Utah
Utah offers three-star linebacker LaGary Mitchell Jr.
The Utah Utes have extended an offer to LaGary Mitchell Jr., a three-star linebacker out of Meridian High School (Idaho). Mitchell, a versatile tri-sport athlete, has excelled in football, track, and wrestling, showcasing his elite athleticism.
At 6-foot-3 and 205 pounds, he is a dominant presence on both sides of the ball, playing linebacker, running back, and wide receiver. However, his biggest impact has come at linebacker, where he earned First-Team All-State honors.
After a great talk with @Colton_Swan I am extremely blessed to say I have received my 2nd D1 scholarship to the university of Utah🙏🏽#AGTG pic.twitter.com/ieIVTbuFHk
— LaGary Mitchell Jr (@LaGaryMitchell8) January 25, 2025
Mitchell is currently committed to Boise State, but Utah’s offer adds another intriguing option for the talented prospect. Ranked as the No. 63 linebacker nationally and the No. 5 overall player in Idaho for the 2026 class, Mitchell is a highly sought-after recruit. His combination of size, speed, and physicality makes him an intriguing fit for Utah’s defensive system, which has developed numerous elite linebackers under head coach Kyle Whittingham.
Kyle Whittingham and Utah projected to win Big 12 with CFB Playoff bid in 2025
One of Mitchell’s key goals before arriving at the collegiate level is to add weight and strength. He recently told 247Sports, “I want to be around 225, then after the season get down to 215 when I get to college.” This plan suggests he is preparing to maintain his speed while increasing his physicality, a trait that would help him transition to Power Five football.
Where Utah ranks on college football’s most valuable list
The Utes’ pursuit of Mitchell comes as they look to strengthen their future recruiting classes. With upcoming shifts in NIL and player compensation structures, Utah is working to solidify commitments early. Whether Mitchell sticks with Boise State or reconsiders his options remains to be seen, but Utah’s entry into his recruitment could make things interesting as signing day approaches.
Utah
Utah Zoom weddings used by thousands of Israelis face new legislative threat
Thousands of Israelis have already used an option offered by the U.S. state of Utah to marry via Zoom and register as legally wed. Israelis who did not want, or were unable, to marry through Israel’s Chief Rabbinate, the only authority through which Jews can marry and be registered as married in Israel, found a solution in the arrangement. Now, an internal legislative move in the U.S. state threatens that possibility.
In recent weeks, a bill introduced in the Utah Senate seeks to bar marriages conducted entirely remotely, without physical presence in the state, unless they were recognized before a certain date. The proposed legislation would require at least one of the spouses to be physically present in Utah during the wedding ceremony.
2 View gallery
Will the option for Jews to marry outside the rabbinate and register as married in Israel be revoked?
(Photo: Alexander Dyachenko / Shutterstock)
According to data from the Hiddush religious freedom advocacy group, about 3,000 couples in 2024, in which at least one spouse is Israeli, were married in “Utah weddings” via Zoom or another video platform. Information from Utah County indicates that roughly 30% of all couples marrying through the remote procedure there are Israelis.
During the COVID pandemic, Utah authorized marriage ceremonies to be conducted via Zoom, enabling couples, including non-U.S. citizens, to marry and have their unions legally registered. After Utah residents, Israelis make up the largest national group to use the option.
In a landmark 2022 ruling, Israel’s Administrative Court instructed the Population and Immigration Authority and the Interior Ministry to recognize all couples married under the “Utah wedding” framework and register them as married. The decision effectively validated the registration of civil marriages conducted in Israel by remote means. Now, that option could be curtailed.
2 View gallery
Zoom app. About 30% of Utah weddings are of Israelis
(Photo: Thaspol Sangsee / Shutterstock)
“‘Utah weddings’ are a very common ‘bandage’ for the distorted reality in which the State of Israel does not allow many citizens to marry at all or to marry in accordance with their worldview,” said Rabbi Dr. Seth Farber, founder and chairman of the ITIM advocacy organization, which helps people navigate Israel’s religious bureaucracy
“Our assistance center at ITIM uses Utah weddings as a solution for many couples who seek to marry according to Jewish law but refuse to do so through the Chief Rabbinate,” he added.
“Israeli lawmakers must advance an arrangement that allows citizens to choose how to conduct their wedding ceremony. More and more couples would then choose a Jewish wedding.”
Utah
Most Americans don’t know Utah is hosting another Olympics. But they have thoughts about the 2034 Winter Games name
As Italy’s Milan Cortina Olympics came to a close Sunday with a ceremonial hand off to the French Alps as the site of the next Winter Games in four years, everyone was looking ahead to Utah hosting in 2034, right?
Maybe not.
Sure, a new Deseret News-Hinckley Institute of Politics poll found 88% of Utahns know their state is where the “next next” Winter Games will be held eight years from now, a decision made by the International Olympic Committee in July 2024.
