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Chinese woman carrying thumb drive with malware arrested at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort

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Secret Service agents arrested a Chinese woman after she bypassed layers of security and gained access to the reception area of President Donald Trump’s Florida resort this past weekend, saying they found she was carrying two passports and a thumb drive containing malicious software, according to court documents.

The incident renews concerns about how secure the president and his advisers are during their frequent stays at his Mar-a-Lago Club, which stays open for its members and their guests when the president is there.

Prosecutors say the woman, Yujing Zhang, first approached a Mar-a-Lago security checkpoint on Saturday shortly after noon and told security officials she was there to go to the swimming pool.

“Zhang was asked if the true member . . . was her father, but she did not give a definitive answer,” according to the criminal complaint filed by Secret Service agent Samuel Ivanovich. “Zhang additionally did not give a definitive answer when asked if she was there to meet with anyone. Due to a potential language barrier issue, Mar-a-Lago believed her to be the relative of member Zhang and allowed her access onto the property.”

The president was in south Florida that afternoon, golfing nearby, but there is no indication he saw or interacted with her.

Once on the resort grounds, Zhang was approached by a receptionist and asked why she was there.

"After being asked several times, Zhang finally responded that she was there for a United Nations Chinese American Association event later in the evening," the complaint says. "The Receptionist knew this event did not exist" but when the Secret Service agent, Ivanovich, followed up with additional questions, Zhang allegedly said she had arrived early for the event so she could "familiarize herself with the property and take pictures."

At that point, Zhang presented documentation that she said was her invitation to the event, but it was written in Chinese and the agent could not read it.

Laurence Leamer, a Palm Beach writer who recently wrote a book about Mar-a-Lago, said that anyone who got past the receptionist desk would have the run of the club's "living room," patio and pool area. He said a guest could not enter Trump's private quarters, but they could probably walk past the door to it.

"You can go anywhere. You're in the living room," he said. "There's no checkpoints once you're in there."

Toni Holt Kramer, a longtime member of the club, said Secret Service agents circulate beyond the reception desk, but their presence is not oppressive. "You don't feel intruded on," she said. "They're there, but they're invisible."

A person familiar with security procedures at the club when the president stays there said it is standard practice for everyone in the reception area to be greeted and questioned about who they are and where they are going.

Secret Service agents took Zhang to a different location to interview her, at which point she became "verbally aggressive," according to the charging document.

"During the second interview of Zhang, she claimed her Chinese friend 'Charles' told her to travel from Shanghai, China to Palm Beach, Florida, to attend this event and attempt to speak with a member of the President's family about Chinese and American foreign economic relations. Agents were unable to obtain any information more specifically identifying Zhang's purported contact, 'Charles,' " the complaint said.

It is unclear if she was referencing Charles Lee, an event promoter who runs a group called the United Nations Chinese Friendship Association - a name similar to the one Zhang had mentioned during her encounter with the receptionist. A lawyer for Zhang declined to comment, and Lee could not be reached.

The Miami Herald has reported that Lee sold travel packages to Chinese customers that included tickets to Mar-a-Lago events. Some of the tickets were provided by Li "Cindy" Yang, a South Florida massage-parlor entrepreneur who re-sold tickets to banquet events at Trump's club, the Herald reported.

Zhang also told the agents that she had never claimed she was going to the swimming pool, the complaint says.

After Zhang was stopped and questioned, a search of her belongings turned up four cellphones, a laptop, a hard drive, and a thumb drive which contained "malicious malware," according to the criminal complaint. Authorities said that despite her initial claim to be headed for the pool, she was not carrying a swimsuit.

She is charged with making false statements to a federal law enforcement officer and entering a restricted area, the complaint says.

The Secret Service said in a statement that the agency "does not determine who is invited or welcome at Mar-a-Lago; this is the responsibility of the host entity. The Mar-a-Lago club management determines which members and guests are granted access to the property. This access does not afford an individual proximity to the President or other Secret Service protectees."

In Saturday's incident, the individual was screened and "immediately met by club reception. The Mar-a-Lago reception staff then determined that the individual should not have been authorized access by their staff and Secret Service agents took immediate action resulting in the arrest of the individual," the statement said.

The Secret Service tries to keep a tight security cordon around the president to protect him from physical harm and any attempts to eavesdrop or electronically monitor his conversations. In early 2017, Mar-a-Lago Club guests watched in surprise as the president and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe huddled with aides at a dinner table as they discussed a ballistic missile test North Korea had just conducted. Trump was criticized afterward for what critics called his loose attitude toward information security.

During the Obama administration, the Secret Service was criticized by lawmakers for its handling of security breaches - particularly instances in which individuals scaled the White House fence and had to be chased down. A former Bush administration official with experience in security issues called the Mar-a-Lago breach a significant blunder.

"When in doubt say no and ask up the chain," the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to offer a candid assessment of the incident. "Don't say yes."

People who have recently hosted events at Mar-a-Lago said they were surprised by the apparent ease with which Zhang breached the club's perimeter, saying that, for their own events, they had to submit guest lists days ahead of time.

Michael Barnett, head of the Palm Beach County Republican Party, said that when he submitted a guest list for the annual Lincoln Day Dinner, some people were rejected.

Holt Kramer, the Mar-a-Lago member, said the club closely scrutinizes members and their guests, checking identification and cars.

"There's always security, and without a doubt you have to be checked, whether it's the 100th time you've been there, or the first," she said. "If you have guests, you call ahead, at least a couple of days, and you tell them who your guests are. And you tell your guests, 'Make sure you bring your full ID with you.' "

Leamer, the author, said he had been impressed by the security checks when he had visited recently. But, he said, Trump had created a massive security vulnerability at Mar-a-Lago by choosing to make it his "winter White House" while allowing it to remain open to hundreds of members and guests every week.

"How can the president of the United States be spending his weekends in this club with all these people coming in and out?" Leamer said, noting that Trump's private quarters are located in the middle of the busy grounds. "I thought inevitably something was going to happen. And thank God it was a fairly benign thing" in this case, he said, with no apparent physical danger to the president.

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The Washington Post's Josh Dawsey and David Nakamura contributed to this report.

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Utah baseball team snaps nine-game losing streak, beating BYU 8-6

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Utah second baseman Oliver Dunn made a sliding stop and started a game-ending double play, then windmilled his arms as he ran across the infield Tuesday night.

The Utes deserved to enjoy their 8-6 nonconference victory over No. 24 BYU at Smith's Ballpark, after losing their last nine games. Utah third baseman Rykker Tom's two-run triple broke a tie in the eighth inning of a game that BYU never led, even though the Cougars repeatedly rallied after falling behind 4-0 in the first inning of the teams' first of three meetings this season.

Light, steady rain fell during the late innings, but the 3½-hour game was never halted. The Utes have won the last four games between the schools, who will meet again April 9 in Provo and May 14 at Smith’s Ballpark.

“It's always fun to play your rival and come out on top,” Tom said.

“Utah is a scary team,” BYU coach Mike Littlewood said. “Their record is not indicative of how good they are.”

Utah (8-15) almost wasted a go-ahead opportunity in the bottom of the eighth, after the Cougars (21-6) tied the game in the top of the inning via Jackson Cluff's sacrifice fly.

Matt Richardson opened Utah's half of the eighth with a walk, then Dunn beat out a bunt single. BYU reliever Adam Zimmerman retired the next two batters on a strikeout and popup, before Tom came through in a big way.

The right-handed batter ripped the ball into the gap in right-center field to drive in Richardson and Dunn. A sophomore from Cedar City, Tom is batting .365 this season after posting a .298 average last year.

