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Utah House set to vote on hate crimes bill after committee OKs it despite objections to sponsor’s ‘flippant’ comments

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Sen. Daniel Thatcher said Friday that he feels good about the chances for his hate crimes legislation to pass the House, but acknowledged that his “flippant" comments before the House Law Enforcement Committee could weaken support for the yearslong effort to fix what prosecutors say is a toothless and ineffective state statute.

The committee voted 8-2 to recommend SB103 after a sometimes heated discussion, during which two representatives scolded Thatcher, R-West Valley City, for comments they took as suggesting they were less qualified to understand the bill than their Senate counterparts.

“It was the kind of flippant comment that I make when I’m talking to friends privately,” Thatcher said after the hearing. “It was an inappropriate comment to make.”

Thatcher apologized to the committee generally and to lawmakers individually after the hearing.

He also clarified that his intention was to emphasize the value of input from subject-matter experts like attorneys, prosecutors and the sentencing commission.

Thatcher said most of the committee discussion Friday was “awesome” and that he believes the bill will pass in the House after years of failed attempts to get out of the Senate.

“We’ve given the House an opportunity to have bragging rights forever over the Senate,” Thatcher said. “Because it took the Senate four years to get this thing through, and the House could get it on their first try.”

Under the bill, crimes would be subject to penalty enhancements in instances where a victim is targeted specifically due to their race, religion, sexual orientation and other characteristics. The bill was approved by the Senate on Tuesday after Thatcher amended it to include additional victim classifications like their age, martial status, matriculation and military service.

“We are not punishing thoughts or feelings,” Thatcher said. “We are not criminalizing anything that is not currently a crime.”

Jay Jacobson, a board member for the United Jewish Federation of Utah, spoke in support of the bill. He said its passage would send a message that Utah is legally supportive of religious communities, communities of color and other groups that are targeted for violence.

“I would be proud, as would my colleagues, to live in a state that signaled to us that Utah is no place for hate," he said.

But Dani Palmer, of the conservative Utah Eagle Forum, objected to the bill’s list of protected classifications. By listing who is included under hate crimes protections the law excludes other targeted crimes, she said, like a victim selected for their political ideology or affiliation with political groups.

“What I would do,” Palmer said, “is add anybody who is selected for a crime for whatever reason.”

Rep. Casey Snider, R-Paradise, pointed to the bill’s inclusion of ancestry and gender and suggested the breadth of listed classifications in the bill is sufficient to include nearly everyone.

“Basically the bulk of humanity, somehow, would fall into these labels,” Snider said.

The question of whether political affiliation should be added to the bill has been raised at multiple points during the legislative process for SB103. Thatcher said political expression, association and speech are already protected under current law and that the bulk of hate crimes are committed against victims based on their religion, race, sexual orientation and gender identity.

Thatcher said it’s likely the political affiliation issue will be raised on the House floor, but he’s confident the collective expertise of the chamber will allow members to explain why such an amendment is unnecessary.

“There are competent attorneys who understand this law who understand this language who can get up and make the argument,” he said.

While most committee members indicated their support for the bill — and ultimately voted in favor of its passage — Rep. Paul Ray, R-Clearfield, was the first to question Thatcher’s comments, which he called “insulting and out of order.”

Thatcher had commented that he “cheated a little bit” on the Senate side by getting his bill assigned to a committee where the members were either attorneys in their private careers or had worked for years with the state’s sentencing commission, which supports SB103.

“The benefit I had [in the Senate] is all of the members of that committee on the Republican side were either attorneys or spent eight years working with the sentencing commission,” Thatcher said. “So we get that a crime is not a crime, that all crimes are treated differently and individually.”

Rep. Mark Strong, R-Bluffdale, opposed the bill, and referred to Thatcher’s characterization of the House committee during a charged exchange with Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill, who had referenced an event in the Latter-day Saint movement known as the Haun’s Mill Massacre as an example of a religious community being targeted.

“I’m not an attorney,” Strong said. “I guess i’m just one of these ignorant committee members.”

Strong questioned the effect of enhancing a crime beyond first-degree murder, independent of whether the victim was of a particular race or religion.

“I don’t care. I really don’t care,” Strong said. “I see all of us as individuals under the law. Because of that, I cannot support this legislation.”

Strong told The Tribune after the hearing that he accepted Thatcher's apology "100 percent."

“No issues at all — none — on my end,” he said.


Worn-down Ute women’s basketball team will halt its season, turning down a WNIT bid

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With her roster having been reduced to seven active players for the past two weeks, Utah women’s basketball coach Lynne Roberts will turn down a WNIT bid, she said Friday.

“We are worn down, and you can just see it,” Roberts said in a news release.

The Utes took the program’s highest-ever seed (No. 6) into this week’s Pac-12 tournament in Las Vegas, but No. 11 Washington pulled off a 64-54 upset in the first round late Thursday at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. Utah finished 20-10, after once being 18-1 and ranked No. 14 nationally. The school’s spring break is scheduled next week.

The team lost No. 2 scorer Daneesha Provo to a knee injury in early January and then forward Dre’Una Edwards, the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year, was hurt Feb. 22. The Utes already were low in numbers due to preseason injuries, players redshirting, an admissions case and a midseason transfer.

Playing in the WNIT was meaningful to Roberts' program in her first three seasons at Utah, but she recognized that this week that “although I am a competitor and we want to play as much as we can, we also want to protect our student-athletes.”

Senior forward Megan Huff is a WNBA draft prospect. The Utes also will lose Provo, guard Erika Bean and reserve guard Sarah Porter from the program’s first 20-game winner since 2012-13. Utah’s 9-9 record in the Pac-12 and a tie for sixth place are benchmarks in eight years of conference membership.

“I am incredibly proud of our team and their resiliency throughout the year,” Roberts said. “They have been an absolute joy to coach. This group has been one of the most fun, most rewarding groups I have ever coached. We are laying the foundation and our seniors took this program to another level. … So, it is closure on this season, but the program is headed in the right direction.”

Corner Canyon High School guard Kemery Martin, who signed with the Utes in November, was named Friday as the Gatorade Player of the Year in Utah. The Chargers lost to East in the Class 5A state championship game.

Tell The Tribune: Have you rationed or stopped taking a prescription drug due to cost?

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How are rising prescription drug prices affecting your health care choices? National surveys show an increasing number of patients are rationing or foregoing medications because they can't afford to buy what they are prescribed. The Salt Lake Tribune would like to hear from you about your own experiences, and your views on purchasing drugs in other countries.

Your responses won’t be published without your permission. A reporter from The Salt Lake Tribune might reach out for further comment.

