Plus, it's primary election day, the day the bipartisan infrastructure bill is expected to pass the Senate and lots more COVID news
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The Utah Policy newsletter is your one-stop source for political and policy-minded news. Send news tips or feedback to editor@utahpolicy.com.

 

Situational Analysis | August 10, 2021

It's Tuesday and National S’mores Day. Probably best not to cook 'em outside though - there's enough smoke in the air already. 🔥

Be in the Know

  1. It's election day! If you live in a municipality that has a primary election, today's the day. Mail-in ballots needed to be postmarked by last night, so today you'll need to find your local dropbox. Good luck to the candidates out there. Running for office is an act of bravery. 

  2. The US Senate is set to pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill today. Republican support has grown and some 70 Senators are expected to vote in favor of the bill, including one of its key architects, Utah Senator Mitt Romney. 

  3. According to researchers Tabitha Benney and Daniel Mendoza from the University of Utah, residents of Salt Lake County’s least-affluent zip codes contracted COVID nearly 10 times more often, per capita, than residents of the most affluent areas.

  4. In response to news that COVID vaccines will be required for the military by September 15, former Ambassador John Bolton tweeted: Ordering our military take the COVID vaccine has deep and honorable precedents. With the Continental Army constantly threatened by smallpox, Washington ordered all soldiers to be inoculated. If it was good enough for George Washington, it's good enough for me.

 

Utah Headlines

General

  • What you need to know about the Beijing Winter Olympics: With only 6 months till the next Olympic Games, say ‘sayōnara’ to Tokyo and ‘nǐ hǎo’ to Beijing (Deseret News)
  • Witness the unmitigated patriotism of this U.S. Olympic gold medalist. Tamyra Mensah-Stock, after becoming the first Black U.S. woman wrestler to win gold, said, ‘I love representing the U.S. I freaking love living there’ (Deseret News)
  • Probably not the best way to get out of work: Park City employee claims fake bomb threat to leave work early. Now the county attorney will decide if she will be charged with making a terroristic threat. (Fox13)
  • ‘We can’t forget about Enoch’: Gov. Cox tours area still recovering from flooding (St. George News)
  • Brandless raises $118 million. Led by Cydni Tetro, Brandless has secured one of the largest funding rounds led by a female CEO to date, and the largest round in Utah for a woman-led tech company. (Utah Business)
  • JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon praises Mitt Romney as ‘one class act’ during Park City stop (Park Record)

COVID Corner

  • Friday: 948, Sat: 662, Sun: 403. 9 new deaths over those three days, putting the total over 2500.
  • Breakthrough COVID cases? Utah Department of Health has the numbers: As of Friday, there have been about 5500 breakthrough cases, out of 438,479 cases in Utah, or about 0.375%. (KSL)
  • What to do with our COVID rage (New York Times)
  • Parts of the U.S. will see a COVID-19 spike because schools are reopening, Dr. Scott Gottlieb said over the weekend (Deseret News)
  • Children now make up 15 percent of US coronavirus cases (The Hill)
  • Dr. Fauci has a big tip for keeping kids safe from COVID-19 in school: wear a mask. (Deseret News)
  • A nurse who lost both her parents to Covid-19 says she does not regret their decision not to get the vaccine. She's still not going to get the shot. (Wall Street Journal)
  • Anti-vax? Be prepared to pay more for insurance (ABC News)
  • Austin, Texas sent out an emergency alert because of its massive COVID surge (Deseret News)
  • Florida's Governor Says School Leaders' Salary May Be Withheld If They Require Masks (NPR)

Drought/Wildfires/Heat

  • The Dixie Wildfire in California is now the largest single blaze in CA history - nearly 490,000 acres and counting (Fox13)

Economic Development

  • Paiute tribe explores getting into the medical cannabis business (Fox13)

Education

  • Logan nonprofit to give away school supplies for 1,000 kids in need Saturday (Herald Journal)
  • ‘You don’t have to be a victim’: Utah County sheriff prepares educators for active shooter situations (KUER)

Environment

  • Bad news for the West in a new international climate change report. Utah, the West face more fires, less snow, and an uncertain water future (Deseret News)
  • Environmentalists push lawsuits after impact statement released on $3 billion rail project that would quadruple Uinta Basin’s oil output. The proposed Uinta Basin Railway would send up to 11 trains a day between oil fields and the Union Pacific line in Price Canyon. (Salt Lake Tribune)

Family

  • Wedding bells have to ring loud and long to make up for large pandemic decline. Research says both marriage and divorce fell dramatically during the pandemic, but more couples are starting to exchange vows again (Deseret News)

Housing

  • ‘I can hardly look anyone in the eye’: St. George’s homeless feel shame. Advocates believe many residents want to offer support but say there’s a need for awareness to reduce stigma. (Salt Lake Tribune)
  • Valerie Novack: Housing insecurity follows us wherever we go (Salt Lake Tribune)
  • Students at Utah universities priced out of housing (KUTV)

National Headlines

General

  • WATCH: Video shows passenger mutiny over wrongful removal of two Black men from flight (The Hill)
  • Mississippi’s history of lynchings haunts grieving mother. A 21-year-old Black man was found hanging from a tree in 2018. It was ruled a suicide, but his family says he was lynched. (Washington Post)
  • Pay cut: Google employees who work from home could lose money (Reuters)

Politics

  • Is it finally infrastructure week? Senate gets ready to pass the INVEST in America Act as the House weighs whether or not it will vote on the bill this week (Deseret News)

Economy

  • Who discriminates in hiring? A new study can tell. Applications seemingly from Black candidates got fewer replies than those evidently from white candidates. (New York Times)
  • Millions of Americans are unemployed despite record job openings. The hardest-hit industries have yet to get back to prepandemic levels (Wall Street Journal)

