Pleasant Grove · issues
Topics getting the most attention in Pleasant Grove public meetings, ranked by how frequently they come up.
Pleasant Grove is relaxing its rules on keeping pigeons, making it way easier to set up your own coop in the backyard. If you've been wanting to get into urban bird-keeping, the city just cleared the path for you.
Pleasant Grove is joining a statewide program to give our downtown a much-needed facelift. Expect more walkable streets and a better mix of local shops to make the city center a place you actually want to hang out.
Pleasant Grove just broke ground on a new $15 million park, meaning we're finally getting some fresh green space in the neighborhood. It’s a major project that’s going to change the local landscape once construction wraps up.
Pleasant Grove’s brand-new splash pad broke down just 48 hours after opening, leaving local families high and dry. The city is currently scrambling to figure out what went wrong and when the park will actually be usable again.
Pleasant Grove is dropping $18 million to bring UTOPIA fiber to town, finally giving residents a real alternative to the slow, spotty internet we've been stuck with. It’s a major upgrade that should make streaming, gaming, and working from home a whole lot smoother.
Pleasant Grove is being sued over a road utility fee that residents claim is unfair. If the city loses, they’ll have to overhaul how they pay for road repairs, which could directly change what you see on your monthly utility bill.
Pleasant Grove's mayor is in hot water for allegedly using their platform to break state ethics laws in a recent op-ed. This could trigger a formal investigation into how our city leaders handle their official communications.
Pleasant Grove is heading back to court over religious monuments in public parks. This legal fight is a big deal because it’s going to decide exactly how much control the city has over what gets displayed on public property.
Pleasant Grove is considering a total ban on Sunday beer sales, which would stop you from picking up a cold one at local stores on the weekend. It’s a major shift in local policy that could change your Sunday grocery run.
Good news: Pleasant Grove isn't planning to bulldoze any of our historic homes anytime soon. Your favorite local landmarks are safe for now, so you don't have to worry about them disappearing.
Pleasant Grove is in a legal standoff over whether they have to host every religious statue offered to them just because they accepted one in the past. The Supreme Court's ruling will decide if cities can pick and choose what monuments go in public parks or if they have to open the floodgates to everyone.
Pleasant Grove officials decided to drop a proposed policy that would have dictated how local grocery stores display magazines. It’s a win for business owners who didn't want the city telling them what to put on their shelves.
Pleasant Grove is deciding if it's worth a costly legal fight to keep a local monument standing on public land. City leaders are currently weighing whether the historical value is worth the hit to the taxpayer's wallet.