BYU got the potential tying run on base in the top of the ninth, but Zac McCleve earned his first save of the season by getting Abraham Valdez to ground into the double play. Richardson had made an error at shortstop earlier in the inning, but he made a nice turn to complete the double play after taking Dunn's throw. Jacob Rebar got the win, recording the last two outs in the top of the eighth while giving up only Cluff's sacrifice fly.

Utah will resume Pac-12 play with a series at Oregon State, beginning Friday; BYU's West Coast Conference series at San Diego starts Thursday.

The Utes thrived early Tuesday against BYU starter Ryan Brady, who allowed four runs and lasted only one inning. Shea Kramer's two-run single was the biggest of Utah's five hits in the inning.

Utah led 5-1 before BYU scored three runs in the fourth with the help of an error. The Cougars then earned a 5-5 tie in the seventh and a 6-6 tie in the eighth, before Tom put Utah ahead to stay.

Erick Migueles led Utah with three hits. Brock Hale and Valdez each had two hits for BYU.

Lightfoot wins Chicago mayor race; pledges end to corruption

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Mayoral Candidate Toni Preckwinkle at the 22nd precinct polling station, Tuesday, April 2nd, 2019.  (James Foster/Chicago Sun-Times via AP)
Mayoral Candidate Toni Preckwinkle at the 22nd precinct polling station, Tuesday, April 2nd, 2019. (James Foster/Chicago Sun-Times via AP) (James Foster/)

Chicago • Former federal prosecutor Lori Lightfoot easily won the Chicago mayor’s race Tuesday, earning support from every part of the city to defeat a longtime political insider and become the first black woman and openly gay person to lead the nation’s third-largest city.

Lightfoot, who had never been elected to public office, delivered a commanding victory over Toni Preckwinkle, who served in the City Council for 19 years before becoming Cook County Board president. Preckwinkle also is chairwoman of the county Democratic Party.

Lightfoot promised to rid City Hall of corruption and help low-income and working-class people she said had been "left behind and ignored" by Chicago's political ruling class. It was a message that resonated with voters weary of political scandal and insider deals, and who said the city's leaders for too long have invested in downtown at the expense of neighborhoods.

"Together we can and will make Chicago a place where your zip code doesn't determine your destiny," Lightfoot told a cheering crowd at her victory party. "We can and we will break this city's endless cycle of corruption and never again — never ever — allow politicians to profit from elected positions."

She said people are seeing "a city reborn" — a place where race and "who you love" don't matter.

Chicago will become the largest U.S. city to have a black woman serve as mayor when Lightfoot is sworn in May 20. She will join seven other black women currently serving as mayors in major U.S. cities, including Atlanta and New Orleans, and will be the second woman to lead Chicago.

Preckwinkle said she called Lightfoot Tuesday night to congratulate her on a "hard-fought campaign."

"While I may be disappointed I'm not disheartened. For one thing, this is clearly a historic night," she told a crowd gathered in her South Side neighborhood. "Not long ago two African American women vying for this position would have been unthinkable. And while it may be true that we took two very different paths to get here, tonight is about the path forward."

Congratulations poured in for Lightfoot, 56, who has one daughter with her wife, Amy Eshleman.

Brian Johnson, CEO of Equality Illinois, said the civil rights organization for lesbian and gay people was "thrilled" with the outcome.

"This victory is historic, and it is also an undeniably proud moment for the LGBTQ community," Johnson said.

Pete Buttigieg, the openly gay mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who’s running for president in 2020, said on Twitter that Lightfoot “will be a terrific new leader for her city and in the community of American mayors.”

Lightfoot emerged as the surprising leader in the first round of voting in February when 14 candidates were on the ballot to succeed Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who decided against running for a third term.

Lightfoot seized on outrage over a white police officer's fatal shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald to launch her reformer campaign. She got in the race even before Emanuel announced he wouldn't seek re-election amid criticism for initially resisting calls to release video of the shooting.

"I'm not a person who decided I would climb the ladder of a corrupt political party," Lightfoot said during a debate last month. "I don't hold the title of committeeman, central committeeman, boss of the party."

Preckwinkle countered that her opponent lacks the necessary experience for the job.

"This is not an entry-level job," Preckwinkle said repeatedly during the campaign.

Joyce Ross, 64, a resident of the city's predominantly black West Side who is a certified nursing assistant, cast her ballot Tuesday for Lightfoot. Ross said she believes Lightfoot will be better able to clean up the police department and curb the city's violence.

She was also bothered by Preckwinkle's association with longtime Alderman Ed Burke, who was indicted earlier this year on charges he tried to shake down a restaurant owner who wanted to build in his ward.

"My momma always said birds of a feather flock together," Ross said.

Truly Gannon, a 39-year old mother of four who works as a dietitian, said she wasn't bothered by stories that portrayed Preckwinkle as an insider aligned with questionable politicians like Burke. She supported Preckwinkle, based on her experience.

"I'm not sure Lightfoot would be able to handle the job like Preckwinkle," she said.

The campaign between the two women got off to a contentious start, with Preckwinkle's advertising focusing on Lightfoot's work as a partner at Mayer Brown, one of the nation's largest law firms, and tagging her as a "wealthy corporate lawyer."

Preckwinkle also tried to cast Lightfoot as an insider for working in police oversight posts under Emanuel and police oversight, procurement and emergency communications posts under Mayor Richard M. Daley.

But Preckwinkle had to spend much of her campaign answering for her ties to Chicago's political establishment, including Burke.

Despite the barbs on the campaign trail, the two advanced similar ideas to boost the city's deeply troubled finances, which include an estimated $250 million budget deficit next year and billions in unfunded pension liabilities.

Both candidates expressed support for a casino in Chicago and changing the state's income tax system to a graduated tax, in which higher earners are taxed at a higher rate — two measures lawmakers have tried for unsuccessfully for years to pass.

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Associated Press writer Don Babwin contributed to this report.

A man who got into Salt Lake City’s airport without a ticket is suspected of assaulting a traveler

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A man is suspected of assaulting a traveler in what police are calling an unprovoked attack Saturday at Salt Lake City International Airport, where he managed to enter a concourse despite having no ticket.

According to arrest documents, the victim reported that the man, 42, went into Concourse G and began punching him “for no reason.” The man then took the victim’s cellphone and walked away, police wrote.

He was booked into jail on suspicion of robbery and assault.

The man did pass through a security screening, despite not having a ticket for a flight, the TSA confirmed on Monday.

"TSA’s travel document verification procedures were not properly followed at Salt Lake City International Airport on Saturday, March 30," TSA officials wrote in a prepared statement. "As a result, an individual who was not ticketed for travel gained access to the sterile area of the airport. The individual and his belongings were screened through the security checkpoint with no alarms. TSA will cooperate with law enforcement in its ongoing investigation.”

Neither the TSA nor police have disclosed how the man passed through checks for travelers’ tickets and ID at the security screening. Several witnesses and video footage corroborated the victim’s account, police wrote.

State colleges: Utah Valley tops Utah in softball 5-2, BYU beats Southern Utah 13-4

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On a rainy evening at Dumke Family Softball Stadium, Utah dropped a 5-2 decision to Utah Valley.

The host Utes (13-21) had a chance to set the tone when Alyssa Barrera singled between walks to Julia Noskin and Makayla Hurst to load the bases. Instead, UVU’s Devyn Cretz capped the inning by striking out the side to keep the game scoreless.

The Utes broke through in the third as Barrera singled with two outs and Hurst drove her in with a single to right. Utah’s junior center fielder was off with the crack of the bat and able to beat the throw home.

Utah pitcher Sydney Sandez ran into trouble in the fourth. Utah Valley (11-17) answered Utah’s run with Linnah Rebolledo RBI to tie the game, 1-1.

