for Park City mayor s office after soils criticism
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Park City mayor says widespread confusion remains about contaminated soils facility
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Park Record file photo
The text message was timed shortly before the campaign will formally begin and amid broad worries about the concept of a facility, known as a repository. It is a likely indication that the repository concept will be an election issue, at least at the outset of the campaign.
The text message includes a call for candidates and a statement to “Stop the landfill!”
“Consider serving beautiful Park City and your neighbors while preserving the environment,” the text message says.
The text message provides the June dates when candidates may file campaign paperwork with City Hall formalizing a bid for elected office. There is also a link to City Hall-posted online information about the mechanics of the campaign.
Mayor Andy Beerman and the Park City Council met in person on Thursday at the Marsac Building, the first live meeting by the full slate of elected officials since early March of 2020. The meetings were held electronically for longer than a year in an effort to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus. Tanzi Propst/Park Record
Park City leaders on Thursday addressed the concept of building a facility to store soils with contaminants from the community’s silver-mining era, focusing the discussion on the efforts to publicize the prospects of developing what is known as a repository and hearing from Parkites with questions about the concept.
Park City Councilor Nann Worel declined to join other elected officials in signing a statement addressing City Hall’s concept to build a facility along S.R. 248 to store contaminated soils. Worel says the statement “did not go far enough” in explaining the City Hall process regarding the facility.
Park Record file photo
A member of the Park City Council opted against joining the other elected officials in signing a statement centered on the controversial concept to build a facility along the S.R. 248 entryway to store soils containing silver-mining era contaminants.
City Councilor Nann Worel’s name was left off the one-page statement, which was published under the municipal logo. Mayor Andy Beerman and the other four members of the City Council signed the statement.
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