Reader comments
Count on growth in Utah
10 comments | Read story
Get today's headlines via email
Good morning edition
Deseret News Family Deals
In Opinion
Across Site
- Jay Evensen: On second thought...
- Readers' forum: No nuclear waste in Utah
- In our opinion: New nuclear plants...
- Readers' forum: Price of freedom
- Robert Bennett: A brokered...
- Frank Pignanelli & LaVarr Webb: The...
- Readers' forum: A changing Constitution
- Michael Gerson: Egypt's craziness is...
- George F. Will: Is it bribery or just...
- Mackenzie Eaglen: Obama's proposed...
In Opinion
Across Site
- Robert Bennett: A brokered...
- In our opinion: Editorial: Protecting...
- Charles Krauthammer: The Gospel...
- Frank Pignanelli & LaVarr Webb: The...
- In our opinion: New nuclear plants...
- Evangelicals and Mormons: Can we talk?
- Readers' forum: Price of freedom
- My view: The climate is right to tear...
- Readers' forum: A changing Constitution
- Readers' forum: No nuclear waste in Utah
In Opinion
Across Site
- Letters: Bush's failed policies
53 - Letters: A changing Constitution
45 - Editorial: Rights of conscience
40 - Editorial: New nuclear plants
33 - Letters: Teachers not overpaid
32 - Letters: Home equity loans
28 - The Gospel according to Obama
27 - Letters: Rights of conscience
26 - GOP no longer leads on defense
24 - Tear down the wall of discrimination
21








Look at the thousands of unwanted homes and foreclosures in the St. George area before declaring it will continue to grow at 2006 rates. They are dumping and abandoning whole development plats.
If water is needed in the future, just stop building lush golf courses, kiddie splash pads and private "water features"....that can be done without burying southern Utah in massive tax debt for the developer's Big Dig.
That's what is needed.
More growth.
LOL!
More people
More jobs
More wealthy
More happiness
hmmm, you might want to ask people in California how much "wealthy" and "happiness" having a crushingly huge population crammed into a small space causes.
There has been a miracle in agriculture in my lifetime. Recently the ability to grew more food on less land as peeked.
Were I live was once the most productive farmland on earth. It's now homes. We have less land to grow food.
With the current economics, who will build the roads, schools and public transportation?
The Population explosion in Salt Lake City and Utah in general - (what is it now, something like 8.2 children per family or something?) is now becoming painfully evident.
Trouble in River City.
more crime
more traffic
more illegal drug use
more pollution
less freedom