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Ask Ann Cannon: Should I put my dog’s poop in someone else’s trash can?

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Dear Ann Cannon • I walk my dog twice a day and recently an out-of-state family member accompanied me on one of those strolls. As per usual, my dog did her business and after I picked up the poop, my relative argued I should throw it away in any garbage bin that was at the curb. I declined, saying a private citizen pays for the can so it was not a public receptacle and therefore it would be bad form. What’s your take?

What to Do With Doggie Doo-Doo?

Dear What to Do • True confession time. I used to be THAT person — the one who tossed the bag into the first garbage can I saw. To me, a garbage can was a garbage can was a garbage can. I just assumed other people wouldn’t care if I used theirs because I didn’t care if they used mine. If anything, I thought I was being totally awesome on the Good Citizen Front for even picking up after my dog. I grew up in America’s Reckless Days when nobody wore seatbelts or picked up poop, which meant we all spent a lot of time scraping stuff off the soles of our Keds before walking inside someone’s house when it was time to watch reruns of “Gilligan’s Island.”

Then one day a good friend of mine (who doesn’t own dogs) told me she hates it when strangers dump dog mess in her garbage can. It’s her can on her property. What’s wrong with people? I was surprised by her reaction, but it caused me to rethink my position and now I am woke when it comes to disposal issues. Yes. I am very, very woke.

This is a long way of saying that I think you’re right and your relative is wrong … although I think we can agree that tossing that doggie bag into any receptacle is better than leaving it on the ground.

Dear Ann Cannon • Why have the election campaign seasons become so expensive, long and abusive? What happened to a person speaking out to their community about what specific ideas they have for solving problems? We need kinder, gentler campaigns. How do we get there?

Disgusted by Today’s Election Spectacles

Dear Disgusted • Well, I’m not a politician. Or a pollster. Or a poli-sci professional of any kind. And even if I were, I’d probably disagree with my colleagues (who would be busy disagreeing with each other) about how to manage the reality of our currently exhausting and expensive election cycles. Me, I’m personally a fan of the way the Brits manage theirs. Give ’em six weeks and things are won and done, Son.

We’ll never be able to impose such an efficient and cost-effective system here in America. We’ve already let too many gremlins out of the bag.

What we can do as individual citizens, however, is to ignore the bad examples set by far too many of our leaders and choose to engage with one another civilly in person and online, even when we disagree.

Got a question for Ann? Email her at askann@sltrib.com or visit the Ask Ann Cannon page on Facebook.


Letter: Respect for the rule of law, ethics is what makes a country (even a socialist one) thrive

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KUTV News on Oct. 25 aired a piece that it curiously labeled an examination of what socialism would look like today. The examples contrasted the brilliantly successful Nordic countries with the abject failures in Venezuela and Brazil. In doing so, the report demonstrated that the success of a country has little to do with the degree of socialism but everything to do with the level of corruption society tolerates in people’s lives and leadership.

The obvious takeaway is that respect for the rule of law is critical and that we need to hold our economic and political leadership to a high standard of ethics. The lesson is that in a democratic society, that is always up to us.

Dan Cortsen, Sandy

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Tribune editorial: Utah isn’t buying Trump’s birthright citizenship gambit

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President Trump this week told an interviewer that he intends to end “birthright citizenship,” the 150-year-old constitutional right to citizenship for anyone born on American soil.

The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution says that “all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

Despite the president’s insistence, skirting a constitutional amendment with an executive order doesn’t even appear legally possible. Even House Speaker Paul Ryan was quick to dismiss the idea.

Beyond the legality, the president is attacking yet another pillar of American strength. The language in the 14th Amendment was in answer to the Dred Scott decision, in which the 1857 U.S. Supreme Court decided, among other things, that African-Americans could not be citizens. Dred Scott has been called the worst decision the court ever made.

The irony is that the birth of Trump’s Republican Party can be traced to reaction to Dred Scott. It is why it’s the Party of Lincoln. After the nation fought the Civil War, the 14th Amendment turned all African-Americans into citizens.

That birthright to citizenship became embedded in American society with the wave of European immigration more than a century ago. Millions came knowing their progeny born here would be American in all respects.

Today, birthright citizenship has become a bogeyman for the right wing. About 8 percent of children born in the United States have at least one parent who is undocumented, although the number of such births has fallen in the past decade. Immigration hardliners have argued these children don’t deserve citizenship because their parents do not have legal residency, even though the children will grow up and attend schools in the only country they’ve ever known. If they don’t belong here, where do they belong?

Similar arguments have been used against so-called Dreamers, undocumented immigrants who came here as children and went to college and deserve a path to citizenship. But in this case they didn’t arrive here as children. They started here.

No Utahn currently serving or running for Congress — Republican, Democrat or independent — has spoken in favor of the president’s plan. Mia Love, the daughter of Haitian immigrants, rejected it outright, as did her opponent, Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams, who rightly blames Congress for failure to pass meaningful immigration reform.

A spokesman for Sen. Mike Lee seemed more concerned with the limits of presidential power than with the harmfulness of the idea. He declined to say that getting rid of birthright citizenship was a bad idea. His only point was that Congress, not the president, could do it if it wanted. But do we want it, Sen. Lee?

This bluff on killing citizenship rights is part of Trump’s “package” of anti-immigrant scare tactics to get his loyalists to the polls. Like amassing troops at the Mexican border for migrant caravans that pose no threat, it’s not about solving a problem. It’s about feeding fears.

Thankfully, Utahns aren’t biting.

Gehrke: Suzanne Harrison, who lost by three votes last time, is back in one of several Utah races to watch on election night

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You could count the deciding votes on one hand and still have two fingers to spare, that’s how close the 2016 race was between Democrat Suzanne Harrison and incumbent Republican Rep. LaVar Christensen.

The day after the results were final, Harrison, a physician, announced she would run again in 2018, believing this time would be different.

“I took the results [as indicating] that people are ready for someone who is willing to listen to them and focus on the issues that really matter to everyday families,” she said Thursday. “For too long, I think the Legislature has given lip service to issues families care about and not really prioritized them.”

Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune
The Salt Lake Tribune staff portraits.
Robert Gehrke.
Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune The Salt Lake Tribune staff portraits. Robert Gehrke. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

This time she has a new opponent, Brad Bonham, owner of a furniture company, who ran after Christensen decided to take a shot (he missed) at an open Senate seat.

Their race will once again be among the closest in the state when the votes are counted Tuesday.

The district naturally tilts to Republicans, but Harrison has knocked on 30,000 doors in this Sandy and Draper district pitching her message of how good schools plus clean air will equal a strong economy.

Bonham is appealing to the area’s GOP tenancies, selling himself as “the only fiscal conservative” in the race and arguing that limited government equals more opportunity.

Bjorn Jones, the United Utah Party nominee in the district, has been sidelined by health issues, and recently encouraged his supporters to consider supporting Harrison.

Both Bonham and Harrison are well-funded — Bonham donating tens of thousands of dollars to his campaign, bringing his total to $139,000, compared to more than $106,000 for Harrison, a lot for a state House seat — and every indication is that we once again may not know the outcome on election night.

It’s just one of a handful of state legislative races that don’t get a lot of attention, but are worth watching Tuesday as Democrats try to chip away at the Republican supermajorities in both the House and Senate. Here are a few more:

Sen. Brian Zehnder vs. Kathleen Riebe

Zehnder took over the Senate District 8 seat early this year, after Sen. Brian Shiozawa resigned to take a job as regional director for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The Cottonwood Heights and Midvale district, like House District 32, favors Republicans (Shiozawa won twice by 14 points each time), but is very moderate. Zehnder, a physician, has positioned himself in that vein. So has his challenger, Riebe, a 15-year educator who currently represents the area on the state school board and has made improving Utah schools and expanding health care access a cornerstone of her campaign.

Riebe has been outspent by Zehnder more than two-to-one, but has worked hard and made it the most competitive Senate race in the state this year.

Former Rep. LaWanna “Lou” Shurtliff vs. Lorraine Brown

For a decade, Shurtliff, a former teacher, represented her South Ogden district in the Utah House before retiring in 2008. But concern over some of the bills she saw in the Legislature — specifically a plan to spend $45 million re-branding the Utah Transit Authority — brought this Democrat out of retirement.