Ellessa Bonstrom doubled to begin the bottom half and Barrera singled again to put runners on the corners. UVU tried to pick Bonstrom off third base while Barrera stole second and the throw was off the mark, allowing Utah to regain the lead, 2-1. After Barrera moved to third on the error, Utah had a chance to extend its lead, but three consecutive pop ups ended the threat. Utah left 10 runners on base during the contest.

For the second time, the Wolverines quickly responded. Skylar Cook doubled to start the sixth and Lyndsay Steverson smashed a two-run homer for a 3-2 UVU lead.

UVU put the game away with a pair of runs in the seventh. Jordan Freas walked before Madison Sisco and Peyton Prigge doubled in back-to-back at-bats to make the score, 5-2.

For Cretz, it was her third complete-game win in her last three starts. Cretz allowed one earned run on nine hits while striking out three.

BYU 13, Southern Utah 4 • In Cedar City, the Cougars scored four runs in the first inning and led 8-1 after four.

SUU’s Hannah Williams hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the fourth to make it 8-3, and Kendall Kapitzke had an RBI double in the fifth to close the gap to 8-4.

BYU responded with a five-run sixth inning to make it 13-4 and end the game.

Latter-day Saint leader Russell Nelson trumpets ‘Church of Jesus Christ,’ but so do many other Christian faiths

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The LDS Church just amped up the religious rivalry around who owns the name Jesus Christ.

Last August, Latter-day Saints embraced their prophet’s mandate to use the faith’s official name — The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — as a public and private push to recognize the Savior who they believe leads their church.

Outsiders, researchers and reporters respected the religion’s right to self-identity, and many strived to follow its preferred style guide, some even eschewing the popular term “Mormon” to describe the 16 million members.

Recently, though, the Utah-based church replaced its official website, lds.org, with a new domain name, simply churchofjesuschrist.org, without the “Latter-day Saints” ending — a move some Christians find confusing, curious or downright offensive.

After all, scores of churches have “Christ” in their names, and many online domains are similar as well.

Consider national and international denominations like United Church of Christ, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), and Church of God in Christ. There are small congregations such as the Church of Jesus Christ in Washington, D.C., the Church of Jesus Christ in Kingsport, Tenn., the Church of Jesus Christ in Peridot, Ariz., the Church of Jesus Christ in Dyersburg, Tenn. — and the list goes on and on.

Several are even offshoots of the mainstream LDS Church and track their origins to Mormonism’s founder, Joseph Smith.

  • <a href="http://thechurchofjesuschrist.org/">The Church of Jesus Christ (Bickertonite)</a> is a Christian Restorationist church headquartered in Monongahela, Pa. It began with former Latter-day Saint authority Sidney Rigdon.
  • <a href="https://www.ldsstrangite.com/">T</a><a href="https://www.ldsstrangite.com/" target=_blank>he Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite)</a> is based in Wisconsin.
  • <a href="http://www.cofchrist.org/">Community of Christ </a>(formerly the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints) is headquartered in Independence, Mo.
  • <a href="http://www.churchofchrist-tl.org/">Church of Christ</a> is also based in Independence, Mo.
  • The <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/religion/2018/10/14/how-younger-latter-day/">Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints</a>, a polygamous sect, has followers in many locales, including Hildale and Colorado City along the border of Utah and Arizona.

Besides mistaking one group for another, there is the question of priestly authority.

Joseph Smith and his fledgling followers founded their church in 1830, asserting it to be the restored gospel of Jesus Christ; indeed, calling it the only true church with divine authority to act for God.

(Photo courtesy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints)

Joseph Smith's first vision.
(Photo courtesy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Joseph Smith's first vision.

In recent years, the church has not “honked about that so much,” says the Rev. Jeffrey R. Silliman, a lifelong Utahn and former pastor at Mount Olympus Presbyterian Church in Millcreek.

Silliman was OK with Latter-day Saints using the full name of their church more often, he says, to help others recognize their connection to Christ.

But the new domain name, Silliman says, “offends me.”

“It accentuates that the rest of us are not the church of Jesus Christ,” the Presbyterian says. “It’s an attempt to assert the church’s claims.”

For his part, Richard Mouw, president emeritus of the Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, Calif., finds it hard “to get worked up over this.”

Many churches, Mouw explains, “‘own’ labels expressing identities that the rest of us also claim.”

For example, he says, “I consider myself ‘orthodox.’”

"Catholic" is a good term, Mouw says, for “anyone who sees herself/himself as a member of the universal church.”

So Latter-day Saint authorities, says the religious scholar, author of “Talking With Mormons: An Invitation to Evangelicals.” “are not doing anything particularly offensive simply by employing this label.”

All of those other churches, though, purposely send signals with their nomenclatures.

“The Stone-Campbell movement wanted to be known as ‘Disciples [of Christ]’ because they saw themselves,” Mouw says, “as initiating a movement that was lifting the yoke of a lot of structures and creeds that had accumulated in Christianity.” "Adventists" wanted to “send the message,” he says, “that they put a very strong emphasis on the Second Advent [or Second Coming].”

So, what is the message the Salt Lake City-based church is trying to send by dropping “Mormon” and “LDS.” Mouw wonders what it is about those terms that the authorities worry can be misleading.

“This does not strike me as taking a step away from those of us who are not LDS but who also see ourselves as belonging to the Church of Jesus Christ,” Mouw says. “Nor do I see this as — and this will certainly be the cynical reaction of some others — a deceptive move.”

The evangelical theologian rather sees it as “affirming continuities and commonalities with the rest of us. I choose to see the decision as of a piece with the recent friendly meeting with the pope.”

During that historic exchange, Latter-day Saint President Russell M. Nelson did not tell Pope Francis anything about Mormonism’s doctrine of a “Great Apostasy,” that Christ’s church disappeared for centuries until Smith “restored” it.

(Photo courtesy of the Vatican) Pope Francis welcomes President Russell M. Nelson to the Vatican on Saturday, March 9, 2019.
(Photo courtesy of the Vatican) Pope Francis welcomes President Russell M. Nelson to the Vatican on Saturday, March 9, 2019.

At the same time, the Roman Catholic Church, with its 1.2 billion members, believes it is — and has been since the beginning — the repository of Jesus’ teachings and the legacy of faith built on the apostle Peter’s “rock.”

After the recent meeting of prophet and pope, Nelson acknowledged theological differences, but he noted the two focused instead on similar social goals: safeguarding religious liberty, defending the family and enhancing global relief.

Nelson wanted to emphasize the two faiths’ commonalities, not their opposing assertions about authority.

For Latter-day Saint leaders, it has become crucial for the world to know of their church’s connection to the Christian Redeemer.

Some years ago, when the church studied how it was perceived, Mara Einstein, professor and head of media studies at Queens College, City University of New York, notes that there “was confusion about whether the Mormons believed in Jesus.”

Making the domain name “Church of Jesus Christ,” she says, “would put any confusion around that to bed.”

To the media expert, “this move sounds more like the ‘we’re just like you’ strategy.”

She says The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square (which changed its name last fall from the Mormon Tabernacle Choir) “has always had an appeal beyond Salt Lake City.”

But recognition of the full name of the church, she says, has “been more limited.”

Daniel P. Stone, of The Church of Jesus Christ (Bickertonite), endorses the Utah-based faith’s new domain name, with all its implications.

“What Nelson is doing is admirable,” Stone writes in a recent Salt Lake Tribune opinion piece. “He doesn’t want his people to be considered Mormons, but latter-day followers of Jesus Christ.”

But Stone warns fellow Bickertonites to get ready. The Salt Lake City church’s domain name, churchofjesuschrist.org is very close to their own, thechurchofjesuschrist.org. Only “the” differentiates the two.

