Featured in Park Record

Featured in Park Record

Extra! Extra! Read all about it!

We made the Front Page of The Park Record!

Bridge 21, a Park City nonprofit dedicated to providing housing for neurodiverse adults in Summit County, is under contract for four homes in Silver Creek Village that will accommodate 21 adults with special needs and four resident advisors. A row of homes on Coneflower Way serves as a model for what the project could look like when it’s completed next summer.

May B21 Crossings Newsletter

May B21 Crossings Newsletter

We are getting very close to sharing some super exciting news regarding housing for people with special needs in our community!

Park City has always been known for being inclusive and supportive. Now we’re taking a big step forward in ensuring that everyone has access to safe and supportive housing.

Our own Deb Hartley, Featured on Visit Park City

Our own Deb Hartley, Featured on Visit Park City

If you assigned a seat to each turkey, Deb Hartley has helped round up leading the PC Turkey Drive for 20 years; you’d fill Eccles Stadium. That’s 45,000 turkeys – plus fixings and other groceries to serve needy families, veterans, and busy first responders. “It shows the generosity of the people of Park City,” she says. “I am blown away by the support year after year.”

April B21 Crossings Newsletter

April B21 Crossings Newsletter

Years from now, we’ll look back on the EPIC (and seemingly endless) Winter of ’23, the 700+ inches of snow, and share the memories of how we survived and thrived! 

Just when you think Spring is here…here comes the snow again. 

March B21 Crossings Newsletter

March B21 Crossings Newsletter

Forward March!

For those who march to the beat of a different drum and the families that love them, lining up in an orderly formation usually doesn’t work so well.

We can see this in our neurodiverse children as young as toddlers who are perhaps out of sync with the playgroup or classroom setting. If everyone fit neatly in a box how boring would that be? Yet for those who color outside the lines, standardized living can be a challenge. And it never stops being so.