Vision Pest Solutions was founded in 2020 by David Harris, with James Draper named as a partner — both surfaced openly on the company’s own about page rather than buried in state filings. The branding leans into “Born and Raised in Southern Utah, Now Serving Southern Utah,” which is the kind of identity claim plenty of pest operators make but few publicly name themselves to back up. Vision does both.
A Cedar City pest book that reaches Beaver
The mix is residential-heavy: monthly, bi-monthly, and quarterly recurring plans, plus rodent control and the standard Southern Utah list — spiders, ants, mice, scorpions. The published radius covers Washington County (St. George, Ivins, Bloomington, Washington, Leeds, Hurricane, New Harmony, Kanarraville), Iron County (Cedar City, Enoch, Parowan), and Beaver County (Beaver, Minersville, Milford). The Beaver County reach is the unusual piece — most Washington County–based pest companies stop at Cedar; Vision keeps going north because the shop is rooted in Cedar in the first place.
A genuinely newer operator
Five years in business is the headline asterisk. Bug Blasters has been running twenty-two years, Western Pest twenty-four, and Vision is at five. That’s meaningful and shouldn’t be papered over — Vision is the newest credible pest operator in this batch, and the directory entry should say so rather than implying parity with the long-tenured shops.
Iron County anchor
The value of including Vision in the register is the Iron County anchor. Most St. George pest companies treat Cedar City as a stretch service-area; Vision treats it as home and treats the Beaver County villages an hour further north as a reasonable Tuesday route. Cedar’s pest pressures look different from St. George’s anyway — colder winters, less monsoon, a different rodent and insect profile shaped by the higher elevation — and a Cedar-rooted operator works on instinct calibrated to that landscape rather than transposing the Mojave-edge playbook.
For the 435, Vision rounds out the pest segment with a publicly named, Iron-County-anchored, newer-but-credible operator running across three counties.