A new Utah law going into effect Wednesday will require websites featuring adult content to go even further in verifying a user’s age before granting access to the website.
SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — A new Utah law going into effect Wednesday will require websites featuring adult content to go even further in verifying a user’s age before granting access to the website.
Under Senate Bill 73, if more than 33% of a website’s content includes material harmful to children, it will be required to verify the user is at least 18 years of age.
While age mandates went into effect in 2023 with S.B. 287, the new law also impacts Utahns using Virtual Private Networks, who otherwise would have been able to bypass age verification.
A VPN is an encrypted connection that hides a user’s data, online activity and location from a website.
Aaron Mackey, the deputy legal director of the non-profit Electronic Frontier Foundation suggests the new law impedes on privacy by piercing through those VPNs.
“What this law does is it sort of affects a fundamental change in that it requires … services to actually go behind those VPNs and actually intrude on that privacy and if they discover that you’re using these VPNs, they actually require you to provide information, to de-anonymize yourself or actually provide proof of age in ways in which the whole point of using the VPN in the first place was that you wouldn’t have to be identified online,” Mackey said.
In a statement to ABC4.com, the bill’s sponsor Utah Republican Senator Cal Musselman said
S.B. 73 is about accountability, not censorship. It simply requires companies that profit from material that is harmful to minors to take reasonable steps to keep it out of children’s hands, just like we already do with alcohol, tobacco and gambling.
Children today are being exposed to harmful online content earlier and more often than ever before, and families are seeing the consequences in rising anxiety, depression and exploitation. Ignoring those realities is not responsible.
In Utah, we believe in putting families first, standing up for parents and protecting children. S.B. 73 is a commonsense approach that protects kids while preserving individual freedoms. If a company profits from content harmful to children, it has a responsibility to implement safeguards to help prevent minors from accessing it.
Mackey fears that the intended purpose of the new law may have a broader impact on Utahns who value privacy.
“So the consequences of this type of regulation, I think, are much broader … and will affect others who have no desire to access that type of content on the internet and I think that’s what’s unfortunate is like those folks who use [VPNs] every day to access content that is not sort of the subject of this core regulation,” Mackey said.
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Scattered showers & isolated t-storms will mainly impact the northern half of Utah today & into Wed. morning. Storms could produce gusty winds. Warmer & dry starting Wednesday & into the weekend.
Scattered showers & isolated t-storms will mainly impact the northern half of Utah today & into Wed. morning. Storms could produce gusty winds. Warmer & dry starting Wednesday & into the weekend.
SALT LAKE CITY
Tuesday: Mostly cloudy & cooler with a slight chance of showers & t-storms in the morning, but most likely in the afternoon. Highs: Upper 60s.
The Utah Mammoth came up short in the Stanley Cup Playoffs, losing in the first round to the Vegas Golden Knights, but it was a great learning experience for this team.
SALT LAKE CITY — The Utah Mammoth came up short in the Stanley Cup Playoffs, losing in the first round to the Vegas Golden Knights, but it was a great learning experience for this team that made it to the postseason for the first time in franchise history.
“The standard for our team now is to make the playoffs, and to win, and bring a Stanley Cup to Utah,” said Utah Mammoth forward Clayton Keller.
FOX 13 Sports Director Jeff Rhineer went one-on-one with the Utah Mammoth captain to talk about the team’s playoff run, his epic stick toss into the stands after scoring a winning goal in overtime, and how he powered through after the unexpected passing of his father during the season. Watch the full video above.
Utes return key pieces from last year, but need to replace entire starting offensive line and a productive tight end …
After two down years, the University of Utah’s offense was among the most productive in the country last season.
Led by quarterback Devon Dampier, running back Wayshawn Parker and a stellar offensive line, Utah’s offense scored 41.2 points per game, fourth in the country, and averaged 482.9 yards per game, also fourth in the country.
They set school records for rushing yards (3,462) and rushing touchdowns (41) in a season.
All in all, it was a welcome change from the last two years for Ute fans, but Kyle Whittingham’s move to Michigan put an offensive shakeup in motion.
The architect of Utah’s 2025 offense, coordinator Jason Beck, joined Whittingham at Michigan, so new head coach Morgan Scalley turned to Utah State offensive coordinator Kevin McGiven.
By all accounts, McGiven should run a similar offense to Beck’s, which will feature a lot of RPOs and utilize the rushing talents of Dampier and backup quarterback Byrd Ficklin, though the Utes could pass the ball more this year than in 2025.
The Utes retained a decent chunk of offensive production, most notably the two quarterbacks and Parker, but will need to rebuild an offensive line that lost all five starters to the NFL draft and graduation.