“I have a feeling,” Stone writes, the Bickertonite website “is going to be getting a lot more traffic.”

Children’s chalk art aims at getting leaders’ attention about community dismay over gravel operation in their neighborhoods

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(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   William Hoffert 8, draws on the side walk in front of the Lehi City Hall, to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Carolyn Hoffert and Angie Parkin and their kids are drawing chalk art on the sidewalk at Lehi City Hall to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   William Hoffert 8, draws on the side walk in front of the Lehi City Hall, to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Felicity Hoffert 10, draws on the side walk in front of the Lehi City Hall, to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Felicity Hoffert 10, draws on the side walk in front of the Lehi City Hall, to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Carolyn Hoffert and Angie Parkin and their kids draw chalk art on the sidewalk at Lehi City Hall to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Carolyn Hoffert and Angie Parkin and their kids draw chalk art on the sidewalk at Lehi City Hall to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Carolyn Hoffert and Angie Parkin and their kids draw chalk art on the sidewalk at Lehi City Hall to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Carolyn Hoffert and Angie Parkin and their kids draw chalk art on the sidewalk at Lehi City Hall to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Carolyn Hoffert and Angie Parkin and their kids draw chalk art on the sidewalk at Lehi City Hall to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Carolyn Hoffert and Angie Parkin and their kids draw chalk art on the sidewalk at Lehi City Hall to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.

Lehi • After many months of feeling ignored by city leaders, some residents and their kids are picking up sidewalk chalk to convey their dismay about a project they say would create a de facto gravel pit near their homes.

On walkways all over Lehi, local mothers-turned-activists and their children have been giving artistic expression to their concerns about letting Geneva Rock haul away gravel from a site in the Traverse Mountain community.

“Welcome to the city of Geneva,” the Lehi City Hall steps proclaimed Saturday in a range of pastels.

Members of the group Lehi Moms and Allies for Clean Air contend the grading operation at Traverse Mountain would kick up dust in an area where air quality is already compromised by existing gravel pits.

"We just feel it's reckless to even think about proceeding before an environmental health study ... has actually been done," Angie Parkin, co-founder of Lehi Moms, said in a Tuesday interview.

One member of her coalition has battled lung cancer, while another suffers with asthma, and both are worried the dust pollution is a factor in their health problems.

The group also believes airborne particles tossed up by mining could threaten their children’s respiratory wellness. Parkin said an elementary school sits less than half a mile from the proposed project site, and existing homes are a mere 50 feet away from it.

So she and others are urging the city to stop the gravel extraction before it starts.

Geneva Rock spokesman Dave Kallas says critics of the project have improperly labeled it as a gravel pit expansion when it is actually a grading operation to prepare the site for housing. The developer in this case turned to Geneva to flatten the site over the next few years before construction can begin.

Their plan is to load the gravel onto a conveyor belt that will carry it over to Geneva's pit a short distance away, saving the developer the trouble of trucking the material offsite.

The arrangement is also a win for Geneva, which can use this gravel to make concrete and asphalt. But that doesn't make it a mining operation, Kallas said, noting that the development approvals require Geneva to wrap up grading within three years.

"A mine is a permanent installation that is intended to extract all the resources until the resource has been removed," Kallas said. "This is being graded to a site-specific plan with the intention of building on it."

However, Carolyn Hoffert, who lives in Traverse Mountain, said even existing mine operations stir up a significant amount of dust, and tearing up the ground next door to her neighborhood will only make matters worse.

“Sometimes, so much wind is blowing off the mine that I can’t see the mountains on the other side. And that’s really depressing,” Hoffert said Tuesday, as her 10-year-old daughter Felicity worked to shade in a pink heart on the pavement outside City Hall.

"I heart clean air," the message read.

(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Carolyn Hoffert and Angie Parkin and their kids draw chalk art on the sidewalk at Lehi City Hall to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Carolyn Hoffert and Angie Parkin and their kids draw chalk art on the sidewalk at Lehi City Hall to protest the expansion of Geneva Rock's mining activities near their neighborhood, Tuesday, April 2, 2019. (Rick Egan/)

Crystalline silica dust generated by mining operations has been linked to various health risks, and state health officials have advised conducting a roughly yearlong community health assessment of construction and mining activities near the Point of the Mountain gravel operation.

But residents say the city has pushed forward to allow the grading project without any such health analysis.

Frustrated after hitting a series of brick walls, they landed on the idea of a sidewalk art protest.

"We've honestly tried all the normal channels as far as the emailing ... and going to city council meetings. ... And we just have not been heard," Parkin said. "And thus, sidewalk chalk is just something creative and fun and something kids can do."

Kallas said the grading and development project has received all the necessary city approvals, but a date to begin work at the site hasn’t been set. A city spokeswoman confirmed that the final agreement between the developer and the city was signed in February but declined further comment.

Political Cornflakes: President Trump wrongly claims that his father is from Germany — for the third time

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Happy Wednesday!

President Donald Trump wrongly claimed Tuesday — for the third time — that his father is from Germany. Actually, Fred Trump was born in New York City. It was Trump's grandfather who immigrated from Germany.

The latest incident came as President Trump expressed concern that Germany is not paying its fair share to NATO, but said he respects the country because his father is a native.

"My father is German, was German," he said. "Born in a very wonderful place in Germany, so I have a great feeling for Germany.”

The Washington Post said he has made that erroneous claim two other times as president, including at a NATO summit in Brussels. [WaPost][TheHill]

Topping the news: A years-long effort to give more teeth to Utah’s hate crime law ended with a bill signing ceremony where Gov. Gary Herbert approved a bill that enhances penalties for those who have targeted their victims based on bias. [Trib][Fox13][DNews]

-> Utah Sen Mike Lee voted against a measure that would allow Senate Republicans to more swiftly approve U.S. president Donald Trump’s judicial nominees. The senator said the Senate should not break rules for short term gain. [Trib]

-> Speaking before the U.S. House committee, Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski urged Congress to take action to reduce carbon emissions. She said her city and others in Utah are doing their part. [Trib]

Tweets of the day: From @MollyJongFast “So the president either A) forget where his own father was born B) is lying about where his own father was born C) never knew where his own father was born. None of these answers” are good.

-> From @derekkitchen “The sad irony of Trump cutting aid to Latin America is that it could likely increase the number of people fleeing North.”

-> From @RobertGehrke “Note to media folks covering the signing of SB103, the landmark hate crimes bill, today. Every year I rant about calling ceremonial bill signings (i.e. pretend bill signings) a bill signing. This is not one of those cases. So go crazy, y’all.”

Happy Birthday: to State Rep. Marie Poulson

In other news: Two reports show crime rates are down in the Rio Grande neighborhood of Salt Lake City after law enforcement stepped up security in the area. [Trib]

-> Utah Muslims have produced leaders in every field, except politics. The newly formed Utah Muslim Civic League is aiming to change that and put more Muslims on the ballot. [Trib]

-> An unusual type of protest has emerged in Lehi by residents worried that a project may create a de facto gravel pit by their homes: use of children’s sidewalk chalk art around the city to attack it. [Trib]

-> New research shows that temporary residents — retirees seeking warm winter weather and visitors to scenic areas — swell the St. George area’s population by a third during peak times. [Trib]

-> Pat Bagley illustrates what he terms a “National Security Crisis.” [Trib]

-> Utah Sens. Mike Lee and Mitt Romney were among a bipartisan group that introduced a drought contingency plan for the Colorado River. [DNews]

Nationally: President Trump has walked back his commitment to closing the U.S. Mexico border and replacing the Affordable Care Act after backlash from the GOP. [WaPost][Politico] [NYTimes]

-> Lori Lightfoot easily won the Chicago mayor’s race Tuesday to become the first black woman and openly gay person to lead the nation’s third-largest city. She vowed to end corruption there. [Trib]

-> President Donald Trump says former Vice President Joe Biden is “being taken care of pretty well by the socialists,” suggesting criticism against him was hatched by his own party’s left wing. [Politico]

-> A Chinese woman carrying a device containing computer malware was able to briefly gain access to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort after lying to secret service agents. [WaPost][Politico][NYTimes]

-> British Prime Minister Theresa May broke with her own Party Tuesday and appealed to the Labour Party to work on a Brexit plan. [NYTimes]

-> Refugees fleeing violence in Syria, sparked a humanitarian crisis when arriving at an overcrowded tent camp in the northeast corner of the country which is under the control of the US-backed Kurdish forces. [WaPost]

-> News industry leaders are fighting back against the charge by President Trump that special counsel Robert Mueller’s report proved journalists were “so wrong for so long." [Trib]

Got a tip? A birthday, wedding or anniversary to announce? Send us a note to cornflakes@sltrib.com.

