Illustration of a hand unrolling a blueprint over a mountain landscape, transforming trees and ski lifts into a developing town with cranes, houses, and buildings.

Building A City In 22 Days: Inside The Herculean Effort Of Ogden Valley's Transition Team

Published

When voters go to the polls on November 4th, they’ll be electing the first leaders of a brand-new city. But between the certification of the election results and the crisp morning of January 5th, a clock starts ticking — loudly. Just 22 working days stand between the announcement of the city’s inaugural elected officials and the moment the municipality must open its doors, take out the trash, and plow its first snowfall.

This is the story of a team of volunteers tasked with enabling an unbuilt city to become a fully functioning civic organism — overnight. Welcome to the world of the Transition Team: the bridge between vision and reality.

Illustration of a hand unrolling a blueprint over a mountain landscape, transforming trees and ski lifts into a developing town with cranes, houses, and buildings.

Why The Ogden Valley Transition Team Exists

Cities don’t materialize out of thin air. They require intricate planning, logistical coordination, and legal frameworks that support everything from public safety to zoning, waste management to websites. Without this infrastructure in place before January 5, Ogden Valley City risks grinding to a halt before it ever gets started.

If residents expect basic services — trash collection, snow removal, emergency response, and functioning government departments — to be operational from Day One, then the months leading up to launch must be an all-hands-on-deck sprint.

The truth is, 22 working days is simply not enough time to lay the administrative and regulatory foundation required for a new city. Contracts must be negotiated, service providers selected, policies crafted, and legal codes developed — all before the elected officials are sworn in.

That’s where the Transition Team steps in. They are the architects behind the blueprint, working tirelessly to ensure the newly elected officials don’t start from scratch, but rather with a detailed, ready-for-action set of choices.

Superstars Behind A Seamless Transition For New Ogden Valley City

Even before the vote to incorporate passed, Nick Dahlkamp, one of the six incorporation sponsors, organized a small group of subject matter experts to focus on the city’s start-up.

The original team consisted of Janet Wampler, Anne Ladd, Angela Dean, and Wayne Pyle, and was overseen by Nick Dahlkamp. They met weekly and compiled a task list of all the essential actions to a city’s start-up.

Once the success of the incorporation effort was certified, the Transition Team grew and formalized both their organizational structure and deadlines for deliverables.

There is a Transition Steering Committee consisting of Brandi Hammon, Kay Hoogland, Janet Wampler, and Madison Aviles. Senior Advisors to the team are Wayne Pyle and the six incorporation sponsors: Richard Webb, Mark Ferrin, Shanna Francis, Jeanie Wendell, Nick Dahlkamp, and Brandi Hammon. Angela Dean serves as Project Coordinator and Anne Ladd overseas Communications.

The Scope Of The Work — 3 Major Foundational Tasks For Ogden Valley City

The Transition Team is tackling an expansive and critical range of foundational tasks, organized into three major areas: Planning & Land Use, Public Works, and Finance/Administrative Services. Each is a pillar upon which the city will stand, and each is being led by an expert devoted to getting it right.

Planning & Land Use

Led by Janet Wampler, the Planning & Land Use portion of the team is tasked with developing a functional and legally sound land use framework. One of the main reasons the incorporation passed was a general disagreement with how land use was being managed by the county.

With this in mind, Wampler, and her large team of volunteers, are reviewing the current zoning ordinances, land use codes, and General Plan, and making recommended changes that reflect the city’s vision while remaining compliant with state statutes.

Her work aims to prevent the need for moratoriums and ensure the city doesn’t face a regulatory void that could lead to chaotic development or lawsuits.

Public Works

If it involves a plow, a garbage truck, IT, or GIS, it falls under Madison Aviles’ watchful eye. She’s heading the massive effort to identify and initiate contracts for sanitation, snow removal, records, and GIS. Timing is everything — providing our newly elected officials with choices and a recommendation of vendors before January 5th is the only way to avoid service interruptions.

Finance/Administrative Services

Kay Hoogland is leading the charge on everything from finance to legal, HR to insurance. Kay and her team are setting up recommendations for both initial and fiscal year budgets, proposing startup organization options, and laying the groundwork for the administrative operations of the new city. Kay’s work ensures that the doors can open and the lights turn on — not metaphorically, but literally — on January 5.

This level of advance preparation is both unprecedented and absolutely necessary. When the newly elected officials are announced, they will be handed a detailed city start-up handbook filled with well-researched choices and the reasoning behind the recommendations.

Then they have 22 days to decide how to proceed.

Why The Ogden Valley Transition Team Matters

The urgency behind this effort can’t be overstated. The gap between the election and the official start of the city is short. Twenty-two business days may seem like a reasonable amount of time for a project or initiative, but it is barely a blink in the life cycle of forming an entirely new government.

Without the Transition Team’s work, newly elected officials would face a chaotic and unmanageable first six months. Administrative confusion would slow service delivery. Residents would be left wondering why trash wasn’t picked up, why the snowplow hadn’t come, or why they couldn’t get a business license. These are not theoretical problems — they’re real consequences that affect daily life.

It may take a village to raise a child, but it takes a Transition Team to raise a city.

As The City Takes Shape, So Can Your Next Move

Behind the scenes, a dedicated team is laying the groundwork for Ogden Valley’s next chapter. With Eden and Huntsville at the heart of this unfolding story, valley enters a new era of self-governance — it’s a powerful invitation to belong.

Whether you're drawn by the natural beauty, four-season recreation, tight-knit community, or the promise of something thoughtfully built, there’s never been a better time to explore real estate in Eden, UT, and Huntsville, UT.

Similar Articles