White City Township Newsletter SALT LAKE COUNTY January 2008 HTTP://www.whitecityutah.org/ Volume 1, Issue 4 OCTOBER 2007 Community Council Members

Troy Blundell (801) 547-4884 District 3 - Chair White City Township [email protected] ACCT Rep. 938 E. Violet Dr. HB 40 Working Council Member Elections Sandy, UT. 84094 Group Representative

Paulina Flint (801) 571-5257 At Large –Vice In November White City Township residents Chair elected community council members for the odd [email protected] West Side Council 10467 Carnation Dr. Representative numbered districts and two of the three at large Sandy, UT 84094 Newsletter committee districts. New council members are Kay Dickerson

Kay Dickerson (801)571-1447 District 1 -Secretary in District 1, Troy Blundell in District 3 and [email protected] Jeremy Christensen in District 5. The council 10442 S. Carnation Dr Sandy, UT 84094 members that were re-elected are Gene Robinson and Paulina Flint, both elected as At Large Council Jeremy Christensen (801) 545-0231 District 5 -Treasurer members. [email protected] 9644 S. Poppy Ln. Sandy, UT 84094 The 2008 White City Community Council nd Gene Robinson (801) 572-3803 At Large Executive Board elections were held January 2 . [email protected] All of the elected positions were voted in 9454 S. Poppy Lane unanimously. As Treasurer Gene Robinson, was Sandy, UT 84094 elected. Kay Dickerson was voted in as Secretary. Don Patocka (801) 548-4420 At Large Paulina Flint was elected as Vice Chair and as [email protected] ACCT Alternate 747 E. Delphinium Way Newsletter Committee Chair, Troy Blundell. Sandy, UT 84094 The counsel members still serving are Jim Vacant District 2 Johnson in District 4, Paul Smith in District 6 and Paul Smith (801) 571-4590 District 6 Don Patocka as the remaining At Large Council 1062 E. Diamond Way Jordan School District Sandy, UT 84094 Split Committee Member.

Jim Johnson (801) 572-7977 District 4 1218 E. Forget Me Not Avenue The representative for District 2 has resigned. Sandy, UT 84094 The community council can appoint a citizen to fill this position until the next election cycle and we Committee Members Art Kimball (801) 571-4174 are looking. If you are, or know someone that is [email protected] Public Relations in terested, please let one of the council members 1020 E. Violet Drive Legislative Representative know. Sandy, UT 84094 By Troy Blundell

White City News 1 The Community Council is looking for individuals Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Corner who wish to help us do a fund raiser for the community council. Our community council has Hello, been around since 1986. We have elected volunteer community council members. No one I am Deputy Brody Waldram. I have been assigned to the White City area as a Community Oriented you elect gets a pay check for their services. Over Policing Detective. One of my functions is to make the years as we needed to fund newsletters and sure the people of White City have a resource of notices many of the council members donated information to help safe guard their community. In their time effort and their money’s to keep our this newsletter I am going to share some tips to citizens informed. This has enabled this prevent your home from being burglarized. First we community a great deal of freedom from partisan need to know burglary is a crime of opportunity. politics. Some times we received funds from the Basically, a would be random burglar looks for the county via the community council association. “easiest” target. The burglar wants to get in and get Sometimes it came directly from County out with the least chance possible of being caught. Government, which can become problematic. In Probably the easiest thing you can do is make order for our community to retain it’s freedom your home look uninviting. Make sure no bushes or from becoming a quasi governmental agency which shrubs conceal your windows. Invest in a good dead it was never meant to be, we have to do our own bolt system. Make sure the dead bolt has at least a fund raising to continue our ability to educate our one-inch throw. I would also suggest throwing away citizenry. the screws that come with you deadbolt and buy longer ones. This makes it harder to breach a New laws come into play which, prohibit us from taking door. Motion lights are also a good way to keep the county dollars unless we sign a county volunteer form, by burglars away. No burglar wants light cast on him or doing so we loose our autonomy. If as a county volunteer we her as they are trying to open a window. Let’s would be prohibited from disclosing what we hear in remember a vast majority of burglaries happen in the government if that government shoes to make the information day. Make it look like someone is home. Make sure to private. take in your papers. Make sure to wait until the garage door shuts.

In order to remain clean in the process and not Have your windows well secured. I suggest you jeopardized our independent standing to truly meet use a wooden dowel and place them in your the intent with which we were created we have to basement windows and rear slider doors. Don’t use become self sufficient. metal. Burglars can use magnets to move the bar and render its security purposes useless. Finally, We would never have been allowed to pursue the record the serial numbers of valuable items in your purchase of White City Water Company as a home. Secure these numbers somewhere safe. That volunteer agency of Salt Lake County. This way way if you do get burglarized, the serial numbers will only the citizens of our community decide what we become a great asset to the Sheriff’s Office in choose to do. investigating the crime. I hope you all find this information helpful. Feel free to ask me any Thank you for all the service you as neighbors questions. I look forward to working with your and past council members have given, to keep Community. the facts coming as they acme to light. Deputy Brody Waldram

To volunteer for fund raising and or to Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Official web site: become committee members please contact your council members. http://www.slsheriff.org/