In the transfer portal, the Utes focused on receivers and landed a crop they feel could be a better group than last year.
Below is a position-by-position breakdown of Utah’s offense, plus our stab at a depth chart following spring camp.
Utah quarterback Devon Dampier (4) and Utah quarterback Byrd Ficklin (15) look on during warm ups before an NCAA football game against the Kansas State Wildcats held at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025. | Rio Giancarlo, Deseret News
Quarterback room in a good spot
Devon Dampier mostly answered the questions he needed to in 2025.
The New Mexico transfer quarterback cleaned up the turnovers and boosted his completion percentage while leading the Utes to an 11-2 record and their first bowl win since 2017.
Dampier threw for 2,490 yards and 24 touchdowns with five interceptions on 63.75% accuracy in 2025, adding 835 rushing yards and 10 touchdowns. Dampier’s success came even as he played through multiple injuries, including an ankle injury and another injury that required offseason surgery.
He saved his best game for last, throwing for 310 yards and two touchdowns while rushing for 148 yards and three scores in the Las Vegas Bowl against Nebraska.
It was an impressive debut season at Utah for Dampier, but there’s more for him to improve on for the Utes to hit the next level — namely reading the defense better and improving his deep ball.
“It’s a goal of his to go to the NFL and so, OK, how do we need to develop you to get you to the next level?” McGiven said. “We need to get you more in tune with protection. We need to get you more in tune with certain types of reads, with certain types of concepts so that you can become more of a complete player.”
Going through full-field and other types of progressions was a major point of emphasis for Utah’s quarterbacks this spring.
“There’s certain guys that are going to count to four or five and they’re going to go boom, boom, they’re going to scan the whole field. We want to give them tools to where they don’t have to count that high every time. They can simplify or cut down the progression,” said Utah quarterbacks coach Ryan Gunderson.
“So the wording that I use for them is you play slow pre-snap, so you can play fast post-snap. So giving them tools to cancel things out pre-snap is what we’ve focused on a lot.”
In 2025, Dampier proved that he could lead Utah to success. This year, it’s all about building on what he did well last season while improving other aspects of his game to make him more of a complete quarterback.
It’s rare in the transfer portal age of college football to have a quality backup quarterback, but that’s what the Utes have in Byrd Ficklin.
Ficklin showed he could lead Utah’s offense when needed, throwing for 140 yards and two touchdowns and rushing for 151 yards and a score in his first-ever collegiate start against Colorado. Ficklin was also key for the Utes at many points in the season, including in wins against Baylor and Kansas State.
Unlike previous years, when an injury to the starting quarterback derailed the season, Utah’s coaches are confident in Ficklin stepping in as the starter if needed.
Obviously, Utah’s hope is that Dampier gets through the season healthy, so consistent, meaningful reps for Ficklin at quarterback could be scarce. That doesn’t mean that he won’t see the field, though.
“I think with Byrd, it’s utilization. How can you contribute and what does that look like?” McGiven said. “He’s like a Swiss army knife and without giving up the ship, there’s a lot of different things that he can do on a play-to-play basis and different places that he can line up. And we need to be able to utilize those and get creative with those packages.”
With Dampier and Ficklin in the fold, Utah’s quarterback room is in a good place for 2026.
Utah Utes running back Wayshawn Parker (1) runs down the field against the Nebraska Cornhuskers during the Las Vegas Bowl at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025. | Tess Crowley, Deseret News
Wayshawn Parker leads the running backs
Through the first half of 2025, Wayshawn Parker was splitting carries with NaQuari Rogers, and the arrangement seemed to work well, as Utah was one of the country’s most productive rushing teams.
“Really the bottom line is the overall output and we’ve rushed for nearly 300 yards both games and so we’re getting what we need right now,” Whittingham said in September. “…As long as they’re 1 and 1a, we will continue with it. If one of them separates themselves, then we’ll go that direction.”
In late October, Parker separated himself.
Parker registered his first 100-yard game as a Ute with a 145-yard outing against Colorado, which kicked off a stretch of four straight games with 100 or more yards (he barely missed making it five consecutive games with 95 yards against Kansas). He finished the season with 981 yards and six touchdowns on 149 carries — an impressive 6.6 yards per carry.
This year, there’s a clear lead running back for the Utes as they enter the season.
“Wayshawn to me brings a bell cow, a kid that rushed for almost a thousand yards, is someone that you can really lean on, is someone that can take extended carries. And I think he’s even capable physically of getting more carries than what he got last year,” McGiven said.
With Parker getting the majority of carries this season, who will be No. 2 behind him?
Steve-Chavez Soto, a San Jose State transfer, could fill the Rogers role — more of a power back that can get the necessary yardage in short-yardage situations. He rushed for 448 yards and seven touchdowns on 87 carries last year.
