Also, could the Utah Compact make a difference for America’s immigration standoff?
At Holiday Oil, the Wagstaff brothers keep their dad’s vision alive |
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| | Lee Benson writes: "Brothers Scott and Mike Wagstaff are the leaders of one of Utah’s most successful home-grown businesses. "Their company, Holiday Oil, turned 60 this year. Year-in, year-out its growth has been as steady as a metronome. In July they’re set to open their 75th store. By the end of the 2020s they plan to hit 100. They have 1,000 employees on their payroll, and counting. "How have they survived, thrived and expanded when so many other family-run gas station businesses have been kicked to the curb, engulfed by the fuel companies and the big corporations? What’s their secret? "Basically it boils down to four words: "What would Jerry do?" |
Read more about the Wagstaff brothers and Holiday Oil. |
| Jacob Hess writes: "The Utah Compact was a declaration of five core principles to 'guide Utah’s immigration discussion' — first signed by community leaders, clergy, business and law enforcement representatives in 2010 and later reaffirmed in 2019. "Those who initiated it were 'concerned about the tone of Utah’s immigration discussion,' with a wary eye on hard-line legislation in other states that could lead to more family separations. Clark Ivory, CEO of Ivory Homes, and one of the original Utah Compact signatories, remembers the response from some leaders in other states who were 'happy to see that a conservative state could have such a balanced approach.' "The signatories promoted these five standards as something leaders in Utah could leverage 'as they address the complex challenges associated with a broken national immigration system ...' "The Deseret News today takes a look at each of the principles in the Compact and asks experts in the immigration field to weigh its principles against what’s happening in the country. Is there any alignment?" Read more about the Utah Compact. | FROM OUR SPONSOR JON M. HUNTSMAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Higher Talent. Hire Huntsman The Huntsman School of Business is building a platform where students can broaden and deepen their knowledge, where they can challenge themselves, where, in the words of Jon M. Huntsman, they can dream, prepare, take risks, create value, and give back. | Environment Vandalizing history in the name of climate change (Deseret News) Archaeologists in Chile race against time, climate change to preserve ancient mummies (CBS News) Faith When a Minerva Teichert painting was dropped off at DI and ended up in a museum (Church News) New Church buildings spur invitations, celebrations in Nigeria and Ghana (Church News) Utah Stadium of Fire mishap: How often do firework injuries happen? (Deseret News) Scientists hope seed collection will help a rare plant persist in Southern Utah (KSL) Provo woman becomes 'tourist in my own state' by hiking to mountain letters (KSL) Politics 5 key questions the Supreme Court will answer next (Deseret News) 3 virtues America needs to sustain the Constitution today (Deseret News) The World 9 bookshops to visit in the U.K. (Deseret News) Everest's highest camp is littered with frozen garbage. The cleanup will take years (NPR) Turnout high as France votes in crucial second round of snap parliamentary election (CNN) Sports Kevin Young recruited his staff the same way he recruited his players (Deseret News) BYU golfer Simon Kwon aims to defend his title at the 126th State Amateur this week (Deseret News) 3 things to watch as Utah Jazz head into Summer League play (Deseret News) Sports on the air: Here’s what games are on TV and radio for the week of July 7-13 (Deseret News) Family Scott Raines: The compound interest of family life (Deseret News) Crystal Hollenbeck, Jill Manning: Betrayal trauma anger: What is it and how do we help those experiencing it? (Deseret News) |
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