Utah
The Cougars flipped the script on the Utes, proving the doubters and 'experts' wrong
If the University of Utah football season were a movie, it would be “The Perfect Storm.” You know the story. Captain Whittingham and the gang catch a lot of big fish and think they’re headed for a big pay day. There are lots of warning signs that trouble is coming, but, yeah, they sail on — right into the perfect storm.
Parts are flying off the boat. Members of the crew are being thrown to the floor and getting injured, especially first mate Cam Rising. Senior XO Andy Ludwig jumps overboard. The boat is heavy and slow. They are thrown for a loss, over and over … and then they get steamrolled.
Everything that can go wrong, goes wrong.
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Meanwhile, their neighbors, BYU, are living in La La Land. Everything they touch is gold. Everything that can go right, goes right. It’s one big Hallmark movie, with Reese Witherspoon in the lead. Sometimes it looks like they’re in trouble, but, nope. Take the Kansas State game. The offense slept through the whole thing, but the team won 38-9 behind punt returns, fumble returns and interceptions. It was like Christmas, a birthday and an anniversary rolled into one half of a game.
Then there was Baylor, which outgained BYU by 120 yards — and lost.
The Cougars are living a charmed life.
Exactly no one saw any of this coming. Can we all agree that preseason polls — and polls in general — are fun but worthless. In both the AP and ESPN preseason polls, Utah was 12th and BYU unranked (the Cougars also didn’t get a single vote for the “others receiving votes,” which was 17 teams deep).
Utah was picked to finish first the Big 12; BYU was picked to finish 13th.
As of this week: BYU is first, Utah 13th.
BYU is 8-0, Utah 4-4 and riding a four-game losing streak. BYU is ranked No. 9 in the national polls; Utah has fallen out of the rankings.
They flipped the script.
Utah and BYU will meet in Rice-Eccles Stadium on Saturday.
Utah’s season is an unmitigated disaster. Much has been made of the loss of injury-prone quarterback Cam Rising, who missed all of last season while recovering from surgery. He played one and a half games this season before getting injured again, only to return for one game weeks later and incurring another injury on the second play of the game, one that sidelined him for the season. He could return for an eighth season next year, which invites comparisons to the old bit in “Tommy Boy.”
Lots of people graduate in seven years!
Yeah, they’re called doctors.
Anyway, the point is — and Coach Kyle Whittingham would be the first to say this — a solid program should be able to weather the loss of any one player without falling off a cliff. The Utes managed to win eight games without Rising last season. In retrospect, heading into the 2024 season maybe they should have planned better for a potential injury to Rising, especially given his long list of injuries. Instead, they replaced him with a true freshman quarterback, one who was in the state high school playoffs a year ago.
If the transfer portal were a physical place, you wouldn’t want to stand in front of the doors this winter at Utah. There’s going to be a stampede. Also, the Utes will go quarterback shopping.
On the 40th anniversary of BYU’s unbeaten national championship season, BYU is doing a good imitation of that magical run. A year ago they won only five games. Good luck finding any preseason predictions that placed BYU in the top 10 of the Big 12 or the national top 25.
It’s time to take BYU seriously. The Cougars handed 13th-ranked SMU its only loss of the season. It handed No. 22 Kansas State one of its two losses. Another of their victims, Oklahoma State, has been ranked as high as 13th. The Cougars rank 29th in strength of schedule, according to the highly respected Sagarin ratings, even though five of their wins have come against teams that currently have losing records.
The Cougars suddenly find themselves among the leading candidates for a berth in the newly expanded, 12-team College Football Playoff. The schedule favors them; their final four regular-season games match them with Utah (four wins, four losses), Kansas (2-6), Arizona State (5-2) and Houston (3-5). The two road games — Utah and Arizona State — pose the biggest challenges.
The Cougars have a lot riding on those games.
Utah
Utah author explores perspective, big emotions in new middle grade novel
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — Reading a good book should make you feel connected to the characters. Books by Utah author Erin Stewart do just that.
ARC Salt Lake talked to the BYU graduate and young author about her new book, The Mysterious Magic of Lighthouse Lane.
MORE | ARC Salt Lake:
Reading a good book should make you feel connected to the characters. Books by Utah author Erin Stewart do just that. (KUTV)
The middle grade novel follows a young empath spending the summer with her grandfather who stumbles onto a bit of magic — and learns what it means to let in the light.
It’s Stewart’s fifth book, and she says each story carries pieces of her own experiences and emotions.
Stewart shared how she found her voice as a writer, what sets the book apart from her previous titles, and what she hopes young readers take away from her stories.
You can learn more about her books at erinstewartbooks.com.
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Utah
Utah school bus driver arrested after cybertip reported child sexual abuse material
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — A school bus driver for the Granite School District was taken into custody following an investigation into a reported tip concerning child sexual abuse material (CSAM).
Casey Dean Golding, 24, was booked into the Salt Lake County Jail on Thursday, accused of three counts of second-degree felony sexual exploitation of a minor.
The investigation started in February 2025 after a social media company filed a report with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. The report identified a social media account that allegedly uploaded and distributed (CSAM).
Investigators said they identified Golding as the owner of the account and confronted him in February 2026, following a “pre-contact investigation.” Upon arrival at his Salt Lake County home, police noted a Granite School District school parked outside.
Golding allegedly admitted to owning the reported social media account, as well as the associated email and phone number. However, Golding denied sending or receiving CSAM but knew the incident that the police were questioning him about occurred in 2025.
According to court documents, Golding allowed police to search his phone, where investigators allegedly found an explicit 30-second video of CSAM.