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Utah Opera helps visually impaired patrons feel the costumes, props and words of ‘The Magic Flute’

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(Photo courtesy Utah Opera) A young visually impaired music lover is equipped with a headset at a dress rehearsal for Utah Opera's production of Mozart's "The Magic Flute" at Salt Lake City's Capitol Theatre. The headset allows the visually impaired to hear a translator deliver a play-by-play description of the stage action during the performance.(Photo courtesy Utah Opera) Visually impaired patrons feel a flute prop at a dress rehearsal for Utah Opera's production of Mozart's "The Magic Flute" at Salt Lake City's Capitol Theatre on Wednesday, March 6, 2019. Utah Opera, the Moran Eye Center and the Utah Council for the Blind organize the annual event for visually impaired opera fans.(Photo courtesy Utah Opera) Visually impaired patrons feel part of a costume at a dress rehearsal for Utah Opera's production of Mozart's "The Magic Flute" at Salt Lake City's Capitol Theatre on Wednesday, March 6, 2019. Utah Opera, the Moran Eye Center and the Utah Council for the Blind organize the annual event for visually impaired opera fans.(Photo courtesy Utah Opera) A service dog sits by during a dress rehearsal for Utah Opera's production of Mozart's "The Magic Flute" at Salt Lake City's Capitol Theatre on Wednesday, March 6, 2019. Utah Opera, the Moran Eye Center and the Utah Council for the Blind organize the annual event for visually impaired opera fans.(Photo courtesy Utah Opera) A Braille translation of the supertitles for "The Magic Flute," on display at a dress rehearsal for Utah Opera's production of Mozart's classic, on Wednesday, March 6, 2019. Utah Opera, the Moran Eye Center and the Utah Council for the Blind organize the annual event for visually impaired opera fans.

Visually impaired music lovers and their companions got to experience the opera this week at a special dress-rehearsal event of Utah Opera’s production of Mozart’s “The Magic Flute.”

Guests on Wednesday got a chance before the show to feel props and fabric samples from the production’s costumes and learn about the set design. Translations of the opera’s supertitles in Braille and large-print copies of the opera’s synopsis were available — as were headsets through which guests could hear a translator give a play-by-play description of the action on stage.

Utah Opera holds this event every year, collaborating with Moran Eye Center and the Utah Council of the Blind.

The Utah State Library for the Blind and Disabled has Braille-translated supertitle scripts and libretti available for checkout. Contact Marie Parker at the library, 801-715-6789, to sign up for the service.

Performances for “The Magic Flute” are Saturday at 7:30 p.m., Monday and Wednesday at 7 p.m., Friday, March 15, at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, March 17, at 2 p.m. Tickets, from $36 to $114, are available at arttix.artsaltlake.org.

3 killed, 4 others hurt in southwest Wyoming crash

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Evanston, Wyo. • Three people were killed and four others were injured in a crash on Interstate 80 in southwest Wyoming.

The Wyoming Highway Patrol says 38-year-old Marco Carr, of Salt Lake City, rear-ended a tractor-trailer near Evanston late Wednesday night, and his minivan was then hit by another tractor-trailer. Carr died at the scene.

Also killed were 28-year-old Rebecca Nowlin, of Salt Lake City, and a 7-year-old passenger whose name has not been released. Four other children in the minivan were taken to a nearby hospital in critical condition.

The truck drivers were not hurt.

Investigators say Carr might have been going too fast for the wintry conditions. I-80 was covered with snow and ice at the time.

U.S. speedskating star Brittany Bowe aims to continue banner year in World Cup finale at Utah Olympic Oval

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She’d felt all the symptoms before, known the unfortunate reality of everything that happens after a sustained concussion. After all, they nearly derailed her entire career, kept her away from the ice, nearly kept her from persevering and returning to eventually win an Olympic medal last February. After a training collision in the summer of 2016, Brittany Bowe dealt with lingering aftereffects of the concussion for 18 months.

So when Bowe crashed on a bike during training a week before the 2019 world sprint championships Heerenveen, Netherlands, a couple of weeks ago — an accident that resulted in another concussion — the 31-year-old American long-track speedskating star was reminded of something.

“Nothing is a given,” she wrote on her Instagram page.

She recovered in time, got to the start line inside the Thialf Ice Arena, heard the gun blast and won the overall bronze medal, which in this banner year of her career, might be the sweetest accomplishment. It came on her 31st birthday. She overcame two tough days of racing to get to that point on Feb. 24 and she found a way to keep the momentum going. She won the women’s 1,000 meters the first day and then got two silvers. Her total time for all events earned her the bronze for the overall world championship event.

“I’m grateful I even got to hear the gun go off and race,” she said recently. “I’m extremely proud of winning a bronze medal and sharing the podium with two of the best ladies in the world.”

Added U.S. head coach Ryan Shimabukuro: “It’s been a grueling trip and I’m very proud of all of our skaters.”

Bowe returns to her home ice this weekend at the Utah Olympic Oval to participate in the final ISU long-track world cup event Saturday and Sunday in Kearns. She does so having won 12 world cup medals (five goals, two silver, five bronze) this season, along with a world championship gold in the women’s 1,000 and a bronze in the women’s 1,500 at the 2019 single distance championships in Inzell, Germany in early February.

The Ocala, Fla., native lives and trains in Salt Lake, and a year ago, helped U.S. speedskating win its first women’s long-track Olympic medal since Jennifer Rodriguez did in Salt Lake at the 2002 Games. A team of Bowe, Mia Manganello and Heather Bergsma won bronze in the women’s team pursuit last year in South Korea.

‘Let’s just go hoop with some joy.’ Transfer guard Sedrick Barefield targets a big finish of his Utah basketball career.

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(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Sedrick Barefield is among the Ute basketball seniors concluding his career at the Huntsman Center this week
 in Salt Lake City on Tuesday March 5, 2019.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Sedrick Barefield is among the Ute basketball seniors concluding his career at the Huntsman Center this week
 in Salt Lake City on Tuesday March 5, 2019.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Sedrick Barefield is among the Ute basketball seniors concluding his career at the Huntsman Center this week
 in Salt Lake City on Tuesday March 5, 2019.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Sedrick Barefield is among the Ute basketball seniors concluding his career at the Huntsman Center this week
 in Salt Lake City on Tuesday March 5, 2019.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Sedrick Barefield is among the Ute basketball seniors concluding his career at the Huntsman Center this week
 in Salt Lake City on Tuesday March 5, 2019.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Sedrick Barefield is among the Ute basketball seniors concluding his career at the Huntsman Center this week
 in Salt Lake City on Tuesday March 5, 2019.

His teammates went home after a loss to Butler, and Utah guard Sedrick Barefield’s night was just beginning.

Barefield placed cones on the Huntsman Center court and went through his dribbling drills in a mostly empty arena, anticipating his opportunity to play for the Utes after becoming eligible as a transfer from Southern Methodist. As he sat on the sideline one afternoon this week, Barefield remembered that scene in November 2016.

“One thing that never left me was my love for the game,” he said, “and how much just being in the gym by myself brought me joy.”