White City News 2 If you would like to be involved in revitalizing our concerns such as a drug house, gang activity, juvenile neighborhood crime watch please contact any one of problems or vandalism. the council members listed for your district. We seek people who will be vigilant, but not vigilantes, to observe and report any and all suspicious persons or vehicles in your neighborhoods. ********************************************* Neighbors helping neighbors to reduce or eliminate crime in their own neighborhood is the basis of our crime Block Captain Training. After the Community Watch prevention program. orientation meeting in a specific neighborhood we The Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office offers a full sometimes are asked to provide additional training for complement of training programs designed to train and individuals who volunteer to serve as Block Captains. assist county residents in maintaining the security of their homes and the tranquility of their community life. This training was developed to explain the duties and responsibilities of a Block Captain and how they can Community Watch best serve the needs and interests of their Creating Crime Free, Caring Neighborhoods. Each day community. the residents of Salt Lake County confront property crimes and threats of crime. In some instances Mobile Community Watch is a mobile version of residents also confront personal crimes such as our successful Community Watch Program. Our Mobile assaults, robbery or sexual assault. Watch training academy is scheduled when a sufficient Citizens generally agree the most popular and number of people have expressed a desire to undergo proven community crime prevention strategy is training. We will stage the training in your Community Watch and Mobile Community Watch. neighborhood or at a central location chosen by the These programs call for citizens in designated areas to Sheriff's Office. This four hour training course teaches become trained to notice and report criminal or persons who want to patrol their own neighborhoods suspicious behavior near their homes. The purpose of about liabilities involved, how to be observant, what to Community Watch is dual – to learn how to protect look for, how to describe a potential suspect in a oneself and family, and to learn how to work together crime, how to maintain their own safety while doing to prevent crime. so. The Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office and residents of Salt Lake County form the crucial partnership in this Visit Salt Lake County Graffiti Removal Program's strategy. Crime Prevention Services provide training website. to all citizens willing to set aside an hour of their time and meet together with their neighbors to determine Volunteer Crime Prevention Specialist. Working the concerns of area residents and determine under the supervision of the Salt Lake County Sheriff's measures we all can take to reduce crime and the fear Office Crime Prevention Officer, Volunteer Crime of crime in our neighborhoods. Prevention Specialists are trained and provided with The most successful Community Watch groups go resource materials to conduct crime prevention beyond just being the "eyes and ears" for the Sheriff's seminars on various topics to the residents of Salt Office, although that is a valuable service we ask those Lake County. Click here for more information. citizens to perform. We encourage citizen groups to sponsor community clean-ups, collect clothing, Attention Program Planners. If you have a special need for a blankets and toys for homeless people, organize after- crime prevention topic not included in this listing, please check in school activities for young people, help victims of our Contact information area and we will research and create a crime, and form task forces that influence our program to meet your needs. lawmakers and policymakers. Make no mistake about it. Attending a one-hour Citizen’s Academy The Citizen’s Police Academy Community Watch meeting is not all that will be (CPA) is a ten-week program designed to give required to make your community safe. It involves participants a working knowledge of the Salt neighbors watching out after their neighbors and Lake County Sheriff’s Office. It consists of a reporting suspicious persons and circumstances to the series of classroom discussions and hands-on Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office. A trained crime scenarios. Training is held one evening a week. prevention specialist will conduct the orientation There are two academy classes each year and meeting at your home, a school, a church, a library or each class size is limited to approximately 25 any other facility of your choosing. Weather students. There is no cost to anyone who enrolls. permitting some neighborhoods choose to conduct their meeting outdoors. A Community Oriented The goal of the CPA is to create a better Policing deputy sheriff will join the meeting to offer his understanding, improve communication, and or her assistance in dealing with neighborhood partnership with the citizens and the Salt Lake

White City News 3 County Sheriff’s Office through education. There are no certifications given during this Community Oriented Policing plays an important course. role in reducing crime in any community. Therefore the Sheriff’s Office instituted the CPA What is the cost? to improve communication and obtain input and support throughout the citizens they serve. It is The CPA is just one of the classes the Sheriff’s our hope that graduates of the CPA become Office offers to the community at no cost. partners with us in identifying problems and solutions to the crime issues that are affecting Who do I contact to participate? our community. The Citizen's Academy is limited to 24 people Who attends the CPA? per class and there are only 2 classes offered per year. Your name can go on a waiting list, if there Citizens in the service area of the Salt Lake are no seats available in the upcoming classes. If County Sheriff's Office are all openly invited to you are interested, contact: enroll. Lawyers, teachers, bankers, homemakers, students and others have attended our classes. Craig Meyer Sheriff's Office Crime Prevention Specialist When do classes meet? (80146) 8-2204

Currently, the Sheriff's Office hosts two academy sessions per year. They meet in the evening hours one night a week for ten weeks. ‘Rent-A-Dumpster Program’ of Salt Lake County will deliver a dumpster to your property. They allow 2 What subjects are covered? days for you to load, and then they take it all away! Classes include, but are not limited to: $20 for Green Waste Dumpsters • Sheriff’s Office Policies • Firearms Training $30+ tonnage fee for Trash Dumpsters • Non-Lethal Weapons • Basic Handcuffing Salt Lake Sanitation Office • DUI Investigations Canine • 7125 South 600 West, Midvale • SWAT / Special Operations • Traffic Stops / High-Risk Stops Call 562-6435 • Basic Legal Block / Juvenile Law • Domestic Violence *********************************** • Building Searches • Traffic Accident Investigations This Center is a joint effort between the city of Sandy () and Salt Lake County Aging Do I get to go on a ride-along? Services. The city provides the facilities and its Yes! The highlight of the academy is the four- upkeep and Salt Lake County Aging Services hour ride-along participants are invited to provides the operating staff. The numerous attend. Students will ride for half a shift with an on-duty uniformed deputy while they are out on activities supported by this center are staffed patrol. Students will not participate in any by countless actions. This is an observation period only. volunteers.

