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Defensive star Porter Gustin, who played high school ball in Utah, won’t suit up for USC against the Utes due to a season-ending ankle injury

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Utah football coach Kyle Whittingham has empathy for USC linebacker Porter Gustin, knowing him personally, but that's the extent of his reaction to how Gustin's being lost for the season due to a broken ankle will affect the Trojans in Saturday's game at Rice-Eccles Stadium.

“Everybody in the country's banged up,” Whittingham said Monday, during his weekly news conference. “Don't want to hear any sob stories.”

The Utes have injuries of their own, with center Lo Falemaka having missed the past two games. Defensive end Mika Tafua missed Friday’s 42-10 win over Arizona and receiver Siaosi Mariner also was unavailable for that game. As for their status Saturday, Whittingham said, “We’ll find out as the week progresses.”

Utah's offensive line has performed well in Falemaka's absence, with sophomore Orlando Umana moving to center and redshirt freshman Nick Ford playing guard.

Gustin, a senior from Salem Hills High School in southern Utah County, fractured his ankle in the late stages of USC’s 31-20 defeat of Colorado, effectively ending his college career. Gustin picked USC over Utah during the recruitment battle back in February 2015.

Gustin leads the Trojans with seven sacks this season and had 21 sacks in the equivalent of three years, with his last two seasons cut short due to injuries. This past summer, he made multiple lists of the biggest “freaks” in college football, a tribute to his athletic ability, nutritional discipline and work ethic.

Even without Gustin, Whittingham said, “They've got plenty of good players. Just like everybody else, you move on to the next guy. You feel bad for him, because he's a great kid and a really good player.”

Now that Utah has solved some offensive issues, Whittingham pointed to the Ute secondary's competition with USC's receivers as “the key matchup of the game.”

Whittingham said he judges his secondary by the pass efficiency defense statistic, and Utah ranks No. 1 in the Pac-12 and No. 18 nationally. Those numbers partly reflect Weber State’s passing troubles in the season opener against Utah with a redshirt freshman quarterback who subsequently was replaced.


Feds say marijuana cash has been used to build and run The Complex music venue in Salt Lake City

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The operators of one of Salt Lake City’s busier concert venues, The Complex, are being charged by federal prosecutors with building and running the business using more than $1 million earned selling marijuana.

The accusation is part of a 13-count indictment announced Monday against three people — Gabriel Seth Elstein, 33, of Park City; his wife, Angela Christina Elstein, 32, of Park City; and Seth Dale Gordon, 48, of St. George — that alleges they conspired to transport hundreds of pounds of marijuana from California to Utah and then across the country. Dumbles Holdings LLC, a company managed by the Elsteins, is also named in the indictment.

Prosecutors allege that the Elsteins and Gordon ran a drug-trafficking operation from April 2007 through December 2013, buying and moving at least 2,500 pounds of marijuana and laundering at least $5 million through Bondad Productions, a company that promoted electronic-music shows, and The Complex, a music venue on the west side of downtown Salt Lake City.

The three were arraigned in federal court Friday, according to a news release from John Huber, U.S. attorney for Utah. Gordon and the Elsteins have been released pending trial, which has been set for Dec. 14.

A publicist for The Complex did not respond to a request for comment Monday. An attorney for Gabriel Elstein had no comment Monday; attorneys for the other two could not be reached for comment Monday afternoon.

The charges include possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance and money laundering.

The indictment describes a scheme that ran from 2006 to 2014, in which Gordon and Gabriel Elstein would find marijuana suppliers in California, and hire drivers to take the marijuana to Salt Lake City and locations in Minnesota, Illinois and Wisconsin for packaging and distribution.

At various times, marijuana was stored or packaged at a home in the Avenues, a warehouse and an auto shop in Salt Lake City, and a garage and an orchid ranch in Chico, Calif., the indictment said.

The drivers would bring money back to Salt Lake City and take it to California suppliers to buy more pot. In one instance, the indictment states, $1 million in cash was vacuum-sealed in the shape of the Empire State Building for delivery to a California supplier.

Along the way, Gordon and the Elsteins employed four different suppliers and six drivers, according to the documents.

According to the indictment, Gordon and the Elsteins began construction on The Complex in 2009, at a cost of $1.3 million. They started with $400,000 in marijuana proceeds laundered through Bondad; the remaining $900,000, also in marijuana cash, was paid directly to companies and individuals involved in the construction, it alleges. The indictment alleges that Gordon made cash payments, in installments of $50,000 in shrink-wrapped plastic bags, nearly every week to the project’s construction foreman, identified in documents as I.M.

The indictment also said Gordon used marijuana money to pay expenses for music shows.

During the course of the scheme, prosecutors allege, Bondad and The Complex kept two sets of books to launder the marijuana money. One set contained actual ticket sales and expenses for a concert; the other inflated sales of tickets, merchandise and concessions, while deflating the expenses. At first, Gordon kept the books, but in 2009 he taught Angela Elstein how to do it, according to the indictment.

All three face sentences of 10 years-to-life on the conspiracy to distribute count. Prosecutors also seek forfeiture of The Complex, at 536 W. 100 South, two properties in Park City, and a $70,000 diamond Gabriel Elstein bought for Angela Elstein. The Complex will remain open, Huber’s release said.

Grizzly attacks hunter in mountains north of Yellowstone

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(Bob Legasa | The Associated Press)  This photo provided by Bob Legasa shows him in a hospital in Bozeman, Mont., Sunday, Oct. 14, 2018, after a bear attack the day before. Legasa, who is having a second surgery for his injuries Monday, Oct. 15,2018, says he expects to be discharged Tuesday, three days after he was mauled by a grizzly sow protecting her cub near Livingston, Mont.(Bob Legasa | The Associated Press) This photo provided by Bob Legasa shows him in a hospital in Bozeman, Mont., Sunday, Oct. 14, 2018, after a bear attack the day before. Legasa, who is having a second surgery for his injuries Monday, Oct. 15,2018, says he expects to be discharged Tuesday, three days after he was mauled by a grizzly sow protecting her cub near Livingston, Mont.(Bob Legasa | The Associated Press) This photo provided by Bob Legasa shows him after a bear attack near Livingston, Mont., Saturday, Oct. 13, 2018. Legasa, who is having a second surgery for his injuries Monday, Oct. 15,2018, says he expects to be discharged Tuesday, three days after he was mauled by a grizzly sow protecting her cub.(Bob Legasa | The Associated Press) This photo provided by Bob Legasa shows his arm after a bear attack near Livingston, Mont., Saturday, Oct. 13, 2018. Legasa, who is having a second surgery for his injuries Monday, Oct. 15,2018, says he expects to be discharged Tuesday, three days after he was mauled by a grizzly sow protecting her cub.

Helena, Mont. • A grizzly bear attacked an elk hunter who surprised the sow and her cub north of Yellowstone National Park, sinking her teeth into his arm and clawing his eye before another hunter drove her off, the victim recounted Monday.

The mauling of Bob Legasa, 57, in the Gallatin National Forest on Saturday was at least the seventh bear attack on a human since May in the Northern Rocky Mountains.

Legasa, awaiting his second surgery on Monday, told The Associated Press in a phone interview from his hospital room in Bozeman, Montana, that he and his hunting partner were moving toward some elk when he heard a growl.

It was a 2-year-old cub and its mother about 12 yards away from the tree that he had just stepped away from. After the cub growled, it moved aside, and its mother charged, Legasa said.

"I was hoping it was going to be a bluff charge, and halfway through I realized it was going to be the real deal," he said.

The sow was on him in three seconds, Legasa, of Hayden, Idaho, estimated. The bow hunter didn't have time to reach for the bear spray on his belt; he barely had time to raise his arms in front of his face.

The grizzly bit his hand, leaving puncture wounds and breaking a bone in his forearm. The sow clawed at his eye, leaving a bloody gash across the bridge of his nose.

His partner and hunting guide, Greg Gibson, discharged bear spray and the grizzly let Legasa go. Legasa pulled out his own spray, but inadvertently sprayed himself with the Mace-like mist.

Gibson discharged his spray canister again, but the wind blew the mist back into his eyes as the bears ran off.

Less than three weeks earlier, the two men made a bear spray safety video for Gibson's Montana Guide Service, Legasa said. Now, both were on the ground, blinded by bear spray.

Montana Guide Service Bear Spray Videofrom Bob Legasa-Freeride Mediaon Vimeo.

They stayed like that for at least five minutes, shouting because they didn't know where the bears were.

"I had blood in my eyes and bear spray in my eyes and I couldn't see a damn thing," Legasa said. "We were putting snow and water in our eyes, trying to get relief."

The men were eventually able to make their way back to their truck about 500 yards away.

They determined Legasa's wounds were serious, and drove to a hospital after cleaning his wounds and putting a splint on his arm.

Legasa was operated on Saturday to flush out his wounds to prevent infection. On Monday, he was scheduled for another surgery to put in a plate and screw to secure his broken bone.

Legasa's attack was the most recent in a spate of bear encounters in Wyoming and Montana, several of which have happened during hunting season when hunters look for deer and elk in bear habitat.

One attack in Wyoming last month killed hunting guide Mark Uptain of Jackson Hole. Separately, a bow hunter on Montana's Blackfeet Indian Reservation reported killing a grizzly that attacked him, and a hunting guide shot another grizzly that charged three people along Wyoming's upper Fork of the Shoshone River.

In May, a grizzly wounded a bear researcher working in the Cabinet Mountains of northwestern Montana. A 10-year-old boy was injured in an attack in Yellowstone park in August while hiking with his family, and a hiker in the Beartooth Mountains on the Montana-Wyoming border in September.

Legasa said he doesn't believe the experience has put him off hunting, a hobby since he was a teenager. But, he added, he will be more cautious in the future.

“I’m always going to have my hunting partner close, and reposition where I carry my bear spray so I can grab it with both hands,” he said.

