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Monday, June 25, 2007

None by KCPW

Triple digit temperatures and dry grass. Midday Metro talks with Brian McInerney of the National Weather Service and Battalion Chief Devin Villa of the Salt Lake City Fire Department about what that means for your summer fun.

(McInerney/Villa = 10:18)

When is a massive construction project not a massive construction project? When it's the Temporary Museum of Permanent Change. Find out what three artists -- Stephen Goldsmith, John Schaefer and Gilberto Schaefer -- have planned during the construction of City Creek in downtown Salt Lake City.

(Goldsmith/Schaefer/Schaefer = 14:45)

At 10:30 on The Bottomline:

Michael Sullivan of the Governor's Office of Economic Development with an update on Utah teams competing for a slot at this fall's DARPA Challenge.

(Sullivan = 3:58) 

Latyon City has had seven homes slide off its foothills in seven years. Do developers have the right to build on geological hazards? What rights do cities have to prevent it? What obligation does a city have to alert homebuyers down the road? Who pays when mud slides and earth quakes? Those questions answered with Gary Christenson of the Utah Geological Survey and Gary Crane, Layton City Attorney.

(Christenson/Crane = 21:36) 

Email to a friendPosted in Politics Up Close. Copyright 2009 KCPW

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