Do I GRADUATE with a certification? The Sandy Senior Center is located at The CPA is an educational tool only. At the end of 9310 South, 1300 the course participants will have a better knowledge of how the Sheriff’s Office works and East in Sandy, Utah. what a police officer does on a day-to-day basis. Open to all seniors age 60 and above

White City News 4 and to all spouses of seniors 60 or above Monday through • Thursday Afternoon: Friday Morning: Word Friday from 8 am to 4 pm. The center provides a noon Processing Class, 9:30-11:30, starting Feb meal for a $2 donation. Transportation for those in the 29.Friday afternoon: Computer Basics, 1:30- Sandy area that are not able to reach the center on their 3:30, starting Feb 29. own is available. The center with help from numerous volunteers makes available over 100 different activities The following computer classes are offered at the Sandy per month. They include exercise, dances, social events, Senior Center throughout the year. and classes on every thing from Computers to Watercolor. There is no charge to visit and participate in Basic Computers: This is a course you want to start if you the activities. Some activities may ask for a donation to have no experience with computers. This course explains what cover cost of the materials. the basic pieces of computer hardware and software are. Learn the proper way to shut down a computer, use of the keyboard and "mouse." When you finish, you should be able to run Click on one of the buttons to the left to see the current programs on your computer, play games, and write basic activities or find out more about the Sandy Senior Center. letters. Instructors: Andy Anderson, Bob Adair & Floyd Crump. For more information phone 561-3265. Windows XP, I & II: If you have a system with Windows XP JUST A CLICK AWAY and are already comfortable with a mouse and can do what is described in the Basic course, this is the next good entry point. The following are web sites which can help you locate services This course covers how to generate, remove and arrange which are vital to our senior citizens and their families. shortcuts (icons), how to use the Recycle Bin, and what the taskbar can do for you. Find out more information on the Start LEGAL SERVICES: button, Find/Search commands, document menus, and how to move and arrange files on your hard drive. Learn what title, • www.nsclc.org menu, and tool bars do and how to change them. Learn how • www.seniorlaw.com and why to use multiple windows to run more than one program at a time. Make the Help program work for you. We FINANCIAL SERVICES: recommend that you know the material in Basic and Windows XP before taking one of the more advanced courses. Instructor: Jerry Stewart/Don Bricker • www.aarp.org • www.retirenet.com Basic Internet: This course provides a tour of what to see and • www.ssa.gov where to go on the internet. Learn about E-mail, search engines, chat rooms, newsgroups, and other internet offerings. MEDICAL SERVICES: Learn how to download Internet software, text, or photos into your computer. Prerequisites for this course are the skills • www.alz.org taught in Windows I. Instructor: Al Whipple • www.americanheart.org • www.ama-assn.org Photo Editing: You will learn how to enter your pictures • www.healthopedia.com from a digital camera, scanner, or Internet into your PC and • www.huntsmancancer.org how to edit those pictures using Photoshop Elements. You will learn how to store your pictures for future use and how to • www.medicare.gov transmit them via E-mail. You will learn how to manipulate • www.medlineplus.gov them for size and visual quality, how to store them in original • www.55plusbook.org and compressed formats and how to print them. You will be • www.firstgov.gov introduced to layering techniques which will allow making • www.aoa.gov collages for display or publication. Prerequisites for this • www.benefitscheckup.org course are the skills taught in Windows XP. Instructor: Don • www.slcoagingservices.org Ramey & Rayna Scott.

FUN: Word Processing: This course is taught using Word Perfect. The first three classes are 100% compatible with Microsoft • www.seniornet.org Word. The commands and techniques taught in the last are in • www.utahwalks.org different places in Word and are also demonstrated on the instructor's machine. Check spelling and grammar, special