Anne Applebaum: This is why so many journalists are at risk today

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Twelve years ago this month, Anna Politkovskaya, a journalist whose reporting came too close to the truth about Russia's war in Chechnya, was gunned down in the elevator of her Moscow apartment block. One year ago this month, Daphne Caruana Galizia, a journalist whose reporting came too close to the truth about corruption in Malta, was murdered by a car bomb next to her house in Bidnija. Seven months ago, Jan Kuciak, a journalist whose reporting came to close to the truth about the mafia's role in Slovak business, was murdered in his home outside Bratislava.

The murderers in all these cases were contract killers. But that's the only real difference between them and the government-employed hit men who are alleged to have murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a journalist whose reporting came too close to the truth about the hypocrisy of the Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman - a man who claims to be a "reformer" but is himself a corrupt oligarch, as well as an authoritarian who jails his critics.

Over the past two decades, there have been dozens, if not hundreds, of similar cases - and there will be more.

Each of these stories has a different political context, and in each of them the killers have different things to hide. But in a deeper sense, they are connected, for this is one of the defining issues of our time: The murders are the consequence of the clash between a 21st century technological revolution, which has made it possible to obtain and spread information in new ways, and a 21st century offshore banking revolution, which has made it possible to steal money in new ways, to hide it in new ways and to use it to maintain power. These two rapid changes have had a dramatic impact on democracies such as Malta and Slovakia as well as dictatorships such as Saudi Arabia and Russia. Often, it is journalists, especially investigative journalists, who are caught in the fault lines between them.

Why? Because we already live in a global news network, whether we want to or not. And because the information they reveal spreads so much more quickly than it once would have done. The Soviet Union - or indeed Saudi Arabia before the Internet - could effectively silence a critic through censorship or exile. Someone like Politkovskaya would not have mattered as much back then, because nobody inside the U.S.S.R. could have easily read what she wrote. Outside of his country, someone like Khashoggi would have had little influence in the pre-Internet era, either. But in 2018, everything he wrote was accessible to any Saudi citizen with a smartphone.

At the same time, elected politicians and unelected autocrats have a far greater personal and political interest, in 2018, in hiding the real extent of what they do. In China, Russia and now Saudi Arabia, authoritarian regimes stay in power by staging fake campaigns against "corruption," even as their members continue to hide huge caches of money and to spend it abroad. Democratically elected leaders can be tempted in much the same way. When Caruana Galizia died, she was on the trail of corrupt money linked to the Maltese ruling party. When Kuciak died, he had just exposed the tax-fraud schemes used by wealthy business executives linked to the Slovak ruling party.

In all of these countries, newspapers, websites and activist groups that publish stories about hidden wealth, illicit business activity, secret wars and secret funding schemes are dangerous: They undermine the claims of powerful politicians, both democrats and autocrats, to be acting on behalf of "the people." They demonstrate hypocrisy. They sometimes reveal the existence of crimes. They sometimes cost politicians their jobs.

Kuciak's murder led to the downfall of the Slovak government. An anti-corruption street protest in Ukraine became a revolution. An anti-corruption protest in Armenia more recently led to a change of power there as well.

To protect themselves, some politicians seek to discredit the media. President Donald Trump calls journalists "enemies of the people" on Twitter and directs mob anger against them at staged public events.

Rodrigo Duterte, the president of the Philippines, has called journalists "spies," in Trump's presence.

In Russia, the authorities use a different tactic: They seek to drown accurate information in a flood of state-sponsored garbage, producing reams of contradictory stories designed to undermine the very notion of "truth."

Given what’s at stake, it’s hardly surprising that quite a few governments have gone further. The Turkish government has arrested more than 200 journalists. More than 40 are in prison in China. Those who can get away with more extreme tactics will use those, too. Precisely because we now live in a global information network, the death of a single journalist could usefully frighten the rest - not only in one country but around the world.

Anne Applebaum is a Washington Post columnist, covering national politics and foreign policy, with a special focus on Europe and Russia. She is also a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and a professor of practice at the London School of Economics. She is a former member of The Washington Post’s editorial board. @anneapplebaum

Ramesh Ponnuru: The lesson of ‘First Man’ is not about the flag

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Weeks before it opened this weekend, "First Man" became embroiled in one of those stupid controversies that are now our economy's chief product. The movie, in telling the story of Neil Armstrong, does not show him planting the U.S. flag on the moon. Ryan Gosling, who plays Armstrong, only heightened the criticism of this omission by saying that the moon landing was "widely regarded not as an American, but as a human achievement."

We see the flag on the moon (and we see many U.S. flags on earth) in the movie. The reason it does not show the flag being planted is that it would be a distraction from the story the movie wants to tell. And this movie is never distracted: Not a moment is wasted.

Its story is not social or political; it is personal. The focus on Armstrong’s psychology can sometimes feel claustrophobic — as can the shots of the interiors of the tin cans he was flying in. But if some of the scenes are unbearable, they are never unwatchable.

So forget the nonsense about the flag. "First Man" uses Armstrong to celebrate the American character or, at least, a certain kind of American character: competitive, driven, risk-taking, technologically adept, laconic, stoic; both practical and romantic.

The movie's celebration of that character is not, however, uncritical. We see the costs of Armstrong's devotion to his mission: the costs to him, to his fellow astronauts and their families, and above all to his relationship with his wife and children.

"First Man" lets the critics of the race to the moon have their say, too; it does not pretend that the country was united, although its divisions, like the flag-planting, are not its focus. The lens widens briefly to view the social unrest of the 1960s over Gil Scott-Heron's "Whitey on the Moon."

Which, let's face it, could have been an alternative title for the movie. It was predominantly white men who went to the moon, and the movie does not indulge in any revisionism on that point. Yes, they were all white men; but perhaps this was not the most important thing about them.

The movie engages in some guesswork and some dramatic condensation of events. But, so far as this (non-space-buff) reviewer can tell, it is faithful to the history. Its efforts to convey the visual and even tactile sensations of space exploration are close to miraculous.

"First Man" gives us an alternative personality type, too, in Buzz Aldrin, who comes across as boorishly willing to say whatever passes through his mind. We are more Aldrin than Armstrong now. Self-expression reigns over stoicism in the culture.

Hence the movie's mood of nostalgia, however qualified, for the days when we were reaching for the stars. We admire the men who went to the moon, but we know we would not have done what they did.

PONNURU, Ramesh 
Bloomberg News
PONNURU, Ramesh Bloomberg News (BLOOMBERG NEWS/)

Ramesh Ponnuru is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is a senior editor at National Review, visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and contributor to CBS News.

Derrick Favors says Alec Burks is back to his pre-injury abilities. Burks says he’s even better.

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Derrick Favors and Rudy Gobert are the only players who were on the Jazz’s roster the last time Alec Burks was fully healthy and playing a major role. That was five years ago. Gobert, though, spent part of that 2013-2014 season in what is now called the G League, and much of it not playing.

So you might call Favors the expert on Burks' game among his teammates, and when he says something like this, it means more than if it came from nearly anyone else.

“He looks like AB before the injury. He’s been explosive, passing the ball a lot better, and getting back to the way he was playing before he got hurt,” Favors said. “I think he’s going to have a big year for us.”

You may remember that 2013-14 season for Burks, where he played in 78 games, averaged 28 minutes and 14 points per contest. It was the highest-efficiency year of his career (he shot 45 percent overall and 35 percent from 3), and had the highest usage rate on the team, even more than an up-and-coming Gordon Hayward.

And yet … the Jazz were terrible. They won only 25 games, their offense ranked 25th in the league, and when Burks was on the floor, they were outscored by 7.3 points per 100 possessions. That wasn’t his fault: They were bad with him off the floor, too. But he wasn’t exactly the key to winning games.

That’s been the book on Burks since he came into the league, actually — fair or not, that he doesn’t play winning basketball. He’s frustrated coaches with his tendency to freelance, on both sides of the ball, at the expense of his team.

Here’s the good news, then: While Burks was flattered by Favors' compliment, he disagrees. He thinks he’s better than he was before the injuries.

Take, for example, his penchant for rejecting screens. Rather than running his defender around the screen, Burks liked to fake using the screen, then drive to the rim the other way, hoping to catch his defender leaning. According to Zach Lowe in 2013, “Burks dribbled away from the pick on 36 percent of pick-and-rolls he ran, the highest such rate by a giant margin among guys who ran at least 35 pick-and-rolls, according to Synergy.”

Rejecting a screen was an effective strategy for Burks getting to the rim, and while it surprised the defense, it also surprised Burks' teammates too, who didn’t know where to go because their play had been cut off. And if it turned out he couldn’t get all the way to the rim, the result was usually a tough midrange pull-up of some sort: a bad shot.

Now, though? He doesn’t want to do that anymore. “Usually, I rejected the pick every time, because I knew I can get by a guy,” Burks said. “But now I’m just reading the defense.”

And what he does after using that screen and getting that advantage matters too. “Before, I was just trying to dunk it on everybody, and that’s what got me hurt,” Burks said. “Now I’m just going to read. If I have to finish, I’m going to finish. If I have to pass, I’m going to pass. If I get fouled, I get fouled. I don’t know what’s going to happen beforehand.”

That’s earned him plaudits from his coach. “Alec is such a creative offensive player, he’s got great quickness, and handles the ball well. ... Alec’s a really good passer. It’s just his progression and evolution as a player," Quin Snyder said.

“You have to respect the work he’s put in, not only to get his body back, but to develop as a player," Snyder continued. "And everything that he’s doing right now, he’s trying to play the game the right way, and it shows.”

Snyder’s trust was reflected in Burks' playing time during the preseason: He averaged 19 minutes per night, and even was the first man off the bench in one contest. And Burks repaid him by playing well during those minutes, scoring 13.4 points per game while shooting over 50 percent from the floor. Whether Burks or Grayson Allen ultimately wins a rotation role largely will depend on the defensive effort from both, but Burks will get opportunities.

So yes, after recovering from injury, Burks' speed is back. But what’s new is his ability to control it.

