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Primary election results: Here are the first vote totals in Salt Lake County cities, Ogden and St. George

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Primary election results: Here are the first vote totals in Salt Lake County cities, Ogden and St. George

Primary election results are trickling in after Utah voters cast their ballots for whom they would like to see square off in the fall finale.

Candidates across eight Salt Lake County cities are waiting to see if they’ll get the nod to keep making their case for holding office.

Residents of Bluffdale, Brighton, Cottonwood Heights, Draper, Murray, Sandy, West Jordan and West Valley mailed in ballots and took to the polls to determine who will have a chance to represent them on town and city councils.

Ogden voters, meanwhile, decided who will compete in the city’s mayoral race, and St. George residents cast ballots to finalize the field for November’s City Council contests.

[Read more: Preliminary results of the special Republican primary for Utah’s sprawling 2nd Congressional District.]

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Several communities in Salt Lake County, including Salt Lake City, opted to decide their races with ranked choice voting in November instead of hosting a primary.

Mail-in ballots postmarked by Tuesday will still be counted. The official canvass is scheduled for Sept. 19.

Bluffdale

City Council candidates

At large (six candidates will advance)

Tony Elegante, 204, 7.31%

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Brian James Ostler, 184, 6.6%

Billy Hesterman, 326, 11.69%

Mark Hales, 427, 15.31%

Eric R. Hawker, 235, 8.43%

Alan W. Lord, 236, 8.46%

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Gregory D. Wilding, 458, 16.42%

Ulises Flynn, 152, 5.45%

Steve Austin, 356, 12.76%

Erik Swanson, 211, 7.57%

Brighton

Town Council candidates

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At large (four candidates will advance)

Heidi Westfall, 22, 12.94%

Gavan Ganung, 23, 13.53%

Adrienne Aldous, 25, 14.71%

Jeffery S. Bossard, 61, 35.88%

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Lise Sorensen Brunhart, 39, 22.94%

Cottonwood Heights

City Council candidates

District 2 (two candidates will advance)

Sharon Daurelle, 539, 41.3%

Suzanne Hyland, 401, 30.73%

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Scott Bracken, 365, 27.97%

Draper

City Council candidates

At large (six candidates will advance)

Jordan Davis, 964, 9.88%

Fred Lowry, 2,524, 25.87%

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Danita Rouzer, 588, 6.03%

Cal Roberts, 2,417, 24.77%

Lucky T. Bovo, 782, 8.02%

Terry Smith, 758, 7.77%

Bryn Heather Johnson, 1,723, 17.66%

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Murray

City Council candidates

District 1 (two candidates will advance)

Paul Pickett, 421, 52.04%

Aaron Thompson, 198, 24.47%

David W. Rodgers, 190, 23.49%

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District 3 (two candidates will advance)

Leann Parker-Reed, 80, 5.44%

Rosalba Dominguez, 605, 41.16%

Scott Goodman, 144, 9.8%

Clark Bullen, 405, 27.55%

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Janice Strobell, 236, 16.05%

Sandy

City Council candidates

At large (four candidates will advance)

Aaron Dekeyzer, 3,845, 22.42%

Matthew Ostrander, 1,440, 8.4%

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Paul Z. Ford, 1,210, 7.06%

Brooke Christensen, 2,826, 16.48%

Jim Bennett, 2,863, 16.7%

Cyndi Sharkey, 4,964, 28.95%

District 4 (two candidates will advance)

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Scott Earl, 826, 29.57%

Marci Houseman, 1,270, 45.47%

Terri Tapp Hrechkosy, 697, 24.96%

West Jordan

City Council Candidates

District 2 (two candidates will advance)

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John Price, 219, 11.64%

Gary Leany, 625, 33.21%

Kat Whiting, 244, 12.96%

Bob Bedore, 680, 36.13%

Kevin Seal, 114, 6.06%

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District 4 (two candidates will advance)

David F. Pack, 683, 34.18%

Alfredo S. Gonzalez, 161, 8.06%

Gloria Vindas, 487, 24.37%

Kent Shelton, 667, 33.38%

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West Valley City

City Council candidates

At large (two candidates will advance)

Sophia Hawes-Tingey, 1,862, 23.88%

Steve Rose, 903, 11.58%

Darrell R Curtis, 654, 8.39%

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Don Christensen, 2,409, 30.89%