Lee Davidson and Christina Giardinelli

twitter.com/LeeDavi82636879, twitter.com/Ninetta89


Karen Tumulty: Use your head, Joe Biden, not your hands

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Joe Biden needs to cut it out. And so does the mob that is after him.

The former vice president — and presumed front-runner-to-be in the 2020 Democratic primary — has a long history of putting his hands all over pretty much anyone who comes within reach. Women. Men. Children. Longtime friends. Perfect strangers.

He calls it the trait of a "tactile politician." Longtime aides say it is simply "Biden being Biden." But a quick web search of "creepy Uncle Joe" finds an avalanche of video proof that his space-invading overtures are not always received with delight.

All of this is rightly being looked at in a different light amid the #MeToo movement. Over the weekend, in an essay for New York magazine's The Cut, former Nevada state legislator Lucy Flores said Biden put his hands on her shoulders, sniffed her hair and kissed her on the back of the head at a 2014 rally for her lieutenant-gubernatorial campaign. She wrote that the episode left her feeling shocked, confused and humiliated.

In the ensuing uproar, Biden's rivals for the nomination expressed support for Flores, and there was speculation that all of this might disqualify him from running. White House counselor Kellyanne Conway pronounced on "Fox News Sunday" that Biden has a "big problem," which was more than a little ironic coming from someone whose boss was elected president amid multiple accusations of sexual assault and after declaring he liked to grab women by their genitals.

On Monday, another woman, former congressional aide Amy Lappos, told the Hartford Courant that Biden rubbed noses with her at a 2009 fundraiser in Connecticut.

What we all are learning, we should hope, is that we should respect women who have the courage to come forward about their experiences with unwanted physical contact. They deserve the benefit of the doubt both about their versions of events and about how they were made to feel.

But it is also important — and a sign that a social movement is maturing into a social norm — to recognize that not every offense is of equal severity.

Also worth factoring in is whether an alleged perpetrator was acting with malevolence or just cluelessness. Flores indicated that she believed Biden's actions were demeaning and disrespectful, but not violent or sexual. Nor does it sound like a power move on Biden's part.

To lose that sense of proportion is to dishonor the victims of the worst kinds of sexual abuse, and to abandon any hope that there can be a path to redemption for those who commit lesser ones and grow to understand the hurt they have caused.

For politicians, these issues can be particularly fraught. "Pressing the flesh" is a vital part of the campaign ritual. Nearly every public appearance by a candidate ends with eager supporters lining up for handshakes and hugs and faux intimate photos wrapping arms with someone who just might be making history.

Indeed, Flores' essay brought a rebuttal from Stephanie Carter, the wife of former defense secretary Ash Carter. A photo of Biden with his hands cradling her shoulders became a viral sensation four years ago, striking many as overly familiar or downright weird. The truth, she wrote, was that the vice president was offering her a bit of badly needed emotional support at her husband's swearing-in.

In a statement, Biden promised to "listen respectfully" to those who say he acted inappropriately. Part of that process should be recognizing that others might have life experiences or cultural backgrounds that do not predispose them to unsolicited physical contact with people they do not know well. Flores, for instance, suggested that Biden's touch evoked familiar feelings of being discounted as a young Latina in a field dominated by white men.

Biden also cited his record as a champion of women's rights. But that may in fact turn out to be a far bigger vulnerability, starting with his inept excuses for how shabbily the Senate Judiciary Committee treated Anita Hill during the 1991 confirmation hearings of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.

“To this day, I regret I couldn’t come up with a way to get her the kind of hearing she deserved,” Biden said — a jaw-dropping dodge, given that as chairman of the committee, he decided not to call additional witnesses who could have supported Hill’s claim that she had been sexually harassed by Thomas.

Americans deserve a far better explanation, not only of why he failed back then but whether and how he is different because of it. If Biden does indeed run for president, the question will not be whether his hands are in the right place, but whether his heart is.

Karen Tumulty | The Washington Post
Karen Tumulty | The Washington Post

Karen Tumulty is a Washington Post columnist covering national politics. She joined The Post in 2010 from Time magazine and has also worked at the Los Angeles Times.

@ktumulty

Letter: Scientific facts are not ‘scaremongering’

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I read the recent Tribune article entitled, ”Utah parents say school science guidelines are ‘scaremongering’” with great dismay.

Established bedrock scientific principles of evolution and climate change (resulting from human-produce greenhouse gases) were dismissed and denigrated by some parents as “politically driven”?

These principles are scientific facts, not political manipulations, and have been validated by impartial scientific experts (biologists, geneticists, and climate scientists) to a degree comparable to any other established scientific principles.

Human psychology has often been driven by the idiom, “Believe what you want to believe.” But when “alternative truth” is weighted more by religious beliefs or political ideology than observable reality (i.e., science), we have a real problem.

It is true that science and ideology often create cognitive dissonance, but that confusion is not solved by attacking scientific truths. The scientist Copernicus was vindicated over time when savagely attacked by deniers of his time. (The Earth really does revolve around the sun!)

I am not attacking religion here. I also am a believer. I am standing up for objective science. For the sake of the future of our children, let’s keep our public school science curriculum, and our religion, “pure and undefiled.”

Gene Jones, Salt Lake City

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‘World’s Best Cheese’ costs $45 a pound and is available — finally — in Utah

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It may seem cruel to announce the winner of the World’s Best Cheese contest and then make aficionados wait more than a year to taste it.

But Cornish Kern, a buttery British cheese that won the global title in November 2017, is worth the 16 months of anticipation, says Mariah Christensen, the specialty cheese buyer for Harmons Grocery — the only place in Utah to get this rare cheese.

Made in southwest England’s county of Cornwall — Cornish Kern topped 3,000 other cheeses for the global honor. Judges select the winner based on taste, color, texture, consistency, rind and body of the cheese.

Christensen placed an order for Cornish Kern immediately after it was crowned.

“I thought maybe I’d get one wheel,” she said. Instead, thanks to her cheese connections, Harmons was allotted five wheels of the firm, complex cheese with a visually interesting dark-ash rind.

Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune   Cornish Kern, a cheese from the United Kingdom, that recently won best cheese in the world, is available at Harmons Grocery Stores.
Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune Cornish Kern, a cheese from the United Kingdom, that recently won best cheese in the world, is available at Harmons Grocery Stores. (Leah Hogsten/)

Something this rare — and sought after — isn’t cheap, though.

Cornish Kern sells for $45 a pound. But “small chunks go a long way," said Christensen, who suggests serving it with fruit, breads, salami and a glass of red wine.

“It’s not a melting cheese,” she added, so don’t try it on grilled sandwiches.