“I’m not going 100 miles an hour. I can read,” Burks said. “It’s beautiful what you can read when you’re not going so fast.”

‘They got a new walk, a new talk’ — Latter-day Saints, NAACP building upon their newfound ties

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Latter-day Saints and civil rights leaders are making plans for a collaboration to foster education and economic empowerment in urban centers across the country.

Officials of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the NAACP met in Salt Lake City earlier this month to continue hashing out plans for an “education and employment initiative” to be started in cities from Baltimore to San Francisco.

“They changed; they’re singing a new song,” the Rev. Amos Brown, chair of the NAACP’s interreligious relations committee, told fellow black Baptist clergy in Washington, D.C., about his recent meeting in Utah. “They got a new walk, a new talk and they have admitted that there were checkered instances in the past that they were engaged in racial ideas and practices.”

The collaboration, scheduled to launch next year, comes as the Salt Lake City-based faith marks the 40th anniversary of the “revelation” about race that then-President Spencer W. Kimball declared he received. According to that revelation, the priesthood was no longer limited by color, opening the way for blacks to have leadership positions.

In May, current church President Russell M. Nelson joined with top church and NAACP officials in a call for “greater civility, racial and ethnic harmony and mutual respect.”

Standing next to him, on the 64th anniversary of the Brown v. Board of Education decision that declared school segregation unconstitutional, NAACP President Derrick Johnson spoke of their shared hope that “all peoples can work together in harmony and should collaborate more on areas of common interest.”

The dialogue between the two groups started officially this spring, when the church hosted a “unity luncheon” for NAACP board members in Salt Lake City. That was followed by the first-time speech of a top LDS leader at the civil rights organization’s annual meeting in July. Then NAACP board members attended a portion of the church’s recent General Conference.

The collaboration will be based on internal LDS “self-reliance” programs, which church leaders hope will enhance the employment opportunities and financial well-being of participants.

Ahmad Corbitt, a spokesman for the church who recently directed missionaries in the Caribbean, said the most recent meetings focused on making materials and manuals for the initiative appropriate for people of all faiths and no faith.

Topics include personal finances, entrepreneurial advice and getting a “better education for a better job.”

Planners anticipate the programs will primarily be attended by African-Americans and be held in black or Latino churches, Latter-day Saint meetinghouses and recreation centers in cities including Atlanta, Chicago and Camden, N.J.

“We are starting in five cities and we’re trying to serve our brothers and sisters who most need our service in those cities,” Corbitt said. “We’re coming together to do that and to identify them and get them enrolled in these courses or groups that will make a real difference in terms of their education and employment and really can change the course of their lives for many of them, is our hope.”

Corbitt, who previously was the African-American president of the stake, or regional area of Latter-day Saints, in Cherry Hill, N.J., said the church’s programs usually occur once a week for 12 weeks. But the duration and frequency of the collaborative programs may be different.

Brown, in an interview, said he believes the church is focused on fostering better education and employment opportunities through the initiative rather than building its membership of 16 million people worldwide.

“They did not come with any hidden agenda of proselytizing,” said Brown, who also is the social justice chair of the National Baptist Convention, USA. “It was made clear up front that they were concerned about what the church today needed to do of substance to address the challenges of African-Americans and other marginalized people in inner-city communities.”

‘Hyperalarming’ study shows massive insect loss

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Insects around the world are in a crisis, according to a small but growing number of long-term studies showing dramatic declines in invertebrate populations. A new report suggests that the problem is more widespread than scientists realized. Huge numbers of bugs have been lost in a pristine national forest in Puerto Rico, the study found, and the forest’s insect-eating animals have gone missing, too.

In 2014, an international team of biologists estimated that, in the past 35 years, the abundance of invertebrates such as beetles and bees decreased by 45 percent. In places where long-term insect data are available, mainly in Europe, insect numbers are plummeting. A study last year showed a 76 percent decrease in flying insects in the past few decades in German nature preserves.

The latest report, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows that the problem extends to the Americas. The study's authors implicate climate change in the loss of tropical invertebrates.

“This study in PNAS is a real wake-up call — a clarion call — that the phenomenon could be much, much bigger, and across many more ecosystems,” said David Wagner, an expert in invertebrate conservation at the University of Connecticut who was not involved with this research. He added: “This is one of the most disturbing articles I have ever read.”

Bradford Lister, a biologist at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York, has been studying rain forest insects in Puerto Rico since the 1970s. If Puerto Rico is the island of enchantment — “la isla del encanto” — then its rain forest is “the enchanted forest on the enchanted isle,” he said. Birds and coqui frogs trill beneath a 50-foot-tall emerald canopy. The forest, named El Yunque, is well-protected. Spanish King Alfonso XII claimed the jungle as a 19th-century royal preserve. Decades later, Theodore Roosevelt made it a national reserve, and El Yunque remains the only tropical rain forest in the National Forest system.

"We went down in '76, '77 expressly to measure the resources: the insects and the insectivores in the rain forest, the birds, the frogs, the lizards," Lister said.

He came back nearly 40 years later, with his colleague Andres Garcia, an ecologist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. What the scientists did not see on their return troubled them. "Boy, it was immediately obvious when we went into that forest," Lister said. Fewer birds flitted overhead. The butterflies, once abundant, had all but vanished.

Garcia and Lister once again measured the forest's insects and other invertebrates, a group called arthropods that includes spiders and centipedes. The researchers trapped arthropods on the ground in plates covered in a sticky glue, and raised several more plates about three feet into the canopy. They also swept nets over the brush hundreds of times, collecting the critters that crawled through the vegetation.

Each technique revealed the biomass (the dry weight of all the captured invertebrates) had significantly decreased from 1976 to the present day. The sweep sample biomass decreased to a fourth or an eighth of what it had been. Between January 1977 and January 2013, the catch rate in the sticky ground traps fell 60-fold.

“Everything is dropping,” Lister said. The most common invertebrates in the rain forest — the moths, the butterflies, the grasshoppers, the spiders and others — are all far less abundant.

Louisiana State University entomologist Timothy Schowalter, who is not an author of this recent report, has studied this forest since the 1990s. This research is consistent with his data, as well as the European biomass studies. "It takes these long-term sites, with consistent sampling across a long period of time, to document these trends," he said. "I find their data pretty compelling."

The study authors also trapped anole lizards, which eat arthropods, in the rain forest. They compared these numbers with counts from the 1970s. Anole biomass dropped by more than 30 percent. Some anole species have altogether disappeared from the interior forest.

Insect-eating frogs and birds plummeted, too. Another research team used mist nets to capture birds in 1990, and again in 2005. Captures fell by about 50 percent. Garcia and Lister analyzed the data with an eye on the insectivores. The ruddy quail dove, which eats fruits and seeds, had no population change. A brilliant green bird called the Puerto Rican tody, which eats bugs almost exclusively, vanished by 90 percent.

The food web appears to have been torn asunder from the bottom. It’s credible that the authors link the cascade to arthropod loss, Schowalter said, because “you have all these different taxa showing the same trends — the insectivorous birds, frogs and lizards — but you don’t see those among seed-feeding birds.”

Lister and Garcia attribute this crash to climate. In the same 40-year period as the arthropod crash, the average high temperature in the rain forest increased by 4 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperatures in the tropics stick to a narrow band. The invertebrates that live there, likewise, are adapted to these temperatures and fare poorly outside them; bugs cannot regulate their internal heat.

A recent analysis of climate change and insects, published in August in the journal Science, predicts a decrease in tropical insect populations, according to an author of that study, Scott Merrill, who studies crop pests at the University of Vermont. In temperate regions farther from the equator, where insects can survive a wider range of temperatures, agricultural pests will devour more food as their metabolism increases, Merrill and his co-authors warned. But after a certain thermal threshold, insects will no longer lay eggs, he said, and their internal chemistry breaks down.

The authors of a 2017 study of vanished flying insects in Germany suggested other possible culprits, including pesticides and habitat loss. Arthropods around the globe also have to contend with pathogens and invasive species.

"It's bewildering, and I'm scared to death that it's actually death by a thousand cuts," Wagner said. "One of the scariest parts about it is that we don't have an obvious smoking gun here." A particular danger to these arthropods, in his view, was not temperature but droughts and lack of rainfall.

Lister pointed out that, since 1969, pesticide use has fallen over 80 percent in Puerto Rico. He does not know what else could be to blame. The study authors used a recent analytic method, invented by a professor of economics at Fordham University, to assess the role of heat. "It allows you to place a likelihood on variable X causing variable Y," Lister said. "So we did that and then five out of our six populations we got the strongest possible support for heat causing those decreases in abundance of frogs and insects."

The authors sorted out the effects of weather like hurricanes and still saw a consistent trend, Schowalter said, which makes a convincing case for climate.

"If anything, I think their results and caveats are understated. The gravity of their findings and ramifications for other animals, especially vertebrates, is hyperalarming," Wagner said. But he is not convinced that climate change is the global driver of insect loss. "The decline of insects in northern Europe precedes that of climate change there," he said. "Likewise, in New England, some tangible declines began in the 1950s."

No matter the cause, all of the scientists agreed that more people should pay attention to the bugpocalypse.

"It's a very scary thing," Merill said, that comes on the heels of a "gloomy, gloomy" U.N. report that estimated the world has a decade left to wrangle climate change under control. But "we can all step up," he said, by using more fuel-efficient cars and turning off unused electronics. The Portland, Oregon-based Xerces Society, a nonprofit environmental group that promotes insect conservation, recommends planting a garden with native plants that flower throughout the year.

"Unfortunately we have deaf ears in Washington," Schowalter said. But those ears will listen at some point, he said, because our food supply will be in jeopardy.

Thirty-five percent of the world's plant crops requires pollination by bees, wasps and other animals. And arthropods are more than just pollinators. They're the planet's wee custodians, toiling away in unnoticed or avoided corners. They chew up rotting wood and eat carrion. "And none of us want to have more carcasses around," Schowalter said. Wild insects provide $57 billion worth of six-legged labor in the United States each year, according to a 2006 estimate.