She is vying for an open seat, vacated by the retiring Rep. Dixon Pitcher, and contending with Republican Lorraine Brown, a South Ogden attorney, running on a platform of states rights and incentivizing jobs in Weber County and pollution reduction statewide.

On paper, this has been a hard-fought district, with Pitcher winning twice by eight points or less, before an easy win two years ago.

Throw into the mix a wild card, a write-in campaign mounted by Terry Schow, the former director of the state’s Department of Veterans Affairs, who lost to Brown in the Republican primary.

Brown has spent more than $50,000 on her campaign, compared to about $17,000 for Shurtliff. But Shurtliff’s built-in name recognition and experience make this a race worth watching.

Rep. Sue Duckworth vs. Barbara Stallone

This Magna district, with a distinct blue-collar union flavor, has been a Democratic stronghold for decades but could be up for grabs this year.

Duckworth has represented District 22 since she took over for her husband, Rep. Carl Duckworth, who retired in 2008 after being diagnosed with cancer. He died in May.

Duckworth is well-liked and traditionally has won re-election easily, but last election she faced stiff opposition, pulling out a 52-48 victory.

This time she faces an energetic candidate, Barbara Stallone, a development director for a nonprofit that provides services to families. Stallone is the sister of state Sen. Daniel Thatcher, who represents the area, as well.

This is a pure, person-to-person campaign, with Duckworth spending less than $8,000 on her race, while Stallone has spent about $6,500.

Rep. Karen Kwan vs. David Young

House District 34, covering chunks of Taylorsville and West Valley City, is one of just a few true “swing” districts in the state. Rep. Karen Kwan, a Democrat, won the open seat in 2016 by a 9-point margin, rebounding from a 6-point loss to incumbent Rep. Johnny Anderson two years earlier.

Republicans think they may have a shot at taking it back, running David Young, a mortgage officer at America First Credit Union, who says his experience in home financing will help him address housing affordability issues.

Kwan, who teaches psychology at Salt Lake Community College, has the fundraising edge over Young. The aggressive get-out-the-vote efforts in the 4th District race between Rep. Mia Love and Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams could also come into play.

Letter: Vote for and demand public health, education and quality of life

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It’s not unusual for development to turn a blind eye to potential and known threats to public health and quality of life. But, these days, that seems to be the norm. If ever there were a time for deliberate, careful planning before we ruin an exceptionally nice place to live, this is it.

We all understand air quality is our most serious public health issue. Yet rampant massive development and highway projects such as the prison relocation and Inland Port, which will seriously exacerbate air quality, continue.

As many politicians consider air quality improvement an impediment to development, new highways are favored over education, life-supporting wetlands and water supplies. Every piece of land available for rental development in Salt Lake City is under construction regardless of impacts to local communities. And now, unbelievably, officials are struggling to decide whether or not to approve a permit that allows EnergySolutions to accept depleted uranium while knowing doing so will create a deadly health threat to generations of future Utahns.

Question: Why would any sane person, or politician, even consider such a project (or any of these projects)? Answer: Greed.

This November, vote for and demand public health, education and quality of life.

Dan Mayhew, Salt Lake City

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Owner of Salt Lake City’s Eccles Theater files a countersuit, alleges caterer owes venue $300,000

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After being sued by a Utah caterer for allegedly breaking its concession contract, the government-led agency that owns Salt Lake City’s Eccles Theater filed a counterclaim this week, stating that the food provider owes the venue at least $300,000 in unpaid rent and building improvements.

Cuisine Unlimited “is in breach of its agreement with the Eccles Theater and has been for almost two years,” according to the counterclaim filed in 3rd District Court by the Utah Performing Arts Center Agency (UPACA).

The board of directors for UPACA includes officials from Salt Lake City and Salt Lake County.

UPACA asserts the caterer brought in $1.8 million in revenues between October 2016, when the theater opened, and May 2018, when Cuisine ended its contract. Yet, the agency says, the caterer paid only $54,682 in commissions, a fraction of the $310,521 it owes in lieu of rent.

Cuisine Unlimited also owes the theater $65,448 for certain requested building improvements. And, according to UPACA, the caterer failed to meet the “first-class standard of service" required of a showcase venue like the Eccles.

UPACA hopes to recoup its losses, as well as attorney fees, in a jury trial.

Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune
The Encore Bistro at Eccles Theater.
Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune The Encore Bistro at Eccles Theater. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

Last month, Cuisine Unlimited, which was hired to handle all food and beverage service at the downtown venue, filed a lawsuit claiming UPACA “grossly overstated” the capacity of the building’s event space in its request for proposal (RFP). It asserts the inaccurate contract caused $1.5 million in lost revenue.

Cuisine Unlimited also alleges that after it signed the catering contract, UPACA placed additional restrictions on the company, hindering its ability to make a profit. The problems, the suit states, forced Cuisine Unlimited to terminate the five-year Eccles contract after two years.

Maxine Turner, founder of Cuisine Unlimited, said her company tried for more than a year to resolve the issues through mediation. However, she said, UPACA would not engage in that process. The offer to negotiate is still on the table.

“It is our hope that the leadership of UPACA, the county and the city will meet with us to resolve these issues without further legal action," she wrote Thursday in an email. “Until then, we will proceed with our legal process.”

UPACA counters that the caterer’s “accusations have no merit.” The agreement "made no guarantee as to any capacity or business at the theater. Indeed, it was Cuisine — not the Eccles Theater — that was charged with driving business at the theater.”

UPACA also asserts that Cuisine Unlimited failed to operate the theater "in a manner consistent with . . . other first-class standard performing arts venues in the United States.”

The agency pointed to patron feedback that indicated “concession stands were poorly operated." Customers noted long lines, which made buying drinks and snacks difficult during the short intermission; and the quality of the offerings were “substantially less than the prices being charged.”

UPACA also asserts that Cuisine Unlimited failed to “meet even a basic standard for many private events” including those attended by donors. Such as:

• Failing to file required permits in time.

• Arriving as much as 45 minutes late to events.

• Running out of food or failing to serve the planned amount of food.

Even though Cuisine fell behind on its commissions, the Eccles Theater continued to work with Cuisine in good faith, UPACA states.

As an example, UPACA says it allowed Cuisine Unlimited to cut the operating hours at the Encore Bistro, located in the theater lobby, because it was struggling to make the eatery profitable. Reducing the hours from weekdays to just show nights was allowed despite the fact that the Bistro was supposed to be “a unique draw for the theater,” the suit states.

“The Eccles Theater was committed to helping Cuisine make their operations at the theater a success,” the suit says. “Unfortunately.... when Cuisine realized that it could not or did not want to come current on its increasing obligation to the Eccles Theater, Cuisine began to manufacture false claims of breach against the Eccles Theater.”

How many drinks does it take to hit 0.05? The Salt Lake Tribune and FOX 13 put Utah’s DUI law to the test.

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How many drinks will it take for someone to reach Utah’s new 0.05 blood-alcohol content limit? It depends on the person — and the drink of choice — according to an experiment conducted by FOX 13 and The Salt Lake Tribune.

When it goes into effect on Dec. 30, Utah will have the nation’s toughest DUI law, lowering the blood alcohol level from 0.08 to 0.05. To see what that could mean for Utahns, FOX 13 and Tribune reporters tried different combinations of alcohol and food under the supervision of the Unified Police Department’s DUI squad.

The five journalists all started with a 0.00 BAC and passed a field sobriety test. Over the course of three hours, the experiments included:

  • Two glasses of white wine and a Greek salad for Kathy Stephenson, The Tribune’s food and alcohol reporter,
  • Four gin cocktails for Tribune columnist Robert Gehrke,
  • Two high-point golden ales and a cheeseburger with fries for FOX 13 producer Darcy Stapleford,
  • Eight 3.2 beers and a cheeseburger with fries for Mike Rank, a FOX 13 photojournalist and
  • One serving of cough syrup and a bowl of chicken noodle soup for FOX 13 reporter Ben Winslow.

Stapleford and Stephenson were the only ones to reach a 0.05 or higher. Even still, both passed their field sobriety tests.

Unified Police Officer Mikel Archibeque said, however, that police need only find signs of impairment to pull someone over.

“We’re looking to get impaired drivers off the road,” Archibeque said. “So whether it’s a 0.05, 0.08, 0.16, whatever number, if we can show they’re impaired, we need to get those impaired drivers off the road.”

See more at FOX 13.

Editor’s note: The Salt Lake Tribune and FOX 13 are content-sharing partners.