Taste, of course, is what makes it worth the price.

“I like how buttery it is, for a hard cheese,” explained Christensen, “and it’s got a granular texture, almost like brown sugar.”

It is available at the specialty cheese counter at the Salt Lake City Harmons in Brickyard and City Creek; as well as stores in Holladay, Riverton (Mountain View) and Farmington (Station Park).

Cornish Kern, which is made with pasteurized cows’ milk, is a Gouda cheese, with characteristics of cheddar, courtesy of Alpine starter cultures used by the producer, Catherine Mead at Lynher Dairies Cheese Co., near Truro, in England.

Batches of Cornish Kern are selected monthly by London’s Neal’s Yard Dairy, where they are turned, brushed and washed for 16 months in special aging rooms — located under the brick railway arches of Bermondsey.

After Cornish Kern won the World’s Best Cheese title, the dairy amped up production to meet some of the international demand, said Christensen, but it remains in limited supply, with only a few wheels available each month.

While Cornish Kern is “the big cheese” at Harmons right now, Christensen is similarly excited about two others that received recognition at the 2018 World Cheese Awards in Bergen, Norway.

Harbison, named the Best American Cheese, is a soft cheese from Jasper Hill Farm in Vermont. It is wrapped in thin strips of spruce bark, giving it a rustic, woodsy flavor. It sells for $22 a pound.

Midnight Moon, which won “Super Gold” at the 2018 competition, is an ivory-colored goat cheese, with a nutty, brown-butter flavor. It is made by Cypress Grove dairy in Arcata, Calif., and goes for $32.50 a pound.

Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Each Harmons Grocery location has a cheesemonger who can recommend cheeses that would complement one another. l-r  Lynher Dairies' Cornish Kern, Cypress Grove's Midnight Moon goat gouda, Jasper Hill Farm's Harbison, Caseificio La Madonnina's Parmigiano Reggiano and Rogue Creamery's Smokey Blue.
Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune Each Harmons Grocery location has a cheesemonger who can recommend cheeses that would complement one another. l-r Lynher Dairies' Cornish Kern, Cypress Grove's Midnight Moon goat gouda, Jasper Hill Farm's Harbison, Caseificio La Madonnina's Parmigiano Reggiano and Rogue Creamery's Smokey Blue. (Leah Hogsten/)

Gehrke: Utah’s multi-year effort to curb suicide is starting to bend the curve, and the Legislature just added resources to the fight

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For decades, Utah’s suicide problem was always there, but not always talked about. More importantly, there was no real sense of urgency to do much to stop it.

Of course there were therapists and psychiatrists, overworked school counselors and researchers who were spread too thin. But it was not something that the state’s top policymakers did much about.

“For 15 to 20 years, it felt like we were wading through mud,” said Doug Gray, an expert who studies the causes and effective deterrents to suicide at the University of Utah.

That started to change about five years ago, in the midst of a rapid 33 percent increase in Utah’s already high rate of suicide, when some in the Legislature set out to try to curb the problem.

Every year since, lawmakers have enacted a series of bills and earmarked millions of dollars toward getting more training, awareness, resources and prevention programs in place, stitching it all into a safety net hoping to catch as many people in need of help as possible.

“To me, the progress in the last five years has been exponential,” Gray said.

Last week, Gov. Gary Herbert signed the latest set of four bills, building on the foundation in a meaningful way.

Perhaps the biggest is HB373, which provides $27 million in state funds to enable school districts to hire counselors, psychologists, social workers and nurses. The districts have to match the grants, meaning even more local money will go to the effort.

More than 300 schools already have some level of school-based mental health available, said Kim Myers, suicide prevention coordinator at the Utah Department of Human Services. With this bill, there could potentially be a mental health professional in every school in the state.

To meet the increased demand for trained psychiatric professionals, HB174 adds up to four (only two were funded this year) new psychiatry residents at the University of Utah’s medical school.

HB17 builds on a prior program requiring gun stores to provide a gun lock when they sell a firearm and offers subsidies to people to buy gun safes, an important step when one considers that firearms were used in half of all suicides between 2006 and 2015.

And HB393 helps pay for doctors to consult with a trained psychiatrist if they worry a patient might need help and sets up a grant fund to help low-income families that lose someone to suicide cover expenses like bereavement counseling, funeral costs or even simple clean-up costs.

All four bills were sponsored by Rep. Steve Eliason, R-Cottonwood Heights, who has led suicide prevention efforts in the Legislature for several years. “He is really a champion for us,” Gray said.

Voters may have taken the single biggest life-saving step, however, when they went to the ballot box last November and passed Proposition 3 (even if legislators scaled it back substantially). “If we could do the one biggest thing to prevent suicide, it’s probably Medicaid expansion,” Gray said.

That’s because people suffering from any illness who don’t have insurance and can’t afford a doctor risk their ailment getting worse. Depression and mental illness are no different. Getting into a doctor’s office could mean getting them the help they need and that could mean saving lives.

Lawmakers dropped the ball on one key suicide prevention measure, Rep. Steve Handy’s bill that would allow family members and law enforcement to seek a court order to take away firearms from those considered a risk to themselves or others. Studies show these red-flag orders can prevent suicide, Gray said, but gun-rights groups kept it from even getting a hearing.

Overall, the actions taken by state leaders has been positive.

“We see mental health and suicide prevention continue to be a policy priority,” Myers said. “That’s a good thing and it shows an ongoing commitment.”

And most importantly, the steps appear to be working. In 2016 and 2017, Utah’s suicide rate leveled off and preliminary data for 2018 shows that the rate may have declined, Myers said.

The bad news is that about every 14 hours a Utahn takes his or her own life. That’s a number that must change. So expect Eliason, Gray, Myers and the rest of the advocates to be back next year, working to get people the tools and the resources they need to save lives.

Anyone experiencing suicidal thoughts is asked to call the 24-Hour National Suicide Prevention Hotline, 1-800-273-TALK (8255). Utah also has crisis lines statewide, and the SafeUT app offers immediate crisis intervention services for youths and a confidential tip program.

Letter: Lee puts on a ridiculous show

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Our senator, Mike Lee, put on a ridiculous dog and pony show the other day in the Senate. Not the first time, either.

I am embarrassed that he is our senator and I hope that the good people of Utah are likewise embarrassed.

Calling for his resignation is meaningless. Let's hope a viable candidate materializes and gives Utah voters a true option.

Utah voters can and do respond to a need, as in the election of Rep. Ben McAdams, and the time is on the horizon for a change.

Kevin M. Sillito, West Valley

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Letter: America should spend more money on foreign aid

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In 2016, the United States spent approximately $49 billion on foreign aid (or 1.2 percent of the entire budget), according to the Congressional Research Services. Recently, in the Trump administration, the amount of foreign aid America gives has gone down.

Although it is called “foreign aid,” it also provides benefits for people in America. One of the benefits is a stronger economy. By providing aid to other countries, they are able to become more developed. This provides companies with new markets, makes them more competitive and provides more jobs for American workers.

A second benefit is that it promotes national security by fighting poverty and diseases. It has been shown that countries with higher poverty rates are more likely to have environments that influence violence like terrorism. Foreign aid helps countries get individuals out of poverty and creates a less violent environment. Additionally, many deadly diseases have started in underdeveloped countries. By providing medication and other medical needs America is able to contain future disease outbreaks.

America needs to focus more on foreign aid and the key way to do this is by increasing the funding we give to other countries.

Olivia Causse, Sandy

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Letter: Support the Energy Innovation Act

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An article in the March 27 Tribune tells about Sen. Mike Lee mocking the Green New Deal.

The Green New Deal is a liberal plan put forth by Democrats to tackle climate change. If Lee and other Republicans don’t like the Green New Deal, they should back another plan for reducing CO2 emissions.

