Publicity stunt leads to temporary city ordinance after helicopter lands on Herriman home


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HERRIMAN — Herriman City Council approved a temporary ordinance to prohibit helicopters from taking off or landing in residential areas during an emergency council meeting Friday.

It comes after a helicopter landed on top of a home with a landing pad on the roof Thursday afternoon. Mayor Lorin Palmer said the city received dozens of calls when the incident occurred.

"People (were) concerned, calling 911, houses shaking, residents with PTSD worried about where the sound was coming from. This was a concern, and we knew we had to nip it in the bud right away. We knew we had to deal with it," Palmer said.

Palmer added the ordinance was not a personal attack on the homeowner but their way of addressing residents' safety.

According to Palmer, the Federal Aviation Administration has jurisdiction over anything in the air, but municipalities and local governments have land use authority.

Originally, there was no law preventing an aircraft from landing or taking off near a residential area. But after Friday's City Council meeting, the temporary ordinance bars helicopters to land or take off within 1,000 feet of a home for the next six months.

The homeowner, who is also the home's contractor, Kyle Norman, told KSL the scene was an attempt to have more eyes on the home in an effort to help sell it. Real estate agent Paige Stecking said Norman contracted a friend to fly their helicopter on top of the home "to show how well built the home was." Stecking added that it was a "one-time thing" in an attempt to make a promotional video to sell the house.

"Mostly as a publicity stunt," Norman said. "Our true means is to advertise the house."

Norman explained that the pad was intended to be a shaded area on his rooftop deck, but he wanted to do something out of the ordinary. Norman said he had the approval to build the pad on his roof. The city, however, denied the approval but would not go into specifics.

Norman apologized for any concerns he may have caused, since many residents may have never seen a helicopter landing before.

"It was not intended to scare anybody," Stecking said.

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Brianna Chavez, KSLBrianna Chavez
Brianna Chavez joined the KSL news team as a reporter in July of 2023. She comes to the Beehive State after working for five years in her hometown of El Paso, Texas.
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