Jim Vesock, 1,153, 14.79%

Jesús R. Jimenez-Vivanco, 817, 10.48%

District 1 (two candidates will advance)

Richard Nowak, 163, 13.61%

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Tom Huynh, 608, 50.75%

Marni Lefevre, 427, 35.64%

District 3 (two candidates will advance)

Will Whetstone, 906, 47.06%

Heidi Roggenbuck, 485, 25.19%

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James (Jack) Fenn, 254, 13.19%

Jacob Gonzalez, 280, 14.55%

Other Races

Ogden

Mayoral candidates (two candidates will advance)

Ben Nadolski, 1,359, 18.28%

Oscar Landon Mata, 572, 7.69%

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Taylor Knuth, 1,435, 19.3%

Jon J. Greiner, 1,200, 16.14%

Angel Castillo, 1,270, 17.08%

Bart E. Blair, 1,319, 17.74%

Chris Barragan, 281, 3.78%

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St George

City Council candidates (six candidates will advance)

Gregg Mcarthur

Aros Mackey

Jimmie B. Hughes

Matthew L Heaton

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Austin Hodges

Katheryne Knight

Steve Kemp

Dannielle Larkin

Kimball Willard

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Greg Aldred

Wendi Prince Bulkley

Brad Bennett

Paula Smith

Steven G Jennings

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Sources • County clerk offices.

For the latest results, go to sltrib.com

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Wisconsin school shooting victims named as teacher Erin West and student Rubi Vergara

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Wisconsin school shooting victims named as teacher Erin West and student Rubi Vergara

Tributes have been paid to the two victims who died in the shooting at the Abundant Life Christian School in Madison, Wisconsin, on Monday, who have been named as 42-year-old teacher Erin M. West and 14-year-old student Rubi P. Vergara.

The Dane County Medical Examiner’s office confirmed their identities in a press release Wednesday night, while in a separate statement, the school said, “our hearts are heavy with these losses.”

The suspected shooter, 15-year-old Natalie Rupnow, a freshman at the school who was also known as Samantha, died on the way to hospital on Monday from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound, police said.

“ALCS is a better school for the work of Erin West. She brought her love of Jesus and love of people to our staff and school family all wrapped in a hug and topped with a smile,” the school’s statement said.

Erin West.Empire Photography

The school said West worked as a substitute teacher for three years before taking a full-time staff role as an in-house substitute teacher and coordinator, “a role tailor made for her abundant skills and breadth of knowledge.”

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“She served our teachers and students with grace, humor, wisdom, and — most importantly — with the love of Jesus. Her loss is a painful and deep one and she will be greatly missed not just among our staff, but our entire ALCS family,” the statement added.

Rubi Vergara, a 9th grade student, had been at the school since kindergarten and was described as popular and a keen volunteer.

“Her gentle, loving, and kind heart was reflected in her smile. Rubi was a blessing to her class and our school. She was not only a good friend, but a great big sister,” the school said.

“Often seen with a book in hand, she had a gift for art and music. Yet, it was Rubi’s love for Jesus that shined brightest and she shared His love with others by volunteering faithfully. She will be missed deeply by her teachers and fellow students,” the statement added.

An online obituary uploaded to a local funeral home website said Vergara loved art, singing and playing keyboard in her family’s worship band. “She shared a special bond with her beloved pets, Ginger (cat) and Coco (dog),” the obituary said.

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Wisconsin school shooting victims named as teacher Erin West and student Rubi Vergara
Rubi Patricia Vergara.Jenn Vergara

The funeral home said a service for Vergara would be held on Saturday at 11 a.m. CST (12 a.m. ET) and would be livestreamed online.

The police investigation into the shooting continues. Authorities said Wednesday night that the two unidentified students who received life-threatening injuries remain in a local hospital, while the four people who were treated in hospital for minor injuries sustained in the shooting have been discharged.

Police said that the shooter opened fire in a second-floor classroom “during a study hall for mixed graders.”

Two guns were found at the school, but only one was used in the shooting, police said.

Police said they were working to establish a motive and said they were aware of the suspect’s alleged social media activity and “documents and photos circulating the internet,” that have yet to be verified.

Detectives want to speak to any who may have interacted with Rupnow in the days or weeks before the shooting — they can contact police anonymously through Madison Area Crime Stoppers at p3tips.com or by calling 608-266-6014. 