Environment

  • Scientists expected thawing wetlands in Siberia’s permafrost. What they found is ‘much more dangerous.’ A 2020 heat wave unleashed methane emissions from prehistoric limestone in two regions stretching 375 miles, study says. (Washington Post)

International

  • Survivors of Guatemalan mudslide face death or emigration (AP)
  • Massive wildfire on Greek island of Evia devours forests (AP)
  • Taliban tighten control of Afghan north as UN fears erasure of human rights (Reuters)
 

Policy News

Salt Lake Chamber to host Workforce Summit: Removing barriers and building skills together this Thursday

The Salt Lake Chamber, Utah’s largest and longest-serving statewide business association, will host the Workforce Summit: Removing Barriers and Building Skills Together on August 12, 2021, at the Salt Lake City Marriott Downtown at City Creek.

The number one economic issue coming out of the pandemic is a skilled and work-ready workforce. The workforce shortages across the state and nation are causing employers and business leaders to rethink hiring strategies. 

The half-day Summit will look at removing barriers and allowing employees to enter the workforce seamlessly, as well as discuss creative skill development and the future infrastructure of the workforce. The event presents an unrivaled opportunity for attendees to discover unique solutions to their recruitment challenges.  (Read More) (Register)


Number of the Day

Number of the Day Aug 10, 2021
 

Analysis: Survey shows Utahns support major elements of Senate infrastructure bill

By LaVarr Webb

The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on a much-debated and much-compromised bi-partisan $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill Tuesday morning, with Utah Sen. Mitt Romney voting in favor of the legislation. The bill includes $550 billion in new funding, added to $650 billion in already-scheduled spending.

Enough Republican senators are expected to join Democrats in supporting the bill for it to pass the Senate and be sent to the House.

Romney has been in the middle of engineering the legislation and negotiating its contents with a group of GOP and Democratic senators. He acknowledges that the legislation is not perfect, and contains measures he would prefer not to include.

But while some Republicans, including other members of Utah’s delegation, say they would support a less costly infrastructure bill, Romney said that, realistically, such a bill is simply not going to be passed.

This bill, he argues, is the result of months of negotiations and compromise, and is the only bill that has any chance of winning approval in the Senate and House. And it’s better than nothing, and much better than a Democratic alternative with a much higher price tag.

According to a new public opinion survey, most Utahns tend to agree with Romney. The survey was conducted July 12-14 and was commissioned by the Utah chapter of The Nature Conservancy (of which I am a member). It was conducted by the polling firm Public Opinion Strategies, with a sample size of 600 Utah registered voters and a possible error margin of plus/minus 4 percent.

The survey shows some 61 percent of Utahns support some type of infrastructure package being passed, with only 27 percent opposing. And strong support exists for key items included in the legislation, such as upgrading and improving water infrastructure and storage capability; upgrading the nation’s cybersecurity infrastructure; overhauling and upgrading transportation across the country, including roads, bridges and rail lines; updating the country’s electric grid; encouraging more products to be made in the U.S. to reduce economic reliance on China; and expanding and improving broadband Internet access in rural communities.

Overall support for infrastructure legislation rises to 70 percent when specific items like those above are mentioned as being included in the package. And overwhelming support exists for using federal infrastructure funds to invest in greater water conservation efforts.

While the legislation does not include any tax increases, a majority of Utahns would even support increases in certain taxes or fees to pay for infrastructure improvements. These include placing fees on goods imported from other countries that generate carbon emissions in their production; raising taxes on households that make $400,000 or more a year; and raising the tax rate on corporations from 21 percent to 28 percent.

The survey also showed that while Utahns strong support the physical infrastructure bill, they do not support the $3.5 trillion “human infrastructure” legislation being proposed by congressional Democrats.

Some Republicans argue that passing the $1.2 trillion physical infrastructure bill will “enable” the Democrats to also pass their $3.5 trillion bill because House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has linked them.

But Romney and others say passing the infrastructure bill will make it less likely the $3.5 trillion bill will past because some moderate Senate Democrats will decline to support a bill with such an enormous price tag, having just approved a $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill.

 

Upcoming

  • Securing the American Dream: A conversation with Tim Scott presented by the Hatch Foundation – Aug 11 @ noon. Register here
  • Utah Foundation Breakfast Briefing: Mental health in anxious times – Aug 26 @ 9 am. Register here
  • Utah Foundation Annual Luncheon with Shaylyn Romney Garrett – Sept 23 @ 12 pm. Register here
 

On This Day In History

From History.com

  • 1793 - Louvre Museum opens
  • 1846 - Smithsonian Institution created.
  • 1858 - Anna J. Cooper is born. Upon receiving a Ph.D in history from the University of Paris-Sorbonne in 1924, Cooper became the fourth African American woman to earn a doctoral degree.
  • 1874 - Herbert Hoover is born. He becomes the 31st US president.
  • 1977 - Son of Sam serial killer is arrested.
  • 1981 - 6 year-old Adam Walsh is found decapitated.
  • 1993 - Ruth Bader Ginsburg is sworn in as the second woman and 107th Justice to serve on the US Supreme Court.
  • 2018 - Evidence of one million Uighurs being held in "counter-extremism centers" in China presented to UN Committee on Human Rights.
  • 2019 - Jeffrey Epstein found dead in his jail cell.

Wise Words

"Fight for the things that you care about, but do it in a way that will lead others to join you."
-Justice Ginsburg


Lighter Side

“The 2020 Tokyo Olympics ended yesterday, and the U.S. athletes brought home 39 gold medals, 41 silvers, 33 bronze and four new variants.” 

— SETH MEYERS

 

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