Two-plus seasons later, Utah will honor Barefield after Saturday’s Senior Night game vs. UCLA. He’s part of another diverse class that includes Parker Van Dyke, a four-year player from nearby East High School; Beau Rydalch, a walk-on and co-captain who’s graduating and moving on with a year of eligibility remaining; and Novak Topalovic, a graduate transfer from Idaho State.

“They mean the world to me,” said freshman forward Timmy Allen.

In a program marked by the departure of transfers, imagine where the 2018-19 Utes would be without the arrival of Barefield, who averages 16.8 points. “As you know, it’s ever-changing; guys are leaving, coming,” Ute coach Larry Krystkowiak said. “He’s been a great rep for our program.”

Recruited out of Southern California by veteran coach Larry Brown, Barefield was partly a victim of bad timing at SMU. The NCAA sanctioned the program and suspended Brown for nine games in an academic fraud case, and Barefield appeared briefly in five games before quickly deciding to move.

In Dallas, Barefield felt “a little mistreated from certain people on the team and on the staff,” he said. “It just wasn't a good fit for me.”

Brown, having known Krystkowiak from NBA circles, recommended Barefield to him. Barefield remembers seeing random signs such as a Utah-logo backpack on the SMU campus and a Ute game on television, suggesting to him, “I think this is where I was supposed to be."

Not everything has gone perfectly at Utah, even after he scored 35 points vs. San Francisco in a loss in his second game as a Ute in December 2016. The coaching staff wanted more from him, notably defense and passing. “He’s grown an awful lot,” Krystkowiak said.

The Utes’ improvement this season is traceable to a mid-December morning when Barefield sat outside the weight room after a lifting session and promised more of himself, after bad losses to BYU and Kentucky. “I feel like I owe more to myself, more to my teammates and more to my coaches, just taking more initiative to be a leader on a consistent basis than I’m doing right now,” he said. “Obviously, I want to have a great year as a senior, but I also want everyone else to have a great experience.”

That's happening, amid an adventurous season. The Utes (16-13, 10-7 Pac-12) enter Senior Night with an opportunity to earn the No. 3 seed in next week's Pac-12 tournament by beating UCLA.

Barefield led a comeback at Arizona State in a conference opener; he recently matched his season high of 33 points in a win at Washington State. In between, he assisted Van Dyke for the winning 3-pointer at the buzzer at UCLA, a moment he frames as “the most joy I've had as a player, just seeing that unfold the way it did.”

Barefield appreciates his relationships with the likes of Van Dyke, Rydalch and former teammates Brandon Taylor, Kyle Kuzma and Justin Bibbins and the way his Ute career has developed.

“Having success as a senior has been really cool, because it's been a true process,” he said. “I think that I've grown as a man, understanding how to process and get through certain situations on and off the court.”

After beating USC on Thursday, Barefield mentioned a pregame conversation with his teammates about playing with more passion, having told them, “Let's just go hoop with some joy.”

Whether alone on the court, or surrounded by others, that’s what Barefield always has tried to do.


Rain brings 2nd California super bloom in 2 years

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In this Wednesday, March 6, 2019, photo, a woman sits in a field of wildflowers in bloom near Borrego Springs, Calif. Two years after steady rains sparked seeds dormant for decades under the desert floor to burst open and produce a spectacular display dubbed the "super bloom," another winter soaking this year is shaping up to be possibly even better. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)In this Wednesday, March 6, 2019, photo, a group of men take pictures with their phones as they stand among wildflowers in bloom near Borrego Springs, Calif. Two years after steady rains sparked seeds dormant for decades under the desert floor to burst open and produce a spectacular display dubbed the "super bloom," another winter soaking this year is shaping up to be possibly even better. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)In this Wednesday, March 6, 2019, photo, people walk among wildflowers in bloom near Borrego Springs, Calif. Two years after steady rains sparked seeds dormant for decades under the desert floor to burst open and produce a spectacular display dubbed the "super bloom," another winter soaking this year is shaping up to be possibly even better. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)In this Wednesday, March 6, 2019, photo, Rene Garcia holds her three-month-old son Brandon amid wildflowers in bloom near Borrego Springs, Calif. Two years after steady rains sparked seeds dormant for decades under the desert floor to burst open and produce a spectacular display dubbed the "super bloom," another winter soaking this year is shaping up to be possibly even better. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)In this Wednesday, March 6, 2019, photo, a man looks on amid wildflowers in bloom near Borrego Springs, Calif. Two years after steady rains sparked seeds dormant for decades under the desert floor to burst open and produce a spectacular display dubbed the "super bloom," another winter soaking this year is shaping up to be possibly even better. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)In this Wednesday, March 6, 2019, photo, a man walks among wildflowers in bloom near Borrego Springs, Calif. Two years after steady rains sparked seeds dormant for decades under the desert floor to burst open and produce a spectacular display dubbed the "super bloom," another winter soaking this year is shaping up to be possibly even better. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Borrego Springs, Calif. • It started with the desert lilies in December. Since then a wave of wildflower blooms has been crescendoing across Southern California’s Anza-Borrego desert in a burst of color so vivid it can be seen from mountain tops thousands of feet above.

Two years after steady rains followed by warm temperatures caused seeds dormant for decades under the desert floor to burst open and produce a spectacular display dubbed the "super bloom," another winter soaking this year is expected to create possibly an even better show by Mother Nature.

Having two super blooms in two years is highly unusual. In California, super blooms happen about once in a decade in a given area, and they have been occurring less frequently with the drought.

(Gregory Bull  |  AP file photo)  In this March 27, 2017, photo, Zoey Speer, of Temecula, Calif., clambers among rocks and blooming desert shrubs in Borrego Springs, Calif. Rain-fed wildflowers have been sprouting from California's desert sands after lying dormant for years - producing a spectacular display that has been drawing record crowds and traffic jams in area desert towns.
(Gregory Bull | AP file photo) In this March 27, 2017, photo, Zoey Speer, of Temecula, Calif., clambers among rocks and blooming desert shrubs in Borrego Springs, Calif. Rain-fed wildflowers have been sprouting from California's desert sands after lying dormant for years - producing a spectacular display that has been drawing record crowds and traffic jams in area desert towns. (Gregory Bull/)

The 2017 super bloom was the best seen in the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in 20 years and drew mass crowds to Borrego Springs, a town of 3,500 that abuts the park.

"There's just an abundance in where it's blooming and it's coming in waves," said Betsy Knaak, executive director of the Anza-Borrego Desert Natural History Association, which tracks the blooms.

On a recent day, Knaak wandered through swaths of bright yellow and acres of purple outside Borrego Springs. Families, retired couples and college students traipsed into the fields trying to capture the natural wonder in photos.

Stephen Rawding drove out from Carlsbad, north of San Diego, to take photos with his girlfriend after a friend told him it was better than the one in 2017.