White City News 5 formatting, adding graphics and other word processing Windows Vista I & II: If you have a system with Windows techniques are covered in this course. Prerequisites for this Vista and already comfortable and have been through basics, course are the skills taught in Windows XP. Instructor: Kay this course covers how to generate, remove and arrange Adair shortcuts (icons), how to use the Recycle Bin, and what the taskbar can do for you. Find out more information on the Start E-Bay Basics: Upon completion of this course, students will button, Find/Search commands, and document menus and how be able to register on eBay, Browse and Search for items to to move and arrange files on your hard drive. We will cover buy, Bid and buy items, Create a Seller's account and list items all of the new features of Vista: major changes include search, for sell. The course includes techniques on how best to sell togging, indexing, side bar, DVD burning software and and how to avoid scams. When you sign up for this class, be features that work in the background without your knowledge. sure to ask for the eBay package which tells you what you Instructors: Jerry Stewart/Don Bricker need to bring to class to sign up as a seller on E-Bay. Instructor: Richard Nelson Schedule is normally four weeks long, and a one week break for Instructor's meeting and computer clean up, Computer Video Production Class: In this 8-week computer course the Club meeting and special seminars. students learn how to use the computer to compose and make a video (slide show or a movie); one that can be shown on the If you see a course you would like to take not on the current home computer monitor or on TV screen. Using a Window schedule, be sure to sign up on the interest survey on the desks Movie Maker, slide making techniques and make 5-10 minutes next to the meals check-in desk or ask someone at the front of your OWN DVD; telling their own "story" with still or desk to sign you up. If we don’t yet offer a course on a subject moving pictures, text, voice, and music. Instructor: Alex let us know and we will see if we can get an instructor if there Hoshovsky is enough interest. Classes are limited to ten (10) students, be sure to notify us if you will not be able to take the course and Creating Greeting Cards: This class will teach you how to someone on standby may be able to take your place. use greeting card software for your home computer. It provides the way to make cards for any occasion, thank you notes, or use the same program to make banners, flyers, calendars or posters. No previous computer classes or 2008 Elections………are experience is necessary. Instructor: Maxine Anderson

Typing Class: If you want to learn how to type on your the most important yet. computer, this is where you want to start. Or if you want to improve your typing skills, this is the class for you. Mavis Beacon program is tailored for each individual student who If everyone registers to wants to sharpen their typing skills. Instructor: Kay Adair vote, we can shape and Spreadsheet: In this class you will learn the basic elements of the worksheet, workbook and the cell. It will teach you to move around in the worksheet, to make extra rows and claim responsibility for columns, to add column of numbers and to use formulas, etc. Instructor: Janet Land, Frank Apa, Cari Curtis the future.

Family Search (PAF): Learn how to use the features provided by Personal Ancestry File (PAF), You will learn how to build your genealogical family trees, research sources, date and Register to vote! Every build your family relationships through the information provided by this program. Instructor: Dan Rees Vote Counts!

Windows Vista for XP Users: This course is for people that had been using Win XP or older windows operating system. visit: http://www.clerk.slc We will cover all of the new features of Vista, i.e., major changes include search, togging, indexing, side bar, DVD burning software and features that work in the background o.org/Elections/html/Regi without your knowledge. Instructor: Jerry Stewart sterFormInstr.html

White City News 6 Township Survey Update chance to revue or vote on, Sandy City is not how government was intended to operate. Also, for the The Township survey that was required to be record, as part of the Township survey process, conducted by the cities and the county will be Sandy City signed an interlocal agreement which coming in your mailbox in the next few months. You bound them to abide by a set of rules that will be asked to choose between creating a new city prohibited them from soliciting the property owners for your area, annexing into Sandy City, remaining as of the Townships with materials that were not a Township, or dissolving the Township and going approved by the Township Survey Team. Needless back to an unprotected unincorporated area. As you to say, their current ad campaign was not approved ponder the materials that will be sent to educate by the Township survey team. you on this issue prior to the survey, please consider the following things that have occurred during the “Hold onto your wallets, process: Sandy City wants you!”

1. The survey is “non-binding.” Just because you This is pretty gloomy stuff – no doubt about it. make a choice, and that choice is overwhelmingly But there are some things you can do to make chosen, doesn’t mean the legislature will accept it. this still come out the way you want it to. Even if the Township property owners choose they want to remain as Townships doesn’t mean it will 1. Do your “Due Diligence.” Study the educational happen. Given the rules on Townships are no longer materials and don’t be afraid to do your own the same statewide in the law. There is going to be research. Make sure you have enough information additional lobbying that will need to be done to that you are comfortable with your choice on the defend your choice. survey.

2. The educational materials don’t paint the whole 2. Fill out the survey. It is the only way to picture. The educational materials you will receive insure your voice is heard. to help you make your choice provide a very limited amount of information on which you will be basing 3. Make sure your neighbors fill out their your decision. Unless you are a tax expert, the surveys. By having them fill them out, too, the financial educational tools you will receive will not results will send a strong message to the powers provide you the necessary financial information for that be, who will be using this information to make you to be able to make an informed choice. the choices that are going to affect us. A “low Even without considering Sandy City’s special turnout” will doom the results. improvement “fee” assessments, you still need to realize all of their citywide fees and taxes have 1. Be prepared to defend your choice with your them paying considerably more in a municipal legislators. Just answering the survey, regardless burden than you are paying today. of the results is going to be enough on its own. Call

your legislators and tell them why you chose the 3. Sandy City does not “Play Fair.” Openness and way you chose, and to support your choice. transparency of government process are the cornerstones of good government and governance. It’s too bad Sandy City has neither. From the backroom deals that brought us Real Stadium to the backroom deals that currently levy over 300 “special service areas” that no resident ever got a

White City News 7 2007 Property Tax / Municipal Funding

Burden Comparison for White City vs. Sandy

Primary ****Storm Residential **Energy water Street Certified Taxable Trash and Use ***Telecom Utility Fee Lighting Total Property Amount Collection Fee (Annual Franchise Fee (Annual Fee (Annual Municipal Tax Rate (Per 100k) Fee Cost) (Annual Cost) Cost) Cost) Costs Difference White City 0.002072 $113.96 $132.00 $245.96 Sandy 0.001252 $68.86 $144.00 $72.00 $42.00 $60.00 $60.00 $446.86 $200.90

