SLC has a ‘big, bold’ plan for upgrading parks. Here’s what the $85M bond would buy.
If voters OK the largest one-time public lands investment in city history, it would bring new and better parks, trails and open spaces to the west and east sides.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) The Jordan River near Jordan Park in March 2022. Salt Lake City officials want to use money from a proposed $85 million bond to pay for improvements along the river.
Blake joined The Tribune in March 2022 to cover city and county government before becoming an editor in 2024. He is a University of Minnesota graduate who started his journalism career in Las Vegas, where he covered local government, state politics and the depletion of the Colorado River. He is dad to a Golden Retriever named Woodward.