Then there’s Daniel Bray, the speedster that was more sparingly used last season, but rushed for 272 yards and a touchdown on 40 carries for an average of 6.8 yards per carry. Bray, who added some weight this offseason, should be used more this season in creative ways by McGiven.
Much of the running backs’ success will depend on offensive line play, but Utah has a solid group with a clear leader heading into 2026.
“I think the backs are seeing things really well, and Mark (Atuaia), he’s done an awesome job with those guys. I think just the mindset that comes with being a ball carrier in that room, the culture in there,” McGiven said. “So when they have an opportunity to, they’re running hard, they’re running physically. You see Daniel Bray punching up in there being a smaller back. And so I love the mentality that they’re playing with.”
“We’re trying to kind of figure out how versatile they are with their skillsets in terms of putting them in different roles and how many we can utilize at a time. But I think just like last year and previous years, we’re going to need to lean on the run game. We’re going to need to be able to control the line of scrimmage and be able to control football games with the way we run the football and with the different elements that come with that.”
Utah wide receiver Braden Pegan during spring practice in Salt Lake City on Thursday, March 19, 2026. | Anna Fuder/Utah Athletics
Best wide receiver group in years?
Scalley has high expectations for this year’s wide receiver group.
“Honestly, I feel like this has to be the best wide receiver crew we’ve ever had for the University of Utah,” Scalley said at April’s “22 for U” fan event. “The guys that we had a part of the program already, the development that they had, the guys that we brought in, I’m excited. I think the two quarterbacks are probably the happiest to be able to distribute the ball to some very good pass catchers.”
Similar sentiments have been shared in past seasons without the performances to back it up. Will this season be different?
Utah State receiver Braden Pegan, who caught 60 passes for 926 yards and five touchdowns in McGiven’s offense last season, is the favorite to lead the Ute receivers.
Could he become Utah’s first thousand-yard receiver since Dres Anderson? The 6-foot-3, 210-pound has the necessary tools to do it.
He had a leg up during spring camp due to his knowledge of McGiven’s offense, and quickly established himself as a leader in the wide receiver room. He was voted to the 15-person leadership council, just the second newcomer named.
He’s one of the tallest receivers on Utah’s roster, has sure hands, and is a threat at any level of the field — he had nine catches of 20 or more air yards last season for the Aggies.
“That’s one of those dudes that you wish you had 20 of them,” Scalley said. “I mean, he’s such a good kid, smart football player, athletic, can jump out of the gym, so we’re excited to have him.”
Dampier and Pegan have already established a good connection, one they hope will pay dividends this season.
“I think he’s been a huge help. Even I was asking him questions at the beginning with things I didn’t understand or what the receiver’s thinking. Just as a playing standpoint, he’s a baller,” Dampier said.
Wide receiver was one of the key positions that Scalley targeted in the transfer portal, and so far, it looks like it’s paying off.
Kyri Shoels, who caught 59 passes for 768 yards and two touchdowns last season for San Jose State, has stood out this spring for his speed, especially running after the catch.
“Kyri, man, he’s really electric with the ball in his hand. He’s probably one of our better ball-in-hand guys and just put the ball in his hands in space and let him go,” receivers coach Chad Bumphis said.
In the slot, Creed Whittemore has been impressive in spring camp. Last season, the Mississippi State transfer was in Whittingham’s dog house for ball security issues in practice, but he has upped his play this spring.
“Creed Whittemore, the role that he’s been playing in the slot, a lot of decision-making that comes with that position, and so he’s done a really good job,” McGiven said.
Those three are among the top players, but there’s also some good depth in the receiver room.
Larry Simmons, who came on strong at the end of the season and finished with 15 receptions for 280 yards and six touchdowns, should figure into the rotation.
“I think Larry Simmons has done an awesome job. He showed up right from the get-go and I didn’t know a bunch about Larry, obviously, but he was making plays right from the start,” McGiven said.
Ricky Johnson, another Mississippi State transfer, emerged this spring as another potential target for Dampier.
“Ricky Johnson coming in is a guy that’s a young player, and when he’s playing confident, I think he’s a really dangerous player that has really good speed,” McGiven said.
There’s also Nate Johnson, who has turned heads this spring and has become a viable receiver, and you still have experienced receivers like Tobias Merriweather and Daidren Zipperer in the mix.
It’s a strong group, but as always, they will have to prove it on the field.
“I think it’s been pretty good. Not where we want to be, but I love the direction we’re going in. We got a good group and they’re competing and they’re competing the right way,” Bumphis said.
