Midvale City Newsletter | December 2022

Page 1

In The Middle of Everything MIDVALE CITY DIRECTORY City Hall Finance/Utilities Court City Attorney’s Office City Recorder/Human Resources Community Development Public Works Ace Disposal/Recycling Midvale Historical Museum Midvale Senior Center SL County Animal Services Communications

801-567-7200 801-567-7200 801-567-7265 801-567-7250 801-567-7228 801-567-7211 801-567-7235 801-363-9995 801-567-7285 385-468-3350 385-468-7387 801-567-7230

MIDVALE CITY ELECTED OFFICIALS MAYOR Marcus Stevenson 801-567-7204 Email: mstevenson@midvale.com CITY COUNCIL District 1 - Quinn Sperry Email: qsperry@midvale.com District 2 - Paul Glover Email: pglover@midvale.com District 3 - Heidi Robinson Email: Hrobinson@midvale.com District 4 - Bryant Brown Email: bbrown@midvale.com

WHO TO CALL FOR… Water Bills Ordering A New Trash Can Permits Court Paying For Traffic School Business Licensing Cemetery Planning and Zoning Code Enforcement Building inspections Graffiti

801-567-7200 801-567-7202 801-567-7213 801-567-7265 801-567-7202 801-567-7214 801-567-7235 801-567-7231 801-567-7208 801-567-7213 385-468-9769

PUBLIC SAFETY & EMERGENCY CONTACTS EMERGENCY UFA Fire/UPD Police > Non-emergency Unified Police Department > Midvale Precinct Public Works Rocky Mountain Power

City Hall – 7505 South Holden Street • Midvale, UT 84047

CITY NEWSLETTER

Marcus’s Message

By Mayor Marcus Stevenson

If you’ve ever watched a Midvale City Council meeting, you may have noticed that we often end the meeting and then immediately re-start again. That’s because our city council and I not only serve on the council, but also as board members for the Redevelopment Agency of Midvale City. The redevelopment agency (RDA) is a separate legal entity from our city, which overlaps in many ways, but serves the specific purpose of sparking revitalization and development. The State of Utah, with county approval, allows for cities to create these RDA project areas to encourage development in areas where the market has struggled to naturally do so. To help spark development, a project area shifts property taxes from their usual use back into the project area. As an example, on your property taxes, you pay amounts each year to the school district, county, city, public safety, etc., but if you live or own a business in one of our project areas, 60-80% of your property taxes are re-routed and reinvested directly back into the area in which you live or own your business. That property tax is then used to encourage development, revitalization, and support affordable housing initiatives. While most of the re-routed property tax is used for economic development, 20% must be designated for affordable housing, which can be used to help build housing units, support first-time home buyer programs, provide low-interest loans for home improvement projects, and more. Midvale City has three of these project areas: Bingham Junction, Jordan Bluffs, and Main Street.

BINGHAM JUNCTION PROJECT AREA

District 5 - Dustin Gettel Email: dgettel@midvale.com

911 801-840-4000 385-468-9350 801-567-7235 877-508-5088

DECEMBER 2022

to make them functional. So, while the area was remediated, the cost of developing in that area was much more expensive than developing elsewhere, which meant that our city struggled for many years to bring in new growth. When the project area was created, the agreement was that it would collect property taxes for 25 years. It began collecting in 2009, which means in 2034 those property taxes will shift back to their normal uses. This ability to shift property taxes back into itself has meant that the city has been able to support many of the costs that would not take place in normal circumstances and help make development feasible in this area. Today, after just 18 years, we have a bustling Bingham Junction with WinCo, Top Golf, Overstock headquarters, and many other businesses that have helped us reimagine that area, which used to be completely unusable land.

JORDAN BLUFFS PROJECT AREA

The Jordan Bluffs Project Area, which covers most of the southwest of our city, goes from Main Street to the Jordan River at its widest point and Center Street (7800 S) to our southern border at around 8600 S. This project area was also created in 2004 and is largely still in its infancy but is quickly changing. Most notably, the new Zions Bank Technology Center opened in this area earlier this year and in the last couple of years, we have seen many new housing units go up between Main Street and Bingham Junction Blvd. This project area will also last 25 years and was part of the old Sharon Steel site, having gone through the same remediation process as explained above. While a private company currently owns all this land that remains empty, our city is continually working diligently with them to ensure that this last remaining piece of land, of about 200 acres, is something that will truly benefit our community. While we can’t

The Bingham Junction Project Area, which covers most of the northwest of our city, goes from Holden Street to the Jordan River and from about Top Golf to Center Street (7800 S), was created in MAYOR’S MESSAGE CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE 2004 after the old Sharon Steel site had gone through years of environmental remediation. Unfortunately, the steel site used much of the western side of our city, near the Jordan River, as a dumping ground for the tailings left over from steel production. Because of this, the ground soil in that area contains poisonous arsenic. The remediation helped to make that area safe by adding in a waterproof cap on top of the poisoned ground, with clean soil on top of the cap. However, just adding in a cap does not make the tailings beneath stable for development on HAPPY top and a heavy building would sink into that ground, so special techniques must be used when building to avoid this. Further, water and sewer systems cannot be placed into the poisoned From Mayor Marcus Stevenson, Council Members Paul area beneath the cap, which means Glover, Dustin Gettel, Bryant Brown, Heidi Robinson and Quinn Sperry, and the employees at Midvale City systems that usually work because of gravity now need expensive pumps

Holidays!


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.