Parks and recreation reports rising tourism revenues, $95,000 matching grant, and a push to formalize shooting-range safety

5731391 · September 8, 2025

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Tourism collections are close to 2024 levels, the county won a $95,000 matching marketing grant, and parks staff proposed training/volunteer range-safety officers and physical upgrades to the county shooting range as use increases.

Iron County parks and recreation and tourism staff told commissioners that tourism-related tax collections are roughly in line with 2024 year-to-date, restaurant tax is up nearly 11 percent over 2024, and the county received a $95,000 matching grant from the Utah Office of Tourism for marketing.

"Fall advertising is in full swing," the parks/tourism director said, describing digital and streaming advertising outside the county to attract visitors. The county is also participating in a Utah Office of Tourism pilot “destination development” program that pairs a destination expert with local businesses to create bookable experiences.

Parks and recreation also provided a detailed update on improvements and events at county sites. Highlights included completion of an OHV parking area at 3 Peaks, new pavilions and parking improvements at Wood Ranch and 5 Mile, invasive-species removal and future Forest Service work along Bowery Creek, and higher-than-expected park revenue year to date (about $11,000 to date vs. last year's total of roughly $12,000).

Shooting range safety and management was a major discussion. Staff described growing public use and concerns raised by neighbors and a citizen who urged the county to consider range supervision and safety officers. Park staff proposed exploring a volunteer range-safety-officer (RSO) program, training standards, a calendar to show when RSOs will be present, and continued berm and infrastructure improvements. The BLM has approved a south-boundary expansion and staff plan to split the group area into two rentable ranges with a gate to allow simultaneous groups. Staff said proposed fee adjustments to reflect the new split will be brought back to the commission.

Ending: Commissioners expressed support for exploring RSO options and for an exploratory site visit to a well-managed range in Washington County (Saint George/purgatory facility) to inform policy choices. Staff will return with cost estimates and a calendar/operations proposal if they recommend moving forward with a staffed or volunteer RSO program.