The loss of insects and arthropods could further rend the rain forest’s food web, Lister warned, causing plant species to go extinct without pollinators. “If the tropical forests go it will be yet another catastrophic failure of the whole Earth system,” he said, “that will feed back on human beings in an almost unimaginable way.”


Audit says Utah’s Department of Workforce Services isn’t properly overseeing federal funding for needy families

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Utah’s use of roughly $75 million in federal funding for needy families lacks oversight and performance standards, according a legislative audit released Monday.

The Office of the Legislative Auditor General reviewed state contracts under Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, or TANF, and found that many of the programs selected for funding appeared to have been chosen arbitrarily, and without defined goals or a standard for evaluating success or failure.

“It is generally recognized that spending on case management is important,” the audit states. “Our concern is with [the Department of Workforce Services’] inability to adequately document its effectiveness.”

Roughly a third of Utah’s funding is used to employ counselors, who work with low-income families on achieving self-sufficiency. But those cases, overseen by Workforce Services, are tracked based on the ability of agency counselors to close a case when the family no longer receives assistance.

Auditors say that doesn’t account for the same family returning later for assistance, which can’t legitimately be labeled a success.

“We reviewed recidivism data, which indicated that positive case closures are not very meaningful in terms of demonstrating family self-sufficiency,” the audit states. “The number of families returning to state assistance is nearly the same, regardless of a positive or a negative case closure.”

At a hearing at the state Capitol on Monday, Department of Workforce Services Executive Director Jon Pierpont committed to a swift response on the audit’s recommendations.

“If you know me, we’ll get right after it,” Pierpont said. “These won’t be solved in 18 months. They’ll be solved in, like, 18 days.”

DWS was credited in the audit for improving its budget and financial controls in recent years, including the hiring of new finance staff and the implementation of new politics and reporting standards. The audit also describes Utah’s TANF programs as among the top-performing in the nation.

But 11 out of the 24 contracts reviewed by auditors did not include the basic rationale for why TANF funding was being awarded, and DWS “struggled to clearly identify programs that receive TANF funding."

“We commend DWS for its achievements,” the audit states, "but more can be done to improve outcomes for families.”

Auditors issued a series of recommendations, including that DWS track assistance recidivism and post-employment outcomes, and that contracts approved for funding include specific goals related to receipt of assistance.

Members of the Legislative Audit Subcommittee responded positively to the department’s current leadership. House Speaker Greg Hughes, R-Draper, complimented Pierpont for the work he and his staff has done on Operation Rio Grande, a multipronged law enforcement and state assistance effort to combat homelessness in Salt Lake City.

The work of Pierpont and DWS related to the operation, Hughes said, goes “above and beyond” what is typically asked of Utah’s department heads and state agencies.

“You have done an incredible job,” Hughes said, “even outside of your normal scope and mission.”

Pierpont told lawmakers his department agrees with auditors' recommendations, and that corrective action has or will be taken regarding the audit’s findings.

“We’re committed to the program,” Pierpont said. "As you know, improvements can always be made.”

Back on track — historic streetcar returns to Salt Lake City’s Trolley Square

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There was a high-flying homecoming Monday at Trolley Square as a giant crane lifted a century-old streetcar into the air and then glided it to its rightful place outside the Salt Lake City shopping center.

Believed to be one of the city’s oldest electric streetcars, it was placed on the north plaza, near Pottery Barn, where it will undergo renovations and then ultimately be home to a new mall tenant, said Taymour B. Semnani, general counsel for SK Hart Properties, the company that owns the shopping center on 700 East between 500 South and 600 South.

“The streetcar has been in storage for seven or eight years,” said Semnani, “but it’s well-preserved. We’re hoping people will be excited to see the renovation as it happens.”

(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018 as people gather for the repositioning ceremony. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  Framed by the wheels of the last Utah trolley car hanging from a giant crane, Khosrow Semnani, owner of Trolley Square makes takes the stage for a few remarks before the repositioning of the iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, and was moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. Marking a 110 year history and last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company, the now empty car was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018 as people take a tour of the now empty car. The last Utah trolley car was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018 as people gather for the repositioning ceremony. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018 as people gather for the repositioning ceremony. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  Kirk Walton of Salt Lake City overlooks his photos of the last Utah trolley car as he recalls how his great grandfather Robert Lamont Sr. used to be a conductor of the trolley's. The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, was moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. (Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  Khosrow Semnani, owner of Trolley Square makes a few remarks before the repositioning of the iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, and was moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. Marking a 110 year history, the last trolley car in Utah, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  People gather to witness the iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, as it is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  Boris Walther, 78, takes a trip down memory lane as he tours the inside of the last Utah trolley car. Walther, the last living wood craftsman that worked on the trolleys back in 1972, recalls the details seen inside following a repositioning of the iconic trolley car on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018, that has been sitting in storage for several years and was placed back into view at Trolley Square.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  The iconic trolley car, that has been sitting in storage for several years, is moved back into view at Trolley Square on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018 as people gather for the repositioning ceremony. The empty trolley car, last seen housing the Trolley Wing Company was moved into place on the north plaza by Pottery Barn.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Francisco Kjolseth)  Boris Walther, 78, right, takes a trip down memory lane as he tours the inside of the last Utah trolley car alongside trolley enthusiast Bob Mertens. Walther, the last living wood craftsman that worked on the trolleys back in 1972, recalls the details seen inside following a repositioning of the iconic trolley car on Monday, Oct. 15, 2018, that has been sitting in storage for several years and was placed back into view at Trolley Square.

Semnani said his father, Khosrow Semnani, who purchased Trolley Square in 2012, chose Monday, the 110th anniversary of the trolley fleet building, for the streetcar’s return.

According to historians, the first electric streetcar left the trolley building for public service on Oct. 15, 1908.

Considered state-of-the-art at the time, the building held 144 double-truck streetcars, was divided into four massive bays with four tracks each and a total of 208 skylights, according to Trolley Square’s online history page. As fire was always a risk, the iconic 50,000-gallon water tower was built.

Courtesy  |  Utah State Historical Society
Aerial view of the car barns, now Trolley Square, January 20, 1945.
Courtesy | Utah State Historical Society Aerial view of the car barns, now Trolley Square, January 20, 1945.

“The trolley car system ran from Salt Lake City to Holladay, Sugar House, Bountiful and Centerville, totaling 146 miles of track, and making it the premier transportation system in the state,” the history page states. “It was estimated that half the city’s residents rode trolleys daily.”

Buses and cars replaced the trolley system by the mid-1940s. The trolley barns sat empty for decades, until a family purchased the property in 1972 and adapted them for retail use. They hired architect Wally Wright, who used Ghirardelli Square — the San Francisco chocolate factory refinished as a shopping center — as his inspiration.

Through the years, the trolley car, which sat beneath the water tower, served as home to State Savings Bank and, later, Trolley Wing Co., a tavern that specialized in 3.2 beer, chicken wings and camaraderie — regulars got their own beer mug to hang on the wall.

In 2010, the mall’s previous owners removed the trolley to make way for Whole Foods Market, an anchor in a multimillion-dollar renovation.

Since then, the car has sat on the empty lot on 600 South, just south of the mall. When SK Hart acquired the property, the trolley car was among the assets included in the purchase.

Seeing the vacant trolley car wrapped in plastic was painful for Jess Wilkerson, the owner of Trolley Wing Co., who was forced to move his business from the streetcar that gave his business its name. After the move, Trolley Wing operated in a makeshift spot inside Trolley Square for four years during mall construction — only to be evicted again.

Wilkerson and several Trolley Wing Co. regulars — the bar now has locations in Sugar House and Midvale — attended Monday’s streetcar return.

“I’m on cloud nine," he said, noting that before he was evicted, he tucked his personal beer mug in the trolley car ceiling. “I’ve been waiting for this for a long time."

Wilkerson said he plans to meet with SK Hart officials about possibly reopening Trolley Wing Co. in its original home.

It could definitely fit into SK Hart’s future plans. In April, the owners said they intend to add theaters, a food and beer hall, fitness venues and a multifamily development, with the existing pedestrian bridge on 600 South connecting the housing project to the mall.

“One of the first pieces of that multifamily project,” said Taymour Semnani, “was to move the trolley off the south lot."

Three RSL players on international duty won’t return until Wednesday, putting their status for Thursday’s game in jeopardy

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Three Real Salt Lake players pegged last week for international duty will not return from their assignments until Wednesday, making it unlikely they will start Thursday’s game against the New England Revolution, The Tribune confirmed Monday.

Albert Rusnák, Joao Plata and Jefferson Savarino have been with their respective national teams since last week. All three are scheduled to play games on Tuesday with their teams and will fly back from overseas on Wednesday.

A source told The Salt Lake Tribune that it is “reasonable to assume they won’t be starting” against New England.

Rusnák is with the Slovakian team, Plata with Ecuador and Savarino with Venezuela.

RSL will already be without Kyle Beckerman and Sunday “Sunny” Stephen, who were suspended from Thursday’s game due to card accumulation after each picked up a yellow card in the previous game.

Thursday’s game is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Rio Tinto Stadium.

BYU women’s basketball team will be young and inexperienced in 2018-19, but will have an international flavor with 6 foreign-born players

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Provo • BYU women’s basketball coach Jeff Judkins has a rebuilding project on his hands in the 2018-19 season because three key players graduated from a team that went just 16-14 last year and tied for third in the West Coast Conference race.

Sounds like the coach entering his 18th season in Provo also has some chemistry and bonding issues to work through as well.

One of the few returning players with Division I college basketball experience, center Shalae Salmon, said Monday at the program’s media and photo day that team unity went lacking last season and has been a major focus in the offseason.

“One of the main things we need is [better] off-court chemistry,” said Salmon, a 6-foot-3 junior from Porirua, New Zealand. “It was really toxic last year. Even though I loved the team last year, it really didn’t help with our game having little certain groups and not being able to be close as a team off the court as well. I thought it really affected our on-court chemistry.”