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Perplexity’s value triples to $9bn in latest funding round for AI search engine

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Perplexity’s value triples to bn in latest funding round for AI search engine

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Perplexity, an artificial intelligence-driven search engine, has closed its fourth funding round this year, tripling its valuation to $9bn as it seeks to compete with offerings from Google and OpenAI.

The $500mn round was led by Institutional Venture Partners, with involvement from Nvidia, New Enterprise Associates, B Capital and T Rowe Price, according to multiple people with knowledge of the deal. Previous investors have included SoftBank’s Vision Fund 2, Nvidia and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, as well as several prominent names from the AI industry such as OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy and Meta’s chief AI scientist Yann LeCun.

The San Francisco-based group has grown rapidly this year, with its product receiving hundreds of millions of queries a month. It has 15mn monthly active users with most of that traffic coming from the US.

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The new funding will help Perplexity compete with west coast rivals in an increasingly fierce fight for engineers. “The talent war for AI is like no other time before,” according to Ali Ghodsi, co-founder and chief executive of Databricks, the AI and data analytics company that announced a $10bn fundraising round on Tuesday.

Perplexity is seeking to capitalise and improve on the search advertising system pioneered by Google, in which marketers bid to have a sponsored link placed against search queries. It is in talks with major brands to pilot advertising on its platform.  

In a sign of growing competition in the space, AI companies have recently targeted the search market by linking up chatbots to the internet. This week, OpenAI rolled out web searching for its popular ChatGPT product, while Anthropic’s Claude can perform searches through a feature called “computer use”.

Google and Microsoft, which are leaders in the $300bn digital advertising world, have also recently incorporated large language models, which power AI chatbots and make results more conversational, into their search offerings.

The latest round has pushed Perplexity’s valuation higher by nine-fold since the start of the year, in another sign of how hot start-ups developing new AI tools can draw in hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars in investment. 

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After OpenAI’s $6.6bn fundraising in October — one of the largest in Silicon Valley — one person close to the company said Perplexity was inundated with unsolicited interest from new investors.

Run by former Google intern Aravind Srinivas, Perplexity raised $250mn this summer, on top of previous funding rounds in January and April.

Perplexity makes money through subscriptions. It says its annualised revenues — a projection of full-year revenues based on extrapolating the most recent month’s sales — have grown from $5mn in January to $35mn in August.

The spate of deals for lossmaking AI start-ups has stoked concern among some investors that rising valuations in the sector show all the hallmarks of a bubble, however. But even those who argue most AI valuations are increasingly detached from reality are willing to stake bets on companies they believe could be winners.

Perplexity and T Rowe Price declined to comment. IVP, B Capital, NEA and Nvidia did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The closing of the round was first reported by Bloomberg.

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Dreaming of a white Christmas? There's hope, depending on where you live

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Dreaming of a white Christmas? There's hope, depending on where you live

An unidentified person braves the weather to do last-minute shopping on Christmas Eve in Omaha, Neb., on Dec. 24, 2009. That year, a powerful storm spread snow, sleet and rain across the nation’s midsection.

Nati Harnik/AP


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Nati Harnik/AP

If you’re hoping to wake up on Christmas morning to white fluffy stuff on the ground, there’s a chance you might get your wish.

Christmas magic won’t bring snow to the majority of the country, but some parts might just get lucky, according to Scott Kleebauer, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center.

“If you are one of those people that does get a chance to enjoy a white Christmas, definitely feel very lucky and very blessed to be able to enjoy something like that, as it looks like a lot of people this year will not be able to,” Kleebauer tells NPR.

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While hopes for a white Christmas are on many minds each year, experts say the chances of experiencing one may diminish in the future, in part because of shifts in weather patterns driven by global warming.

Here is what the weather is likely to look like on Christmas Day across the country and how a changing climate may impact Christmases to come.

Will you have a white Christmas?

The areas that have the highest chances for a white Christmas — when there is at least 1 inch of snow on the ground on Christmas morning — will be out west in the Rockies, around the Great Lakes and in higher terrain in northern New England, Kleebauer says. Parts of the Appalachian Mountains across the high country of West Virginia, western Maryland and into western Pennsylvania also have a chance for snow.

AccuWeather's 2024 white Christmas probability graphic for the United States shows snow possible in the north, Rockies, Sierra Nevadas and Cascades.

