Plus, the IOC contract change that could cost Utah the 2034 Winter Games
Good morning! Here are today’s temperatures: 🌤️ 59 – 94° in Logan | 💧 10% ⛅ 74 – 98° in Salt Lake | 💧 20% ⛅ 79 – 103° in St. George | 💧 30% At the end of 2019, Laila Mickelwait couldn’t shake the disturbing headlines about cases of child sexual abuse on Pornhub, the largest pornography site and the tenth most-visited site in the world at the time. So one night in February of 2020, she decided to test the site herself. What Mickelwait discovered launched a new chapter in her fight to end online sex trafficking. Read more about the woman taking on the fight to shut down Pornhub and combat online human trafficking and sexual exploitation. Also on our minds: Trump announces debates and defends Biden’s right to run for reelection Snoop Dogg, a wedding proposal and other fun Olympics stories you may have missed Deaths related to alcohol consumption are on the rise in the U.S., and studies say there are no health benefits to alcohol |
| Controversy dogs Washington County’s proposed highway |
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| | A proposed regional transportation corridor in Washington County that has been a subject of debate for more than a decade took another controversial turn this week, with a lawsuit challenging federal agencies for breaking their own rules for review. The Washington County Commission and County Attorney Eric Clarke are suing the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, asserting that the agencies improperly started and completed a biological analysis that effectively revoked approval of the Northern Corridor. It had been approved in 2021, but then the regional transportation route was taken off the table for further review. “In March, (the Fish and Wildlife Service) withdrew its analysis that concluded the expansion of the Red Cliffs Desert Reserve fully offset the Northern Corridor’s impacts to the Mojave desert tortoise recovery efforts,” Clarke said. “They ignored the regulatory triggers that would allow for the reconsideration, and instead stated that the only justification for the reconsideration was a back-room deal with environmental groups.” The four-lane, 4.5-mile highway would run through the federally protected Red Cliffs National Conservation Area and has been the subject of two heated on-site congressional field hearings in Washington County. Read more about the highway and the lawsuit. | The last-minute addition of a new termination clause in Utah’s contract to host the 2034 Winter Games has attracted a lot of attention. But it’s not the kind bid leaders expected when they agreed to the change sparked by a U.S. Justice Department investigation into an international doping controversy. The new clause is being described as “blackmail” and promoting “dirty Games.” What it does is allow the International Olympic Committee to take back the 2034 Games awarded on July 24 in Paris if “the supreme authority of the World Anti Doping Agency in the fight against doping is not fully respected or if the application of the World Anti-Doping Code is hindered or undermined” by the United States. “I’ve obviously seen many opinions and stories,” Fraser Bullock, president and CEO of the Salt Lake City-Utah Committee for the Games, said after his recent return to the United States. “My hope is that people understand the two fundamental principles behind all this.” Those principles, Bullock said, are supporting a “clean” Games where athletes compete without the advantage of performance-enhancing drugs, and working to resolve tensions between the Canadian-based World Anti Doping Agency, or WADA, and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, or USADA, that have been “festering for years.” Read more about how Utah and the United States are planning to address the issue. More in Olympics Some fun Olympic stories you might have missed (Deseret News) Utah diver Emilia Nilsson Garip will compete for an Olympic medal in 3-meter springboard (Deseret News) Park City’s biking silver medalist made U.S. Olympic history in Paris. She already has her sights set on gold in LA (Deseret News) Former Utah State athlete breaks down in tears while struggling at the Olympics (Deseret News) | Utah How water moves through the Great Salt Lake drainage (Deseret News) Brush fire blazes across 200 acres near Saratoga Springs (KSL) Layton Hills Mall sold for $37.1M; new owner plans to ‘enhance and energize’ shopping center (KSL) Salt Lake City says Rio Grande Plan may solve east-west divide — but can it get Olympic funding? (KSL) The U.S. Mortgage rates see biggest drop in 2 years. How low will they go? (Deseret News) Trump defends Biden’s right to run for reelection: Democrats ‘took it away’ (Deseret News) The World U.S., Qatar and Egypt invite Israel and Hamas for summit to finalize Gaza deal (Axios) Russia says troops are battling to push Ukrainian forces back after cross-border incursion in Kursk (The Associated Press) Sports How much will Zach Wilson play in Denver Broncos’ preseason game against Indianapolis Colts? (Deseret News) After adversity at Washington and a comeback at Cal Poly, Sam Huard is embracing QB2 battle (Deseret News) Weber State transfer Marque Collins adds depth, experience to talented secondary (Deseret News) 4-star Spanish Fork offensive lineman Aaron Dunn, a top in-state recruit, commits to Utah (Deseret News) Faith A tale of two legacies: What BYU's new medical school means for future generations (Deseret News) 3 steps to dig deeper into news about biblical manuscripts (Deseret News) Health Studies turn thumbs down on alcohol health benefits (Deseret News) | Photo of the week BY JEFFREY D. ALLRED Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf, of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and Sister Harriet Uchtdorf gesture to attendees prior to the YSA Conference devotional at the Conference Center in Salt Lake City on Sunday, Aug. 4, 2024. Read more. |
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