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State university report: Alpine residents report high personal well‑being; water, growth and trails are top concerns
Summary
A Utah State University survey of Alpine residents found very high personal well‑being scores but identified water supply, open space and traffic as top community concerns; the city collected 399 usable responses and staff said repeating the survey depends on funding.
Courtney Flint, director of the Utah Well‑being Project at Utah State University, presented results of a fall 2024 online survey to the Alpine City Council on Feb. 11, 2025. The survey received 399 usable responses from adults who live in Alpine and was administered on Qualtrics with local recruitment through the city’s channels.
Flint said Alpine scored near the top among comparable Utah cities on personal well‑being, with an average of 4.32 on a five‑point scale and 87% of respondents rating their well‑being a 4 or 5. “Alpine is just top of the heap,” Flint told the council, summarizing the city’s comparative ranking.
The report breaks well‑being into 12 domains. Respondents rated safety and security, family life and physical/mental health among the most important domains; safety and family life were also the…
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