Political Cornflakes: President Trump has reached a new high ... in the false claim tally

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President Trump is making false claims at such a rate that fact checkers are having a hard time keeping up. Former Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. has undergone treatment for cancer. The LDS Church-owned Deseret News editorializes against Prop 2.

Happy Friday. President Trump has really stepped up his game — in making false or misleading claims. In the first nine months of his unorthodox presidency, the former reality TV celebrity and real-estate tycoon made 1,318 such statements, or about five a day, according the Washington Post Fact Checker. But in just seven weeks leading up to the midterm election, he has racked up1,419 false or misleading claims, or just short of 10 per day. During his whole presidency the false-claim count has clocked in at 6,420 over the 649 days up to Oct. 30. [WaPost}

Topping the news: Jon Huntsman Jr., U.S. Ambassador to Russia, received treatment at his family’s hospital, Huntsman Cancer Institute, for Stage 1 Melanoma. [Trib][DNews][ABC4]

-> It now looks like a special session to pass compromise medical marijuana legislation will be held in December — instead of this month — it the ballot initiative passes. [Trib]

-> The state Board of Education has released retooled sex education standards for public comment. Utah’s curriculum will remain centered around an “abstinence-only” approach. [Trib]

Tweets of the Day: From @erickhutchings: “‘Nobody will ever deprive the American people of the right to vote except the American people themselves and the only way they could do this is by not voting.’ Franklin D. Roosevelt #Vote #2018Midterms #Utpol

-> From @Acosta: “Trump: “This is an invasion and nobody is questioning that.” (Lots of people are questioning that)”

-> From @Twitter: “Wow.”

-> From @realDonaldTrump: “Just had a long and very good conversation with President Xi Jinping of China. We talked about many subjects, with a heavy emphasis on Trade. Those discussions are moving along nicely with meetings being scheduled at the G-20 in Argentina. Also had good discussion on North Korea!”

Happy Birthday: to Salt Lake City’s Ann Ober on Saturday and Hope Zitting-Goeckeritz on Sunday.

Weekly Quiz: Last week, 92 percent of you knew about the lucky — and rich — South Carolinian who won the lottery, but only 47 percent knew about the proposed state park near Grand Staircase-Escalante. Think you kept up with the news this week? Take our quiz to find out. A new quiz will post every Friday morning. You can find previous quizzes here. If you’re using The Salt Lake Tribune mobile app, click here. [Trib]

Behind the Headlines: Tribune reporters Erin Alberty and Benjamin Wood as well as columnist Robert Gehrke join KCPW’s Roger McDonough to talk about the week’s top stories, including the response by local faith groups to the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting. Every Friday at 9 a.m., stream “Behind the Headlines”at kcpw.org, or tune in to KCPW 88.3 FM or Utah Public Radio for the broadcast. [Trib]

In other news: n the 2016 election voting lines were up to four hours long in certain areas, and the Salt Lake County Republican Party is worried that could be the case this year in some conservative areas. But Salt Lake County Clerk Sherrie Swensen says there are sufficient voting centers and she would be the last person to engage in voter suppression as the GOP charges. [Trib][KUTV]

-> Mitt Romney critiqued President Donald Trump’s attacks on the media in an essay, arguing that journalism has been ‘essential’ and the United States is “indebted” to news organizations for their work covering various wars, sex crimes, Watergate, etc… [Trib][DNews]

-> The Eccles Theater has counteredsued its caterer, claiming that the company that already has a suit filed owes the theater $300,000 in unpaid rent. [Trib]

-> Salt Lake City officials completed a $3M road reconstruction project only a few days before the midterm elections, during which voters will decide whether an $87M road bond should be implemented. [Trib]

-> A recent analysis rated House candidate Ben McAdams as favored to win the 4th Congressional District Race, giving him a 60.6% chance of beating Rep. Mia Love. [DNews]

-> The Gateway is leaving the identity of “shopping mall” behind as owners rebrand to be an extension of the Silicon Slopes, striving to be an urban hotspot for tech, travel, dining, and entertainment. [Trib][Fox13][DNews]

-> Jeffrey Whipple, a Libertarian candidate for Utah’s 2nd Congressional District, is seeking to unseat Rep. Chris Stewart and provide an option other than Republican or Democrat. [KUTV]

-> The Mia Love campaign is once again trying to get TV stations to stop airing ads about her fundraising, claiming she raised $1M illegally. The outside groups behind these and other ads for both candidates have now pumped around $3M into the race. [UtahPolicy]

-> The Deseret News editorial board opposes Proposition 2 and urges a no vote on the initiative to legalize medical marijuana in the state. The editorial doesn’t mention that the paper’s owner, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is one of the groups behind an alternative bill proposed for legislative consideration. [DNews]

-> Gehrke highlights the close state legislative races to watch election night, beginning with the matchup between physician and Democrat Suzanne Harrison and Republican businessman Brad Bonham. [Trib]

-> Pat Bagley illustrated emotional detachment from politics on the part of nonvoters. [Trib]

Nationally: President Trump’s closing strategy for the midterm elections is a similar one to the 2016 elections — instill fear of migrants. [NYTimes][CNN][Fox]

-> The number of early voters in 2018 has dwarfed voter turnout in 2014, with 23,391,086 mail-in votes already being collected. [CNN]

-> President Trump’s nationalism might be spooking suburban members of the GOP, especially women, who like his financial policies but recoil from his language on race and gender. [NYTimes][Fox]

-> President Trump met with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday and reported a “very good conversation” which signals progress in settling disputes between the nations. The two will convene again later this year in Buenos Aires, Argentina. [WSJ]

Got a tip? A birthday, wedding or anniversary to announce? Send us a note to cornflakes@sltrib.com. And if you want Cornflakes to arrive in your email inbox each morning, subscribe here.

-- Dan Harrie and Cara MacDonald

https://twitter.com/danattrib and Twitter.com/carammacdonald


Independent review of Lauren McCluskey’s murder will now look into actions of University of Utah police

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Three law enforcement experts will investigate the University of Utah’s police department, its policies, and — despite earlier statements — the “actions taken by individual officers” after a student was shot to death on campus last week.

U. President Ruth Watkins announced the independent review team Friday, and it includes two former commissioners of the Utah Department of Public Safety: John T. Nielsen, who served in that post from 1985 through 1988 and also is an attorney; and Keith Squires, who retired as commissioner in August.

Former University of Wisconsin-Madison Police Chief Sue Riseling will serve as the third member of the team. She is now executive director of the International Association of Campus Law Enforcement Administrators.

Watkins said she chose the panel members based on their experience in law enforcement and with campus safety. The U. previously said the investigation would focus on policies and not on individual officers’ conduct. That position shifted Friday, and Watkins said she has asked the team to complete its review by Dec. 17.

A related inquiry into overall campus safety is to be finished in the spring.

“I want to be clear that the review team will act with full autonomy,” she said, noting they will have complete access to staff and records.

The university and its police department have faced questions for how campus officers handled complaints of extortion reported by student and track athlete Lauren McCluskey in the weeks before her death.

(Steve C. Wilson, University of Utah via Associated Press) This Aug. 21, 2018, photo shows Lauren McCluskey, a member of the U. cross country and track and field team, who was fatally shot on campus on Oct. 22, 2018. Police say Melvin Rowland, a man she had briefly dated, shot her; he was found dead by suicide hours later inside a church.
(Steve C. Wilson, University of Utah via Associated Press) This Aug. 21, 2018, photo shows Lauren McCluskey, a member of the U. cross country and track and field team, who was fatally shot on campus on Oct. 22, 2018. Police say Melvin Rowland, a man she had briefly dated, shot her; he was found dead by suicide hours later inside a church. (Steve C. Wilson/)

The man she alleged was involved in the harassment, Melvin S. Rowland, killed her Oct. 22 outside the dorms. He died by suicide hours later.

“We have committed to Lauren’s family that we will learn from this in the hope of preventing another tragedy like this on our campus,” Watkins added.

The Department of Public Safety is best known as the parent organization of the Utah Highway Patrol, though it also includes the State Bureau of Investigation, the state crime lab and the state fire marshal’s office.

Nielsen, who will lead the investigations, said Thursday he hesitated to say where the review will go, but said his team anticipates answering “whether or not Lauren’s concerns were taken seriously.”