Sandy City uses Special Improvement Districts (SID) to fund infrastructure upgrades to bring an area up to Sandy City Standards Sandy City has historical track record of establishing multiple infrastructure SID's on an area for itemization and accounting purposes ** Energy and use fee based on average utility cost of $100 a month *** Telecom franchise fee costs based on average telecom bill of $100 a month **** Stormwater Utility based on ERU from City's Website All tax rates used are based on information from "Truth in Taxation" municipal filings on the State of Utah Website

Municipal Burden Comparison

Primary Residential White Assessed Value City Sandy

$100,000 $246 $447 $200,000 $360 $516 $300,000 $474 $585 $400,000 $588 $653 $500,000 $702 $722 $600,000 $816 $791 $700,000 $930 $860 $800,000 $1,044 $929

White City News 8

Remain Township, Annex, Incorporate or Unincorporated To review the feasibility study done by Wikstrom August 2007 go Salt Lake County Government web site or White City’s web site. http://www.slco.org/07to09Events/townshipFeasibility/townshipFeasibility.pdf or http://www.whitecityutah.org/ House Bill 40 OPEN HOUSE

February 21, 2008

4:00 PM to 9:00 PM

@ Eastmont Middle School

10100 S. 1300 E.

In Cafeteria on the 2nd Floor

Salt Lake County Education Committee on HB 40 has retained the ’s Center for Public Policy & Administration to present data in relation to all unincorporated areas within Salt Lake County. We have scheduled them to do the open house for the southeast quadrant of the Salt Lake Valley which includes:

Granite, Sandy Hills, White City &Willow Canyon

Surveys will be run throughout Salt Lake County the middle of March 2008. Legislature will decide our fate in 2010! For additional information Town Hall meetings need to be scheduled by the first week in March. Contact [email protected] or [email protected] for information as to how to get informed. (Review maps on back to determine which community you live in.)