“Obviously everybody’s competing for playing time, but they’re still really close in how they encourage each other and motivate each other. So love where we are, still a long way to go from a detailed standpoint, but we got playmakers. We have a really good room, so just got to keep bringing them along to get where we want to be.”
Utah Utes offensive lineman Zereoue Williams (76) blocks Utah State Aggies defensive end Lawrence Falatea (50) and Utah State Aggies defensive end William Holmes (59) in Logan on Saturday, Sept. 14, 2024. | Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News
Season could hinge on offensive line play
Last season, Utah’s offensive line was one of the best in the country, paving the way for school records in rushing yards and rushing touchdowns. They also protected Dampier well and were a major reason why the Utes had as much success as they did on offense.
The two anchors of that line, tackles Spencer Fano and Caleb Lomu, were selected in the first round of this year’s NFL draft, and center Jaren Kump and guard Tanoa Togiai signed undrafted free agent deals with NFL teams.
That’s a lot of talent for the Utes to replace under first-year offensive line coach Jordan Gross.
The Utes appear to feel confident in the players they already had on the roster, only adding Montana State tackle Cedric Jefferson and Ohio State center Isaiah Kema from the transfer portal.
Utah will have an entirely new starting five, but that doesn’t mean they lack experience.
Veterans Keith Olson, Alex Harrison, Zereoue Williams, Solatoa Moea’i and Roger Alderman all played at least 130 snaps last season — Utah’s 19.8-point margin of victory last year ensured reps for everyone — while transfer Jefferson started every game for FCS champion Montana State last season.
The Utes’ line could be led by four seniors — Williams, Harrison, Olson and Moea’i — who have played a combined 1,469 career snaps. Jefferson, a junior, adds 1,276 snaps from the FCS level.
It’s unrealistic to expect this group to reach the heights that last year’s line did, but the season hinges on if this group can be at least above average.
Utah’s coaches were pleased with the progress that the offensive line made this spring.
“Incrementally better. I think coach Gross has done a tremendous job with that group. Really have seen it mostly from a technical aspect. Just the fundamentals, pad level and first two steps, hand placement, path placement, all those kind of things you talk about with offensive line play has gotten way better,” McGiven said.
“The defense has thrown a bunch of stuff at them, and so they’re having to protect against a lot of looks. They’re having to implement run schemes against a lot of different looks, whether it be pressures or whether it be base looks or whatever it is. But they’ve done a great job handling that stuff. And so the recognition, application of scheme has gone way up. I think from an improvement standpoint, it’s really just deciding who the starting five are, what their roles are, and then just building that collective chemistry.
In an interview with ESPN 700’s Sean O’Connell in April, McGiven gave some insight as to how the offensive line room is shaking out.
Williams has been “a bonafide guy” at the left tackle position, McGiven said, while Harrison has been solidified as the team’s center and Olson has held down the right guard spot.
The battles to watch for as the Utes enter spring camp are the right tackle and left guard spots. Montana State transfer Cedric Jefferson and Utah redshirt sophomore Isaiah Garcia, who missed all of last year with an injury, will compete for the right tackle spot, while five-star freshman and Gross protégé Kelvin Obot and Moea’i will battle for the left guard spot.
“I’ve been very pleased with the progress thus far. It’s an outstanding group to work with. I inherited a group that had a very high football IQ, and so that makes my job easy,” Gross said. “But a lot of guys enjoying the opportunity to compete for starting spots, which as everybody knows, there’s five of those opened up. So it’s been a lot of fun. Definitely have a long way to go still, but very encouraged by what I see.”
Utah Utes Noah Bennee celebrates after beating the USC Trojans in the Pac-12 Championship at the Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Friday, Dec. 2, 2022. The Utes won 47-24. | Ben B. Braun, Deseret News
How will the tight ends factor in?
How will McGiven utilize tight ends in Utah’s offense? A lot depends on how talented the room ends up being.
At San Jose State, where he had now-Minnesota Vikings tight end Josh Oliver, McGiven tailored the offense around him. At other stops, like Utah State, the tight ends weren’t as much of a factor.
“It’s just kind of what you feel like you want to feature and who you feel like your best personnel groups are,” McGiven said.
After a strong run of tight ends featuring Brant Kuithe, Dalton Kincaid and Dallen Bentley, there’s as many question marks around the position as there’s been in a while.
One key piece will be Hunter Andrews, who showed promise — especially as an option in the run game — before suffering a season-ending injury. Now healthy, Andrews could be used in a variety of different ways in McGiven’s offense.
“Hunter’s coming off the injury and it’s been good. He has been progressing. We’ve been able to do a lot more with him in the last few weeks,” said tight ends coach Luke Wells. “Been pleased with that. I mean, obviously he’s got good speed and so there’s some things that we can do there to use his talents to help us be explosive on offense.”