“I’ve accepted this responsibility with the firm understanding that it must be done correctly and thoroughly,” Nielsen said. “We’ll go where the facts lead us.”

McCluskey’s parents have said Rowland, a registered sex offender, lied to their daughter about his name, age and criminal history. She ended their relationship on Oct. 9, after dating him for a month and finding out his actual identity.

She first reported to police three days later that she was getting harassing messages from Rowland, or possibly his friends. Campus police told her there wasn’t much they could do.

The next day McCluskey told officers that she received emails and texts threatening to release “compromising pictures” of her if she didn’t send them $1,000. U. police did not open a formal investigation until Oct. 19.

Officers did not call Rowland’s parole officer, who might have arrested him for violating the terms of his release. In fact, they never figured out Rowland was on parole.

He had an extensive criminal history, moving in and out of prison after a handful of parole violations. He was convicted of attempted forcible sex abuse and enticing a minor over the internet in 2004.

Watkins said Friday that the university is not waiting for the completion of the reviews to take action on improving campus safety.

University police, she said, will be asked to re-evaluate how the department prioritizes cases after the delay in responding to McCluskey. The school will examine campus for places to install more cameras and better lights and let students know when and where they can park closer to buildings.

She has asked the U.’s Housing & Residential Education office to conduct reviews of the secured dorms to see where students might be propping open doors or letting in strangers. U. Police Chief Dale Brophy has said that Rowland waited inside the building where McCluskey lived hours before her death, after residents he had previously befriended let him in.

The school’s president is also asking several departments — including housing, the Office of the Dean of Students and the Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action — to conduct more trainings with staff and students on dealing with emergencies.

“We always need to be looking at ourselves, learning and improving,” Watkins said. “That work is not done.”

University spokeswoman Annalisa Purser said the school currently requires all new students to take online training modules on sexual assault and alcohol abuse prevention, but there is no way to see whether students have completed those or to enforce a sanction if they have not (such as not allowing them to enroll in classes). Though that started in fall 2017 and McCluskey enrolled in 2015, she would have completed the training as a member of the athletic department, which requires its students to participate every year.

When new staff members are hired at the U., they’re asked to complete a larger package of trainings, including modules on emergency management and sexual misconduct — which discuss where to report harassment or violence. But the university does not enforce completion, Purser said.

The U.'s police department has its own set of trainings and a schedule for renewing those, but would not release that information Friday because investigators asked the office not to “go into detail on current processes or trainings.”

There are two anonymous email addresses set up where anyone can send information to the investigation team. Those are: ansr.me/UDeptPSReview and ansr.me/CampusSafety.

The university’s review is one of multiple inquiries into whether Utah law enforcement made mistakes in supervising Rowland and handling McCluskey’s complaints against him. Utah Gov. Gary Herbert has also called for investigations of the Utah Department of Corrections and the Board of Pardons and Parole. The State Bureau of Investigation has named a team to handle those and it is currently gathering information, a spokesperson said.

Commentary: Pittsburgh shooter didn’t hate ‘religion,’ he hated Jews. We should say so.

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This past week, presidential counselor Kellyanne Conway came under withering criticism after she partly attributed the massacre at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue to general hatred of religion, rather than specific hatred of Jews.

“The anti-religiosity in this country — that it’s somehow in vogue and funny to make fun of anybody of faith, to constantly be making fun of people who express religion,” she told the “Fox & Friends” hosts. “The late-night comedians, the unfunny people on TV shows — it’s always anti-religious. And remember, these people were gunned down in their place of worship.” Conway seemed to be airbrushing anti-Semitism from the greatest mass murder of Jews on American soil.

She wasn’t alone. The day before, Columbia University administrators emailed a statement on the attack to students, condemning “violence in our nation’s houses of worship” without mentioning “anti-Semitism” or “Jews” — even though the alleged perpetrator had reportedly shouted, “All Jews must die.” (Columbia’s statement was later amended.)

This affliction — the urge to universalize specifically Jewish tragedies in ways that elide their actual victims — transcends party and ideology. President Donald Trump’s 2017 Holocaust Remembrance Day statement famously omitted Jews and anti-Semitism. So did similar statements from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (in 2016) and British Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn (in 2018). Both later backtracked, while Trump did not. In 2017, Canada had to replace the plaque on a new $8.9 million Holocaust monument when officials belatedly realized that it did not mention Jews. And in perhaps the most egregious instance of such erasure, Corbyn co-sponsored a 2010 motion in Britain’s Parliament to rename “Holocaust Memorial Day” as “Genocide Memorial Day,” which would have abolished the one day devoted solely to commemorating Europe’s murdered Jews in favor of lumping together all victims of all genocides into one undifferentiated group.

All this is self-evidently offensive to Jews and to many other people of goodwill. So why does it keep happening?

The instinct to universalize anti-Semitic acts has many motives — some quite understandable, others more mendacious. Well-meaning non-Jews often seek to draw universal lessons against intolerance from acts of anti-Semitic violence. Others want to make the incidents accessible and relevant for a broader, non-Jewish audience in an attempt to evoke empathy for the victims, and do so by trying to equate anti-Jewish oppression with forms of oppression faced by non-Jews.

Often, however, there are darker impulses at work. On the far right, attempts to deny that Jews were the primary target of the Holocaust are typically part of an effort to evade responsibility for the Holocaust itself. Thus, in 2014, over the livid protest of Jews there and around the world, Hungary erected a Holocaust monument that cast all Hungarians as “the victims of the German occupation,” even though Hungary’s leaders and population assisted the Nazis in deporting the country’s nearly 500,000 Jews.

This February, Poland passed a law designed to suppress discussion of its complicity in the Holocaust, presenting its non-Jewish population as equal victims of the Nazis alongside the Jews. In reality, despite the efforts of righteous gentiles, 90 percent of Poland’s Jewish population was exterminated — the highest proportion in Europe — often with enthusiastic local participation. Both far-right French leader Marine Le Pen and far-left leader Jean-Luc Melenchon — who combined for 40 percent of the last French presidential vote — insist that France did not collaborate with the Nazi regime, even though a Nazi-allied government ruled the country for most of World War II. In this way, the Holocaust is recast as an ecumenical crime, with Jews as its incidental victims.

On the far left, meanwhile, dropping Jews from discussions of anti-Semitism frequently results from an inability or unwillingness to recognize the reality and seriousness of the anti-Jewish threat. Britain’s Corbyn, whose party and career have been wracked by escalating anti-Semitism scandals, is a case in point. In 2012, Corbyn infamously defended a mural that depicted Jewish bankers playing Monopoly on the backs of naked workers; this year, he said he hadn’t noticed that it was anti-Semitic agitprop. He was an active member of an anti-Semitic Facebook group where he never rebuked any of the anti-Semites.

Yet even as British Jews took to the streets in protest, and nearly nine out of 10 said they wouldn’t vote Labour, Corbyn’s allies continued to scorn anti-Semitism claims as “smears.” After Pittsburgh, one local Labour organization even deliberately removed a commitment to combat anti-Semitism from its condolence statement. In this progressive conception, Jews are dismissed as a group of privileged whites whose oppression need not be prioritized or “centered,” if it even exists anymore. When anti-Semites declare that “all Jews must die,” people declare that we must change the subject.

Whether the motives are pure or impure, the result is the same: When deadly anti-Semitism strikes, Jews are expunged as inconvenient accessories to their own execution. Their persecution is but a pivot to subjects of greater importance.

These diversions are dangerous and self-defeating. Any serious effort to combat anti-Semitism must begin with understanding the hatred: its sources, symptoms and manifestations. That cannot happen if anti-Jewish prejudice is collapsed into a milquetoast mishmash of all bigotries. Because while these bigotries may share common characteristics, every prejudiced pathology has its own unique signatures. And we ignore them at our peril.

Robert Bowers, the man charged with 44 counts in connection with the Pittsburgh massacre, believed that a Jewish conspiracy was flooding the country with brown people in order to overthrow the white majority. This belief had been given explicit expression in Charlottesville last year in the chant of “Jews will not replace us.” Yet instead of centering and discussing anti-Semitism, most accounts of the neo-Nazi rally at the time misunderstood it or omitted it entirely, failing to explain the chant or anti-Semitism’s centrality to white supremacy. The warning sign was missed.