White City News 9 13 PO BOX 977 26 368 E 600 S 40 Lynn N Hemingway 1513 ASHFORD DR 53 Melvin R Brown PO BOX 697 HOUSE OF (R) CLEARFIELD UT 84089 (D) UT 84111 (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84124 (R) 255 E SPRING CANYON RD REPRESENTATIVES Davis Home (801) 774−0624 Minority Whip Home (801) 596−0187 Salt Lake Cell (801) 231−2153 Daggett, Morgan, COALVILLE UT 84017 Work (801) 776−5139 Salt Lake Cell (801) 792−7172 Rich, Summit, Home (435) 336−3309 1 17680 N 5200 W Cell (801) 725−2719 41 Todd E Kiser 10702 S 540 E Wasatch Cell (435) 901−1729 (R) GARLAND UT 84312 27 John Dougall PO BOX 771 (R) SANDY UT 84070 Fax (435) 336−3308 Box Elder, Home (435) 458−9115 14 PO BOX 824 (R) AMERICAN FORK 84003 Tooele Office (435) 797−3728 (R) CLEARFIELD UT 84089 Utah Home/Office (801) 492−1365 Salt Lake Home (801) 571−0179 54 Gordon E Snow 1046 W 290 S (511−5) Davis Home (801) 773−9796 Office (801) 266−6800 (R) ROOSEVELT UT 84066 2 Ben C Ferry 905 N 6800 W Cell (801)898−6875 28 Roz McGee 2552 E 1700 S Majority Whip Home (435) 722−4162 (R) CORINNE UT 84307 Fax (801) 773−3185 (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84108 42 5111 WEST WOODWORTH Duchesne, Uintah Office (435) 722−4403 Box Elder Home/Office (435) 744−2997 Salt Lake Home/Office (801) 583−6039 (R) WEST JORDAN UT 84084 Wasatch Fax (435) 722−9111 Cache Fax (435) 744−2999 15 Douglas C Aagard 1055 W 150 S Salt Lake Home (801) 280−9056 (R) KAYSVILLE UT 84037 29 Janice M Fisher 6411 W 3785 S Office (801) 282−4112 55 John G Mathis 384 E 2500 S 3 Jack R Draxler 1946 N 1650 E Davis Home (801) 546−3935 (D) WEST VALLEY CITY UT 84128 (R) VERNAL UT 84078 (R) NORTH LOGAN UT 84341 Office (801) 778−8384 Salt Lake Home (801) 250−2698 43 Wayne A Harper 6683 S NOTTINGHAM Grand, Home (435) 789−7316 Cache Home (435) 752−2668 DR Uintah 16 Kevin S Garn 2206 E SUMMERWOOD 30 Jackie Biskupski 753 E ROOSEVELT (R) WEST JORDAN UT 84084 4 Fred R Hunsaker 1190 N 1700 E DR AVE Salt Lake Home (801) 566−5466 56 Kenneth W Sumsion PO BOX 1475 (R) LOGAN UT 84341 (R) LAYTON UT 84040 (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84105 (R) AMERICAN FORK UT 84003 Cache, Rich Home (435) 753−1850 Davis Home (801) 544−3533 Salt Lake Home (801) 484−8369 44 Tim M Cosgrove 477 E 6325 S Utah Cell (801) 404−8225 Cell (435) 757−0184 Office (801) 776−0232 (D) MURRAY UT 84107 Fax (801) 776−0214 31 Larry B. Wiley 1450 W 3300 S Salt Lake Home (801) 685−0673 57 Craig A Frank 825 E 1300 N 5 R Curt Webb 233 N MAIN (D) WEST VALLEY CITY UT 84119 (R) PLEASANT GROVE UT 84062 (R) LOGAN UT 84321 17 Julie Fisher 865 S ORCHARD CT Salt Lake Home (801) 487−8095 45 Mark W Walker 887 E NIGHTHAWK DR Utah Home (801) 785−6652 Cache Home (435) 753−0215 (R) FRUIT HEIGHTS UT 84037 Office (801) 520−8051 (R) SANDY UT 84094 Office (801) 362−3171 Office (435) 753−2467 Davis Home (801) 544−2229 Salt Lake Home (801) 562−2051 Cell (801) 362−3171 32 Ron Bigelow 4658 WATERWOOD DR Office (801) 594−8290 6 Kerry W Gibson 5454 W 1150 S 18 Roger E Barrus 322 E 500 N (R) WEST VALLEY CITY UT 84120 Cell (801) 541−0273 58 Stephen E Sandstrom 1775 SKYLINE (R) OGDEN UT 84404 (R) CENTERVILLE UT 84014 Salt Lake Home (801) 968−4188 DR Weber Home (801) 731−8071 Davis Home (801) 292−2266 46 Karen W Morgan 8378 AUSTRIAN WAY (R) Utah OREM UT 84097 Office (801) 940−0475 33 Neal B Hendrickson 3402 W 4100 S (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84121 Home (801) 224−2194 Cell (801) 710−5220 19 Sheryl L Allen 620 LARSEN DR (D) WEST VALLEY CITY UT 84119 