Judkins said a recently completed trip to Europe, allowed every four years by the NCAA, “was a real blessing” because the players were able to bond better than they have in the past. The Cougars will have 12 underclassmen on their roster, including six players from countries other than the United States.

“The nice thing is there is not a lot of age difference. They are all young,” Judkins said. “The last two years we have had a lot of older seniors and young kids, and for whatever reason it is a difficult deal. They just don’t see eye-to-eye on things. They don’t like the same music. They don’t like a lot of things. So it was really hard. This team is a lot closer that way, because of that.”

The only seniors are 6-2 forward Jasmine Moody, who missed all of last season with an injury, and Caitlyn Alldredge, who is joining the team after playing for BYU’s softball team the past four years.

The only returning starters are guard Brenna Chase and center Sara Hamson, a two-sport star who tore an ACL last summer and was forced to miss the current volleyball season with the Cougars. Judkins said Hamson is ahead of schedule in her recovery and hopes to be back by Dec. 1.

“She has worked really hard to get back, but we are not going to rush it,” Judkins said. “I would just as soon keep her out and make sure she’s ready for conference.”

Chase, 5-9, will likely lead the team in scoring, considering the junior from Thornton, Colo., averaged 13.5 points last year. No other returner averaged more than 5.6 ppg.

“I think we have a team expectation of winning a WCC championship and hopefully getting into the NCAA Tournament,” Chase said.

With such a young and inexperienced roster, that will be difficult. The WCC coaches preseason poll will be released Wednesday.

Judkins said he has much better depth this year than last, but will miss the leadership and scoring of Cassie Devashrayee, Amanda Wayment and Malia Nawahine.

“I can play a lot of players,” he said. “Last year, it seemed like the injury bug hit us. Now I have a lot of depth. These freshmen that came in this year are very good. They are very talented. They will push the seasoned players a lot.”

The freshman Judkins is most excited about is Shaylee Gonzales, a 5-9 guard from Gilbert, Ariz.

“She’s going to be a really, really good player,” he said.

Other new faces include Abby Mangum, the sister of BYU quarterback Tanner Mangum, who redshirted last year, Kaylee Smiler of Hamilton, New Zealand; Babalu Ugwu of Sao Paulo, Brazil, Tahlia White of Orem and Signe Glantz, a 6-1 forward from Ostersund, Sweden.

Along with Salmon, Smiler, Ugwu and Glantz, the other two international players are guards Maria Albiero of Brazil and Khaedin Taito of New Zealand.

“We are not afraid to [bring in international players],” Judkins said. “BYU is not afraid to let us go and find the best players we can, and it is getting more that way because it is so hard to get good [U.S.] kids now with the Power Five conferences getting them. It is harder.”

BYU Women’s Basketball in 2018-19

Returning starters: G Brenna Chase, C Sara Hamson

Other key returners: F Jasmine Moody, C Shalae Salmon, G Paisley Johnson

Key newcomers: G Shaylee Gonzales, G Caitlyn Alldredge, G Tahlia White, F Signe Glantz, F Babalu Ugwu


Utah hunters upset after area burned by Pole Creek Fire remains inaccessible through end of season

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Utah’s massive Pole Creek and Bald Mountain fires are out, but hunters are now getting burned after U.S. Forest Service officials extended closures for a special big game unit.

Citing public safety concerns regarding falling trees and debris flows, the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest decided to keep some burned areas in the southern Wasatch Mountains beyond the remainder of Utah’s rifle season.

For many hunters holding cow-elk and mule-deer permits, the move nixes their hunting season and renders their hard-won tags worthless, fumed Springville hunter Spencer Duncan, a popular outdoors blogger.

“We spent three years buying the points [for the drawing]. That’s the area my tag is for. For me and everyone else who has a cow tag for the Central Mountains Nebo unit, we are all [out of luck]. Same with the general season,” Duncan said. “If these were state officials deciding to close it, they would be out of a job already."

The closure might be unnecessary and could have been avoided had the Forest Service put these fires out when they were just a few acres, Duncan argued.

The state issues up to 300 cow-elk tags a year for the unit affected by the burn. Securing such a tag usually requires three or more attempts.

State leaders, including U.S. Senate candidate Mitt Romney, have previously criticized the Forest Service’s decision to not attack the lightning-triggered Bald Mountain and Pole Creek fires with full suppression, accusing the agency of “letting it burn.”

The Forest Service was managing the Pole Creek Fire and observing Bald Mountain when a wind anomaly whipped them into a frenzy Sept 12. For the next 10 days, unseasonably high, dry winds merged the fires and drove the burn north from the east side of Mount Nebo into Spanish Fork and Diamond Fork canyons, blackening 121,000 acres.

Forest officials contend managing the blazes — as opposed to suppressing them — was the right decision with the information they had at the time. High winds, not the prolonged dry conditions, were to blame for the fires’ magnitude.

The day after the fires blew up, the Forest Service closed a large area to ensure the public did not disrupt firefighting activities. That order was to remain in effect through Oct. 15.

The agency re-evaluated conditions on the ground, deciding Friday to extend closures for some areas until Nov. 30, according to Uinta-Wasatch-Cache Forest Supervisor David Whittekiend. Dead trees are liable to topple. Rain could trigger dangerous debris flows, washing out roads.

“It does affect their ability to hunt, but we don’t want to get anyone injured or trapped or get a first responder injured. We need to make sure it’s safe for the public,” Whittekiend said. “There are lots of burned trees right next to roads. We are re-evaluating. Just because it says Nov. 30 doesn’t mean we won’t consider [reopening] before then.”

Utah’s rifle season on elk runs Oct. 6 to 18 this year and Oct. 20 to 28 for deer. In response to the late-season fires that swept across northern Utah mountain ranges, however, the Division of Wildlife Resources extended the season in affected hunting units until Oct. 30, according to Duncan.

The initial closure was little more than an inconvenience to hunters, who would still have had a two-week window to stalk elk on Nebo, Duncan said. But that window slammed shut Friday with the order extending closures.

Hunters such as Duncan spend a year preparing for a limited-opportunity hunt, scouting the terrain weeks in advance. Losing such a coveted opportunity at the last minute stings.

“I hunt to put meat in the freezer," he said. “It is what I live on.”

National forest closures prohibit all entry to popular recreational areas along the Nebo Loop National Scenic Byway, which runs along the east side of Mount Nebo from Payson Canyon to Nephi. They also shut down the Nebo Loop, Mona Pole Canyon and Santaquin Canyon roads to all traffic, not just motorized vehicles. Violations can be punished with a $5,000 fine and up to six months in jail. Diamond Fork Canyon is also closed, but closures were lifted on areas that did not burn on the west side of Bald Mountain, Hobble Creek and parts of Spanish Fork Canyon.

Gov. Herbert declares drought emergency for all of Utah

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Don’t let last week’s ample rains fool you. Utah remains dangerously parched with water stores severely depleted, natural habitats stressed and woodlands primed for burning, according to an emergency declaration issued Monday by Gov. Gary Herbert.

“The rainfall we have received helps, but the drought is at a level unseen for many years and will not be solved with a small series of storms,” the governor said in a news release. “In some areas, the drought is at, or near, historic levels.”

Hardest hit is San Juan County, which is experiencing “exceptional” drought, according to the federal Drought Monitor. Drought conditions in the rest of the state are categorized as extreme or severe. Six counties have already declared drought disasters.

“Such difficult conditions are harming the quality of life and the livelihoods of many Utah families and agricultural producers,” Herbert said. “The ramifications of drought extend beyond our depleted water supply. Drought harms our industries, agriculture, recreation and wildlife, and it worsens wildfire conditions and air quality.”

The governor’s declaration comes at the recommendation of a special drought-response committee convened last month by Mike Styler, executive director of the Department of Natural Resources.

“This declaration opens doors for the Utah families and industries most harmed by this drought,” Styler said. “Hopefully, it’s also an eye-opener for the rest of us, and we’re encouraged to do our part.”

Some farmers have not been able to harvest alfalfa, while some ranchers are being forced to sell their livestock at a loss, according to Agriculture and Food Commissioner LuAnn Adams.

State officials are imploring residents to conserve water by running appliances only with full loads and reduce the amount of time in the shower.

“We can’t control precipitation, but we can find opportunities to decrease our water use all year long,” Styler said. “If we all look for opportunities to conserve, we can keep a lot more water in our reservoirs, which will really help if we have another dry winter.”

The water year that ended Sept. 30 was Utah’s driest since 1895, when official weather records started being kept, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It was also Utah’s second-warmest year on record, which puts even greater demands on depleted water supplies.

According to the National Weather Service, Salt Lake City received 10.5 inches of precipitation last year, about two-thirds what it normally gets. Streams around the state have run dry, including in Salt Lake City’s Emigration Canyon.

Sixteen of Utah’s major reservoirs are less than 20 percent full, according to the state, and fawn survival rate is expected to be zero for some Utah deer herds.

Meanwhile, wildfires have charred 490,000 acres this year, nearly four times the average.

Utah’s colleges raise tuition without getting much scrutiny from the board that’s supposed to supervise them, critical audit says

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The board that oversees tuition hikes at Utah colleges regularly approves them with little or no scrutiny — never rejecting a proposed increase, rarely asking questions about requests and failing to significantly analyze how the additional money will be spent, according to a scathing state audit released Monday.

That “superficial review,” the new report from the Office of the Legislative Auditor General says, has meant that students at the state’s eight public universities have collectively footed $131.7 million in tuition increases over the past five years.

“We’re calling for analysis to show where that need is,” said Kade Minchey, audit manager. “Our concern is that tuition has been increased with minimal independent analysis to support the increases.”

Each spring, the Utah Board of Regents approves a uniform percentage increase for all the colleges in its system. This “tier one” increase — 1.5 percent this year, 2.5 percent the year before — covers inflation and staff compensation.