Noah Bennee, who started his career at Utah before transferring to Weber State, should fill more of that traditional tight end role. Bennee caught 23 passes for 264 yards last season in Ogden.
“I have seen Noah improve literally every practice we’ve had this spring. He’s very sure-handed and he’s a guy that understands. He picks up things really well. We’re able to do a lot of things with him and been pleased with how he’s progressed as a blocker as well,” Wells said.
Kana’i Lopes converted from linebacker to tight end and looked good at the position in the spring, and the Utes added Oklahoma State transfer Will Monney as well.
Then there’s the “rhinos” — 317-pound Semi Taulanga and 276-pound Sione Motuapuaka, who will primarily block, but, as shown in the spring, can also catch the ball as well.
How much this group is utilized will come down to how much value they provide the offense.
Utah’s projected offensive two-deep
(Note: this two-deep is this reporter’s best guess and is based on coaches comments and past experience, not practice viewing)
QB: Devon Dampier (Sr.); Byrd Ficklin (So.)
RB: Wayshawn Parker (Jr,); Steve Chavez-Soto (So.)
WR: Braden Pegan (Jr,); Larry Simmons (Sr.)
WR: Kyri Shoels (Sr.); Tobias Merriweather (Sr.)
WR: Creed Whittemore (R-Jr.); Ricky Johnson (So.)
TE: Noah Bennee (Sr.); Hunter Andrews (R-So.)
LT: Zereoue Williams (Sr.); Soren Shinofield (So.)
State lawmakers declined to back a Trump-inspired plan to move 1,300 homeless people to a campus on the edge of Salt Lake City, but supporters are trying to keep the plan’s spirit alive.
State lawmakers declined to back a Trump-inspired plan to move 1,300 homeless people to a campus on the edge of Salt Lake City, but supporters are trying to keep the plan’s spirit alive.
A Utah waitress filmed how boomers and Gen Z left their tables in 2020. Nine million people watched it. The argument it started is still going.
In March 2020, an 18-year-old waitress in Utah named Kaitlyn Brande pointed her phone at two tables in her section and said exactly what she was thinking. The video was 20 seconds long. It hit 9.3 million views, got her reprimanded by her employer, and launched a generational argument that apparently has no expiration date.
The setup is simple. Brande pans to the first table, still scattered with plates, napkins, and leftover food. “This is a table of five boomers that I took some plates out of the way of already,” she says. Then she swings the camera to the table next to it, where every plate has been stacked neatly at one end, cups grouped together, trash consolidated. “This is a table of six Gen Zs. They did that. Just saying.”
Her caption did the rest: “‘They get paid to do that’ VS ‘We know restaurant life is hard, here, let us help you out.’”
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Brande eventually deleted the video at 9.3 million views because, as she explained in the comments, corporate got mad. She quit shortly after and got a new job. The video lived on anyway, resurfacing every year or two and reliably restarting the same argument.
The comments split in every direction. Some people praised the Gen Z table for the gesture. Others pushed back on the framing entirely, pointing out that stacking plates isn’t automatically helpful and can actually make a server’s job harder depending on how it’s done. “Half of your server squad would prefer the plates not stacked,” wrote one commenter who works in the industry. “You all need a handbook to get it together.”
A more measured version of that argument: “I was taught by the main dishwashers to always be cautious about how you stack, and leave it if you don’t know how. There is a difference between cleaning up your area and just leaving it.”
Others bypassed the plate-stacking question entirely and went straight to the generational read. “It doesn’t matter even if they do get paid for it,” one commenter wrote. “It helps the staff out, especially if it’s hella busy and they don’t get as much money as you think.” A self-identified Gen Xer chimed in: “I have been cleaning up tables for waitstaff for decades. Not only is it helpful, it’s also the right thing to do.”
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Research on how the two generations actually experience restaurants backs up the idea that something real is going on beyond just table manners. A qualitative study on Gen Z dining behavior found that younger customers are more attuned to the behind-the-scenes reality of service work, more likely to engage with restaurants through a lens of efficiency and mutual respect, and more likely to treat servers as people doing a hard job rather than as part of the restaurant’s background.
What keeps this video resurfacing every year or two isn’t really about plates. It’s about what those plates represent: who sees service workers as people doing a hard job under pressure, and who doesn’t register them much at all. That’s a question without a clean generational answer, which is probably exactly why nobody can stop arguing about it.
You can follow Kate (@katebrande) on TikTok for entertainment-related content.
A new group of Latino religious leaders in Utah has taken shape with the backing of some GOP officials to promote …
SALT LAKE CITY — A coalition of Latino church leaders from around Utah has formed a new organization to promote the family and conservative causes.
