Park City thrives on charm, tourism, and reputation but beneath the ski-town image lies a battle that could define its future. Teachers, EMTs, grocery clerks, and young families can’t afford to live in the very community they serve. A proposal at Kimball Junction promised affordable homes, daycare, and even intergenerational living. It was rejected. Officials cited density and traffic, but critics say the real issue is cultural resistance, a refusal to change. Is Park City becoming a place only for second homeowners and visitors, or can it still be a real community for the people who keep it alive?
The Fight for Workforce Housing in Park City Continues
Park City thrives on charm, tourism, and reputation but beneath the ski-town image lies a battle that could define its future. Teachers, EMTs, grocery clerks, and young families can’t afford to live in the very community they serve. A proposal at Kimball Junction promised affordable homes, daycare, and even intergenerational living. It was rejected. Officials…
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Nicole Anderson is a communication professional and freelance writer. She holds a master’s degree in Strategic Communications from Westminster College and a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Studies from the University of Utah. She is a certified Utah Master Naturalist in Wetlands, and has spent many years researching the Great Salt Lake. Anderson co-founded the blog, Summer of Salt, where she spent three summers exploring the shorelines of Great Salt Lake. In 2010, Anderson was commissioned to write, “Patterns of Change” which documented bird and human usage in Bear River Bay, and she later had a role in the 2012 documentary, “Evaporating Shorelines.” Anderson teaches intercultural and interpersonal communication at Salt Lake Community College. She has written as a freelance author for ten plus years. Her stories and articles have appeared in Airboating Magazine, Gateway Magazine, Utah Stories, and Utah Life Magazine, among several other print and online publications. Anderson has a passion to protect landscapes and places that cannot speak for themselves.

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