Individual universities can then lobby for an extra “tier two” increase to include more expenses, such as the construction of a new stadium or hiring more faculty. (The University of Utah, for example, asked for and received the largest additional increase for the 2018-2019 school year, raking in $7.6 million on top of the first tier.)

The board receives recommendations for both tiers from the commissioner of higher education, compiled by staff who meet privately with the universities and provide no public minutes of what was said behind doors. The regents then give the green light to those, the audit concludes, without much discussion, debate or examination of where the funds will be used. And it has never denied a request.

This creates a process that is largely unfettered and essentially allows schools to raise tuition with few checks or limitations, Minchey said.

The audit puts it this way: “When asked what kind of vetting is conducted on the institutions’ tuition requests, a member of senior management told us that commissioner staff perform no independent analysis, either on the reasonableness of the requests, or the accuracy of the numbers provided by the institutions prior to the Board of Regents’ approval.”

In response, the Utah Board of Regents acknowledged its shortcomings and announced plans Monday to restructure its system for approving hikes. Starting this coming spring, there will no longer be tiered increases or uniform rates across all schools. Instead, each university will be required to present a individualized request for a tuition change during a public hearing.

Board members will listen to the proposals, review them and then approve a percentage increase they deem appropriate for each institution.

“We’re very concerned about keeping tuition affordable,” said Harris Simmons, chair of the Board of Regents, during a report on the state’s findings Monday at the Capitol.

The Legislative Audit Subcommittee spent a grueling 90 minutes going over the report with members expressing disappointment in the Board of Regents, concern about the lack of review of tuition and fear that the changes won’t come soon enough. They, too, grilled Simmons, as well as David Buhler, Utah’s commissioner of higher education, for not being more transparent.

“I’ve seen a lot of audits in my time here, and this is one of the worst,” said Rep. Brad Wilson, R-Kaysville. “This system has raised tuition to the highest degree possible.”

“We can’t have the kind of slack that this audit has exposed,” added Rep. Brian King, D-Salt Lake City.

“I want to reject the notion that because we have low tuition that the tuition increases we see are OK,” noted House Speaker Greg Hughes, who co-chairs the subcommittee.

Utah’s public colleges, which do have some of the lowest tuition rates in the nation, are unique in that, unlike other with state jobs, the Legislature designates only 75 percent of the funds needed to pay for annual compensation increases rather than the full 100 percent. The purpose of tier one tuition hikes is to cover the rest.

But the annual uniform increase is determined by the institution that would require the largest percentage to close the gap. And that amount is then applied to all universities under the Board of Regents’ oversight.

This year, Snow College set the bar with a need for a 1.5 percent increase. That means the seven other schools received more than needed to match (including Southern Utah University, which needed only 1 percent). The audit found that resulted in an extra $3 million spent this year.

The subcommittee questioned where that money has gone and why the increase is uniform instead of just fitting to the need. They also criticized that the tier one percentage is sometimes increased still beyond that by an advisory group made up of the college’s presidents — which does not hold public meetings.

Overall, it’s amounted to $65.6 million over the past five years beyond what was needed to cover the 25 percent not included in the Legislature’s funding. King said that’s hard to justify.

“When you have increases that far exceed the need, it appears to me that there’s cost shifting to the students,” the representative noted.

Wilson added that he was baffled by the lack of discussion over the increases. When the Legislature increases taxes, he said, there’s “hearing after hearing. We analyze the data. We argue about it. We debate it.” The Regents, he said, are “basically raising taxes for students” and not spending any substantial time weighing the proposals. It’s just a rubber stamp.

The Regents also approved an additional $30.5 million over the past five years with tier two tuition increases. The majority of that went to the University of Utah, which has collected $18.65 million during that time and has the highest public tuition in the state.

The audit says the Board of Regents did nothing to verify at any point what the U. would use that money on or to analyze if it was necessary.

For the 2014-2015 school year, the school’s tuition was $6,889 annually. By 2018-2019, the end of the five-year period the audit covered, it was $7,997.

U. spokesman Chris Nelson said the university looks forward “to reviewing the findings and working closely with the Board of Regents moving forward on any changes that may be needed.”

Buhler defended the process, in part, and said the money goes to additional compensations, faculty promotions and student aid. He also said the Board of Regents began its own evaluation of its policies last year and will have the audit’s recommendations — including the public hearings — in place within six months.

“We are revising those in a very robust way,” he said. “We agree that good data is critical to good decisions.”


Rep. Mia Love and Ben McAdams debate in Utah’s closest major race

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Like their hard-hitting negative TV ads in recent weeks, GOP Rep. Mia Love and Democrat Ben McAdams came out throwing punches, jabs and attempted haymakers Monday in their one-and-only debate.

Consider a sequence that started when Love was asked if any federal action could have made life easier for her back when she was mayor of Saratoga Springs.

She sidestepped the question to say, “We didn’t take developments like Olympia Hills and shove it down people’s throats without anybody knowing what was going on. We didn’t take over $10,000 from developers who wanted to build over 9,000 new housing units” with high density near Herriman, saying McAdams did that.

McAdams, the mayor of Salt Lake County, countered that when he heard public outcry about that development after the county council approved it, “I did something that I never heard Rep. Love do: I held a town hall meeting.” Then after hearing protests, “I vetoed that proposal.”

Love does not hold traditional town halls open to all comers, but she has held 85 small group and open office meetings. “Mayor McAdams may not have gotten the notice, probably because he doesn’t live in the district. He lives in the 2nd District,” she said.

Later, when Love was permitted to ask McAdams any question, she asked for whom he would vote for Congress — again to show that he does not live in the 4th District. He avoided her question, but said much of the 4th District is in Salt Lake County where he serves, “and I travel every corning of this county…. and Rep. Love is absent” in that part of the district.

The debate at Salt Lake Community College’s Miller Campus in Sandy saw Love try to tie McAdams to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, McAdams try to attach Love to President Donald Trump — plus jousting over whether some fundraising by Love was illegal, and battles over what their stands really are on a variety of issues.

Fundraising questions

In her closing statement, Love said the Federal Election Commission called her unsolicited on Monday to tell her she had not broken any laws by raising $1 million for a primary election that was never held. The FEC earlier wrote her advising she would have to return or reallocate that money, which she said she raised legally.

She said she was told “that my campaign was legally allowed to raise primary-election contributions and that we may retain all primary-election contributions that we received before” the state GOP convention that nominated her to avoid a primary.

She charged that McAdams “knew full well that no illegal fundraising had taken place…. I am asking McAdams to hold himself accountable by acknowledging and apologizing for his false commercial and mailers [attacking that fundraising]. My family and the voters deserve an apology.”

Adams countered that no official letter has yet been posted about the matter by the FEC, so he is unsure what the agency has said. But he noted that Love raised more than $300,000 for the primary after she already became the GOP nominee, “and that was a violation” of federal law.

Trump vs. Pelosi

McAdams continually attacked Love for voting “97.5 percent of the time” with Donald Trump. Love attacked McAdams for being part of the “party of Nancy Pelosi.”

“We are seeing a partisan agenda being forwarded by Rep. Love to the detriment of the people of Utah. I want people to see that I am somebody who will put Utah first,” McAdams said — charging that Love takes money from big Pharma, then votes to cut health care, and from big oil and then votes in ways that hurt air pollution.

Love countered she is the only member of the all-GOP Utah congressional delegation who has stood up to Trump on occasion — such as criticizing some of his statements about immigrants (her parents are immigrants). She said she also works with him when he is right, such as helping Utahn Joshua Holt be freed from Colombia.

As an example of Love trying to tie McAdams to Pelosi, she noted that the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, was enacted as “Nancy Pelosi, the party of Ben McAdams and Democrats said they had to pass it before they knew what was in it.” She added, “My opponent may be naïve and say he’s not going to vote for Nancy Pelosi,” but if Democrats gain control of the House “Nancy Pelosi will be speaker of the House.”

Social Security, Medicare

McAdams attacked Love for what he said was voting to cut Social Security and Medicaid, including raising the retirement age. “We must preserve promises made to the older generation,” he said.

Love said she made no such votes — and challenged McAdams to come up with specifics, which he vowed to do later. She said his charges are “typical, unfounded scare tactics that we see used over and over again by national Democrats.”

She said reforms are needed to save Medicare and Social Security, so she calls such as McAdams to leave them relatively untouched would bankrupt them.

Tax reform, debt

McAdams attacked Love for what he said are adding to a $1.3 trillion national debt that he said is now shocking — while he said he has worked hard to achieve balanced budgets every year as mayor.

He said Love signed a pledge before her first election vowing never to vote to add to the national debt. “That promise has been broken,” he said.

Love said what McAdams was actually criticizing was her votes for Republican tax reform. “I would rather give people more funds so that we can grow the economy,” while she charged that McAdams had raised taxes every year as mayor.

McAdams said instead that he has “lowered the tax rate every year.”

While that is technically true, tax hikes as defined by state law occurred some years that he was mayor — including when he declined to lower taxes after some bonds were retired. But taxes did not increase every year, as Love charged.

About the harsh tone of the debate, McAdams said, “Campaigns are about disagreements. We highlighted the disagreements.” But Love complained that McAdams tried to “come after and try to destroy a fellow American in pursuit of political power,” or her, with his attacks.

The Jazz pulverized the Kings in their preseason finale, but the opener at Sacramento will be a different deal

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If there’s any outside concern that the success the Jazz had in last Thursday’s preseason finale vs. the Kings will engender a sense of complacency or false confidence heading into this Wednesday’s regular-season opener in Sacramento, no one in the organization seems to share it.

“Both teams will be different,” said coach Quin Snyder. “Really, it’s an easy demarcation.”

So, then, forget about the Jazz shooting 60 percent from the field, thanks in part to so thoroughly getting the Kings’ heads’ spinning on defense that Utah racked up 14 dunks, including seven alley-oops.

Forget about all those wide-open corner 3s, which paved the way for hitting 14 shots from deep and converting them at a 46.7-percent clip.