There’s hope for a white Christmas in a few parts of the U.S.

AccuWeather


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There’s also a high chance of “heavy precipitation and high elevation snow” in northern California and parts of the Pacific Northwest on Christmas Eve that will start again on Dec. 26, according to the NOAA Climate Prediction Center, or CPC.

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“A storm system in the Pacific Northwest could bring mountain snow as Santa is making his rounds, and the CPC features a moderate potential for Heavy Snow Hazards in the northern Rockies, especially in the Cascade Mountains and the Bitterroot Range of Idaho,” Erica Grow Cei, meteorologist and spokesperson for the National Weather Service, tells NPR.

Most of the country is also expected to have temperatures that are “milder than average” on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, according to NOAA. Temperatures are expected to be near normal to slightly above normal across portions of the Plains and into the southeastern portion of the country. States including Texas and Florida are forecast to see temperatures in the 70s.

This map by the Climate Prediction Center shows areas at risk of heavy snow from Christmas Day to the end of the year.

This map by the Climate Prediction Center shows areas at risk of heavy snow from Christmas Day to the end of the year.

NOAA/NWS/www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov


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So far, 2024 has been the warmest year on record globally and is likely to beat the record set just last year, according to NOAA. The year is also on track to be one of the warmest two years ever recorded in the contiguous U.S.

Warmer temperatures could impact future white Christmases

Historically, parts of the northern U.S., the Rockies and the Sierra Nevada Mountains have had the highest likelihood of experiencing a white Christmas, according to Kleebauer and a map by NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information.

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The last time the majority of America woke up to a white Christmas was nearly 15 years ago, Kleebauer says. On Dec. 19, 2009, a large snowstorm blanketed parts of the Northeast starting in Virginia and dumped more than 12 inches of snow on Boston, with snow lingering through Christmas Day. Snow also fell in other parts of the country during that time, resulting in “large snow coverage across the United States, even into those areas that don’t see white Christmases too often,” he says. Texas was one of those areas.

But because of warmer temperatures driven by climate change, the coldest temperatures are becoming less frequent in parts of the country.

This map based on U.S. Climate Normals from NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information shows the historical probability of at least 1 inch of snow on the ground on Dec. 25. The agency says actual weather conditions on Christmas Day will vary each year.

This map by NOAA shows the historical probability of at least 1 inch of snow on the ground on Dec. 25. The agency says actual weather conditions on Christmas Day will vary each year.

NOAA/climate.gov


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When looking at changes in monthly and seasonal temperatures — along with the number of snowy days — “it is clear that winter is the fastest warming season across 74% of the United States, with the northeastern United States and Upper Midwest,” says Elizabeth Burakowski, a research assistant professor at the University of New Hampshire.

Since the 1970s, the U.S. has seen rapidly warming temperatures, according to the federal government’s most recent National Climate Assessment, released by the U.S. Global Change Research Program.

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“As the world’s climate has shifted toward warmer conditions, the frequency and intensity of extreme cold events have declined over much of the US, while the frequency, intensity, and duration of extreme heat have increased,” the assessment says. “Across all regions of the US, people are experiencing warming temperatures and longer-lasting heatwaves. Over much of the country, nighttime temperatures and winter temperatures have warmed more rapidly than daytime and summer temperatures.”

As temperatures rise, more precipitation is expected to fall as rain instead of snow, particularly in areas in the western part of the U.S., the assessment also found. These temperatures will also lead to “earlier snowmelt, altered rates of snowmelt and evaporation directly from the snow, and longer snow-free periods,” the assessment says.

So far this winter, snowfall across parts of the U.S., including areas of the Prairie Pothole region including North and South Dakota, southern portions of Minnesota and Wisconsin, has been below normal, according to Shawn Carter, Winter Hydrology Desk lead at NOAA’s Weather Prediction Center. Government data shows that snowfall in the Sierra Nevadas and the Cascades are well above normal, while the Rockies are seeing a mix of normal to slightly below normal levels, Carter also says.

White Christmases are a sentimental favorite, but they are also a powerful example of how the world’s climate is changing.

“Seeing changes in the chances of a white Christmas is one of so many ways we may experience climate change,” Burakowski says. “When we come together as a community to address climate [change], we’re preserving so much more than snow on Christmas day.”

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