『435 Podcast: Southern Utah』のカバーアート

435 Podcast: Southern Utah

435 Podcast: Southern Utah

著者: Robert MacFarlane
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Explore the heartbeat of Southern Utah with the 435 Podcast, your go-to source for all things local in Washington County. Stay ahead of the curve with our in-depth coverage, expert analysis, and captivating interviews. Whether you're a resident or visitor, our podcast is your key to unlocking the latest happenings and trends in St. George and the surrounding areas. Tune in now to stay informed and connected with our thriving community!

© 2025 435 Podcast: Southern Utah
政治・政府
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  • How a 31-year-old plans to balance open space, attainable housing, and smart growth in Ivins
    2025/10/07

    Send us a text

    Want to know how a small city can protect its red rock vistas and still welcome new families? We sit down with a 31-year-old Ivins candidate who makes a clear, practical case for balancing heritage, housing, and modern city management—without turning the place into another resort corridor. He shares how growing up in Ivins, interning at the Utah Capitol, and working on statewide campaigns shaped a leadership style that blends clear principles with real listening, especially to younger residents who rarely see themselves on the council.

    We dig into attainable housing mandates from the state and what a thoughtful, design-first response looks like: mixed housing near parks and paths, duplexes and quads that match neighborhood character, and targeted density along Highway 91 where infrastructure can support it. On the revenue side, we get into property taxes, constrained city funding models, and why smarter tools—like a narrowly scoped sales tax for public safety and even autonomous mowers to free staff for higher-impact work—can stretch dollars without sacrificing service. Throughout, he argues for a walkable fabric of small businesses—clinics, family restaurants, kid-friendly activities—that keep life local and sales tax steady.

    Environmental protection is non-negotiable: water planning with the conservancy district, protecting Night Sky and Snow Canyon viewsheds, and accelerating land trusts through the Open Spaces Committee to preserve working farms and the rural feel. He also calls for a digital-first civic process: opt-in alerts for zone changes, short resident surveys, and regular plan updates so the data guiding decisions stays current. It’s a candid, hopeful blueprint for a city that holds on to what it loves while making room for who’s next.

    Please make sure you like and subscribe, share it with other voters throughout Washington County to help them make informed decisions in the upcoming election. Visit VoteSTG.com for more candidate interviews.

    Looking for a Real Estate expert? Find us here!

    www.wealth435.com
    https://linktr.ee/wealth435

    Below are our wonderful friends!

    Find FS Coffee here:
    https://fscoffeecompany.com/

    Find Tuacahn Amphitheater here:
    https://www.tuacahn.org/

    Find Blue Form Media here:
    https://www.blueformmedia.com/

    [00:00:00] Series Kickoff: 2025 Municipal Focus
    [00:06:35] Tragedy, Civic Wake‑Ups, and Engagement
    [00:09:45] Why Run: Experience from Capitol to Campaigns
    [00:13:10] Leadership Philosophy: Trusteeship vs. Delegation
    [00:20:45] Pragmatism, Principles, and Finding Middle Ground
    [00:28:30] Taxes, Revenue Limits, and Policy Tradeoffs
    [00:38:20] Data, Notices, and Smarter Civic Tools
    [00:46:30] Heritage vs. Innovation: Preserving Open Space
    [00:50:20] Mixed Housing, Density, and Design

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    51 分
  • Managing Growth Without Losing Small-Town Soul in Hurricane
    2025/10/04

    Send us a text

    Want the real story behind “managing growth” in a fast-changing town? We sit down with Hurricane’s mayoral candidates for a candid, side-by-side look at how zoning, infrastructure, and budgets determine whether a city keeps its soul while adding homes, roads, and services. We dig into the general plan’s role in preventing costly pivots, why density—more than raw population—is the key lever leaders can pull, and how water, power, sewer, and access act as hard gates on what gets built and when.

    Water takes center stage. You’ll hear where will-serve letters help—and where they fall short—plus the nuts and bolts of reuse: Type 1 irrigation, trunk lines, and the Confluence Park buildout that shifts pristine spring water back into homes. We talk real costs, from treatment plants that inflated from $24M to $38M, to the reality that water will keep getting pricier. Power isn’t far behind: coal retirements, stalled nuclear prospects, and storage-limited renewables complicate the resource mix, even as Hurricane maintains backup generation and shares in regional plants.

    If you’ve ever wondered why “affordable housing” rarely shows up next door, this conversation goes beyond slogans. We break down lot sizes, and why smaller, deed-restricted pockets spread through neighborhoods can support young families without creating high-rise blocks. We also get honest about impact fees—they’re cost allocation, not a growth throttle—and how zero-based budgeting, under-forecasted revenues, and cash-funding capital projects keep the city resilient. Finally, we challenge the idea that “small-town feel” means freezing time. It’s built by open doors at city hall, events like Peach Days, and a culture that welcomes newcomers while honoring property rights and a shared plan.