Online, Bowers posted a cartoons that portrayed Trump being controlled by Jews and democracy being manipulated by a “Zionist occupied government,” a frequent trope among anti-Semites. Such conspiratorial claims about the government and media being “Israeli-occupied territory” are not restricted to Bowers or the far right — witness anti-George W. Bush icon Valerie Plame tweeting a link to an article asserting that “America’s Jews are driving America’s wars” — but they are often overlooked or downplayed. Bowers’ social media bio declared that “jews are the children of satan,” a belief he shares with Louis Farrakhan, who rants about the “satanic Jew” and whom too many progressives dismiss as insignificant (when they are not actively praising and promoting him, as the organizers of the Women’s March did).

These specific beliefs about the specific perfidiousness of Jews are not universal forms of hatred — they are unique to anti-Semitism, and they have lethal consequences. The sooner we stop looking away from them, the sooner we can start confronting them wherever they appear and ensuring that they do not result in another tragedy. We can start by putting Jews back into the story of their own murders.

Yair Rosenberg is a senior writer at Tablet Magazine.

Commentary: American Jews always believed the U.S. was exceptional. We were wrong.

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I am a historian of American Jews. My morning last Saturday began with a bar mitzvah at our synagogue in Philadelphia; an hour into it, I left with my son to take him to a squash lesson at a private club. In my profession, we call this “the American-Jewish synthesis”: the ability to be Jewish and American all at once. Historians like me have spent decades explaining how and why Jews have been able to achieve this.

Then I saw the news of the Tree of Life shooting in Pittsburgh. In my unfurling of emotions — including visceral anxiety about the safety of my daughter, whom I had left at synagogue — I confronted a notion that my training as an American Jewish historian had not equipped me to understand. In fact, it had done the opposite: It had allowed me to believe that the United States was an exceptional place for Jews. The American Jewish story as written and taught by historians like me has been one of progress, of steadily inching past old dangers to success in a new land. Sixty percent of Jews in America have completed college or graduate school. A larger share of Jews than of any other religious group earns incomes over $100,000. Jews can feel at home in America more easily than we could anywhere else in the history of the world.

What I’d never truly contemplated was whether this story of American Jewish exceptionalism can last.

From an early time, Jews have wanted to believe that America is different from other places. In the famous correspondence between George Washington and the congregants at a Newport, Rhode Island, synagogue, American Jews supplied the first president with the language to explain why Enlightenment hopes could become reality in the United States: the government “to bigotry gives no sanction, to persecution no assistance,” they wrote the president, and he echoed those words back to them.

Throughout the 19th century, even as Jews in the United States faced prejudice — bans on their ability to hold public office, official expulsion orders and myriad forms of social exclusion — they continued to voice their faith that America was a better place than others where Jews had lived. Political and economic restrictions, including punishing communal taxes extracted in exchange for the right to conduct Jewish life, had bedeviled Jews in many European countries. Here, Jews could build synagogues and even get tax exemptions for them, just as churches did, or incorporate voluntary associations legally and participate in America’s expanding civic life.

When a swell of Jewish immigrants arrived from Eastern Europe later that century, they learned to see the United States as “The Promised Land” (the title of a famous immigrant autobiography), despite rising nativism. Economic opportunity, paired with legal protections, fueled Jews’ patriotism. Although many immigrants pined for the homes and families they had left behind, they embraced America, enrolling in classes to learn how to speak, cook and dress like Americans. And when the United States entered World War I, Jews volunteered to fight and die for their new country.

In the 1920s and ’30s, Congress voted to stanch the flow of immigrants from nations with populations classified as undesirable. But even as the nations from which millions of Jews had emigrated to America were targeted in restrictive immigration policies and false theories about Jews’ conspiracies for global control and their desires to hold power for their own gain circulated widely, American Jews still kept faith in the unique nature of their “golden land.” Jews voted in droves for Franklin Roosevelt, supporting the New Deal Democrat with growing zeal each of the four times he ran for president. They saw in FDR’s politics a kind of liberalism that would balance the rights of individuals with protections for groups. Despite pro-Nazi rallies and coordinated acts of anti-Semitism — most infamously a 1939 rally that filled Madison Square Garden — American Jews continued to see an exceptional future for themselves and their children in the United States.

Nothing confirmed the rightness of American Jews’ bet more than the destruction of European Jewry. All of them, from the secular to the devout and the radical to the assimilationist, had to confront the “accident of geography,” as midcentury Jewish intellectual Irving Howe put it, that had saved them from the gas chambers. Their belief in the exceptional nature of the United States seemed provident: Here, unlike in other countries, they could use political, economic and intellectual tools to protect themselves. After World War II, Jews helped create the language, laws and institutions that would form the infrastructure of American campaigns against prejudice of all kinds, not just anti-Semitism. Through radio and television ads, social research and political activism, American Jews played a significant role in crafting the rhetoric of tolerance and social harmony. In doing so, they trained Americans to see anti-Semitism as unacceptable and made the case for the rights of minorities more broadly in the United States.

In the 1950s, Jewish leaders, from rabbis to intellectuals to the heads of prominent institutions, argued that Jews would be only as accepted as the least-accepted people in America. Yet by the 1960s and ’70s, many Jews acknowledged that they had more power than African-Americans and other racial minority groups; Jews could often be accepted even if these groups were not. And Jews disproportionately joined civil rights marches and fought legal battles to help these groups (though some also asked why African Americans were not succeeding as Jews had). A high level of engagement with American politics demonstrated that most Jews continued to believe that, just as the United States had lived up to its promise for them, it could, if pushed properly, do so for others. However much further America had to go, if it had avoided the anti-Semitic impulses that had led so many other nations into tragic historical moments, this surely was a sign that progress could be made.

Ironically, that very faith would eventually pose a fundamental question about Jewish endurance: Would Jews achieve so much progress in the United States that they would stop being Jewish? By the 1970s, Jewish leaders had started to identify the impediments to Jewish life as internal, not external. They worried that America offered so much acceptance that young Jews would have no use for their history and heritage. At a 1971 conference, a prominent New York rabbi and communal leader predicted forebodingly (and hyperbolically), “We are likely to lose more Jews through intermarriage and assimilation in the decades to come than we have already lost through the pogrom and the Holocaust.” The language of Jewish survival and continuity became the rallying cry of an American Jewry worried about its undoing through its success.

By the early 2000s, this was the face of American Jewish exceptionalism: well-funded trips to Israel to allow young Jews to discover or recover their birthright; endowed Jewish studies programs and gleaming new college Hillel buildings supported by funders who wanted Jews to find other Jews on campus; and countless surveys of Jewish communities to measure whether Jews were still Jewish. By the new millennium, non-Jewish American politicians seemed as intent — sometimes more intent — upon denouncing perceived anti-Semitism as were American Jews themselves.

Now I wonder if I will look back on those innocent minutes last Saturday between the bar mitzvah and the squash club as the last of an illusion, one that should never have lasted this long. Impossible will be our celebrations of “Only in America,” the name of a standing exhibit at the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia. The treatment of American Jews is not a bellwether of overall American progress — instead, it may be one of the most exceptional things about the United States. It is not the exception that proves the rule; it is just an exception and, perhaps, an unreliable one.

The problem with the deep-seated faith Jews have maintained in America is that it has propped up a broader vision of American exceptionalism and occluded the damages of exceptionalist thinking. As a description of American Jewish life, exceptionalism has brushed under the rug the exclusion and discrimination Jews have faced. Worse, it has stood in the way of an honest reckoning with the violent possibilities that have long simmered under the surface of its claims. The Pittsburgh shooting, on top of the more open expressions of anti-Semitism in the past few years, makes that brutally clear.

For American Jews, that reckoning will be painful. It will challenge the very basis of our acceptance in this country and make us ask whether the opportunities and privileges we gained came not because America held particular promise for Jews, but rather because it withheld that promise in so many ways to so many other people. Should we ever have believed in American exceptionalism, even just for Jews, when all around us was evidence of the limitations and ravages of that exceptionalism?

President Donald Trump displays how easily exceptionalism can become a weapon for exclusion; this is the very purpose of “Make America Great Again.” The president legitimizes white supremacy as one of “both sides” of American life. He declares himself to be a nationalist without bothering to distinguish between his nationalism and the dark history of xenophobic and genocidal nationalism. He routinely gives cover to those who abuse vulnerable populations — trans people, refugees, immigrants, Muslims, people of color, children and women — by telling his followers that they are the victims. In all cases, what he calls the “greatness” of this country is its ability to exclude whole classes of people as unfit and undesirable for its blessings.