The Asociación de Ministros Unidos en Utah, led by several evangelical pastors, will also serve as a link between grassroots communities and government leaders. It’s got the support of numerous elected Republican officials gauging by those who attended a public launch event on Wednesday, including Utah Attorney General Derek Brown, one of the speakers, and several members of the Utah Legislature.
“Our principles as an association are clear, and we don’t hide them — faith, family and biblical values,” Guillermo Rodriguez, president of the new group and a pastor, said at Wednesday’s event, held at the Utah Capitol in Salt Lake City. “We say this respectfully but with conviction — we’ll support every effort, every initiative and every leader who works to strengthen families, protect faith and religious liberty and promote conservative principles and values.”
The group, the United Ministers Association of Utah in English, has been quietly operating for the past few months. But its roots go back several years, to when Carlos Moreno, an immigrant from Venezuela and now a naturalized U.S. citizen, started reaching out to leaders of various churches in the Salt Lake County area to muster support for addressing the ills facing the nation.
Those efforts led to the new organization, and Moreno, now a Republican member of the Salt Lake County Council, addressed Wednesday’s meeting, focusing on faith as a basis for resolving problems. “I believe in the power of God. And I believe if we continue putting God first all the time, we’re going to succeed,” he said.
The group has raised some $40,000 and already pursued a range of initiatives, helping around 50 people with food, housing, legal representation costs and more. During the 2026 Utah Legislative session, the group supported a bill, HB411, calling for the creation of a three-digit dialing code for the National Human Trafficking Hotline, according to a presentation at Wednesday’s meeting. The measure failed in the Senate. It also backed SB193, which called for making Good Friday a legal holiday in Utah, and was signed into law by Gov. Spencer Cox.
A new group of Latino religious leaders in Utah has taken shape with the backing of some GOP officials to promote “faith, family and biblical values.” Some of the attendees are pictured at a kick-off event Wednesday at the Utah Capitol in Salt Lake City. (Photo: Tim Vandenack, KSL.com)
“Our objective is to be a representative voice for conservative ministers and the community of Utah. We bring ethical leadership, community connection, local perspective and faith-based mission,” said Mari Fernandez, secretary of the group and a pastor.
Rodriguez expressed a desire to work with government officials while also listening to the people at the grassroots level the group represents.
“To our leaders and government authorities, today we say you can count on us. We are ready to serve, collaborate, listen and work together for real solutions,” he said. “To our community, we say your voice matters, your faith matters, your family matters and your future matters. To our pastors, ministers and churches, we say this is the time to unite.”
House Speaker Mike Schultz was listed as a speaker at Wednesday’s event but didn’t show up. U.S. Rep. Burgess Owens, a Republican, was also to have addressed the group but got called into session in Washington, D.C., and a staff member spoke in his place. Among the Utah lawmakers in attendance was Utah Rep. Karianne Lisonbee, R-Syracuse, who’s running for a U.S. House seat.
Jamie Renda, of Path Forward Utah and Hope of Utah, nonprofit groups she helped organize aimed at promoting political and community involvement among conservative people of color, pressed for the creation of the United Ministers Association of Utah. The new group is affiliated with Hope of Utah.
“The Latino community is not as engaged as it could be and as it should be, especially Latino conservatives,” she said. “We want their influence to be felt not just at a state level, but at a federal level and community level.”
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Renda sees overlap between Utah conservatives and the Latino community. For instance, many Latinos are very entrepreneurial, support limited government and are family-oriented and anti-abortion, she said.
What’s more, teaming with the broader conservative community can help Latinos build relationships that can aid them in pursuing their causes, perhaps immigration reform. “It’s just building those relationships,” Renda said.
After Wednesday’s presentations, Rodriguez stressed the importance of the group in unifying like-minded actors from across the religious spectrum. “If we can stand together and we can stay united, we can do more,” he said.
Around 15 evangelical churches are represented by the organization, but he said the new group has been reaching out to other churches outside the Latino community to serve as partners. So far, he said, connections with around 70 additional churches have been made.
“This is just starting. This is a movement,” said Rodriguez, currently an assistant at South Mountain Community Church, a nondenominational church based in Draper. “We can work with anybody who’s aligned with our core values — faith, family and biblical values.”
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
A recent national survey focused on how American college students are feeling about their money situation at a moment when a trip to the gas pump or grocery store can trigger anxiety.
SALT LAKE CITY — College and finances. Finances and college.
It’s difficult to consider one without the other.
And even as thousands of young Utahns are donning caps and gowns and celebrating their graduation, personal finance issues questions surely linger for most college students:
Can I land a job? Will it pay me enough to begin making my college loans payments? And what about other money matters that define a postgraduate’s daily life?