Salt Lake Home (801) 943−0067 Office (801) 229−0088 Fax ( 801) 731−5471 (R) BOUNTIFUL UT 84010 Salt Lake Home (801) 969−8920 Office (801) 538−1029 Cell (801) 592−3502 Davis Home (801) 295−8576 Fax (801) 943−9614 Fax (801) 229−0089 7 Glenn A Donnelson 874 E 2100 N Office (801) 402−5416 34 Kory M Holdaway 4352 RUPP CT (R) NORTH OGDEN UT 84414 (R) TAYLORSVILLE UT 84119 47 Steven R Mascaro 3075 W 9050 S 59 Lorie D Fowlke 596 W 1200 N Weber Home (801) 782−2640 20 Paul Neuenschwander 4216 S Salt Lake Home (801) 964−6360 (R) WEST JORDAN UT 84088 (R) OREM UT 84057 FOOTHILL CIR Office (801) 646−5455 Salt Lake Home (801) 569−2719 Utah Home (801) 225−0721 8 P O BOX 379 (R) BOUNTIFUL UT 84010 Fax (801) 646−5457 Office (801) 965−8145 Office (801) 375−5600 (R) HUNTSVILLE UT 84317 Davis Home (801) 292−3348 Cell (801) 201−2913 Fax (801) 375−5607 Weber Home (801) 745−0505 Salt Lake Cell (801) 255−3971 35 Mark A Wheatley 447 E MOSS CREEK Office (801) 621−0505 DR 48 Sylvia S Andersen 2672 DIMPLE DELL 60 Bradley M Daw 842 E 280 S Cell (801) 391−4233 21 James R Gowans 240 S 200 W (D) MURRAY UT 84107 RD (R) OREM UT 84097 Fax (801) 621−0506 (D) TOOELE UT 84074 Salt Lake Home (801) 264−8844 (R) SANDY UT 84092 Tooele Home (435) 882−2120 Salt Lake Home (801) 942−2843 61 Keith Grover 1374 W 1940 N 9 Neil A Hansen 1031 CAPITOL ST 36 Phil Riesen 4382 S 2900 E Fax (801) 495−3713 (R) PROVO UT 84604 (D) OGDEN UT 84401 22 Carl W Duckworth 2901 S 8750 W (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84124 Utah Cell (801) 319−0170 Weber Home (801) 393−1514 (D) MAGNA UT 84044 Min. Caucus Mgr. Home (801) 272−6188 49 Greg J Curtis 350 NORTH STATE Fax (801) 356−2442 Cell (801) 564−0862 Salt Lake Home (801) 250−0728 Salt Lake Cell (801) 560−3055 STREET Fax (801) 392−8011 (R) Suite 350 62 Christopher N Herrod 4125 Speaker 23 Jennifer M Seelig 986 W STERLING DR 37 2712 E KELLY SALT LAKE CITY UT 84114−5030 CRESTVIEW AVE 10 LaWanna “Lou” Shurtliff 5085 AZTEC (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 LANE Salt Lake Home (801) 943−3091 (R) PROVO UT 84604 DR Salt Lake Home (801) 519−2544 (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84117 Office (801) 538−1930 Utah Home (801) 375−9624 (D) OGDEN UT 84403 Office (801) 924−9892 Asst. Minority Whip Home (801) 272−6507 Weber Home (801) 479−0289 Salt Lake Cell (801) 647−8764 50 Merlynn T Newbold 10454 S 1440 W 63 Stephen D Clark 968 E FIR AVE 24 Rebecca Chavez−Houck 643 E 16TH (R) SOUTH JORDAN UT 84095 (R) PROVO UT 84604 11 Brad L Dee 111 W 5600 S AVE 38 Eric K Hutchings 5438 W STONY Salt Lake Home (801) 254−0142 Utah Home (801) 374−6927 (R) OGDEN UT 84405 (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84103 RIDGE CIR Office (801) 863−7289 Asst. Majority Whip Home (801) 479−5495 Salt Lake Home (801) 466−9292 (R) KEARNS UT 84118 51 Gregory H Hughes 472 MIDLAKE DR Fax (801) 863−7071 Davis, Weber Office (801) 399−8623 Salt Lake Home (801) 963−2639 (R) DRAPER UT 84020 25 Christine A Johnson 1336 E 900 S Salt Lake Home (801) 572−5305 64 Rebecca D Lockhart 1754 S NEVADA 12 Richard Greenwood 3704 W 6050 S (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84105 39 James A Dunnigan 3073 EUGENE HILL Office (801) 548−2922 AVE (R) ROY UT 84067 Salt Lake, Cell (801) 661−3489 WAY (R) PROVO UT 84606 Weber Home (801) 985−3280 Summit (R) TAYLORSVILLE UT 84118 52 5526 W 13400 S #108 Utah Home (801) 377−7428 Salt Lake Home (801) 968−8594 (R) HERRIMAN UT 84096 Cell (801) 369−6784 Office (801) 840−1800 Salt Lake Cell (801) 254−5981