But a national poll for the Salt Lake City-based newspaper and the University of Utah institute showed pretty much the opposite. Nearly three-quarters of Americans, 72%, said they weren’t aware that Utah had been selected to host the 2034 Winter Games.
Both polls were conducted by Morning Consult, which polled 769 registered voters in Utah Feb. 11-14 and 2,002 registered voters nationwide Feb. 10-13. The Utah poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4% and the national poll, plus or minus 2%.
The lack of national awareness doesn’t seem to worry the leader of Utah’s Winter Games.
“It’s understandable,” said Fraser Bullock, president and executive chair of the Organizing Committee for the 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, given that the state’s second hosting gig is so far away.
“Over time, we will close the gap on that number and get to a majority,” he said. “Particularly after the French Alps Games, when we’re the next Games, we should see a steady rise over the years.”
Bullock said Utah also can expect “a fair amount of attention” when Los Angeles holds the 2028 Summer Games as the next Olympics and Paralympics for athletes with disabilities being held in the United States.
Utah won’t be able to start selling sponsorships and making other moves in the marketplace until after the LA Games. That’s also when NBC, which holds the U.S. broadcast rights to the Olympics through 2036, is likely to start promoting Utah’s Winter Games.
Building national recognition will take time, said Bullock, who served as chief operating officer for the 2002 Winter Games in Utah. But just how organizers will try to raise the state’s profile as the host of the 2034 Games is yet to be determined.
“Let me put it this way, we’re planning to plan that,” Bullock said. “We know its something we need to do.”
Recognition of Utah at the Milan Cortina Olympics
Utah’s still-small organizing committee did have a presence at Italy’s 2026 Winter Games, including their first formal presentation to the IOC and a news conference where many questions from the international news media were about U.S. President Donald Trump.
Even so, there wasn’t much talk in Milan about the 2034 host, said Robert Livingstone, producer of GamesBids.com, a Toronto-based website that follows the competition to host future Olympics and Paralympics.
“More people were aware of Switzerland (bidding) for 2038 than that Utah had won for 2034,” Livingstone said. “People were talking French Alps and they were like, ‘Who’s after that … oh, right, Switzerland.’ I heard that a number of times.”
He said in conversations about future Winter Games, people were focused on Switzerland, which was granted a unique status as the sole bidder for 2038 by the IOC, and would “just skip over Utah because they haven’t heard anything about Utah.”
And while the French Alps had the chance to showcase the 2030 Winter Games during Sunday’s Closing Ceremonies in an ancient Roman amphitheater in Verona, the Utah Games won’t have the opportunity to do the same until the end of France’s Olympics four years from now.
One of the few hints that an American city was the site of an upcoming Winter Games came during the Feb. 6 Opening Ceremonies, when Team USA marched third from last in the Parade of Nations, ahead of athletes from France and then Italy, to signify the order of future hosts.
That same order was in place for each country’s flag bearers during the Closing Ceremonies.
Matthew Burbank, a University of Utah political science professor who’s authored two books about the Olympics, said Utah organizers were in effect limited in what they could do in Italy to promote the 2034 Games.
“I don’t think it was the time and place,” he said, noting the IOC’s “script” for future hosts calls for them to “wait your turn, stand in line, do what you’re supposed to do, show up at our meetings … but don’t call undue attention to yourself.”
The professor wasn’t surprised that Utah’s status isn’t widely known nationwide.
The Winter Games already attracts less attention than the much larger Summer Games that feature more popular sports, Burbank said. So with Los Angeles hosting those in 2028, he said if Americans “are thinking about the Olympics at all, that’s what they’re thinking.”
That’s no doubt the case globally, as well, Burbank said.
“I don’t think most people could name the French Alps as the next Winter Olympics after Milan. So with the one after that, it gets even farther away,” he said, although there’s a possibility that “because Salt Lake has held the Games before, there might be some recognition of that.”
Should 2034 be the Utah Games? Or the Salt Lake City Games?
When attention does shift to 2034, it will be on what’s been renamed the Utah Games.
In 2002, it was Salt Lake City that hosted because the IOC only awarded Games to a city. Now, cities, regions or countries can host, even joining up — as the cities of Milan and Cortina did this year.
Polling found that Utahns are split over what to call the 2034 Olympics, with 47% backing the organizing committee’s announcement late last year that they would be the Utah Games, and 32% behind the Salt Lake City Games name. Another 21% didn’t know which they preferred.
Nationally, the poll results were more clear-cut, with 50% saying the 2034 Olympics should be called the Salt Lake City Games and only 14% supporting the Utah Games name. Those who didn’t know was higher than in Utah, at 36%.
The 2034 Games organizers believe Utahns and the rest of the country will come to accept the switch from the Salt Lake City-Utah tag used throughout the Olympic bid process, which lasted more than a decade.
“The change is fairly recent and it will take some time for people to become familiar with that and accustomed to it,” Bullock said. “It will evolve over time. But remember this is a transition period where we can’t do a full launch of a brand until after the LA Games.”