Right now, there is a bipartisan climate change act in Congress called the Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act. The act calls for a fee on carbon emissions. Having a fee on carbon would promote innovation in ways of producing fossil fuel energy and would promote conservation. The fees collected would be returned to the American people in the form of a monthly dividend. The act includes a fee on goods imported from countries that don’t already have a carbon fee so our country’s goods will still be competitive.

For the sake of future generations, I hope this act is something that both Democrats and Republicans will agree on.

Russell Patterson, West Valley City

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Paul Waldman: Trump realized mistake on health care, but it’s too late

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Just last week, President Donald Trump promised that any minute now, Republicans were going to produce a plan to solve all the problems in the health care system, one that would be, and I quote, "spectacular." In response, I argued that he was putting his party in an uncomfortable position by forcing Republicans to talk about an issue they would much prefer to avoid altogether.

Now Trump seems to have realized his mistake:

"Trump signaled Monday night that he will not press for a vote on a bill to replace the Affordable Care Act until after next year's elections, apparently heeding warnings from fellow Republicans about the perils of such a fight during campaign season," according to a Monday report from The Washington Post.

"In a series of late-night tweets, Trump continued to bash President Barack Obama's signature health care law but said a vote on a replacement would not occur until after the elections - suggesting that he believes he would still be in the White House and that Republicans would control both chambers of Congress at that point.

" 'Vote will be taken right after the Election when Republicans hold the Senate & win back the House,' Trump wrote. 'It will be truly great HealthCare that will work for America."

It'll be truly great. In two years or so.

We've seen this pattern before: Trump blurts out a promise he thinks everyone will like, but it turns out his party has no interest in pursuing it, and eventually the vow just disappears. This can apply to both the general and the specific; in this case, Trump promised that the GOP would be "the party of health care," and he said Republicans "will take care of preexisting conditions better than they're taken care of now." But Republicans would like to talk about health care as little as possible, and the last thing they want to bring up is preexisting conditions.

That’s because the guarantee that people with preexisting conditions can get health coverage only exists because of the Affordable Care Act, and if Republicans succeed in any of their attempts to destroy the ACA — most recently with the lawsuit the administration is supporting that would tear out the ACA, root and branch — that protection would be eliminated. They can swear up and down that they’ll figure out some way to restore the protection, but they know that voters don’t really believe them.

If you watch the administration representatives talking to the media today, it all seems a bit jumbled. They insist that they’re working on a plan like busy little bees, and the vice president’s chief of staff says “the president will be putting forward plans this year” — plural! — but no one is contradicting Trump on his assertion that the phantom plan will not become a legislative reality until 2021.

You might say, well, of course not - Democrats control the House, and they won't approve of any Republican health care plan. But that's only half true. Democrats would be happy with a plan that did all the "spectacular" things Trump regularly claims - protecting preexisting conditions, insuring everybody, doing it all for much less than we pay now.

What Democrats won't agree to is the actual things Republicans want to do on health care, which involve taking away coverage from millions of people, removing the protections the ACA provides and making the system much crueler than it is now. Any plan that adheres to conservative principles on health care will be abhorrent to Democrats and hugely unpopular with the public.

Republicans may be hoping that this is their best strategy to make the health care issue get as quiet as possible between now and next November: Just say you'll have a plan eventually but remind everyone it can't be passed until 2021 anyway, so there's no reason to be too concerned with it, and throw in some fear-mongering about "Medicare-for-All" aimed at skittish seniors. The trouble with that is that Democrats don't need a specific Republican plan to attack.

That's because there's a lengthy and clear record over the past few years of what Republicans want to do on health care, laid out in the occasional legislative proposal, the actions of the Trump administration, and a never-ending series of lawsuits. They want to roll back the expansion of Medicaid. They want to remove protections for people with preexisting conditions. They want to take away the ability of young people to stay on their parents' insurance until age 26. They want to let insurers offer junk insurance that covers almost nothing.

When confronted about that, their answer amounts to, "Well yes, but then after we do that, we'll restore all those things about the ACA that you like. Trust us, it'll be great." But they know that the public doesn't trust them, and with good reason.

So their best hope is to convince voters to think about something else. But after Democrats had such enormous success running on health care in 2018, they’ll be doing their best to make sure the issue is front and center in 2020.

|  Courtesy Spike

Paul Waldman, op-ed mug.
| Courtesy Spike Paul Waldman, op-ed mug.

Paul Waldman is an opinion writer for the Plum Line blog.

@paulwaldman1

Letter: Don’t mix science and religion in school

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Here is my input into standards for science classes in Utah schools:

I learned many things, in school and beyond, that have helped me understand the world, people, culture. They help me value other perspectives.

They are not science.

  • In third grade we studied Greek mythology.
  • In college I took classes on folklore, folk music, and urban legends.
  • A hospital pediatrician respectfully told me about an eagle feather a Native American family attached to their premature baby’s isolette.
  • A clinic nurse practitioner explained how we have benefitted from safe alternatives developed so that people with religious prohibitions to blood products can receive many treatments.
  • Nursing school taught different cultures’ health practices.
  • My family and religion gave me foundation.
  • Books.
  • Staying informed on current local, regional, and global happenings.

Science curriculum should teach: The scientific process, the hierarchy of evidence, the history of science, physics, chemistry, biology, astronomy, paleontology, geology, anthropology, etc., based on rigorous scientific standards.

Perhaps an elective course could be developed on various world religions’ teachings about God, creation, the universe, man’s place in it and the meaning of life. Incorporating only some Christian beliefs into science classes would not only do a disservice to science, but could violate the Constitutional prohibition on establishing a state religion.

Rosalie Petersen, Salt Lake City

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Dana Milbank: Bernie Sanders has emerged as the Donald Trump of the left

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Washington * In politics, as in physics, every action has an equal and opposite reaction.

Hence, Sen. Bernie Sanders' emergence as the Donald Trump of the left.

Fundraising and polls show that many Democrats think the best answer to an angry old white guy with crazy hair, New York accent and flair for demagoguery is, well, another angry old white guy with crazy hair, New York accent and flair for demagoguery. It's not difficult to picture a scenario in which Bernie captures the Democratic presidential nomination with the same formula that worked for Trump with Republicans in 2016.

On paper, the independent from Vermont doesn't make sense: Democrats are a party of youth, and he's 77; they are majority-female, and he's a man; they represent the emerging multicultural America, and he is white. Statistically, he is the worst option against Trump: An NBC News poll this week found that there are more voters with concerns about Sanders (58 percent) than there are for former vice president Joe Biden (48 percent), Sen. Elizabeth Warren (53 percent), Sen. Kamala D. Harris or former representative Beto O'Rourke (41 percent each).

Yet Sanders has both money and movement. His campaign on Tuesday announced a haul of $18.2 million in the first quarter from 525,000 individual contributors. The other major populist, early favorite Warren (Mass.), has floundered in both money and popularity. And undeclared front-runner Biden now looks vulnerable to accusations he inappropriately touched women, kicked off by a prominent Sanders 2016 backer who served on the board of the Sanders political group.

Meanwhile, Sanders himself remains untouchable, in a Trumpian way. Claims of mistreatment by male staffers from women who worked on his 2016 campaign? Yawn. His resistance to releasing his tax returns? Whatever.

Sanders isn't Trump in the race-baiting, lender-cheating, fact-avoiding, porn-actress-paying, Putin-loving sense. But their styles are similar: shouting and unsmiling, anti-establishment and anti-media, absolutely convinced of their own correctness, attacking boogeymen (the "1 percent" and CEOs in Sanders' case, instead of immigrants and minorities), offering impractical promises with vague details, lacking nuance and nostalgic for the past.

