"The next phase is drilling," said Kennecott spokeswoman Jana Kettering. "After that, depending on what we find through drilling, we'll determine where we go from there." Once Kennecott got interested in exploring the land for minerals, there wasn't really much the county could have done to stop them. "Since they have the subsurface rights, their rights really usurp the surface owner's rights," said Peck-Dabling.
"We do have the right to go after that," Kettering said. "But we did want to keep the county whole in the open space purchase. That's why we agreed to purchase the land." Kennecott agreed to buy 832 acres for $5,345,000, about a million dollars more than the county paid for the land three years ago. That profit may help the county achieve a larger goal of finishing up land acquisition to complete the Jordan River Parkway. Deseret News