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No surprise, many new Washington County residents are former Californians or older snowbirds — or both!
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St. George hopes to get money to build the tower from the state budget during the upcoming legislative session.
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Getting passed over for federal funding was a disappointment for rail advocates and local leaders who tout trains' ability to connect Utahns and boost rural areas. But they aren't giving up.
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Washington County wants to take what it learned in the first year of its turf replacement rebate program and double that number in 2024.
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The plan to build a new highway through a conservation area near St. George has taken a step back. The Bureau of Land Management is revisiting its formal analysis of the road’s environmental impact after a lawsuit from conservation groups.
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The show at the Sears Art Museum in St. George runs through Jan. 12 and is the first in a series of planned exhibits that will spotlight Utah’s famous national parks.
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The projections say Washington County will need a lot more housing as its population expands. But after years of increases, the number of new residential units fell this year.
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The divisive campaign for three open council seats included smear tactics, vandalism and attacks related to St. George’s ongoing drag show controversy.
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Recent pedestrian deaths in St. George and Logan highlight the rising number of similar incidents across Utah over the past few years.
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While the debate mostly stuck to the city’s pressing issues like affordable housing and water, it also highlighted the sharp divisions that have formed over cultural topics.
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Raising sheep is a way of life for many people in the Navajo Nation, but historic drought, grazing restrictions and development threaten that livelihood. There are some younger people, though, speaking out and finding ways to pass on the tradition.
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The city will vote on Nov. 21 if it wants to keep funding new recreation projects the way it has since the 1990s.