Sanders' supporters hope he'll fight Trump's fire with fire, refusing to be conciliatory (the way Biden and O'Rourke are), or to be goaded by Trump the way Warren was into taking a DNA test. Maybe answering belligerence with belligerence will work; Trump-era predictions are worthless. Either way, the support for Sanders shows that the angry, unbending politics of Trumpism are bigger than Trump.

I spent Monday at a cattle call for eight Democratic presidential candidates hosted by labor unions, the Sierra Club, Planned Parenthood and other progressive groups. Sanders was easily the least charismatic, hoisting his trousers by the waist, tugging at his socks, hunching over the lectern, sitting stiffly and awkwardly greeting questioners. But the reception among liberal activists, which had ranged from tepid (Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand) to enthusiastic (Warren) was, for Sanders, rapturous. "Bernie! Bernie! Bernie!" they chanted, standing when he appeared and when he finished. In between, they applauded a routine full of Trumpian flourishes.

He simplified and blamed: "The crisis that we are facing today is not complicated. ... We have a government that ignores the needs of the working people ... yet works overtime for wealthy campaign contributors and the 1 percent." He mocked those who questioned ideas such as Medicare-for-all ("the establishment went crazy, media went nuts, still is"), and he celebrated his prescience.

Like Trump, he railed against companies moving jobs to China or Mexico, and he harked back to simpler times: "Forty, 50 years ago, it was possible for one worker to work 40 hours a week and earn enough money to take care of the whole family."

It's less hateful, perhaps, to blame billionaires than immigrants or certain "globalists" for America's troubles, but the scapegoating is similar. So is Sanders' "socialist" label (worn as defiantly as Trump wears the isolationist "America First"), and his Democratic credentials are as suspect as Trump's Republican bona fides were. Most Republicans opposed Trump, but the large field of candidates prevented a clean matchup.

A similar crowd could likewise prevent Democrats from presenting a clear alternative to Sanders' tempting -- if Trumpian -- message that a nefarious elite is to blame for America's problems. Universal health care, higher education and child care are within reach, Sanders said to cheers, if only "we stand up and tell this 1 percent that we will no longer tolerate their greed." In real life, it's not so simple. But in our new politics, maybe it is.

[This columnist’s wife, Anna Greenberg, works for John Hickenlooper, a Democratic presidential candidate.]

Dana Milbank | The Washington Post
Dana Milbank | The Washington Post

Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

BYU’s defense might be even better than last year if some injured stars get healthy

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Provo • A half-dozen or so frontline players from BYU’s defense in 2018, a defense that ranked 18th in the country in fewest yards allowed, won’t be back for the 2019 season.

Linebacker Sione Takitaki, cornerback Michael Shelton and defensive end Corbin Kaufusi are doing all they can to be selected in the NFL draft, while defensive tackle Merrill Taliauli and linebackers Butch Pau’u and Tanner Jacobson are presumably finished with football because they didn’t participate in Pro Day last Friday.

The Cougars’ goal is to repeat that defensive success this year and perhaps be a little more disruptive, coach Kalani Sitake said as spring practices wrapped up last week. But it won’t be easy.

“I like our defense. I think we have a chance to be pretty good,” Sitake said. “We’ve got to get some guys healthy, and we’re always trying to improve our depth, but I like what I’ve seen so far.”

Sitake wasn’t that bullish on the defense after it was riddled by the offense in the spring scrimmage on March 23, but quickly noted that returning starters such as defensive tackles Khyiris Tonga, Lorenzo Fauatea and Devin Kaufusi and safety Dayan Ghanwoloku only played briefly, if at all.

“We had to kind of baptize those young linebackers by fire, to show them what it is going to be like,” he said.

The offense also held out some starters that day, but not along the offensive line. When the five probable starting offensive linemen were on the field, they moved through the defense quite easily.

“Our first unit, I would gave them a B-minus, probably just because of the expectation I have for them,” said new OL coach Eric Mateos. “The second unit did not do well. I give them D-plus.”

Fourth-year defensive coordinator Ilaisa Tuiaki said bettering last year’s numbers will take getting key guys healthy and younger guys experience as quickly as possible. The Cougars were also 24th in scoring defense (21.4 ppg.), No. 27 in rushing defense (130.1 ypg.) and No. 29 in passing yards allowed (194.0 ypg.).

“We definitely feel like we should have done better, and there are a lot of technical things to fix from the scrimmage,” Tuiaki said. “But the offense just did a better job that day.”

The defense was also missing four 2018 starters hoping to return from offseason surgery. Flash linebacker Zayne Anderson (shoulder), boundary linebacker Isaiah Kaufusi (ankle), free safety Austin Lee (shoulder) and cornerback Chris Wilcox (knee) all sat out of spring practices.

“Us having all these injuries is going to turn out to be a blessing in disguise come fall because a lot of young guys got a ton of reps this spring,” said Anderson, who tore his labrum in the first game, against Arizona, then played in three more games before deciding to have shoulder surgery last October.

Lee, another rising senior, agreed.

“Coaches have really emphasized getting younger players game-ready this spring,” said the former Alta High standout and Utah transfer.

Tuiaki has installed a few defensive wrinkles, such as having defensive end Trajan Pili slide over to middle linebacker for selected plays.

“Some of it is having more experience out there, a guy who has been in the battles,” Tuiaki said. “We know he is not going to flinch. But it is also about letting those young guys know that there is somebody in there to push them. We want them to feel like somebody is out there breathing down their neck.”

Tuiaki said the rapid improvement of junior defensive tackle Zac Dawe has enabled coaches to move Pili around a little bit. He also said returned missionary Chaz Ah You and walk-on linebacker Matthew Criddle have had outstanding practices the past few weeks. Ah You is currently ticketed to back up Anderson at field, or flash, linebacker. But the former four-star recruit is getting cross-trained in other positions in an effort to get the 11 best defenders on the field.

LDS Church gains recognition in Kuwait

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The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced Wednesday that it had received official recognition for its local leaders and organization from Kuwait.

The formal recognition allows church leaders to better serve the needs of the nearly 300 members who live and work in the Persian Gulf country, officials said in a news release.

The population of Kuwait is nearly 77 percent Muslim and Latter-day Saints are prohibited from conducting missionary work among Muslims, according to the online version of “Reaching the Nations: International Church Growth Almanac," which examines the status and stats involving the Utah-based faith in countries around the world.

Latter-day Saints are allowed to do member-missionary work among the Christian population, which numbers about half a million, Matt Martinich, co-author of “Reaching the Nations,” wrote in an email. But there are no young, full-time missionaries in the region.

“This development does not pave the way for any proselytism with full-time missionaries,” Martinich wrote. However, it "will allow for more public awareness of the church in the country and greater freedoms in terms of its operations.”

Martinich, an independent researcher, said the church appears to be the eighth Christian denomination to be licensed and registered, “a HUGE accomplishment," considering the church is small there and not a traditional religious group in the region.

“This also marks the first time a nontraditional Christian denomination has ever been officially registered with the government in Kuwait — usually Seventh-day Adventists get this before Latter-day Saints,” he noted. “The church generally has good relations with all governments in the Middle East as the church is careful to follow local laws governing religious freedom restrictions.”

The church appreciates the government for “allowing freedom of worship in the State of Kuwait, in particular for the expatriate workforce," Bishop Terry Harradine, leader of the Kuwait congregation, said in the release.

Harradine singled out Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al -Sabah, the emir of Kuwait, for his leadership; and the Kuwait Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs "for their assistance in promoting religious tolerance within the country.”

Latter-day Saints have lived in Kuwait since the 1970s, coming from many countries around the world.

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