    Please make sure you like and subscribe, share it with other voters throughout Washington County to help them make informed decisions in the upcoming election. Visit VoteSTG.com for more candidate interviews.

    Looking for a Real Estate expert? Find us here!

    www.wealth435.com
    https://linktr.ee/wealth435

    Below are our wonderful friends!

    Find FS Coffee here:
    https://fscoffeecompany.com/

    Find Tuacahn Amphitheater here:
    https://www.tuacahn.org/

    Find Blue Form Media here:
    https://www.blueformmedia.com/

    [00:00:00] Intro and welcome
    [00:04:06] Stick to the General Plan or Pay Later
    [00:10:18] Water Reality: Will-Serve Letters and Risk
    [00:16:48] Power Supply Constraints and Regulation
    [00:20:12] Sewer Capacity, Treatment Plants, and Cost Inflation
    [00:31:12] Resorts, Short-Term Rentals, and Balance
    [00:38:10] Incentives, Impact Fees Timing, and Market Frictions
    [00:46:20] Impact Fees: Costs, Myths, and Drainage Gaps
    [00:51:10] Budgeting Philosophy: Zero-Based and Cash-Funded Projects
    [00:56:00] Campaign Climate, Civility, and Voter Guidance

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    1 時間 9 分
  • What should a mayor do when public comment turns toxic, budgets tighten, and traffic swells?
    2025/09/30

    Send us a text

    Growth doesn’t wait for perfect alignment, and neither should we. This conversation with Mayor Michele Randall digs into the choices shaping Southern Utah right now: a Northern Corridor designed to relieve real congestion, a beloved Zone Six worth protecting, and a Western Corridor that shouldn’t split SunRiver’s sense of place. We walk the ground-level details—UDOT influence, MPO dynamics, SITLA’s school-funding mandate, and federal timelines—so you can judge the trade-offs with clear eyes.

    We also trace how traffic and housing connect. St. George’s topography and past land-use shifts created choke points that neighborhood commercial can finally ease. Think daily needs embedded near homes, fewer cross-town trips, and smarter corridors that carry regional growth without turning downtown into a freeway. On the housing front, Michele backs practical flexibility: ADUs in every zone, mixed-style neighborhoods, studio and mid-rise apartments near jobs like Tech Ridge, and a faster, clearer path through approvals. Affordability isn’t solved by slogans—it’s zoning, timing, and supply that work together.

    Budgets matter because priorities do. You’ll hear the unvarnished timeline behind the proposed property tax increase, why the council reversed course at truth-in-taxation, and how the city still funded core public safety—new stations, equipment, and a majority of planned positions—by cutting elsewhere and tapping capital funds. We get into the city’s new budgeting approach where council priorities lead and departments build to outcomes: safer streets, maintained roads, reliable parks, responsive services.

    Along the way, we confront labels and look at leadership. Michele argues that a nonpartisan mayor meets with everyone, protects heritage with context (from national historic status for the Sugar Loaf and the “D” to a new interpretive trail), and keeps the focus on what makes daily life better. She addresses attendance rumors head-on, shares her health journey, and emphasizes how city work continued seamlessly with strong staff and open channels—public comment rebuilt, online submissions live, and direct contact by phone and email.

    Please make sure you like and subscribe, share it with other voters throughout Washington County to help them make informed decisions in the upcoming election. Visit VoteSTG.com for more candidate interviews.

    Looking for a Real Estate expert? Find us here!

    www.wealth435.com
    https://linktr.ee/wealth435

    Below are our wonderful friends!

    Find FS Coffee here:
    https://fscoffeecompany.com/

    Find Tuacahn Amphitheater here:
    https://www.tuacahn.org/

    Find Blue Form Media here:
    https://www.blueformmedia.com/

    [00:00:00] Intro and welcome.
    [00:03:40] Rebuilding Public Comment
    [00:12:45] Direct Access: Calls, Emails, Meetings
    [00:16:45] How Agendas Get Made
    [00:21:00] Northern Corridor: Support And Limits
    [00:28:10] Zone Six: Protect Or Build
    [00:33:40] Western Corridor And SunRiver
    [00:37:45] Traffic, Land Use, And Neighborhood Commercial
    [00:45:40] Zoning For Affordability: ADUs To Mixed Use
    [00:53:10] Density, Tech Ridge, And Housing Types
    [00:58:40] Budget, Taxes, And Public Safety Priorities

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    1 時間 2 分
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