Plus, what Gov. Cox, King and Latham said in the debate for Utah governor.
Good morning! Here are today’s temperatures: 🌦️ 47 – 65° in Logan | 💧 50% ⛅ 56 – 68° in Salt Lake | 💧 30% 🌤️ 64 – 91° in St. George U.S. Census Bureau Director Robert L. Santos took a surprising lesson from the effects of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks: the value of collecting data. Speaking to Utah Valley University students Wednesday at an event hosted by the Gary R. Herbert Institute for Public Policy, Santos emphasized that collecting data to accurately represent diverse demographics across the country is a “keystone to our democracy.” Interviewing survivors was an “emotional” process, Santos said, but “we got really valuable information that helped come up with better building codes.” Read more from Hannah Murdock about how UVU honored 9/11. Also on our minds: How to protect your health when wildfire smoke is filling the air Why student loan forgiveness is a bad idea Wake up, sheeple: Meg Walter says cats are controlling the timeline |
| What Utah’s Olympic organizers learned from the Paris Games |
|
| | Utah’s Olympic organizers saw more than just the expected sights during the 2024 Summer Games in Paris. Besides the iconic locations that served as backdrops for Olympic events, like the Eiffel Tower, Place de la Concorde and the Grand Palais, the Salt Lake City-Utah Committee for the Games’ bid lead, Darren Hughes, toured the free “Clubs 2024″ live site set up in a low-income northeast Paris neighborhood with a large African immigrant population. Hughes, responsible for pulling together the details of Utah’s successful bid for the 2034 Winter Games, went to the Jardins d’Éole park that’s built on a reclaimed rail yard as part of the International Olympic Committee’s observer program for future Olympic hosts. Paris organizers helped the public feel like a part of the Olympics through efforts like the live sites set up throughout France, that Hughes said most impressed during the behind-the-scenes look at running the 2024 Summer Games. It’s something he hopes to replicate in all of Utah’s 29 counties when the state hosts in a decade. Read more about the lessons Utah organizers learned in Paris. | Gov. Spencer Cox declared this the “golden age of Utah” during a televised debate on Wednesday night. His general election opponents agreed. But while Cox credited the Beehive State’s booming economy and 2034 Olympics with the legislative accomplishments of his first term, Democratic state Rep. Brian King and Libertarian attorney Robert Latham argued the governor’s approach risked cutting Utah’s golden age short. King rehashed Cox’s flip-flop on former President Donald Trump and attempted to align Cox with the most “extreme” elements within the Republican Party. Latham criticized Cox for what he saw as a pattern of government “cronyism” that picks winners and losers to the benefit of lawmakers and corporations. Read more about the debate and where each candidate stands on the issues facing Utahns today. More in Utah ‘Utah will continue to lead the fight’ to protect children from social media harms, says Gov. Cox (Deseret News) Smoke blankets Utah skies as California, Nevada wildfires rage on (Deseret News) Utah’s Angel Studios, formerly VidAngel, plans to go public in $1.6B SPAC deal (Deseret News) Utah judge dismisses case over making NIL contracts public (Deseret News) | Politics Deseret News Editorial Board: Why student loan forgiveness is a bad idea (Deseret News) Searching for humanity during a contentious debate (Deseret News) Sen. Mitt Romney: Harris showed she’s ‘an intelligent, capable person’ at presidential debate (Deseret News) Renae Cowley & Frank Pignanelli: What would it take to win this presidential election? (Deseret News) The U.S. U.S. inflation hits 3-year low as Fed tees up interest rate cut (Deseret News) Steve Pierce: Baseless attacks on Haitian migrants in America don’t reflect reality (Deseret News) The World Israel-Hamas war latest: Turkey investigates the killing of Turkish-American activist in West Bank (The Associated Press) The horrifying French rape case gripping the world (Deseret News) Sports Heart attack altered Jay Hill’s routine, but his passion for coaching BYU’s defense hasn’t changed (Deseret News) DOJ puts Utah State on notice for ‘substantial non-compliance’ issues related to Title IX violations (Deseret News) 3 thoughts from day one of Utah HC rookie camp (Deseret News) What happens to Utah State, Mountain West if the Pac-12 expands by taking 4 MWC schools? (Deseret News) Faith Why people prayed outside the Supreme Court on Wednesday (Deseret News) What Kamala Harris said about faith and abortion (Deseret News) Health Wildfire smoke filling the air? Here’s what you should be doing (Deseret News) Study found toxic metals in hygiene products; FDA investigating (Deseret News) |
Check your inbox tomorrow morning for more news from the Beehive State and beyond! And reply to this email or email newsletters@deseretnews.com to tell us what you think of Utah Today. Thanks for reading! — Ariel |
| Copyright © 2024 Deseret News, All rights reserved. |