"It's unreal," Rawding said. "It's just like they said — so beautiful."

The setting sun lit up the yellow flowers that contrasted sharply against the brown and copper mountains in the background.

There are tapestries of hot pink Bigelow's Monkey Flower, purple Sand Verbena, delicate white and yellow Evening Primrose and of course the desert lilies, which bloomed extremely early, opening up in December, signaling a super bloom was possible.

In this Wednesday, March 6, 2019, photo, people walk among wildflowers in bloom near Borrego Springs, Calif. Two years after steady rains sparked seeds dormant for decades under the desert floor to burst open and produce a spectacular display dubbed the "super bloom," another winter soaking this year is shaping up to be possibly even better. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
In this Wednesday, March 6, 2019, photo, people walk among wildflowers in bloom near Borrego Springs, Calif. Two years after steady rains sparked seeds dormant for decades under the desert floor to burst open and produce a spectacular display dubbed the "super bloom," another winter soaking this year is shaping up to be possibly even better. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) (Gregory Bull/)

Bright orange poppies are also blanketing the sides of Southern California highways.

"It's a painting of colors at the moment out there in many of the areas," said Jim Dice, reserve manager of Steele/Burnand Anza-Borrego Desert Research Center, University of California Natural Reserve System.

So far, six times the amount of rain has fallen in the Anza-Borrego desert this weather season compared to last year, Dice said.

If the caterpillars and freezing temperatures stay away, the already gorgeous wave of wildflowers could intensify and light up other areas well into spring.

The state park with 640,000 acres is California’s largest, with hundreds of species of plants including blazing stars and the tall spiny Ocotillo, which are covered in buds that will open to flaming orange-red flowers.

A research associate at Dice’s center recently hiked up to the top of Coyote Mountain and shot a photo of the purple fields 3,000 feet below.

“It was pretty spectacular to see that from up above,” Dice said.


With support from rural lawmakers, Utah House passes inland port bill that could expand the development’s scope across the state

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With several rural lawmakers offering their support for the measure, the Utah House of Representatives passed a bill Friday 61-11 that would expand the scope of the inland port, a massive distribution hub planned for Salt Lake City’s westernmost side.

HB433, sponsored by inland port board member and House Majority Leader Francis Gibson, looks to shift the development from its focus on a single site in the state’s capital to a multisite approach that would include rural areas across the state.

In the so-called ‘hub-and-spoke’ model, Salt Lake City would serve as the hub, while other interested communities would make up the spokes — an effort to make it easier for communities with exports to clear international customs.

“This bill was always intended to benefit the whole state of Utah,” Gibson told lawmakers on Friday, noting that this proposal would help distribute high-paying jobs across the state.

Rep. Derrin Owens, R-Fountain Green, spoke in support of the proposal, noting that his district represents one of the state’s largest exporters in Sanpete County, with shipments of alfalfa hay cubes. “This would be a huge benefit to the industry,” Owens said.

Rep. Christine Watkins, R-Price, said she lives about a mile away from a coal load out area in rural Carbon County and would love to see an inland port satellite center come to her area.

“We have the facilities,” she said before casting her vote in support of the bill. “We are ready, we are able and we are excited for this.”

At a recent Inland Port Authority Board meeting, representatives from Tooele, Weber, Box Elder and Millard counties also expressed support for the hub-and-spoke model, promising development-ready parcels of land and willing communities behind them if the port board brought a hub to their areas.

Their comments stand in stark contrast to those of the many Salt Lake City residents who have been organizing for months behind efforts to kill the inland port development.

Their primary concerns center around how the project — which is expected to bring increased rail, truck and air traffic along with tailpipe emissions — will impact the environment, including air quality and the Great Salt Lake’s fragile ecosystem. They also worry about the impacts it will have on education for students in Salt Lake City’s west side.

Gibson, R-Mapleton, and other advocates of the framework argue the hub-and-spoke model would address some of those concerns — improving air quality, while bringing good jobs to overlooked communities and leveraging the statewide transportation network to disperse the impact of emissions and traffic problems in Salt Lake County.

His bill also now includes a renewable energy component that he says would create incentives for businesses to power their operations with solar energy and renewable sources.

But opponents, who came out in full force to oppose the bill at its committee hearing on Tuesday, have argued the hub-and-spoke model would not lessen environmental impacts and would simply spread negative effects around the state.

HB433 would allow the Inland Port Authority Board, which oversees the inland port development, to expand the project beyond its current boundaries only if it receives written consent from the governmental body of the new area or from the private landowner.

“We’re not just going to create [a spoke] without the support of that community,” Gibson said.

A hub-and-spoke inland port model would be fairly unusual, Gibson told lawmakers during the bill’s committee hearing, and he anticipates the hub would be up and running faster than the spokes could be developed.

Only one lawmaker spoke in opposition to the bill during debate Friday: Rep. Jennifer Dailey-Provost, D-Salt Lake City, said she thinks there was a “good opportunity to correct some of the fatal flaws in the original bill” that the sponsor did not take advantage of.

The bill’s final vote split lawmakers along party lines, with 11 Democrats voting against the proposal.

Gibson’s original proposal had included a controversial prohibition against challenges to the “creation, existence, funding, powers, project areas or duties of the Utah Inland Port Authority” and the use of public money to bring forward any litigation.

Under the bill the House passed Friday, a government’s legislative body could bring forward a legal challenge but an executive or administrative branch could not — a provision that seems directly pointed at Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski, who has long been opposed to the inland port.

Gibson’s bill also seeks several changes to the port board’s policy on tax incentives, extending the period of time in which the board could capture 100 percent of the property tax growth for an additional 15 years beyond the 25 years previously laid out in statute. That wouldn’t happen automatically, Gibson told lawmakers, but could be added if the port board decides it’s needed.

Only one other bill proposed so far during this session has related to the inland port: Sen. Luz Escamilla’s SB144, which looks to monitor the development’s impacts on air and water quality and any increases in the level of sound and light and is currently awaiting a hearing in the full Senate.

Gibson’s bill now heads to the Senate for further consideration.

With time running short, advocates press Utah lawmakers to pass affordable housing bills

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One of Utah’s best known champions for the homeless urged state lawmakers Friday to make passing affordable housing legislation “a top priority, because it is going to change lives.”

With the 2019 Utah Legislature set to adjourn Thursday, Pamela Atkinson joined housing advocates and others on Capitol Hill in pressing for a final vote on SB34, which would substantially boost state spending on low-interest housing loans and create new housing-related rules for cities.

“It is going to make a huge difference,” said Atkinson, an adviser to Gov. Gary Herbert, elder in the First Presbyterian Church and lifelong homeless advocate.

Standing at Atkinson’s side, Salt Lake City resident Jeanna Neiberger, 38, told of her difficulties in finding a home as she and her children try to move out of transitional housing.

