Ogden transforms every October. Streets become haunted spectacles, farms turn into fall wonderlands, and ghost stories echo through historic districts. From pumpkin patches to bone-chilling haunted houses, here’s where the real Halloween spirit comes alive.
Halloween in Ogden: Haunted Houses, Neighborhood Displays, and Fall Festivals
Ogden transforms every October. Streets become haunted spectacles, farms turn into fall wonderlands, and ghost stories echo through historic districts. From pumpkin patches to bone-chilling haunted houses, here’s where the real Halloween spirit comes alive.
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Taylor Hartman is an Ogden-based writer who enjoys storytelling in all forms. His work has been featured in numerous Utah publications, winning an SPJ award for his reporting on nursing homes with the Utah Investigative Journalism Project. Taylor’s passion lies in uncovering hidden narratives and shedding light on the unseen. With a background in tourism and journalism, Taylor strives to tell the story of Utah and Utahns from north to south.

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LOOKING BACK
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In November 2014, Weiler attended the national summit on the issue in San Diego, an event hosted by Pew Charitable Trusts.
“I was very involved in it. We had a lot of high hopes,” Weiler, a Woods Cross Republican, said in a recent interview. “That was about the time we were finalizing plans for the new prison. And we actually said that because of JRI we don’t need as many beds because we’ll be incarcerating fewer people. So that new prison was designed with this idea.”
A key part of JRI dealt with adjusting sentencing for crimes related to addiction, dividing offenders into two basic groups: dangerous criminals who are a threat to society (that group goes to prison), and low-level offenders who get help kicking addictions through state-sponsored programs or private-sector rehabilitation.
“The ultimate goal was if we have an otherwise good person who got caught up in an addiction, and as a result committed crimes, they need to be punished for their crimes,” Weiler said. “It’s not that we’re going to overlook what they did, but we wanted to focus primarily on helping them overcome their addiction and [that means] getting them back to their job and their family.”
Before JRI, low-level drug offenders with felonies would spend years in prison, which wreaked havoc with their lives and future prospects. Addressing the root cause of their theft and property crimes through supervision and treatment made sense.
“We’re all imperfect people,” Weiler said. “So we want people working their jobs, paying their bills and raising their kids rather than sitting in jail and watching TV or playing cards.”
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