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Midvale is historically Latino (old Main Street has the nickname of little Mexico). Additionally, my community has a lot of elderly couples, who have lived here for years, mixed with a influx of millennial couples/young families moving into the neighborhood. It is a tight-knit community but faces a lot of change (most optimistic)
We have an explosion of industry growth, which is great other than the influx of people moving into the state, and driving up housing needs. The natural growth rate of utah alone puts ever mounting pressure on housing demands, but coupling that with tech employees swooping in with all cash offers on family homes has hurt working utah families in their housing needs. High density housing has limited success (in terms of family housing) because of lack of public transit and walkability, coupled with lack of adequate parking for family vehicles in already populated neighborhoods. I am interested in local economic development, zoning solutions, and a effective growth of public transit
Everyone in the valley suffers from smog and smoke from the valley, surrounding areas, and even other states. The pollution has measurable differences in our health. We need accessible public transit, walkable communities, and access to healthcare in each community (rising house prices pushes many families farther from employment or necessities, contributing to driving pollution).
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