“I’ve been out for the last week searching for affordable housing units,” Neiberger said. “The soonest one is available is five months and it's not for lack of trying.”

Housing affordability has risen dramatically on the state’s political agenda in the recent year, as escalating rents and house prices continue to make homes inaccessible for many residents making below-average incomes.

June Hiatt, policy director for the Utah Housing Coalition, said there was a widening recognition that stable housing was also critical to helping children succeed in school and to help families afford health care.

Creating new housing options in Utah, Atkinson added, “gives our homeless and low-income friends hope and when they have hope, that's the beginning of some self-esteem and self-worth. That's the beginning of looking towards a possible future.”

SB34, which remains in the House Rules Committee, would make a one-time $20 million payment to the Olene Walker Housing Loan Trust Fund and $4 million yearly after that, boosting its ability to provide gap financing to housing projects statewide.

In its 2018 fiscal year, the fund contributed to 14 housing developments spread across Utah that are accessible to residents with below-average wages, helping to create 779 new dwellings in projects worth a total of $132 million.

Sen. Jake Anderegg, R-Lehi, and SB34 sponsor, called the proposed funding boost “a huge first step.”

“This is showing our commitment,” he said. “We're stepping up to the plate and we recognize we have a role to play.”

In an interview, Anderegg said he expected SB34 to reach the House floor for debate prior to the legislative session drawing to a close on midnight Thursday.

Housing advocates are also closely watching HB386, which would devote $3 million a year to rehabilitate aging homes to keep them in the state’s affordable housing stock. That measure, backed by Rep. Joel Briscoe, D-Salt Lake City, remained in the Senate rules committee as of Friday.

AP changes its style on The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but ‘Mormon’ is not entirely out

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For months, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been urging the media to stop using “Mormon” and “LDS” as shortened references for the faith and its members.

Now, the world’s largest arbiter of journalistic style is listening and heeding — to a point.

The Associated Press Stylebook announced Friday that it is adjusting its guidelines for writing about the Utah-based church.

“Use the full name of the church on first references, with ‘the church,’ ‘church members,’ ‘members of the faith’ preferred on second and later reference[s],” advises the wire service’s online style edition.

The church, in a push led by its president, Russell M. Nelson, also prefers “Latter-day Saints” when referring to its adherents.

“We ask that the term ‘Mormons’ not be used,” the denomination’s own style guide states. For second reference, it calls for writing “the Church” or the “Church of Jesus Christ." The “restored Church of Jesus Christ” is also accurate.

AP’s new entry, however, does not suggest the “Church of Jesus Christ" or the “restored Church of Jesus Christ" on subsequent references. It also still allows for the use of “Mormons” and “Mormon” when “necessary for space or clarity or in quotations or proper names.”

The Salt Lake Tribune put in place similar style standards several months ago.

The church’s own recommendations note that “Mormon” is correctly used in proper names such as the Book of Mormon, the faith’s foundational scripture, and as an adjective in historical expressions such as the “Mormon Trail.”

Otherwise, the church has been busy adopting new monikers and adapting old ones to meet Nelson’s call — a challenging process he has acknowledged will take time.

Earlier this week, for instance, the faith unveiled a new web address, shifting from LDS.org to ChurchofJesusChrist.org. Last fall, it changed the name of the world-renowned Mormon Tabernacle Choir to “The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square.”

The goal, Nelson insists, is to increase the focus on Jesus not only in press portrayals but also in members’ minds and hearts.

“Every day we should ask ourselves, ‘How can we better live as Jesus Christ taught and lived?’” the 94-year-old leader has said. “This mindset will help fill our lives, our homes, our neighborhoods, and our churches with more of Christ’s light and power.”

After chaos in Utah’s last presidential caucuses, bill advances to replace them with a Super Tuesday primary

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Remember the chaos of Utah’s last presidential caucuses in 2016 — with amazingly long lines, insufficient parking and ballot shortages? A Senate committee advanced a bill Friday to replace them with a Super Tuesday presidential primary instead.

The Senate Government Operations Committee voted unanimously to send SB242 to the full Senate.

The Legislature in 2017 passed a bill to allow parties to hold presidential primaries if they choose. The new bill would mandate them, and hold them on Super Tuesday, March 3, next year when 10 other states currently are also scheduled to conduct primaries.

That would be early enough that nominees in contested races likely will not yet have been chosen. In the past, Utah often voted late in the process when national nominees already were apparent.

“After the 2016 caucuses, the chairs of both the Republican and Democratic parties asked that the state hold a presidential primary in the next presidential cycle, not caucuses. And this bill accomplishes that,” said Sen. Curt Bramble, R-Provo, sponsor of the bill. “This is one of those bills we have to have in place for the 2020 cycle.”

The bill received only brief debate, and no witnesses spoke in favor or opposition.

In a primary, people may vote all day in person at voting centers or in advance by mail or early voting. Caucuses compress in-person voting into a few hours in one evening — and are run by party volunteers instead of election professionals.

In 2016, long lines and lack of parking at libraries, schools and other caucus sites led many people to give up and go home — including the elderly or families with children who could not stand in line. Some sites also ran out of ballots.

That year, the Utah Republican Party also tried to allow some voting online. But problems prevented 10,000 out of 40,000 who had signed up from actually casting ballots.

While turnout appeared high because of the compact time frame for voting and the ensuing chaos, officials later figured that 53 percent fewer people actually voted in those caucuses than in a primary held in 2008.

Gene Pack, KUER’s classical-music host for 40 years, dies at 86

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Gene Pack, who introduced generations of Utahns to classical music in his 40 years as a midday host on public radio station KUER, has died.

Pack died in Salt Lake City on March 3 at the age of 86. No cause of death is mentioned in his official obituary, but friends said he had suffered from dementia in recent years.

“Gene was one of those people who just loved life, he loved other people, and he absolutely loved arts in every form,” said Mary Dickson, host of KUED’s community events program “Contact,” who knew Pack for more than 30 years. “He had become such an icon. He was a legend in this town, because you would see him at everything.”

Pack was host of KUER’s classical-music programming from 1960, when the station went on the air, to March 2001, when the station’s midday format was changed from classical music to all news and talk.

Maria O’Mara, KUER’s general manager, called Pack “an important part of the development of our station.” She noted that Pack had created an audience for the station long before KUER became a charter member of National Public Radio in 1971 with the introduction of “All Things Considered.”

O’Mara said Pack’s experience as an actor informed his radio job. “Radio is such an intimate medium, and he understood that. It was just innate in him,” O’Mara said.

O’Mara was an intern at KUER in 1993, and Pack “intimidated me just a bit,” she said. “He was this stately, goateed wise man with the deep broadcast voice. … [But] he was always very kind, generous with his time, and just very willing to be part of the team.”

On his final day as classical-music host on March 16, 2001, Pack played Haydn’s “Farewell” Symphony and broke down.