Announced just before last Thanksgiving along with a new and controversial logo at the unveiling of a massive new installation at the Salt Lake City International Airport, the new “Utah 2034″ name is here to stay even though a different logo is expected in 2029.
“The name element is established,” Bullock said, promising that the 2034 Games will “have a much more comprehensive identity after the LA Games,” thanks to the ability to establish a stronger brand.
That may be a little easier in Utah, where unlike the rest of the country, the population is already overwhelmingly aware that the state is hosting in 2034. Bullock is convinced all Utahns will eventually know they’re going to welcome the world again.
“I’m thrilled that it’s 88%,” he said. “We’ll continue to spread our message, so we’ll get the other 12% that aren’t aware the Games are coming. We’re excited our citizens of Utah are paying attention to our Olympic and Paralympic future.”
What Utah organizers did in Italy during the Olympics
For Bullock, the Milan Cortina Games weren’t about increasing awareness for 2034.
He and the more than 100 other Utahns, including Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, who traveled to Italy for the Olympics largely stayed behind the scenes to get a firsthand look at putting on a Winter Games.
“It’s not our turn on the stage. We respect very much that it’s Milano Cortina’s time to shine in front of the world, as they are doing a great job,” Bullock said. “And that the baton will be handed to the French Alps.”
That meant long days of meetings about topics like technology and hospitality as well as participating in the IOC’s observer program that provides access to the back-of-the-house at Games venues as well as to operations, security, transportation and other functions.
All of it was “incredibly valuable,” Bullock said. “It’s always enjoyable to see the fulfillment of the dreams of a host … how things come together, how proud they are of the work that they’re doing, how they’re welcoming the world in their unique way, reflecting their people and their culture.”
That will happen for Utah 2034, too, he said.
“We’re just biding our time,” Bullock said. “Because we know our time will come.”
Utah
Utah bill exempting traditional Indigenous healers from licensing rules garners House support
SALT LAKE CITY — Healing doesn’t always come from the conventional health care system, says Rep. Jake Fitisemanu.
For some, said the Democratic lawmaker from West Valley City, care comes in the form of home remedies, “dandelion tea from leaves you picked out in the yard,” a special massage, a visit to a religious or cultural elder. With that in mind, he’s sponsoring legislation that would exempt any “traditional healing provider” in the Native American community from having to get a state license.
HB277 is “about clarity, and it’s about access to these kinds of cultural traditions and our healing traditions that have sustained our wellness and our health in our families and in our communities for generations and generations,” he said during debate this week on the measure. The Utah House approved the measure on Wednesday in a 51-18 vote, and it now moves to the Senate for consideration.
As is, Fitisemanu said, whether traditional healers need to be licensed by Utah is “a little gray area,” and his measure aims to clarify their status. The legislation, which wouldn’t grant authority to healers to prescribe drugs, would apply to healers practicing in concert with traditions of American Indian and Alaska Native communities.
Yvette Romero Coronado, an associate professor in the University of Utah College of Social Work, spoke in favor of the measure during a Feb. 9 House committee hearing. She noted practices family healers would apply on her as a child to draw out “negative energies” and said she continues some of the practices.
Some people, she said, are reluctant to tell their conventional health care providers that they visit traditional healers, worried about getting them in trouble.
Read more:
“This bill would say to my family, to me and my clients, it is legal and OK to seek services, and (say) to our trusted elders and practitioners, it’s legal and OK to provide those culturally aligned services,” Romero said. “Traditional medicine practitioners are carriers of important knowledge and cherished members of our community. By passing this bill, we remove a barrier to accessing care. We create an environment where integrative care is possible, and we support the community’s self-determination to seek the care that they see fit.”
The bill has the support of the Navajo Nation Council, the governing body of the Navajo Nation, the Urban Indian Center in Salt Lake City and other Indigenous organizations, Fitisemanu said.
Rep. Karianne Lisonbee, R-Syracuse, asked during Wednesday’s House discussion whether the measure would open the way for legal use of peyote. Fitesemanu said his legislation doesn’t change existing legal restrictions pertaining to the drug, used by some Native American communities in spiritual and religious ceremonies.
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.
-
Montana4 days ago2026 MHSA Montana Wrestling State Championship Brackets And Results – FloWrestling
-
Culture1 week agoVideo: How Much Do You Know About Romance Books?
-
Science1 week agoWhat a Speech Reveals About Trump’s Plans for Nuclear Weapons
-
Oklahoma6 days agoWildfires rage in Oklahoma as thousands urged to evacuate a small city
-
Politics1 week agoSchumer’s ‘E. coli’ burger photo resurfaces after another Dem’s grilling skills get torched: ‘What is that?’
-
Technology2 days agoYouTube TV billing scam emails are hitting inboxes
-
Technology1 week agoThe DJI Romo robovac had security so poor, this man remotely accessed thousands of them
-
Science1 week agoNotoriously hazardous South L.A. oil wells finally plugged after decades of community pressure