Trump renders American exceptionalism irredeemable. Whatever was good or pure about the desire to pronounce our country different or special is, in his framing, explicitly steeped in violence, aggression and hatred. For some Americans, the pain of exceptionalism — its fundamental exclusions — has always been clear. For Jews, it has not, but now it must be.

Faith in American exceptionalism, for Jews or for anyone else, will not save us. I fear that faith is destroying us. But we can look anew at our history, as Jews and as Americans. When we release ourselves from the hold of exceptionalism, we will have to search for new ways to explain why America has been so good to Jews in so many ways. And we will have to confront the fact that the Jewish story in the United States is still being written, and progress is not its inevitable conclusion. Perhaps free from exceptionalism, we may discover a new path toward justice and equality for all, without exception.

Lila Corwin Berman is a professor of history and the director of the Feinstein Center for American Jewish History at Temple University.

Human remains found near Utah border are identified

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Littlefield, Ariz. • The Mohave County Sheriff’s Office has identified human remains found north of the Colorado River in northwestern Arizona.

They say the remains are those of 63-year-old Susan Marie McFalls from Littlefield.

The county Medical Examiner's Office was able to identify the remains using medical records and a medical device the woman had.

The remains were found on Oct. 18 near the Virgin River Gorge in the Arizona Strip area near the Utah border.

Authorities say another body was found in the same area, but hasn't been identified yet.

The remains were forwarded to the FBI crime lab for scientific examination.

McFalls and her husband Jerry went missing in January.

Investigators say the couple’s phones, identifications and other personal items were still inside their Littlefield home near the Virgin River Gorge.

After a wonderful October, the Utes face Arizona State to begin another critical month in the Pac-12 South

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Utah played in one of the last Fiesta Bowls staged at Sun Devil Stadium, a recently remodeled venue that also hosted Super Bowl XXX.

Tracing the Utes' turnaround this season, cornerbacks coach Sharrieff Shah started counting and arrived at “Super Bowl Five.” Utah claimed to have gone 4-0 in October’s Super Bowls, a standard of performance made necessary by September losses to Washington and Washington State.

Wait. Super Bowls? That’s how Utah coach Kyle Whittingham and his players have framed a recovery that could land them in the Rose Bowl — if they keep performing at their October level in November, starting Saturday afternoon vs. Arizona State in Tempe, Ariz.

Let's review that sentence: Utah … Rose Bowl … November. Yeah, what could go wrong?

November failures get most of the blame for the Utes' inability to win a Pac-12 South championship, but here’s another opportunity for them.

Considering the Utes took a .444 winning percentage in Pac-12 play into this season, they haven’t fared any worse (13-15) in November than in any other month in their previous seven seasons of conference membership. Late-season losses are more memorable than most defeats, though, and the Utes have absorbed their share of them. This week’s College Football Playoff rankings were a reminder that they’ve been been in prime position for big things in past Novembers, only to lose key games to ASU in 2014, Arizona in ’15 and Oregon in ’16.

Asked if he detected a pattern of those losses, Whittingham said, “No theories.”

Will this season end differently? The Utes have a couple of factors in their favor. Even mixing in September's struggles, this is the best offense they've fielded in the Pac-12 era. And with the disclaimer of facing some injury-depleted, downtrodden opponents, they've played at a division-championship level for four weeks. So why couldn't Utah keep doing that?

The formula “starts with [Whittingham], that you never let anybody believe you've arrived,” Shah said. “Coach says we're playing Super Bowl after Super Bowl. This is Super Bowl Five. God willing, it'll be Super Bowl Six.”

The Utes conceivably could clinch the South title by beating Arizona State and then defeating Oregon at home next week. If they lose to the Sun Devils, though? That’s another story. ASU would be even with Utah in the loss column and own the tiebreaker, so the Utes would need help from UCLA, Oregon or Arizona.

Without being aware of Utah's history, ASU coach Herm Edwards pointed to the inevitability of a flat performance at some point. In his first season as a college head coach, Edwards said, “The big part I'm noticing is the emotion of the football games. Every week, there's always a couple games that you scratch your head and go, 'How did that happen?' I just think it has a lot to do with the emotions of the football team.”

In that context, a Utah loss in Tempe would not be inexplicable. The Sun Devils have been in all eight games this season; each of their four defeats came by seven points. They're good enough to make Utah play 60 minutes, at a minimum. To have any chance of winning comfortably, the Utes will have to avoid giving up big plays in the passing game. They surrendered some of those against Stanford and USC, although not enough to harm them.

Assuming the defensive line and linebackers can shut down ASU running back Eno Benjamin, who’s approaching 1,000 yards for the season, the focus shifts to Utah’s secondary vs. quarterback Manny Wilkins and receivers N’Keal Harry and Frank Darby. Ute safety Marquise Blair must sit out the first half, due to a targeting penalty last week vs. UCLA.

Harry “is going to make big plays,” Shah said. “You just hope they’re not back-breaking plays, game-changing plays.”

In other words, the kind of plays that Utah’s offense has failed to make in past Novembers.


Commentary: Look for the things that unite us as communities

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The media and political pundits say that we’re a Divided Nation and that America is Polarized. The story line plays out in the news on an almost daily basis. Depending on the day, week, or even hour, nearly every one of us rides the political rollercoaster of frustration, excitement, and stress.

However contentious the national climate, it does not mean that we have to follow suit in our own neighborhoods and communities. In fact, it would be helpful for each of us to take a few minutes; reflect on our surroundings, remind ourselves of our tremendous blessings, the importance of community and the respect we have for one another.

A recent experience put these suggestions to practice. My wife and I attended a friend’s baby shower in Salt Lake City. Nearly 30 people attended. As we sat around a very long table, enjoying good food and great company, I could not help but reflect on the experience. The expectant mother is a lesbian. The couple sitting across from me was from China. The individual sitting next to me, from the Ukraine. We had friends from: Greece, Armenia, India, the East and West Coast, locals, gays and straights.

As we visited, I could not help but appreciate each individual’s unique story. Many in attendance are immigrants who struggled, worked hard and anxiously waited to come to America; one had recently been granted asylum. This was not an orchestrated group of people, set up to meet diversity quotas, groupthink, or a particular political party or religion. This was a group who genuinely cares and has respect for one another joining together to celebrate a mother’s first child.

When I see and hear the tension amongst the opposing political parties, I reflect on that baby shower. It is a reminder to me that if we take time to understand one another’s unique story and experiences, we begin to see those on the other side of the table as valuable members of our community. We are less quick to judge. We do not look for differences, but for those things that unite us. We have more understanding, more empathy, and more respect for each other.

I hope you will join with me and strive to embrace those around us, regardless of political or religious affiliation or social standing. As long as political tensions exist at the national level, lets you and me demonstrate that Salt Lake City is better by smiling and waving to our neighbor, say hi to those in line at the grocery store, and welcome those moving into the neighborhood. Lets remember the reasons we choose to live in this great State and let us strive to better respect and honor the unique stories and experiences of those around us.

Scott Rosenbush
Scott Rosenbush

Scott Rosenbush, Salt Lake City, is a candidate for Utah House of Representatives from District 24.

George Pyle: Strike three blows for liberty. Vote for Props 2, 3 and 4

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If Harry Truman were to invite you to have a shot of bourbon with him — an example of good Missouri hospitality that might happen first thing in the morning or late at night — he had a special expression for it.

It was an expression he may have picked up in the U.S. Capitol, specifically in the private office of House Speaker John Nance Garner, in the years when consuming alcohol was illegal, so all the public officials who did it might favor a winking euphemism.

Gentlemen, they would say, it’s time to strike a blow for liberty.

It was a saying that stuck around long after the end of Prohibition in the minds and mouths of many who had lived through that Very Bad Idea, as they continued to take pride in what had once been an act of resistance.

There are three blows for liberty offered to all Utah voters this year. If you haven’t already cast your ballot, you should raise a glass to all three.

The most obvious example is Proposition 2, the one that would demand that official Utah drop decades of denial and obstruction and make some forms of marijuana available as a legal treatment for a list of maladies for which it has been shown to be helpful.

Some folks object, both to the proposal and to the term “medical marijuana,” given that the plant and its various derivatives haven’t been through the rigorous corporate and government testing and review process that gave us, oh, say, OxyContin. Or is that a bad example?