White City News 10 65 Aaron Tilton 350 STATE CAPITOL Fax (801) 521−6456 14 John L Valentine 857 E 970 N 26 Kevin T Van Tassell 3424 W 1500 N (R) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84114 (R) OREM UT 84097 (R) VERNAL UT 84078 Minority Office (801) Utah Home (801) 491−2051 2 Scott D McCoy 560 E 700 S President Home (801) 224−1693 Daggett, Duchesne, Home (435) 789−0724 Cell (801) 361−5881 (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84102 Utah Office (801) 373−6345 Summit, Uintah, Office (435) 789−7082 538−1406 Salt Lake Home (801) 359−2544 Fax (801) 377−4991 Wasatch Fax (435) 789−8411 66 Michael T Morley 678 W 350 N Office (801)533−8383 (R) SPANISH FORK UT 84660 15 97 W WESTVIEW DR 27 Mike Dmitrich 566 N DOVER CIR Utah Cell (801) 636−0296 3 865 PARKWAY AVE (R) OREM UT 84058 (D) PRICE UT 84501 (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84106 Utah Home (801) 221−0623 Minority Leader Home (435) 637−0426 67 Patrick L Painter 1100 N MAIN Minority Whip Home (801) 484−9428 Fax (801) 221−2513 Carbon, Emery, Office (801) 538−1406 (R) NEPHI UT 84648 Salt Lake Fax (801) 484−9442 Grand, San Juan Cell (801) 580−6128 Carbon, Juab, Home (435) 623−5139 16 Curtis S Bramble 3663 N 870 E Utah Minority Fax (801) Sanpete, Utah Office (435) 623−0687 4 Patricia W Jones 4571 SYCAMORE DR (R) PROVO UT 84604 Cell (435) 660−1147 (D) HOLLADAY UT 84117 Majority Leader Home (801) 226−3663 28 Dennis E Stowell PO BOX 796 326−1476 Fax (435) 623−2265 Salt Lake Home (801) 278−7667 Utah Office (801) 373−1040 (R) PAROWAN UT 84761 Asst. Minority Office (801) 322−5722 Fax (801) 812−8297 Beaver, Garfield, Home (435) 477−8143 TTY (801) 326−1494 68 Bradley A Winn 651 E 100 N Leader Fax (801) 322−5725 Iron, Kane, Millard, Cell (435) 559−8143 (R) EPHRAIM UT 84627 17 Peter C Knudson 1209 MICHELLE Washington Fax (435) 477−8111 Juab, Millard Home (435) 283−5156 5 5044 W BANNOCK CIR DRIVE Sanpete Office (435) 851−2002 (D) WEST VALLEY CITY UT 84120 (R) BRIGHAM CITY UT 84302 29 John W (Bill) Hickman 214 N HOUSE OF Fax (435) 283−7304 Salt Lake Home (801) 968−7756 Box Elder, Cache Home (435) 723−2035 EMERAUD DR Tooele Office (435) 723−6366 (R) ST GEORGE UT 84770 REPRESENTATIVES 69 Brad King 635 N 500 E 6 Michael G Waddoups 2868 W Fax (435) 723−6371 Washington Home (435) 673−2671 (D) PRICE UT 84501 MATTERHORN DR 18 Jon J Greiner 4232 FERN DR Office (435) 674−5203 Minority Leader Home (435) 613−5246 (R) WEST JORDAN UT 84084 (R) OGDEN UT 84403 Carbon, Emery, Office (435) 637−7955 Salt Lake Home (801) 967−0225 Davis, Weber Home (801) 621−0423 Speaker of the Garfield, Grand Fax (435) 637−2433 Office (801) 355−1136 Office (435) 629−8226 ROSTER San Juan, Wayne House 7 Ross I Romero 1150 S 1400 E 19 Allen M Christensen 1233 E 2250 N FIFTY−SEVENTH 70 Kay McIff 225 N 100 E (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84105 (R) NORTH OGDEN UT 84414 (R) RICHFIELD UT 84701 Salt Lake Home (801) 364−2451 Morgan, Summit, Home (801) 782−5600 LEGISLATURE Emery, Office (435) 896−4461 Office (801) 844−7229 Weber Greg J. Curtis Sanpete, Cell (801) 608−4331 Fax (801) 328−0537 STATE OF UTAH Sevier 20 Scott K Jenkins 4385 W 1975 N 350 State Capitol 8 Carlene M Walker 4085 E PROSPECTOR (R) PLAIN CITY UT 84404 71 Bradley G Last 640 E 700 S SUITE 303 DR Weber Home (801) 731−5120 PO Box 145030 (R) ST GEORGE UT 84770 (R) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84121 Office (801) 621−5412 http://le.utah.gov Washington Home (435) 635−7334 Salt Lake Office (801) 733−4599 Salt Lake City UT Office (435) 673−8666 Fax (801) 942−4085 21 Sheldon Killpack 3406 S 875 W 2007−2008 (R) SYRACUSE UT 84075 84114−5030 72 DeMar “Bud” Bowman 109 N 800 W 9 Wayne L Niederhauser 3182 E GRANITE Asst. Majority Whip Home (801) 773−5486 (R) CEDAR CITY UT 84720 WOODS LANE Davis (801) 538−1029 Iron Home (435) 586−8174 (R) SANDY UT 84092 SENATE Salt Lake Home (801) 942−3398 22 Greg Bell 744 EAGLE WAY 73 Michael E Noel PO BOX 301 Office (801) 984−5770 (R) FRUIT HEIGHTS UT 84037 President of the (R) KANAB UT 84741 Fax (1−866) 283−7751 Davis Office (801) 971−2001 Fax (801) 326−1544 Beaver, Garfield, Iron Office (435) 644−3996 Senate Kane, Piute, Sevier, Cell (435) 647−8853 10 D Chris Buttars 9241 S LISA AVE 23 Dan R Eastman 968 CANYON CREST Washington, Wayne Fax (435) 616−5603 (R) WEST JORDAN UT 84088 DR John L. Valentine Salt Lake Home (801) 561−0535 (R) BOUNTIFUL UT 84010 Minority Fax (801) 74 David Clark 1831 RED MOUNTAIN Fax (801) 561−3242 Majority Whip Home (801) 295−5133 320 State Capitol (R) SANTA CLARA UT 84765 Davis Fax (801) 296−6460 326−1539 Majority Leader Home (435) 628−5108 11 Howard A Stephenson 1038 E 13590 S P O Box 145115 Washington Office (435) 634−5123 (R) DRAPER UT 84020 24 Darin G Peterson 838 N 800 E TTY (801) 326−1540 Salt Lake Home (801) 576−1022 (R) NEPHI UT 84648 Salt Lake City UT 75 Stephen H Urquhart 37 W 1070 S Utah Office (801) 972−8814 Juab, Piute, Sanpete, Home (435) 623−2271 SUITE 102 Sevier, Tooele, Wayne Cell (435) 660−1160 84114−5115 (R) ST GEORGE UT 84770 12 Brent H Goodfellow 3620 S 6000 W Washington Home (435) 673−4424 (D) WEST VALLEY CITY UT 84128 25 Lyle W Hillyard 595 S RIVERWOODS (801) 538−1035 Office (435) 656−4424 Minority Caucus Home (801) 968−0626 PKWY STE 100 Fax (435) 673−1444 Manager Cell (801) 556−4871 (R) LOGAN UT 84321 Salt Lake, Tooele Cache, Rich Home (435) 753−0043 Office (435) 752−2610 Fax (801) 326−1475 13 Mark B Madsen PO BOX 572 Fax (435) 753−8895 1 Fred J Fife III 842 W 900 S (R) LEHI UT 84043 (D) SALT LAKE CITY UT 84104 Tooele, Utah Cell (801) 361−4787 Salt Lake Home (801) 521−7383

White City News 11 Over the next two years, we will have to educate many of our citizens on how to lobby our Legislators and Senators. We have always had citizen Lobbyists in our communities throughout Salt Lake County. It has been a wonderful experience. Anyone wishing to get involved in learning how to lobby please contact Art Kimball, Troy Blundell, Paulina Flint and or any of the council members listed on the first page of this newsletter. It is truly an exciting process to see words on a page become law. We live in a time where so much is at stake. We can have our voices heard if we educate ourselves to the process. We have included lists of Utah’s Legislators and Senators for your use. It is important for us to understand that we have family living all over the state. It is not hard to have our relatives lobby their elected officials on our behalf. They listen to their constituents. If you have questions on how you can be affective please give any of us a call. As a community we have been very successful over the years.

White City News 12