“I’m devastated, of course,” Pack said then. “It’s something I’ve done for 40 years, it’s been my identity, and it’s gone. One can only feel hollow.”

The format change was announced abruptly, and drew heavy criticism from loyal listeners. Pack stayed on at KUER as an arts reporter for about 15 months before retiring in the summer of 2002, a few weeks shy of his 70th birthday.

It was not a quiet retirement. Pack emceed the Gina Bachauer piano competition, narrated chamber concerts, and took part in productions and readings with Salt Lake Acting Company, The Grand Theatre and Utah Lyric Opera.

Acting was always one of Pack’s passions. In his younger days, Pack was involved in the alternative theater company Theater 138, which ran from 1966 to 1986. Dickson recalled Pack’s portrayal of Billy Flynn, the razzle-dazzle lawyer in the musical “Chicago,” as a highlight of his acting career.

When he wasn’t onstage, Dickson said, Pack was an avid audience member at theater productions and concerts. “He’s a real bon vivant,” Dickson said. “I can still hear that laugh of his.”

Eugene Grant Pack II was born July 29, 1932, in Salt Lake City, to parents Eugene Grant Pack and Lucile Clara (Payne) Pack. He starred in a play at Kingsbury Hall at age 12, and joined his high school’s radio club. He received a bachelor’s of fine arts degree from the University of Utah.

Pack never married. He is survived by his brother, Dennis Pack, and Dennis’ wife Carol, of Winona, Minn., as well as two nephews, two grand-nieces, a grand-nephew and several cousins.

No funeral is planned, in keeping with Pack’s wishes. A memorial service to celebrate his life is planned, but no date has been set. People are asked to send memorials to Utah Symphony | Utah Opera.

Utah House says ‘yes’ to a review of the state flag

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Rep. Steve Handy told his House colleagues that until recently, he had “never really thought too much” about the Utah state flag.

“It’s there,” he said. “It’s nice.”

But that changed after speaking with a constituent who advocated for a new flag, the Layton Republican said. Residents in other states wear flags on their hats and T-shirts, Handy said, while the Utah flag is rarely seen outside of formal and ceremonial settings.

On Friday, the Utah House voted 46-26 for Handy’s bill creating a commission to review and potentially recommend new designs for the state flag. The bill, HB219, will now move to the Senate for consideration.

If enacted, an 11-member panel would be directed to solicit design submissions and report back to lawmakers by November, with any final decision on replacing the flag being made through future legislation.

Utah’s current flag is more than 100 years old and consists of a variation of the state seal set against a blue background. It includes several traditional Utah and national symbols — like a beehive and sego lilies as well as a bald eagle and two U.S. flags — but is aesthetically similar to several other state flags that also feature a seal on a blue background.

Rep. Scot Chew, R-Jensen, said he’s proud of the current flag and has no trouble explaining its imagery to others. He questioned the need to update the design and balked at the bill’s suggestion that children should be able to draw the flag from memory — a design principle espoused by vexillologists, or flag experts.

“Does that mean someone 3-years old or 17-years old?” Chew asked.

And Rep. Brady Brammer, R-Highland, pushed back on Handy’s statement that Utahns do not display the flag outside of formal settings, adding that a college acquaintance hung it in a shared space.

“I’m not in favor of revisiting our state flag at this time,” he said.

Debate on Handy’s bill was cut short by Rep. Karen Kwan, D-Murray, who asked her colleagues if they had heard a “sound” and suggested the final week of the 2019 session could be better spent on more substantial legislation.

“I think it’s the sound of our future bills dying on the last night,” she said.

Real Salt Lake learned plenty from first test, now looks to build against the Vancouver Whitecaps in Saturday’s home opener

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Sandy • The adages are all over sports.

“It’s only one game.” “It’s early in the season.” “It’s a marathon, not a sprint.”

The same can be said in regards to Real Salt Lake, which just last week opened the 2019 season with a draw against Houston on the road. But first game only represents a minuscule sample size.

Nevertheless, coaches and players say there is plenty to be gleaned from just one game.

“The good things that happen reassure,” coach Mike Petke said Thursday after training. “The bad things — it’s not an excuse, but it falls into that it’s the first game of 34. It’s the first meaningful, full game at full pace in a stadium in front of a crowd. So it just reassures things you have to work on as well.”

Of course, one game does not decide playoff seeding or win an MLS Cup. But it can point to the beginnings of how a team will attack, defend and mesh together. An example of that was the four players RSL used in the front of the field last week against the Dynamo.

Another example: the midfield pairing of Kyle Beckerman and newcomer Everton Luiz. The two picked up a yellow card apiece against Houston, and Petke said he liked the way they played off each other.

“Kyle now has somebody next to him, when they play together, that likes to hit people as much as Kyle does,” Petke said. “That’s a good thing to have in that position.”

Sebastian Saucedo said the first game of the season gives the team an opportunity to start building its identity and habits in order to end up a good team when its time to make a playoff push. Beckerman said getting to that point is a constant work in progress.

“Every game is a reset button,” Beckerman said. “It’s a quarter review each week. So this week we’ll see how good we’re doing, and then the next week, same thing.”

Last week’s draw wasn’t without its miscues. A miscommunication led to RSL conceding a goal — the only shot on target for the Dynamo — and, although they were one man up in the final 10 minutes, Real came away feeling like it was not aggressive enough despite being on the road.

While Petke acknowledged that mistakes are “discouraging” regardless of where a team is in a season, he also said they are not a cause for concern — yet.

“It doesn’t mean the end of the world, doesn’t mean the end of your season, doesn’t mean that things aren’t going to improve,” Petke said. “It just tells you you have now 33 more games to improve those things.”

RSL’s players and coaches have said repeatedly that they wants to improve upon what was accomplished last season. Saturday’s home opener against the Vancouver Whitecaps gives RSL a chance to do so in more ways than one.

RSL lost 5-1 to LAFC in the 2018 home opener. It was one of only two four-goal losses Real suffered all of last season. Beckerman said the team wants to avoid a result like that on Saturday.

“I know a lot of guys remember last year and we definitely don’t want a repeat of that,” Beckerman said.

Now that the first real test is out of the way for RSL, the team is looking to move forward.

“As long as there is a good blueprint and there’s good key moments in that game,” Petke said, “you build off of it.”


CDC: Unvaccinated Oregon boy almost dies of tetanus

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Portland, Ore. • An unvaccinated 6-year-old Oregon boy was hospitalized for two months for tetanus and almost died of the bacterial illness after getting a deep laceration on his forehead while playing on a farm, according to a case study published Friday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The 2017 case is the first case of pediatric tetanus in Oregon in more than 30 years and alarmed infectious disease experts who said tetanus is almost unheard of in the U.S. since widespread immunization began in the 1940s.

The child received an emergency dose of the tetanus vaccine in the hospital but his parents declined to give him a second dose — or any other childhood shots — after he recovered, the paper said.