There have been some studies, and generations of unregulated trial and error, supporting marijuana’s healing potential. Still, cannabis generally lacks FDA approval. Because the FDA, as commanded by Congress, has steadfastly refused to even consider the possibility that a natural thing that can be cultivated in a garden apartment’s window box could possibly rival substances made in stainless steel, pressure-washed factories by multi-national corporations.

Follow the money.

The point of Prop 2 is openly less scientific than it is democratic. We are tired of waiting. We don’t know all we’d like to know. But we know enough to know this stuff can help suffering people suffer significantly less.

And we know that benefit far outweighs the likelihood — the certainty — that some people will misuse the stuff. As they have for generations, with the greatest risk being not effects, side-effects or overdoses, but falling victim to the misbegotten war on drugs, itself an addiction and an abuse of power.

Proposition 3 is just as much a blow for liberty, though perhaps not as obviously so. That’s the one that would, again, brush aside years of Utah government inertia and insist that — billions of dollars too late — the state accept the expansion of the federal Medicaid program as laid out in the original Affordable Care Act.

For many thousands of Utahns, those who now have too much income to qualify for Medicaid under the old regime and too little to afford employer-provided or federally subsidized plans, gaining coverage for themselves and their families would be very much a grant of freedom. Freedom from want and freedom from fear. Which the man both Truman and Garner served as vice president, Franklin Roosevelt, rightly said were essential to a decent life.

The essential freedom that health care coverage gives people allows them to reach their potential, raise their children, start new businesses, survive bouts of unemployment and make their way in a 21st century freelance gig economy. Without it, a diagnosis of cancer, diabetes or kidney failure can be just as terrifying as any middle-of-the-night knock on the door in a totalitarian state.

All the arguments against Prop 3 start and end with dollar signs. There is no humanity in them at all. Yes, full Medicaid expansion will cost money. Nobody is calling it “free health care.” But, if we pass the proposition, we will be telling our elected representatives that joining the civilized world is something we are more than willing to spend our money on, and they should be about figuring out how to do it. Or standing aside and allowing someone else to do the job.

Proposition 4 is also about increasing personal liberty. It would create an independent commission to draw new districts for the Utah Legislature and our delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives. The current system gives whoever runs the Legislature at any given time — always Republicans around here — too much power to draw districts designed to empower incumbents, not voters.

Normally, three blows for liberty is over my limit. But, on this ballot, every voting Utahn should happily imbibe.

(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Tribune staff. George Pyle.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Tribune staff. George Pyle. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

George Pyle, editorial page editor of The Salt Lake Tribune, obviously likes to write about Harry Truman. He’s not that old. But he was born 13 miles from Truman’s home. gpyle@sltrib.com @debatestate



The body of a missing Utah woman was found in the Arizona desert, but the mystery remains — What happened to the McFalls?

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It’s a mystery that has hung over Jerry and Susan McFalls’ family for 10 months, since the South Jordan couple disappeared in early January.

That weekend, the couple had planned to travel from their Arizona property back to Utah. But when the McFalls didn’t show up, their family drove to the Littlefield home.

They found food that had grown cold on the counter. Pets had been left behind. Personal items in their proper places.

But Jerry and Susan had vanished.

On Thursday, at least one piece of the mystery was solved: The Mohave County Sheriff’s Office announced that one of two sets of human remains found near the Virgin River Gorge a month prior was identified as Susan McFalls, 63. While the second set of remains have not been identified, the family believes the body likely belongs to Jerry, 63.

But larger questions still remain. How did they end up there? Was someone responsible for their deaths?

The sheriff’s office say their investigation is ongoing. But McFalls’ family members said in a video they posted on a Facebook page Thursday that they believe “something happened” to get the couple to leave their property Jan. 11.

But the news that the remains found on Oct. 18 were, in fact, the McFalls has brought some closure to their family.

“It gives you a small sense of relief to know that at least we can bring them home and lay them to rest with the family,” Jerry McFalls Jr. said. “And they’re not going to leave the legacy behind of being missing people.”

A website dedicated to finding the McFalls asks anyone with information about their deaths to call 1-800-526-1911. A reward of up to $10,000 is being offered to anyone who can lead to a resolution to the case.

BYU has looked both promising and dreadful this season. Which is it going to be Saturday at Boise State?

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Boise • Sure, Utah has defeated BYU seven straight times and Utah State has gotten the best of the Cougars in the last two battles for the Old Wagon Wheel.

But no college football team that has played BYU regularly the past 20 years has eked out more close victories over the Cougars than the Boise State Broncos.

That is especially true at Albertsons Stadium, where Boise State is 4-0 against BYU, with three of those wins coming by a single point. Both teams have two wins apiece in Provo.

The independent Cougars (4-4) and Broncos (6-2) of the Mountain West Conference renew their rivalry on Saturday night on the blue turf in front of what BSU coach Bryan Harsin expects to be a sellout crowd, meeting for the seventh-straight year.

Can BYU finally break through with a win?

That’s doubtful.

Boise State is a two-touchdown favorite, has a four-year starting quarterback on the verge of becoming the MWC’s all-time passing yardage leader, and has scored 104 points in its last two games. BYU freshman Zach Wilson will make his first road start, third start altogether, in front of a hostile crowd that relishes the Cougars’ visits unlike any other opponent it sees.

“It is a big game,” Harsin said. “This is a game our players enjoy. This is a game fans really enjoy. I expect it is going to be packed. There are a lot of connections between the two teams, whether it is fan-related or recruiting-based or proximity.

“It is one of those fun games to be a part of and there’s been some good ones over the years. BYU is a well-respected program and I think Boise State is as well,” Harsin continued.

A rivalry?

Absolutely, according to the Cougars.

“Of course this is a big rivalry for us, especially since they are so close,” said BYU offensive lineman Tristen Hoge, who is from Pocatello. “It is a cross-state rivalry, with the proximity between us what it is. There is a lot of rich history between us.”

History that favors the Broncos, usually by the slimmest of margins:

• In 2004, BYU fell behind 16-0, but roared back and looked like it was going to muscle out a last-second win. But Matt Payne missed a 38-yard field goal — some Cougar fans still insist it was good — with 19 seconds remaining and BSU escaped with a 28-27 win.

• In 2012, freshman Taysom Hill replaced injured senior Riley Nelson and drove the Cougars 95 yards for a touchdown late in the fourth quarter. But coach Bronco Mendenhall called for a two-point conversion attempt to get the lead, and it backfired when Hill’s pass fell incomplete in the end zone. Boise State’s only score came on a pick-six by defensive tackle Mike Atkinson.

• Boise State’s 55-30 win in 2014 was never close as Mendenhall took over the defensive play-calling from Nick Howell and watched the Broncos put up 637 yards of offense.

• The Cougars also appeared to be on the verge of winning the 2016 game, but David Moa blocked Rhett Almond’s 44-yard field goal attempt with 16 seconds remaining to preserve another 28-27 Broncos win.

“It is a really difficult place to play and we have never won there as a program,” Sitake said. “We are looking forward to having some new things and some goals. It is a challenge for us. Looking forward to breaking that streak.”

Obviously, the Cougars will have to put up more points than they did last week in the 7-6 loss to Northern Illinois, a loss that evened Sitake’s overall record to 17-17.

Sitake has spent the week urging the offensive and defensive coaches to be more aggressive, and telling Wilson to “let it fly” as he directs the offensive attack.

“If we focus on ourselves and find a way to have more consistency, we should be good,” Sitake said.

Offensive coordinator Jeff Grimes coached Boise State’s offensive line in 2000, still keeps in touch with at least a half-dozen members of BSU’s coaching staff, and knows how difficult it is to win at Albertsons.

“They have developed a culture, one we would like to have here, in which they win with blue collar guys who do their jobs on a consistent basis,” Grimes said. “Their recruiting has elevated since I was there. So they are recruiting, at times, a higher profile kid. But I still think they have maintained that blue collar attitude, and there is real strength in that.”


Weekly Run podcast: Breaking down the Jazz’s 3-1 road trip, Donovan Mitchell’s injury, Ricky Rubio’s struggles, and more

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The Jazz just completed a 3-1 road trip with wins in Houston, New Orleans, and Dallas, and a loss in Minnesota. That finale was also notable for seeing star guard Donovan Mitchell sit out late with hamstring tightness — an injury that will cause him to miss tonight’s game vs. Memphis.

