Acting Chair and council members interviewed Stacy Kean, the sole applicant for the BAPTAC cultural committee vacancy, and three candidates for open planning commission seats. Kean said she moved to Park City in 2013, works at the county library and previously worked for Mountain Trails; she told council she understands this appointment is for the cultural wrap tax committee and that she can accommodate the committee’s concentrated April–May workload.
Several applicants also interviewed for planning commission vacancies. Matthew Nagy described 18 years in the area, a civil engineering background with emphasis in transportation, previous work as a private engineering consultant for UDOT and current teaching duties at the high school. Nagy said he views the planning commission as an “administrative” body that must apply the Snyderville Basin development code consistently and bring technical judgment where the code is unclear.
Another applicant who currently serves on the Board of Adjustment highlighted experience with zoning appeals and affordable-housing questions. Candidates discussed common challenges for the commission including growth management, transportation congestion and the need for better coordination among Summit County, Park City and other local planning bodies.
Council members asked about time commitments, residency and prior board service. Staff and members said they will separate and redline policy documents where needed and will notify applicants of decisions within about a week. The council did not take a vote on appointments at the meeting.