"When I read that, my jaw dropped. I could not believe it. That's a tragedy and a misunderstanding and I'm just flabbergasted," said Dr. William Schaffner, an expert in infectious diseases and chair at the Department of Preventive Medicine at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville, Tennessee.

"This is an awful disease, but ... we have had a mechanism to completely prevent it and the reason that we have virtually no cases anymore in the United States is because we vaccinate, literally, everyone."

The paper did not provide any details about the child, his family or where they live in Oregon and attempts to get that information from the paper's authors were unsuccessful.

News about the tetanus case comes as lawmakers in Oregon and Washington are considering bills that would end non-medical exemptions for routine childhood vaccines as the Pacific Northwest weathers its third month of a measles outbreak. Seventy people in southwest Washington, most of them unvaccinated children, have been diagnosed with the highly contagious viral illness since Jan. 1, as well as a handful of people in Portland, Oregon.

Unlike measles, which is a virus, someone who has survived a case of tetanus is not immune and can get the illness again if they remain unvaccinated. Tetanus also isn't transmitted person-to-person by sneezing or coughing like the measles, but instead comes from bacterial spores that are found in the environment.

Tetanus spores exist everywhere, particularly in the soil. When an unvaccinated person gets a deep, penetrating wound, those spores can invade the cut and begin producing the bacteria that causes the illness.

The tetanus bacterium secretes a toxin that gets into the bloodstream and latches onto the nervous system.

Anywhere from three to 21 days after infection, symptoms appear: muscle spasms, lockjaw, difficulty swallowing and breathing and seizures. The disease can cause death or severe disability in those who survive, Schaffner said.

About 30 people contract tetanus each year nationwide, according to the CDC, and 16 people died of it between 2009 and 2015. It's rare among children; those over 65 are the most vulnerable.

In the case in Oregon, the boy cut himself on the forehead while playing and his family stitched up the wound themselves. Six days later, he began clenching his jaw, arching his neck and back and had uncontrollable muscle spasms.

When he began to have trouble breathing, his parents called paramedics and he was transported by air to Oregon Health & Science University in Portland. When he arrived, he asked for water but could not open his mouth.

The child was sedated, put on a ventilator and cared for in a darkened room while wearing ear plugs because any stimulation made his pain and muscle spasms worse. His fever spiked to almost 105 degrees (40.5 Celsius) and he developed high blood pressure and a racing heartbeat.

Forty-four days after he was hospitalized, the boy was able to sip clear liquids. Six days later, he was able to walk a short distance with help. After another three weeks of inpatient rehabilitation and a month at home, he could ride a bike and run — a remarkable recovery, experts said.

The child's care — not including the air ambulance and inpatient rehabilitation — cost nearly $1 million, about 72 times the mean for a pediatric hospitalization in the U.S., the paper noted.

"The way to treat tetanus is you have to outlast it. You have to support the patient because this poison links on chemically and then it has to be slowly metabolized," Schaffner said.

Cases of tetanus have dropped by 95 percent in the U.S. since widespread childhood vaccination and adult booster shots became routine nearly 80 years ago; deaths have dropped 99 percent.

The CDC recommends a five-dose series of tetanus shots for children between the ages of 2 months and 6 years and a booster shot every 10 years for adults.

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Associated Press Medical Writer Michael Stobbe in Atlanta contributed to this report.

Lawmaker who pushed changes to a conversion therapy ban comes under fire for resurfaced anti-LGBTQ posts

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A push to ban LGBTQ conversion therapy for minors looked like it could succeed in Utah after The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said it wouldn’t stand in the way, but the effort ground to a halt this week.

Conversion therapy has a long history in Utah, and the legislation drew fierce opposition from people who said barring therapists from talking about changing someone's sexual orientation would violate free-speech rights.

It was seen as a milestone when the state’s predominant faith announced it would not oppose the ban, considering past teachings that being gay could be “cured,” according to religion scholars. The church has condemned conversion therapy and taken a more welcoming stance to the LGBTQ community but remains opposed to gay marriage and sex.

But eight Republican lawmakers in Utah approved changes this week that advocates said effectively gutted the ban. They would have allowed damaging practices aimed at changing kids' gender identity, activists said.

Republican Rep. Karianne Lisonbee sponsored the changes and insisted she was looking for a compromise that would still protect LGBTQ kids. But activists say some of her Facebook comments revealed by The Associated Press indicate that she supports the debunked practice.

In 2013 comments reviewed by the AP and confirmed by two family members, Lisonbee wondered whether it was "possible that living a homosexual lifestyle may cause individuals to choose to commit suicide?"

She also wrote a 1970s-era experiment in Utah using electric shocks to change sexual orientation was horrifying but shouldn't be considered torture on subjects who volunteered.

Lisonbee said people have "successfully overcome" what she called "unwanted same-sex attraction" and that such therapy should be available to others who want it.

Asked Thursday about the comments that have since been removed, Lisonbee didn’t disavow them but said they came in an occasionally heated debate between members of her family over a story about same-sex marriage and Latter-day Saints.

"I repeatedly said my stance was love and compassion and not judgment," she said.

Asked about the comment on suicide, she pointed to legislative testimony by a man who said he felt despondent about his attraction to other men until he underwent therapy that helped him meet and marry a woman.

Troy Williams with the gay rights group Equality Utah denounced the posts.

"She's falsely suggesting that people take their lives because they are gay," he said. "That is reckless and dangerous rhetoric that reveals her extreme homophobia."

Lisonbee denied that allegation. She said conversion therapy is a "horrific practice" and pointed out that her version also would have banned electroshock therapy.

"My goal was to find something that could pass," she said, adding that she's now the target of angry messages.

But activists say therapists practicing conversion therapy generally don't use outdated, painful techniques, and her revisions still would have allowed practices they do employ to try to change behavior and feelings.

"It's much worse than doing nothing," said Maria Olsen-Hiatt, 21, who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder after going through conversion therapy at age 14.

She came to the state Capitol on Thursday night to protest the ban's defeat. Gov. Gary Herbert released a letter apologizing for supporting the changes, calling it "an enormous misunderstanding."

Olsen-Hiatt said the outcome reveals a disconnect. While state leaders have reached out to gay teens as they work to prevent suicide, she said there’s still a widespread view in Utah that “LGBT existence is sinful.”

A Utah fire hydrant was painted blue to honor a police officer who was killed. A ‘subhuman’ dumped red paint on it.

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To remember where West Valley City police officer Cody Brotherson died the night of Nov. 6, 2016, the city painted a fire hydrant navy blue. Brotherson’s badge number, 8444, was placed in the concrete beside the hydrant.

Now police are trying to find whoever vandalized the hydrant, near 2200 W. 4100 South, by pouring red paint on it. A Facebook post captures the anger of local police.

