450 oppose sale of land for Ogden development

Petitions ask city, WSU not to sell for gondola and homes

Published: Tuesday, April 18, 2006 8:10 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
A plan to "revitalize" Ogden's east bench has prompted about 450 residents to sign petitions asking that land owned by the city and Weber State University not be sold to a developer who wants to build luxury homes and a gondola to the top of Snowbasin Ski Resort.

The petitions oppose developer Chris Peterson's plan to build a gated community on land that is now the Mount Ogden Golf Course and a gondola hub on land now owned by the university, said Mikel Vause, an English professor at Weber State. The general plan calls for building a ski resort midway up Mount Ogden, in Malan's Basin above the city, with a gondola ferrying people from downtown and the university.

Vause was one of over 250 faculty and staff members at the university who signed a petition asking Weber State's president, Ann Millner, not to sell university land for the development. John Kowalewski, a university spokesman, said that the president had received the petition Tuesday, but had not had a chance to review it yet.

"It just seems there is not much hard data," said Vause. "The community wants to have their say. It needs to be open to the public so that no one can point the finger and say someone did this underhandedly. Everything has been done in secret meetings, to select groups of people."

Story continues below

A separate petition, signed by about 200 residents, urges Ogden City not to sell the Mount Ogden Golf Course for the development. Last Thursday, the Ogden City Council and Mayor Matthew Godfrey heard an update about the project. Godfrey is an avid supporter of the development.

Dave Hardman, president and CEO of the Ogden/Weber Chamber of Commerce, said opposition to Peterson's plan stems from a general lack of knowledge about it. The project has and will continue to influence the economic viability of Ogden and the state, Hardman said in an interview Tuesday.

"There are people who don't want our community to change," he said.

Peterson declined to comment Tuesday on the proposed development. He is holding an open house today at Weber State to give details about the project and answer questions from the public. Display boards and a model gondola car will be on display.

Katie Barrett, a spokeswoman for Peterson, said Tuesday that he "believes the new development will help revitalize the city, put Weber State on the world map and stimulate growth."


E-mail: nwarburton@desnews.com

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Related content
previousnext

Latest comments

Didn't Obama and Biden just admit to the fact that the stimilus programs were...

The last part of the article about Cowherd is classic!!! I normally like the...

This man was my teacher in high school. He is my friend, he was like a father...

I like millsap, but portland just burried themselves. They made themselves...

It's amazing how quickly society is willing to vaccinate it's children with...

The first income tax was introduced during the Civil War, that's only 70...

If he really did what the evidence seems to show, I don't think he should be...

Utah needs Portland too much. It's much harder than you think to find good...

Restaurant destroyed by fire

stacy, have you ever eaten there ??

I had Brother Pratt at Viewmont High School my sophomore year... I was really...

Advertisements