And forget about Utah’s defense thoroughly and completely crushing Sacramento’s spirits by forcing a 4-for-27 shooting performance in the first 12 minutes of action.

The Jazz know that none of that matters now, and it’s best not to even think of it.

“We have to forget about that game. That was a preseason game. Now we’re getting ready for the regular season, where we’re playing them for real now,” said veteran big man Derrick Favors. “So we have to go out there with the right mentality, know that they’re gonna come out ready — it’s their home opener, so they’re gonna come out with a lot of energy. We just have to be mentally strong to withstand that first quarter. Make sure we’re solid defensively, make sure we run through our sets offensively, share the ball, play the way we want.”

In the days leading up to Wednesday’s rematch at the Golden 1 center, Jazz players have maintained that the most important tweaks they make actually have little to do with the X’s and O’s.

Instead, it’s all about getting into the proper frame of mind, of realizing that the time for test runs and consequence-free experimentation with lineups and schemes is over, that there’s a switch that needs to be flipped.

Quite simply, Rudy Gobert said, the team must channel the intensity it played with during last year’s 29-6 stretch run and be prepared to utilize that from the outset this time.

“Earlier in the preseason, it was a little easygoing. We felt like everything was going to be easy,” he said. “The thing that got us [to the playoffs] last year was the mindset. We played like it was our last chance, every game. And we need to start that way from the beginning.”

He acknowledged that maintaining such fever-pitch intensity is exceedingly difficult, considering, “You play this first game, and then you’ve got 81 more. It’s a long season.”

That said, he added, the challenge will always entail guarding against complacency.

“Human nature is, once you win 10, once you win 12, you tend to relax,” he said. “The goal is to keep your mind ready and remember that it’s a long season and every game matters.”

Which brings us back to Sacramento.

While Snyder allowed that he was “happy” with the preseason finale, because “there were things we did better [in that game] than we’d done them in the past,” he wasn’t about to gush over it.

“It’s still preseason,” he noted.

Veteran guard Alec Burks, meanwhile, said he was only taking two things away from last Thursday’s contest: learning from the mistakes made, while trying to bring the same energy this time around.

Favors reiterated that, regardless of whatever led to the Jazz’s 132-93 blowout victory, that’s not nothing to do with anything now.

“You gotta realize it was a preseason game,” he said. “I don’t know what they had going on over there, but [in] preseason, guys are still trying to find their rhythm, still trying to connect with the team. But going into the season, we got to get it started right. We gotta throw that game away and get ready for the real thing. We just gotta be prepared and ready.”

Salt Lake City’s iconic New Yorker Restaurant has closed for good

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When the New Yorker first opened in 1978, it oozed "cool,” thanks to its speak-easy location, elegant food and exclusive private club status.

“It’s where you would go and have martinis with lunch," said Tamara Gibo, “and get the kind of food you would read about in magazines.”

On Monday, though, the 40-year-old New Yorker closed for good, dealing Utah’s restaurant community a surprising blow.

“It’s heartbreaking," said Gibo, who co-owns Takashi and Post Office Place just up the street. “It’s where the innovators of Salt Lake City would eat."

The last day of service at 60 W. Market St., in the heart of downtown Salt Lake City, was Saturday, said Catherine Burns, human resource director for the restaurant’s owner, Gastronomy Inc. The 30-member staff got the news Monday, and the news spread quickly among diners.

The company is offering jobs to anyone who wants one at its Market Street Grill locations in downtown, Cottonwood Heights and South Jordan.

“It’s a sad day for all of us," said Burns, who worked as a server, host and cocktail waitress at the New Yorker shortly after it opened. “The New Yorker set the stage for fine dining in Salt Lake City."

Burns said there was no single factor that forced the closure only “that times and dining tastes change.”

The final blow, however, may have come in September, when the Salt Lake County Health Department announced that as many as 650 customers who consumed food or beverages at the New Yorker Restaurant between July 25 and Aug. 15 may have been exposed to the hepatitis A virus.

During that time period, an employee worked while infected and potentially handled certain food or beverage items, the department said in a news release. The agency believes this case is linked to the ongoing hepatitis A outbreak Salt Lake County has been experiencing since mid-2017.

Tom Sieg and business partner John Williams opened the New Yorker in the basement of the New York Hotel. They brought Tom Guinney into the fold in 1980. Eventually, the three formed Gastronomy Inc. Guinney is the last survivor of the founding trio. Sieg died in 2008, and Williams was killed in a house fire in 2016.

The Williams estate owns the New Yorker space, Burns said, so any future plans for the building were unclear.

As its name suggests, the New Yorker reflected a classic 1940s art deco elegance, with a stained-glass ceiling and luxurious banquettes, elements that originated from the historic Hotel Utah.

While there were three partners, the New Yorker was Sieg’s baby. He had his own chair at the bar. He knew everybody, and everybody knew him.

Will Pliler was the restaurant’s culinary stalwart, joining the staff during its first year and serving as executive chef since 1984. Through the years, he won numerous awards for his food, always working on new dishes and keeping the menu current, said Melva Sine, president of the Utah Restaurant Association.

In fact, Pliler was the restaurant association’s 2018 Chef of the Year.

“It was Utah’s most unique fine-dining establishment,” Sine said. “It will be a sad loss for fine dining in Utah.”

In its heyday as a private club, Salt Lake City Mayor Deedee Corradini was a regular as were those who attended the Utah Symphony, the Utah Opera and plays at the Capitol Theatre. Even the legendary Luciano Pavarotti ate there after a performance.

“It was so packed,” Burns recalled. “It was the place to go for a lunch. It was the place to go after work for cocktails."

For many of those power brokers, however, the New Yorker lost some of luster when Utah did away with private club membership.

Through the years, Pliler tried to recapture the midday crowd with specially priced lunches, but ultimately the restaurant opened only for dinner.

“For many years, when it was a private club, the clientele was exclusive. You had to be a member — or know one — to get in,” said Utah chef Dave Prows, who worked for Gastronomy early in his career.

"I hate to see a place with a great tradition close,” he added. “The New Yorker had that.”

Packers rally to beat 49ers 33-30 on field goal as time expires

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Green Bay, Wis. • A pick, a beneficial penalty and a game-winning kick.

Quite a final minute for the Green Bay Packers.

Mason Crosby kicked a 27-yard field goal as time expired to cap an 81-yard drive set up by Kevin King’s interception with 1:07 left, and the Packers outlasted the San Francisco 49ers for a 33-30 win on Monday night.

The final drive was extended after 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman was flagged for illegal contact on third-and-15 that wiped out a sack of Aaron Rodgers with 43 seconds left.

Rodgers rushed up the middle for a 21-yard gain on the next play. The two-time NFL MVP completed two more passes for 19 yards to set up Crosby’s game-winner for Green Bay (3-2-1).

The veteran kicker was perfect a week after missing four field goals in a loss at Detroit.

“It’s very appropriate, what he went through last week, (for) the team to stick with him,” Rodgers said. “And then he responded.”

Rodgers threw for 425 yards and two scores, both to Adams. The second came with 1:55 left from 16 yards to tie the score at 30.

C.J. Beathard passed for 245 yards and two long touchdowns to speedy receiver Marquise Goodwin for the 49ers (1-5).

For a while it looked like the 49ers might hold on for their first victory since quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo was lost for the year in Week 3 with a torn ACL.

Turnovers hurt them again — three more on Monday night, but none bigger than King’s pick at the Packers 10.

“Very disappointed. We had a chance to win that game,” coach Kyle Shanahan said. “It hurts.”

The second-year cornerback was locked in 1-on-1 coverage with Goodwin, who had burned the secondary all night. This time, King kept up and pulled in a ball that looked slightly underthrown by Beathard.

Then Rodgers went to work, aided by the penalty on Sherman, who was covering Davante Adams.

Rodgers was 25 of 46. Adams had 10 catches for 132 yards, one of three Packers receivers to go over 100 yards.

The Packers scored 10 points in the final 2 minutes, capped by Crosby’s fourth field goal of the night.

“This week was a grind, it was one of the tougher weeks of my career,” Crosby said about bouncing back from his awful game last week.

It’s just what the Packers needed going into their bye week.

The late flurry overshadowed another troubling start by the defense.

The Packers had 17-7 lead when Rodgers connected with Davante Adams for a 9-yard touchdown with 1:58 left in the first quarter.

Then San Francisco just brushed past Green Bay.

Beathard connected with Goodwin for the 67-yard score down the middle of the field on the ensuing series.

The 30-yard score came with 6:05 left in the second. Goodwin celebrated by mimicking a long jump in the end zone.

He finished with four catches for 126 yards. Beathard was 16 of 23.

San Francisco also got more pressure after the first quarter, forcing the Packers into more third-and-long situations.

Rodgers figured out the Niners in the end.

“We had every opportunity to finish and win that game and we didn’t get it done,” Shanahan said.

KEY PLAY

The 49ers looked like they were in good shape after Adams’ second touchdown, starting their series at their own 47 with 1:55 left after a 32-yard return by Richie James Jr., and a 15-yard unnecessary roughness penalty on Tony Brown.

But on third-and-3 from the Packers 46, Beathard unloaded under pressure.

“It wasn’t really what we wanted. The all-out blitz stuff, we had to get rid of it,” Shanahan said. There (are) four options on the play, but that wasn’t the one we wanted.”

King picked a nice time for his first career interception.

“I’ve just got to stay the course, keep doing your job, keep it going, and those types of plays are going to come,” King said.

NO TAKEAWAYS

Another game without a takeaway for the Niners dropped them to an NFL-worst minus-11 in turnover differential. The defense has generated a league-low three takeaways coming into the night, which had been the fewest total for the franchise after five games since 1977.

QUOTABLE

“It doesn’t matter if you agree with the call. It’s not like, ‘Oh, I didn’t agree with the call, they’re going to pick it up.’ They called it. I’ve got to find a way to do better.” — Sherman on the illegal contact penalty.