“Please help West Valley Police identify the subhuman(s) who have defiled the fire hydrant near 2200 W 4100 S.,” the post from the Unified Police Department’s Taylorsville Precinct reads. “This is hallow[ed] ground, as it is the same area where Officer Cody Brotherson was savagely murdered by a group of gang members. All give some, some give all!”

The boundary for Taylorsville is near the hydrant. UPD spokesman Detective Kevin Mallory said the assumption is someone poured the paint to desecrate Brotherson’s memorial. Mallory was not aware of any suspects. He encouraged anyone with information to call West Valley City police at 801-840-4000.

UPD officers responded to the scene the night Brotherson died. Three teenage boys were fleeing in a stolen car and the driver ran over Brotherson, killing him.

(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  A photo of West Valley City Officer Cody Brotherson, during a memorial ceremony at Fairbourne Station Plaza in West Valley City on the one year anniversary of Brotherson's death.  Monday, November 6, 2017.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) A photo of West Valley City Officer Cody Brotherson, during a memorial ceremony at Fairbourne Station Plaza in West Valley City on the one year anniversary of Brotherson's death. Monday, November 6, 2017. (Rick Egan/)

A boy who was 16 when sentenced in 2017, and who was suspected of driving, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. Another boy, who was 14 when sentenced, pleaded guilty to second-degree felony manslaughter.

The third boy, age 15 when sentenced, who was in the back seat and claimed he told the driver to stop, was not convicted of any charge related to Brotherson’s death. All three boys pleaded guilty to a variety of other charges related to stealing the car and fleeing.

All three teens were sentenced to juvenile detention. They could remain there until age 21 unless a juvenile parole board releases them earlier.

The BYU Cougars have lots of good memories of the WCC Tournament; until they play Gonzaga, anyway

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Las Vegas • Orleans Arena, a 9,500-seat sports and entertainment venue here that sits adjacent to a casino and across the street from a defunct strip joint annually turns into Spokane South for a few days in early March. Gonzaga basketball fans flock there to watch their beloved Zags dominate the West Coast Conference men’s and women’s basketball tournaments.

Gonzaga supporters easily outnumber fans of all the other teams combined. BYU is by far the second most-represented school, but doesn’t come close to attracting the numbers that GU does.

Gonzaga fans have been known to buy season tickets to all the other schools in the WCC not named Saint Mary’s or BYU — often for less than $100 a season — knowing they will never step foot in venues such as the Leavey Center at Santa Clara or Firestone Fieldhouse at Pepperdine so they can get priority purchasing for WCC tournament tickets.

That dynamic could change a bit this weekend, however, because the Zags’ No. 1-ranked men’s team and No. 14-ranked women’s teams don’t play until Monday under the league’s new tournament format put in place last spring when Gonzaga threatened to bolt for the Mountain West.

In other words, third-seeded BYU will play the winner of Friday’s late second-round game between No. 7 seed San Diego and No. 6 seed Santa Clara at 10 p.m. MDT Saturday in a quarterfinal in front of a lot of empty seats and an ESPN2 television audience.

The Cougars (19-12, 11-5) swept San Diego 88-82 in overtime in San Diego on Feb. 14 and 87-73 in Provo last Saturday. They faced Santa Clara just once, due to another WCC scheduling change that trimmed two games, beating the Broncos 80-74 at the Marriott Center on Jan. 12.

BYU coach Dave Rose was part of the coaches committee that pushed the changes through, so he’s not complaining. He doesn’t seem to have any “Gonzaga Fatigue,” either, although if any men’s team other than the No. 1-ranked Zags (16-0, 29-2) wins the championship game on Tuesday night, it will be a major stunner.

“Mentally, you have to keep your guys really positive” knowing that Gonzaga is probably unbeatable, Rose said. “The streak that they are on has to come to an end sometime, and hopefully you get a chance to do it. But physically you have got to go out there and beat them instead of just proving that they are not going to lose. You don’t necessarily have to be better than they are, but you have to beat them. That’s why we play.”

In their seven previous WCC tournament appearances, the Cougars are 0-5 against the Zags — three of those losses were in the championship games — and 9-2 against the other teams in the league that has seemingly improved recently with the upswings of San Francisco, San Diego and Loyola Marymount this year.

BYU juniors Yoeli Childs and Zac Seljaas both said they enjoy playing at Orleans Arena, notwithstanding its unusual setup for basketball — it originally housed a minor league hockey team and then an Arena Football League team — and how it has the vibe of McCarthey Athletic Center, aka The Kennel, when hordes of Zags fans show up.

“It is awesome,” Childs said. “I first played there in high school. I played really well there. I feel like we’ve had a lot of really good individual games and I don’t think it is going to affect us too much. We are one of the few teams from the conference that is lucky enough to play in a really large arena, so we are more prepared for it than most teams.”

Seljaas, who relies on outside shooting for his points more than any other Cougar, said it is just like “any other gym” he’s played in.

“You just gotta go in and get used to the feel of it, and you are set,” Seljaas said. “The Orleans Arena is kind of like home now. To us, it is just home.”

At least until Gonzaga shows up.


Bagley Cartoon: Flagging Enthusiasm for Tax ‘Reform’

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This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Sunday, March 10, 2019.This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Friday, March 8, 2019.This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Thursday, March 7, 2019.(Pat Bagley  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  This cartoon by Pat Bagley titled "A Real National Emergency" appeared in The Salt Lake Tribune on Wednesday, March 6, 2019.(Pat Bagley | The Salt Lake Tribune)  This Pat Bagley cartoon, titled "The War on Hamburgers," appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Tuesday, March 5, 2019.This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Sunday, March 3, 2019.This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Friday, March 1, 2019.This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Thursday, Feb. 28, 2019.This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2019.(Pat Bagley | The Salt Lake Tribune) This Pat Bagley cartoon, titled "Utah's Hot Topic," appears in the Feb. 26, 2019, edition of The Salt Lake Tribune.This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Sunday, Feb. 24, 2019.

This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Sunday, March 10, 2019. You can check out the past 10 Bagley editorial cartoons below:

  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/03/07/bagley-cartoon-gop/" target=_blank><u>2020 GOP Strategy</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/03/06/bagley-cartoon-temple-bar/"><u>The Temple Bar</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/03/05/bagley-cartoon-real/"><u>The Real National Emergency</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/03/04/bagley-cartoon-war/"><u>The War on Hamburgers</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/03/01/bagley-cartoon-loyalty/"><u>Loyalty Oaf</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/02/28/bagley-cartoon-shredding/"><u>Shredding the Constitution</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/02/28/bagley-cartoon-liars-club/"><u>The Liar’s Club</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/02/26/bagley-cartoon-nordic/"><u>The Nordic Menace</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/02/25/bagley-cartoon-utahs-hot/"><u>Utah’s Hot Topic</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2019/02/22/bagley-cartoon-state-flag/"><u>State Flag Redesign</u></a>

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