A recent national survey focused on how American college students are feeling about their money situation at a moment when simply a trip to the gas pump or grocery store can trigger cash anxiety.
The WalletHub poll gathered college students’ attitudes toward money — ranging from their biggest post-graduation fear to how social media is influencing their spending habits.
Student anxieties: Paying off loans — and finding a job
When asked what spooks them the most about postgraduation life, 30% of respondents said student loan debt. Their fears are not unreasonable. The average student debt in the U.S. is now in the tens of thousands of dollars — and rising.
To better inform college-bound students who are making pricy student loan choices, the Education Department now includes an “earning indicator” on federal student loans applications, with information about specific schools’ postgraduation earning status.
Meanwhile, 29% of student-respondents said their biggest postgraduation fear was not finding a job. A quarter of respondents — 25% — answered “credit card debt.”
Another 16% responded “living with parents.”
Tuition and social media money trends
Tuition at private and public universities across the country has risen significantly over the past generation.
And while college students in Utah spend, nationally, the lowest share of their median annual household income on higher education — while also having the country’s lowest average of student debt — they are still managing tuition increases.
Last March, Utah’s higher education board approved a 2.82% systemwide tuition hike. A University of Utah student in 2026-2027, for example, will pay $317 more than the prior academic year for 15 credit hours.
But despite the rising costs, almost three-quarters of survey respondents consider their tuition a good investment. Not so much for 28% of respondents.
That generally positive attitude regarding the value of attending college revealed in WalletHub’s national survey tracks with Utahns.
In a recent Deseret News/Hinckley Institute poll, 61% of college-age respondents — age 18-34 — said they have at least some degree of confidence in Utah’s colleges and universities.
Those same respondents have slightly less confidence — 56% — in colleges and universities nationwide.
But while students seem generally satisfied with their tuition’s return on investment, a majority of WalletHub student respondents — 52% — believe their college is not doing enough to help them become financially literate.
Meanwhile, a third of college students have little patience for the government subsidizing overpriced tuition. When asked if the federal government should provide loans with expensive tuition, 33% said, “Nope.”
Social media platforms remain popular among American college students.
But affinity for, say, Instagram or TikTok can exact heavy financial costs. Social media-triggered “FOMO,” aka “fear of missing out,” is prompting some college students to make poor money choices.
More than half of the student-respondents — 53% — say they feel pressured by social media to spend beyond their means.
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
One person was injured in what police are calling a “critical” crash between a motorcycle and a passenger car in Utah County.Officials with the Lone Peak Police …
HIGHLAND, Utah (KUTV) — One person was injured in what police are calling a “critical” crash between a motorcycle and a passenger car in Utah County.
Officials with the Lone Peak Police Department said a motorcycle and a car crashed on 6000 W and Canal Boulevard just before noon on Saturday.
One person required immediate medical attention and first responders transported them to a local hospital. Details on their injuries and condition were not released.
Police said the cause of the crash is under investigation. They did not say whether the injured victim was the motorcyclist or an occupant of the passenger car.
The intersection was temporarily closed while emergency responders attended to the crash victim, but has since reopened.
The crash comes days after Utah Highway Patrol officials promoted educational resources for motorcyclists. They said 2025 marked the deadliest year for motorcyclists in Utah’s history.
“Many of these were preventable deaths, and we hope that with additional education, we will see fewer preventable deaths on Utah roadways,” UHP officials said.
Angel City allowed a first half goal and after a red card was issued to Maiara Niehus, Angel City played the second half with 10 players and fell 1-0 at BMO Stadium.
