JULY & AUGUST 2024 ISSUE

Cover Story

  • Experience the Rewards of a Summer Bucket List

Community & Culture

  • Letter from the Editor

  • Mayor’s Message

  • Trailblazer Nation

  • Start on Your Path to a Stable Career

  • Navigating Real Estate in the Age of the Internet

  • The Health Benefits of Resort Living: Why Resort Residences Are the Ultimate Wellness Retreat

  • Utah Tech University Debuting the State’s Most Affordable Online Master of Healthcare Administration Program

  • Creative Wigs and Hair Replacement Now Celebrating Sixty Years of Service

  • It Takes Little to Be a Big

  • Carsen Cooper: Lessons I Learned at Boy’s Nation

Health & Fitness

  • Flex-Time: Trish Schlegel Is Ageless Bodybuilder

  • Walk Your Way to a Longer, Healthier Life

  • Getting the Most from Outdoor Adventures

  • Menopause and Obesity: a Real Phenomenon

  • Riding on the Wind

  • Dave’s Story: Stroke Symptoms Aren’t Always Typical

  • The American Apple

  • Ease the Ache: Arthritis Care and Advice from Vista Healthcare

  • Alternative Holistic Care for Horses

  • Preventive Dental Care Will Help You Live Your Best Life

  • Utah’s Swell: Utah Is Great, but It Is Also Home to the San Rafael Swell

  • Four Considerations for Effective Tax Planning in Retirement

  • A Look at Self-Guided In-Home Health Tests

  • Empower Yourself with Nutrition Know-How

  • Four Tips for Summer Water Safety

Mind & Body

  • Experience the Rewards of a Summer Bucket List

  • The Mental Health Benefits of Exercise for Older Adults

  • The Profound Relationship between Our Physical and Emotional Health

  • Nurtured by Nature: Interacting with Nature Benefits the Body and Mind

  • Change Your Words, Change Your Life

  • Set Your Sights Higher with a Vision Board

  • What Type of Ketamine Is Right for You?

Relationships & Family

  • Have You Lost That Loving Feeling?

  • Encounter on Santa Clara Boulevard

  • Who Am I? A Map to Self-Discovery

  • Make a Positive Impact by Planting a Tree

Current Articles

Mayor's Message - St. George, UT, St. George Health and Wellness Magazine

Mayor's Message

March 01, 20242 min read

The message from St. George residents was unmistakable as a resounding 63 percent of voters approved the General Obligation Trails, Parks, and Recreation Bond (G.O. Bond) on the November ballot. Your mandate was clear: expand and maintain the outdoor recreation opportunities available in St. George.

What is next with the bond? The $29 million in bond money will be issued in two installments over the next several years, which means it’s time to get to work. Here is an update on a few of the projects.

Sunbowl Renovations

The historic Dixie Sunbowl has a special place in our hearts. You feel a certain nostalgia thinking about warm evenings at the Dixie Roundup Rodeo, with cowboys riding saddle broncs and the smell of barbecued burgers wafting through the air. 

The Sunbowl is an iconic venue that needs additional, major improvements for it to become the economically viable, year-round facility we all envision. These improvements include new bleachers and a post-tension concrete floor to allow for a wider variety of events and greater usage. The design phase is in progress, and we are excited about the possibilities.

New Parks

Currently in the design phase, the long-awaited Las Colinas Park will serve the community just north of SunRiver and will have many great amenities. In addition to having a larger playground area than most of our neighborhood parks, there will also be a dog park within the park that will include space for both our larger and our smaller canine friends. This dog park will serve the southwestern portion of our city.

With input from the community, we are excited about the possibilities at Curly Hollow Park, just off Tonaquint Drive. The vision is for it to be an adventure-themed community park geared toward teens and pre-teens, with possibilities for climbing, paddle boarding, skateboarding, tennis, and pickleball. This park is also in the design phase.

Playground Replacement

The equipment used in an average playground is expected to last between ten and fifteen years, yet we have playground equipment in commission that was installed in the early 1990s. With that longevity comes challenges. One challenge is that replacement parts are no longer available for the older playground equipment. Another problem: these older playgrounds were not designed to be inclusive of people with disabilities.   

Revitalizing an older playgrounds costs an average of $500,000 to replace old equipment with new equipment and install shade and soft-fall surfacing. We have identified eight parks throughout the City that will receive new playground equipment. You will start to see them replaced beginning this year.

Mayor's Message
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