Credit Park City Municipal
The Park City City Council held two meetings this week to discuss the future arts and culture district. KPCW’s Sean Higgins reports that although there is broad support for the idea of an arts district in Park CIty, councilors are divided over how important the project is to start now.
With an initial price tag of $70 million and skyrocketing real estate and construction costs projected to add 30% or more to the final bill, the future of the five acre parcel of land at the corner of Kearns Boulevard and Bonanza Drive as an arts and culture district for Park City has gotten a little complicated.
From Potbelly to Kitchen United to the National Restaurant Association, many brands changed their top executive this year
2020 – while unlike any other year – still had some consistencies with years past. Restaurant brands went bankrupt, mergers and acquisitions abounded, chains went public and new CEOs were named – 31, to be exact.
Some companies, like ghost-kitchen provider Kitchen United, Boston Market, Sysco and Punch Bowl Social, saw big public exits from the top roles. Boston Market’s former CEO Frances Allen and Sysco’s former CEO Tom Bené moved on to large and visible jobs at two other companies, Checkers and Rally’s and the National Restaurant Association, respectively.
Updated floor design gives JCSU s Brayboy Gym a refreshed look
Court shows off more wood, less paint
JOHNSON C. SMITH ATHLETICS
Johnson C. Smith s Brayboy Gym has a different look with improvements to the floor shared by men s and women s basketball and volleyball.
Home court has a new look for the Johnson C. Smith Golden Bulls.
The school’s remote fall semester offered time necessary to update Brayboy Gym’s floor, as students were not on campus due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Because of COVID-19, we had a lot of downtime where we didn’t have the student-athletes here,” said Golden Bulls Director of Athletics and head men’s basketball coach Steve Joyner, for whom the court is named after. “We were able to come in and spend as much time as we needed to get the look that we wanted and to get the court up and running.”
Credit Mark Maziarz / photoshelter.com The Park City City Council received a lengthy briefing on the financial health of the city at their meeting Thursday night. Despite relatively strong financials and better than expected summer sales tax numbers, the council is still worried about the months ahead.
There was actually quite a bit of good news at Thursday’s financial update to city council. Sales tax revenues have outperformed expectations this summer, Park City’s credit rating is good, even great, and the city’s capacity to take on debt is in really good shape.
Councilmember Steve Joyce told KPCW on Friday that despite the strong summer, winter will be a different challenge, and that makes him and his colleagues a little nervous.
Michelle Davies | The Journal Gazette
Fort Wayne Police Patrolman Ty Douglas looks for items for a 7-year-old girl while shopping at Meijer on Thursday morning as part of the annual Kops 4 Kids program. Previous Next
Friday, December 11, 2020 1:00 am
Kops 4 Kids different this year
Families helped unable to join shopping spree
JAMIE DUFFY | The Journal Gazette
Police Chief Steve Reed and his public information officer, Sgt. Sofia Rosales-Scatena, shopped for a little girl and her mother.
Officer Lisa Woods brought along her 13-year-old son, Colton, to help her make the holiday purchases.
They were part of a group of 18 Fort Wayne law enforcement officers who answered a last-minute call to keep up the tradition of Kops 4 Kids, even if it meant adapting to the demands of the coronavirus pandemic.