The Park City Council wants to delay building a new pedestrian tunnel underneath Kearns Boulevard. The council wants surrounding development to play out first.
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State transportation authorities are about to ramp up Interstate 80 work in Summit County.
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The U.S. Forest Service is facing a lawsuit over new efforts to improve aspen health in Ashley National Forest.
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Mayor Nann Worel's annual State of Park City speech was delayed in March due to a scheduling conflict. The city has produced a video to serve as a replacement.
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The Park City Education Foundation recognized nine individuals through the PCEF Excellent Educator Program this year. Winners were surprised Friday morning, April 26.
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The Heber Valley Chamber of Commerce hosted its spring tourism mixer Thursday morning, April 25.
Local News Hour Interviews
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The Utah Republican Party is set to select a nominee in the race to replace Mitt Romney in the U.S. Senate at its annual convention.
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The Alterra Mountain Company, which owns the Deer Valley and Solitude Mountain resorts in Utah, has purchased Mike Wiegele Helicopter Skiing in British Columbia, Canada.
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Delegates to the state GOP and Democratic party conventions on Saturday will choose which candidates will advance to Utah’s June primary and the November general election. And their decisions could put a definitive stamp on Utah’s political future.
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Mountain snow and rain are in the forecast for the Heber and Park City areas.
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“The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare,” is action director Guy Ritchie’s fictional tribute to a real-life mission which became the genesis for British special forces and inspired Ian Flemming’s James Bond novels.
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Multiple tornadoes were reported in Nebraska but the most destructive storm moved from a largely rural area into suburbs northwest of Omaha. Hundreds of homes and other structures have been damaged.
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A federal judge sentenced Joanna Smith to 60 days in prison for smearing paint on the case surrounding Edgar Degas' Little Dancer, Aged Fourteen at the National Gallery of Art.
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Health officials say there's very little risk to humans from the bird flu outbreak among dairy cattle, but there's still much they don't know. Here are four questions scientists are trying to answer.
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