Plus, Paralympic gold medalist Hunter Woodhall gives back to Shriners in Utah
Good morning! Here are today’s temperatures: 🌤️ 40 – 75° in Logan 🌤️ 50 – 78° in Salt Lake 🌤️ 56 – 87° in St. George I haven’t had to go to the DMV in years (thank goodness), but Meg Walter’s latest column reminds me that I need to be prepared when my license expires. Meg wrote about her humbling trip to the DMV, where the agonizing wait taught her about shared humanity and inspired her to consider starting a rebellion. Read more about how to outsmart the driver’s license renewal process. Also on our minds: Snowbird kicks off Oktoberfest celebrations Why University of Utah experts want you to get a new COVID-19 shot What Mitt Romney said about how Democrats used IVF bill |
| Utah committee cancels presentation on controversial GOP presidential caucus night |
|
| | A state legislative committee declined to hear complaints about the Utah Republican Party’s caucus-night presidential poll for the second time on Wednesday, citing biased presentations, the independence of party organizations and an alleged conflict of interest with the committee chair. “What we heard here today in this committee, loud and clear, is that they don’t feel like they have any responsibility or obligation to hear from these people,” Sen. Daniel Thatcher, R-West Valley City, said. Lawmakers, including Rep. Stephanie Gricius, R-Salt Lake City, Rep. Mike Petersen, R-North Logan, and Rep. Kay Christofferson, R-Lehi, argued the presentation materials from one critic — Daryl Acumen, a former GOP vice chair in Utah County — were biased against the caucus system. “This is a conversation that does need to happen, but not in this way,” Gricius said. “We need to come at it from a clean slate.” The state GOP’s “presidential preference poll,” held on Super Tuesday, March 5, was criticized by lawmakers and voters for being inaccessible and insecure. Website crashes and disorganization contributed to a low turnout of less than 10% and the disenfranchisement of Utah voters who were unable to attend the caucus proceedings at schools across the state, according to Acumen. Read more about responses to the caucus night and the cancelled presentation. | Utahn Hunter Woodhall ran the biggest race of his life earlier this month when he won gold at the 2024 Paris Paralympics — but he may have just run his most fun races on Wednesday. Woodhall and his wife, Tara Davis-Woodhall, who won gold at the 2024 Paris Olympics, stopped by Shriners Children’s Hospital in Salt Lake City to give back to the Shriners community that gave so much to him. The couple took photos with every family in attendance, signed countless photos — and prosthetic legs — and raced the throngs of Shriners kids in attendance. Woodhall is a former patient and patient ambassador of the hospital. As a baby, he was diagnosed with fibular hemimelia in his left leg and a fused right ankle. Read more about the Woodhalls' visit to the hospital where Hunter Woodhall learned to run. More in Utah Focus on Utah: Ocktoberfest at Snowbird (Deseret News) Utah Hockey Club announces kids’ hockey program, including school PE hockey (Deseret News) ‘Such a gateway’: Latina leaders put focus on education at Weber State event (KSL) Breeze to offer new service between Provo and nation’s capital (KSL) | FROM OUR SPONSOR OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS A Celebration of the Richness of Latter-Day Saint Art Discover the long—and until now—under-studied tradition of Latter-Day Saint art. Including over 200 high-quality color illustrations and 22 essays from various perspectives, this new book looks at the painting, sculpture, film, textile arts, architecture and more that have shaped the history and culture of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. | Utah Politics Sen. Mike Kennedy announces resignation from state Legislature (Deseret News) Rep. Celeste Maloy says Small Business Administration ‘unresponsive’ to local Utah partners (Deseret News) Utah Legislature votes to join lawsuit on federal lands (Deseret News) The U.S. Fed cuts interest rate for first time in four years. Here’s what it means for you (Deseret News) The Deseret News Editorial Board: America’s political violence problem (Deseret News) Politics Out with immigration, in with the economy: Kamala Harris’ Latino messaging switch (Deseret News) Sen. Mitt Romney: Democrats used IVF bill as ‘a messaging opportunity’ (Deseret News) Holly Richardson: The false narrative of immigrants eating pets has a long history (Deseret News) The World Walkie-talkies detonate in Lebanon in second wave of explosions (Deseret News) Inspiring BYU students to solve world hunger (Deseret News) Rampant adoption fraud separated generations of South Korean children from their families, AP finds (The Associated Press) Sports When will NFL teams learn? You can’t rush a rookie QB onto the field (Deseret News) ‘Best thing about life is football’: Utah running back fighting through the pain (Deseret News) Cornerbacks have been a big part of BYU defense’s early success, but coach isn’t satisfied (Deseret News) The Aggies doubled the size of their 2025 recruiting class over the weekend (Deseret News) Anderson Julio scores twice, Gavin Beavers youngest keeper to notch assist as Real Salt Lake tops FC Dallas (The Associated Press) Health Drug-resistant bacteria deaths are projected to jump 70% by 2050. Here’s what can reverse the trend (Deseret News) COVID-19 is still spreading in Utah but new vaccines are available. Here’s what experts want you to do (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. |