In this edition of the Weekly Run podcast, the Tribune’s Andy Larsen and Eric Walden discuss general takeaways from the trip, including the struggles of the usually solid defense. Meanwhile, what does Mitchell’s injury mean? Who takes his place in the starting lineup? Burks? Exum? O’Neale? Allen? Crowder?

Also, Rudy Gobert is straight-up killing it right now, averaging better than 18 points and 13 rebounds; what’s making him so effective? And conversely, what’s do be done about Ricky Rubio’s continuing struggles?

We also get into Andy’s former life in the real estate business.

Here’s a rundown of this week’s podcast:

At 1:04 • How the road trip matched up vs. expectations

At 10:50 • Donovan Mitchell’s hamstring tightness, how long he’ll be out, and potential replacements in the starting lineup

At 19:20 • The impressive production of Rudy Gobert, ex-Jazzman Derrick Rose, and the production of the supporting cast

At 28:00 • Ricky Rubio’s continuing struggles

At 33:46 • Final thoughts, including predictions for Friday’s Memphis game.

In win over LAFC, Nedum Onuoha showed why Real Salt Lake signed him

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Los Angeles • Yes, Damir Kreilach scored two goals — one of the karate variety. Yes, Real Salt Lake went on the road, where it won only three games in the regular season, and usurped a statistically better opponent.

But it was defender Nedum Onuoha who on Thursday proved why RSL signed him in September. In Real’s 3-2 win over Los Angeles Football Club, Onuoha was everywhere, batting away balls and putting his 6-foot, 210-pound frame up against LAFC’s attackers, bothering them just enough to cause resets in their offense.

After the stunning victory that advanced RSL to the Western Conference semifinals of the MLS Cup Playoffs, head coach Mike Petke called Onuoha a star. The Nigeria-born defender, who started his second MLS game Thursday in just his third-ever appearance, said it was a “big pat on the back” that Petke called his number in the biggest game of the season.

“It’s nice, but I’d prefer not to be the star and someone else to just score three, four, five goals and we can just have a nice relaxing game,” Onuoha said. “I do appreciate him saying that. It was a vote of confidence because when it came down to it, this was a game which we had to win.”

Onuoha tallied 14 clearances, five interceptions, three defensive blocks and three recoveries, per mlssoccer.com. The other three starting defensive backs — Brooks Lennon, Marcelo Silva and Aaron Herrera — had 15 clearances combined.

Onuoha said the key to RSL’s collective effectiveness on defense simply came down to desire.

“When you’re in a game where you know it’s a must-win game or your season’s over, then the bare minimum you’re going to expect to give is to put your body on the line,” Onuoha said. “It matters. If you get it wrong today, your season’s done. So I think it’s just a lot of commitment and we had something to hold on to.”

With Onuoha and Marcelo Silva getting the start Thursday, that left Justen Glad on the bench for just the second time this season. The first time that happened, Glad was also replaced by Onuoha and Silva — and RSL came away with a crucial victory against the New England Revolution.

Glad said after the day after the New England game that he did not mind giving up his starting spot.

“I’m here for the team and they put in a great shift, got the win,” Glad said at the time. “That’s the most important thing right now.”

Real is now 2-0 when Onuoha appears in the starting 11. While he won’t be actively lobbying Petke and the coaching staff for more starts any time soon, he sees any opportunities this season as icing on the cake after only hoping he would play once he joined RSL.

“The next year — possibly two years — that’s the big thing for me. That’s when I think I can really make a mark,” Onuoha said. “Anything this year has just been a massive bonus.”

Legendary Utah political pollster Dan Jones has died

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“The Oracle” of Utah politics, Dan Jones, died Friday after a prolonged illness at the age of 84.

Born in Ogden and raised on a farm in rural Idaho, Jones went on to teach American government to generations of young people and for decades was recognized as the state’s preeminent pollster, advising senators and congressmen and every governor since Cal Rampton’s 1964 campaign.

“His influence on the state of Utah is hard to grasp, if you think of all the people he’s worked with. … He has gradually become the man, anybody of any stature in the state has said, ‘Let’s go talk to Dan and see what he has to say,’ ” Gov. Gary Herbert said Friday.

Sen. Orrin Hatch, who hired Jones to poll for him in his first race in 1976, said that Jones was “a remarkable man who had a profound impact on Utah’s political landscape. Most importantly, he was a great friend. Elaine and I will miss him dearly.”

Jones got his start teaching while he was serving in the military, holding weekend classes on the U.S. Constitution for visiting Hungarian freedom fighters.

In 1959, Jones began teaching in a civilian capacity, after a call-up of National Guard troops for the Korean War left schools with a teacher shortage. Jones taught American government courses at Granite High School and enrolled in graduate school at the University of Utah that year to get his teaching credentials.

It was that same year that Jones landed his first polling job — conducting a survey for The Salt Lake Tribune in the Salt Lake City mayoral contest between the incumbent J. Bracken Lee and Bruce Jenkins.

When he retired from teaching in 2013, Jones said his commitment to the classroom was cemented by the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

“That had the greatest impact on me and I knew I'd get involved. I would teach and not preach," he said. "I would try to get students to say 'What can I do for my country?' instead of so much 'What can my country do for me?'"

Jones moved to Utah State University in 1968, running the school’s Bureau of Government Research, and Jones had a flair for the classroom. He would roll his head back and talk in almost a whisper, drawing students in, then build to a crescendo.

“Passion sells and Dan had passion,” said Doug Foxley, a prominent lobbyist who took Jones' course at Utah State. “He would mesmerize the students. … You could hear a pin drop and it would have startled everyone. He just had that master gift.”

Foxley said he and other students would go door to door gathering data, and a few years later, Jones turned it into a business, Dan Jones and Associates, which Jones and his wife, former state Sen. Pat Jones, built into the go-to polling firm for Utah candidates and news outlets.

Ted Wilson met Jones in 1975, when Jones did some polling for Wilson’s Salt Lake City mayoral campaign and later taught alongside him at the University of Utah.

“How ya doing, Wilson?” the former mayor recalls Jones asking. “I’m fine, plus or minus three percentage points,” Wilson would respond.

Dan Jones
Dan Jones

“He tried to be as fair as he could to everyone and explain the numbers to people if they were mad about it,” said Wilson, who was later the Hinckley Institute of Politics director. “I’ve always thought he was a man of the highest integrity and he took the polling business really seriously.”

Jason Perry, the current director of the Hinckley Institute at the University of Utah, said Jones’ commitment to the classroom was remarkable.

“In 50 years of teaching, he only missed one class, and he felt so guilty about it he got Sen. Orrin Hatch to be the substitute on that day,” Perry said.

On election night, Perry said, Jones’ anxiety would go through the roof and he would pace waiting for results to come in, not because of uncertainty about the accuracy of his work, but because he understood that voters and candidates would be impacted by what he said.

Bob Henrie, a top adviser to Hatch and Herbert, said he has worked over the years with the best pollsters in the country and he respected Jones for his work and as a person more than any of them.

Henrie recalled in January 2017, when Hatch called a meeting of his top advisors to look at running for one more term in the Senate. Jones walked Hatch through a slew of polling numbers.

“It was clear to Senator Hatch that a substantial part of the Utah public felt that it was time for him to retire and give somebody new a chance,” Henrie said. The poll numbers weren’t what made up Hatch’s mind, Henrie said, but some time later, Hatch contacted Mitt Romney about running for his seat, if he decided to retire.

“Every major elected official that I’ve worked with in the state has done no different,” Henrie said. “They do not make a major decision, especially about their career, without having one or many good sessions with Dan to get his insight and his advice.”

Jones fell ill over the summer and was hospitalized for several weeks. He was moved to an assisted living center but in recent days his health had deteriorated and he contracted pneumonia.

Herbert said he had hoped to spend part of Tuesday night at Jones’ bedside — that Jones would live to see one more election night.

The governor said Jones’ legacy in the state will live on, both because he used his gifts as a pollster to shape policies that reflected the will of the people, and in the tens of thousands of students who he helped to understand politics and get excited about government.

“He is going to be sorely missed because of that. Nobody is going to replace Dan Jones,” Herbert said. “I consider it one of the greatest blessings of my life to say he was a friend and a mentor to me, and I was a better governor because of that.”

Jones is survived by his wife, their three children, a stepson, and three children from a previous marriage.

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