Investigators took Golding into custody, citing that he was in a “trusted position” over children as a bus driver transporting elementary and middle-school-aged children.
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Utah
Proposed Utah bill takes aim at hidden rental fees
SALT LAKE CITY — After spending a year living out of her car, Rachel Ortiz said she does everything she can to avoid going back to that life. And that includes keeping a very tight budget.
“Unexpected things come up and I’m able to pay them thankfully, but a lot of people aren’t able to do that,” Ortiz said.
But her carefully planned budget blew up on her when her Salt Lake City apartment turned out to be not as affordable as advertised.
The listed rent price for her place was $869. But each month, Ortiz pays nearly a hundred dollars more to live there – not including utilities.
The reason? Hidden rental fees.
“It’s hard to afford a place nowadays with the rent, and if the inflation is going up,” she said.
The monthly add-ons driving up rent
Ortiz’s monthly fees include $10 for pest control. Another $14 goes to her place’s liability waiver program — an alternative to the required renter’s insurance. And with no adjacent street parking available, she also must pay $25 for parking: covered or uncovered. On top of those fees, there’s a $16 “real estate tax” for her share of the complex’s property taxes.
“I mean, they want to charge you separate for every little thing,” Ortiz said.
She also shares the costs of landscaping, maintenance, snow removal, security and utility bills for her place’s common areas. That fee varies, but last month it came to $32.
“I go to pay this amount, and then you tell me it’s this amount,” she said. “And I have this amount for the rent.”
Fees renters report paying nationwide
Ortiz isn’t alone in having to tackle monthly rent inflated by hidden rental fees. Americans spend hundreds of millions of dollars on rental fees every year, according to a National Consumer Law Center study. That same study identified 27 distinct types of fees renters are paying in addition to their rent.
Those include a fee for having a guest over. Some renters pay an additional fee for the landlord to process their rent payments. Some pay for mandatory trash pick-up or valet service even though they want to take their garbage to the dumpster on their own. Some tenants report having to pay fees to receive packages or to get their mail sorted.
What current law protects renters
Since 2021, landlords in Utah have been required to disclose all fees before taking an application fee.
“The tenants, when they are touring those apartment communities, the law is that they have to disclose all the fees,” said Derek Seal of the Utah Rental Housing Association – a leading trade association for landlords, property managers and others linked to the rental housing industry. “We want people and tenants to be able to make informed decisions.”
Seal says the current law already prevents a landlord from charging a fee that wasn’t disclosed before the renter signed the lease. On the flip side, if a fee was disclosed in the lease – he says renters really don’t have room to complain.
“They have a responsibility to understand the agreement … that they’re getting into,” he said.
What HB29 would change
But now, HB29 aims to require fee disclosure well before a prospective tenant sees an agreement. It wants it to happen in the advertising.
“It’s setting a standard,” said the bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Tyler Clancy, R-Provo. “We’re making sure that they (consumers) have an expectation that the marketplace is being honest and transparent.”
HB29 bans hidden rental fees by requiring a listing or an advertisement for a rental to disclose the total price.
“When you’re not being upfront about your price, that could be anti-competitive in nature because you’re not really advertising your product,” Clancy said. “Setting an expectation that families can know if something fits into their budget or not, I think that’s a reasonable thing.”
“The extra fees then should be baked into the price,” said Katie Hass, who leads Utah’s Division of Consumer Protection — which will enforce HB29 if it passes.
They have a responsibility to understand the agreement … that they’re getting into.
–Derek Seal, Utah Rental Housing Association
She says the listed rental price must reflect the real price a tenant will have to pay to live there, excluding personal utilities. And that price, she said, cannot be a range that depends on variable or seasonal fees.
“You (landlords) get to set your own prices,” she said. “You just have to be truthful what’s included in that price and what’s optional at the end of the transaction.”
Federal scrutiny and Greystar’s response
At least eleven other states have similar laws about disclosing hidden rental fees in listings or ads. And in December, the Federal Trade Commission and the State of Colorado reached a $24 million settlement with rental housing giant Greystar over allegations it deceived renters with hidden fees.
“These little fees, at the end, they create a bitterness to our economy that we don’t want here in Utah,” Hass said.
KSL reached out to Greystar about the settlement, who pointed us to their Dec. 2, 2025 statement that reads in part, “The agreement contains no admission of wrongdoing, and Greystar continues to maintain, as it has from the start of this matter, that its advertising has always been transparent, fair, and fully consistent with the longstanding industrywide practice of advertising base rent to potential residents.”
In that same statement, Greystar also says the agreement clarifies the FTC’s position “that federal law requires displaying the Total Monthly Leasing Price, including base rent and all mandatory fees, when advertising housing for rent.”
One renter’s reaction as ownership changes
As for Rachel Ortiz, she does feel bitterness toward all the fees she has to pay on top of her rent.
“It’s become like really greedy,” she lamented. “They start thinking with this (pointing to her head) and stop thinking with this (tapping her heart).”
She just recently learned her home has been bought out by Greystar. She now hopes her new landlord will be more transparent.
“It’s just too much,” she said.
What renters can do right now
If passed, HB29 would not take effect until July 1, 2026.
As a renter, the best thing you can do is, before touring a place, contact the landlord and request a full breakdown of all monthly costs you’re expected to pay, as well as any one-time fees, such as a lease initiation fee. And it doesn’t hurt to try to negotiate. Ask whether they’ll consider waiving a fee or maybe lowering the rent to offset the fee costs.
Derek Seal said the Utah Rental Housing Association maintains a fund that reimburses application fees for renters who did not receive full disclosure when they applied. You can apply on their webpage.
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.
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