Angel City FC forward Sveindís Jónsdóttir (32) chases the ball against Utah Royals defender Kate del Fava during the first half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC midfielder Evelyn Shores (15) moves the ball against the Utah Royals during the first half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC forward Riley Tiernan, front, recovers the ball against the Utah Royals during the first half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC defender Gisele Thompson, left, moves the ball against the Utah Royals during the first half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC forward Sveindís Jónsdóttir, front, recovers the ball against the Utah Royals during the first half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC forward Jun Endo, right, recovers the ball defended by Utah Royals midfielder Courtney Brown (16) during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC fans hold up signs during the second half of an NWSL match against the Utah Royals at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC midfielder Ary Borges, back, vies for the ball with Utah Royals midfielder Dayana Pierre-Louis, front, during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC defender Emily Sams kicks the ball against the Utah Royals during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC defender Gisele Thompson (20) controls the ball against the Utah Royals during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC forward Prisca Chilufya (24) winds up to kick the ball against the Utah Royals during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC midfielder Taylor Suarez (99) recovers the ball defended by Utah Royals forward Cloé Lacasse (24)
during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC goalkeeper Angelina Anderson (19) kicks the ball; against the Utah Royals during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC forward Sveindís Jónsdóttir winds up to take a goal shot against the Utah Royals during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
An Angel City FC supporter cheers against the Utah Royals during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Utah Royals goalkeeper Mandy McGlynn, left, eavesdrops on Angel City FC midfielder Ary Borges, center, and teammate defender Sarah Gorden (11) during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC forward Prisca Chilufya, right, is upended by Utah Royals defender Kate del Fava, bottom, during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC defender Gisele Thompson, center, moves the ball between Utah Royals midfielder Narumi, left, and defender Kaleigh Riehl during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC forward Prisca Chilufya, left, pushes off on Utah Royals midfielder Narumi during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC forward Sveindís Jónsdóttir (32) heads the ball defended by Utah Royals defender Ana Tejada (17) during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC head coach Alexander Straus, center, look on against the Utah Royals during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC forward Sveindís Jónsdóttir (32) signals to teammates to back up against the Utah Royals during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
A fan reacts during the second half of an NWSL match between the Angel City FC and the Utah Royals at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC midfielder Nealy Martin, left, vies for the ball with Utah Royals defender Ana Tejada during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
Angel City FC midfielder Maiara Niehues, center, vies for the ball with Utah Royals defender Ana Tejada (17) and forward Mina Tanaka during the second half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
USWNT head coach Emma Hayes, second from right, plays the drums during the second half of an NWSL match between the Angel City FC and the Utah Royals at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Utah Royals won 1-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
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Angel City FC forward Sveindís Jónsdóttir (32) chases the ball against Utah Royals defender Kate del Fava during the first half of an NWSL match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, on Saturday, May 2, 2026. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)
LOS ANGELES — The wild “NWSL After Dark” moments didn’t have anything on Angel City FC before sunset in Saturday’s meeting with the Utah Royals.
In one of the wildest and chaotic games in its short history, Angel City (3-3, 11 points) ended up on the wrong end of two video review decisions, both would have given the club a penalty attempt, saw a player sent off with a red card, and in the end, it all added up to a third consecutive defeat.
Utah Royals’ Cloé Lacasse’s first-half goal stood up as the difference-maker, handing Angel City a 1-0 defeat at BMO Stadium. The win was the fourth consecutive for the Royals (4-2-1, 13 points).
The game took a turn in the first half, even after Utah’s opening goal. Angel City midfielder Maiara Niehues was issued a red card for violent conduct after a swing of her elbow toward a Utah player, just before halftime.
“It happens probably two meters in front of me,” Angel City coach Alex Straus said of Niehues’ incident. “So I have the best view in our stadium. … I’m not going to say anything more about it. It changed the game.”
In the second half, with 10 players, Angel City went into a “tactics-free zone” early, pushing from all angles. The first video review decision came in the 65th minute. Ary Borges attempted to play a ball inside the penalty area, but she collided with a Utah defender. Referee Lauren Aldrich was called over the video review, and after a long review, it was determined that Borges had initiated the foul.
Later, Prisca Chilufya was knocked down at the edge of the penalty area by another Utah defender and Aldrich didn’t hesitate in pointing to the penalty spot. However, after another trip to the video monitor, she ruled that Kate Del Fava didn’t commit a foul.
“If we come out in the first half like we did in the second, we win that game,” Angel City defender Emily Sams said. “It’s something that we can learn from that we don’t have to wait until we’re without a player.
“The goals that we’re conceding, we’re doing it ourselves. I think that’s a big talking point. We haven’t had a game where a team has really broken us down and obviously outplayed us, so I think we just really need to continue to be switched on in our moments.”
The end result for the lengthy video reviews was an 11-minute second-half stoppage time period.
It was all looking smooth for Angel City before the international break. Angel City won its first three games of the season, suffering its first loss before the break against the Orlando Pride.
The lone loss, probably should have been at least a draw, but the Orlando Pride scored in the eighth minute of stoppage time.
Since returning from the break, Angel City has suffered losses to the Portland Thorns and now the Royals.
“I said the same thing when we were winning three games (in a row) and everybody lost their mind and said how great we were,” Straus said. “We tried to keep everybody down, grounded. … We’re not terrible now. … We should have won (tonight), we should have won against Portland (last Sunday), if you look at all the stats.
“This was a big problem with Angel City last year and it’s a big problem the year before and the year before is to make these games draws or make these games three points.”
Angel City will conclude its string of three consecutive home games Saturday against San Diego Wave FC. After Saturday, Angel city will have four games remaining before the NWSL pauses for the FIFA World Cup, returning in early July.