The city is building a new substation to improve power reliability. Neighbors are concerned about aesthetics and safety, so the city is looking at fencing and landscaping to hide it.
At a glance
Rising — being discussed more frequently. 1 mention in the last 30 days, 3 the 90 before that.
The city is investing in utility infrastructure to support future growth.
Residents and businesses in the service area who will receive more reliable power.
Residents who feel they have lost a local venue to voice their concerns about major infrastructure projects.
A new power substation is being built to handle the city's growing energy needs, providing 28 megawatts of power.
New rules will allow power substations to have smaller setbacks and taller walls to better fit into the community.
The city is trying to figure out how much power to sell to big companies without running out of electricity for the rest of us.
The city is building a new substation to improve power reliability. Neighbors are concerned about aesthetics and safety, so the city is looking at fencing and landscaping to hide it.
The city is removing an overlay zone that was meant to give them a say in large utility projects, like power lines. Staff says it was misleading because the city doesn't actually have the legal power to stop these projects.
Follow this issue in Spanish Fork City
Get an alert when it comes back up at City Hall — one plain-English email a week.
Free. Unsubscribe with one click any time. We never sell your email.