ANTHEM

Goodwin appeared to be the only player on either team with an apparent sign of protest during the national anthem, raising a right first in the air.

UP NEXT

49ers: Host the unbeaten Los Angeles Rams on Sunday.

Packers: After a bye week, Green Bay visits the Rams on Oct. 28.

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More AP NFL: https://apnews.com/tag/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP—NFL

A reformed Hildale has its first prep sports star — a 6-foot 8-inch cross-country runner named Jeffs

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James Jeffs helped build his high school. That’s not a metaphor.

When he was 10 or 11 years old, he was sent to work with other members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in construction of a bishops’ storehouse in Hildale. The storehouse was later sold to the Washington County School District and converted to Water Canyon High School.

Now 18, out of the FLDS and a senior at Water Canyon, Jeffs is helping transform Hildale in a way only teenagers can — through high school sports.

“The coach is always saying, ‘Represent the school,’” Jeffs said, “and, for the most part, the high school represents the town.”

Jeffs and other Water Canyon runners will compete Wednesday at the Utah State High School Activities Association state cross-country meet at Sugar House Park in Salt Lake City. Jeffs, running in the 1A division, finished 18th at last year’s competition and hopes for a top-10 finish Wednesday.

  • <b>UHSAA State Cross Country Meet</b>
  • Wednesday in Sugar House Park, 1330 E. 2100 South in Salt Lake City. The parking lot is accessed from 1700 East.&nbsp;
  • 1A girls run at 10 a.m.; 2A girls, 10:30 a.m.; 3A girls, 11 a.m.; 1A boys, 11:30 a.m.; 2A boys, noon; 3A boys, 12:30 p.m.; 4A girls, 1 p.m.; 5A girls, 1:30 p.m.; 6A girls, 2 p.m.; 4A boys, 2:30 p.m.; 5A boys, 3 p.m.; 6A boys, 3:30 p.m.&nbsp;
  • Awards will be presented as quickly as possible after the finish of each race. The presentations will be on the west side of the track at the Highland High School stadium next to the park.&nbsp;

Jeffs, who at 6 feet 8 inches tall also plans to play center on Water Canyon’s boys' basketball team later this fall and wants to run track in the spring, can lay claim to being the first prep sports star in the remade Hildale. Earlier this year, residents pitched in to send him to Australia to compete and train.

If some voters have it their way, Water Canyon will make more high school athletes. The school district is asking voters to approve a $125 million bond to finance school and facilities construction across Washington County. At Water Canyon, the bond would finance construction of a new track and baseball and softball diamonds in 2021. The district is emphasizing the bond would not boost tax rates; it would replace existing bonds when they are paid off.

Hildale was once run by FLDS members loyal to the faith’s president, Warren Jeffs. The town has gotten more secular in recent years with two jury verdicts allowing federal judges to impose changes, as well as a municipal election last year when voters elected a mayor and three City Council members who are not Jeffs followers. The Washington County School District opened Water Canyon as a kindergarten through 12th grade school in 2014 — the first public school in Hildale in a decade.

Hildale City Councilman Lawrence Barlow compares high school sports to a beer brewery that recently opened in adjacent Colorado City, Ariz. They both show, Barlow said, that Hildale and Colorado City are not as standoffish as they once were and can be “venues of healing” for the community.

Barlow said he’s also seen sports make a difference in his family. One of his daughters ran on Water Canyon’s track team. Another daughter was on the wrestling team.

“I know it’s done a lot for them," Barlow said, “to boost their confidence and interact and cope with everyday life.”

(Photo courtesy Dale Jeffs family) James Jeffs poses in Mancos, Colo., circa 2011, when he was about 11 years old. James was born into the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but his family exited the church.
(Photo courtesy Dale Jeffs family) James Jeffs poses in Mancos, Colo., circa 2011, when he was about 11 years old. James was born into the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but his family exited the church.(Photo courtesy Lisa Jeffs) James Jeffs, left, and his father, Dale Jeffs, sit at Los Angeles International Airport on June 26, 2018. The pair then flew to Vancouver, British Columbia, and then to Australia, where James Jeffs competed in cross country meets in Gold Coast through a program called Down Under Sports. Residents of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz., pitched in to raise money for James Jeffs to attend and for his father to go as his chaperone.
(Photo courtesy Lisa Jeffs) James Jeffs, left, and his father, Dale Jeffs, sit at Los Angeles International Airport on June 26, 2018. The pair then flew to Vancouver, British Columbia, and then to Australia, where James Jeffs competed in cross country meets in Gold Coast through a program called Down Under Sports. Residents of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz., pitched in to raise money for James Jeffs to attend and for his father to go as his chaperone.

James Jeffs’ family was once loyal to his uncle Warren Jeffs, too. James Jeffs, who says he falls somewhere in the middle among his father’s 16 children, said the family was moved through the years to FLDS homes in Colorado and in South Dakota.

“Those are stressful times,” James Jeffs said Friday in a telephone interview.

He was reluctant to say much about his family’s time in the FLDS but volunteered that when the bishops' storehouse that became his school was under construction in 2010, he was sent there to sweep the floors and carry lightweight supplies and equipment.

In 2011, Warren Jeffs was convicted of crimes related to sexually assaulting two girls he married as plural wives in Texas. He is serving a sentence of life plus 20 years in prison.

FILE - In this Nov. 15, 2010 file photo, Warren Jeffs sits in the Third District Court in Salt Lake City. Multiple people were charged with food stamp fraud and money laundering, including Lyle Jeffs and Seth Jeffs, top-ranking leaders of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and brothers of imprisoned sect leader Warren Jeffs. (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune via AP, Pool, File)
FILE - In this Nov. 15, 2010 file photo, Warren Jeffs sits in the Third District Court in Salt Lake City. Multiple people were charged with food stamp fraud and money laundering, including Lyle Jeffs and Seth Jeffs, top-ranking leaders of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and brothers of imprisoned sect leader Warren Jeffs. (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune via AP, Pool, File) (Trent Nelson/)

Then, in mid-June 2012, James Jeffs’ father, Dale Jeffs, a half-brother to the imprisoned president, received a message from the then-FLDS bishop. Warren Jeffs had a revelation, the bishop said, that Dale Jeffs and two of his three wives had committed a number of sins. The purported sins, Dale Jeffs said Friday in a phone interview, were similar to what other evicted FLDS men have reported over the years — Warren accused him of murdering unborn children, having evil in his heart and being immoral, among other vague transgressions. (Dale Jeffs said all the accusations were lies.)

Dale Jeffs and the two wives were told to leave Hildale and not speak to other family members. The three of them settled 300 miles away in Heber City. The children were left in the care of one of Dale Jeffs’ oldest daughters.

It took Dale Jeffs and his wives about seven months to process what had happened and realize they needed to return to Hildale to care for their children and stop them from following his half-brother.

That suited James Jeffs.

“When we left," he said, “things were starting to get to the point that I actually did want to get out.”

(Photo courtesy Down Under Sports)  James Jeffs, center foreground, runs in a cross country meet in Gold Coast, Australia, in late June or early July 2018, before his senior year at Water Canyon High School in Hildale, Utah. Residents of Hildale and the adjoining community raised money to help send Jeffs and his father to Australia.
(Photo courtesy Down Under Sports) James Jeffs, center foreground, runs in a cross country meet in Gold Coast, Australia, in late June or early July 2018, before his senior year at Water Canyon High School in Hildale, Utah. Residents of Hildale and the adjoining community raised money to help send Jeffs and his father to Australia.

James Jeffs enrolled in Water Canyon in 2015. An older brother had joined the cross-country team and invited James to practice. He had played basketball among his family but had no experience running competitively.

Runners race 3 miles in cross-country meets. James Jeffs said he was asked to run about 2.5 miles in that first practice.

“I stopped and walked some of the way,” he said. “It wasn’t until about two or three practices later I went the full distances without walking.”

The teen steadily improved his times and, by the end of that first season, was Water Canyon’s fastest runner.

He might be Utah’s tallest cross-country runner, though James Jeffs said he doesn’t perceive that he trains or races differently than those with shorter strides. He still has to strategize, deciding how to pace himself based on his competition and how many hills are on the course.

Dale Jeffs grew up along the Wasatch Front and one of his brothers ran track at Jordan High School in Sandy. But, Dale Jeffs said, children raised in the FLDS and its earlier incarnations mostly played their sports within families.

“We didn’t get out with the public that much,” he said.

After James Jeffs qualified for last year’s state meet, Hildale took notice. When a program called Down Under Sports invited him to Gold Coast, Australia, to train with and race against other U.S. teens, his family, friends and the community were ready to help him.

In a town where the household income is 69 percent of the state’s median and two out of every five residents live below poverty, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau, Hildale residents and other supporters amassed $9,400 for James Jeffs to go to Australia and Dale Jeffs to go as his chaperone. The trip was James Jeffs’ first flight on an airplane and the first time seeing the ocean.

Dale Jeffs said other Hildale residents stop him and ask him how James’ season is going.

Sports in Hildale, the father said, “has been a good thing. It occupies [the students] and keeps them busy.”

(Photo courtesy Dale Jeffs family)  James Jeffs, back row center, poses with his Water Canyon High School cross country teammates Oct. 9, 2018, in Hildale, Utah. Jeffs, who is 6 feet 8 inches tall, and his teammates have qualified for Utah's state cross country meet.
(Photo courtesy Dale Jeffs family) James Jeffs, back row center, poses with his Water Canyon High School cross country teammates Oct. 9, 2018, in Hildale, Utah. Jeffs, who is 6 feet 8 inches tall, and his teammates have qualified for Utah's state cross country meet.

James Jeffs said he would like to go to college to study engineering. He would like to play collegiate sports, too, but has not been recruited.

“I try to think of myself as just another 18-year-old,” he said.

On Friday, James Jeffs didn’t know how he would vote on the bond Nov. 6. By Monday, he decided he is in favor of the measure. Like a runner planning his race strategy, James Jeffs needed to do his homework and think before deciding a plan of action.

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