Utah
Salvadorans in Utah casting ballots in Central American nation’s presidential election
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KEARNS — Sofia Zelaya, now living in Utah, is thousands of miles away from her native El Salvador.
That doesn’t mean she’s left the tiny Central American country behind.
With presidential elections in El Salvador set for Sunday, she and many other Salvadorans and Salvadoran-Americans in Utah are paying close attention to what’s happening in the country and aim to have a say in the process. The government has created new openings for voting by expatriates, with Salt Lake City to host one of many remote polling sites around the United States and beyond on Sunday to accommodate the global Salvadoran diaspora.
“We still have loved ones at home. We want our loved ones to live in a peaceful environment,” said Zelaya, a naturalized U.S. citizen and dual national who was offering voting information to Salvadorans at a table set up inside the Kearns Library in Kearns. Some 13,000 to 20,000 Salvadorans and Salvadoran-Americans live in Utah, according to varied estimates, and the money they and others around the world send back to relatives is a pillar of the Salvadoran economy.
Indeed, becoming a U.S. citizen, Zelaya went on, “doesn’t mean we don’t have cultural and family ties to where we came from.” The pride is still there and she and many more Salvadorans in Utah have already voted online — which started for eligible expatriates on Jan. 6 — or will do so in person on Sunday at the Salt Lake polling site, 850 E. South Temple, from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Fernando Pérez, consul general of the Salvadoran Consulate in Salt Lake City, called the expatriate community “a fundamental part of our nation,” noting the money those living and working abroad send to family members in El Salvador. According to the Salvadoran newspaper El Mundo, expatriate Salvadorans sent $8.2 billion to El Salvador in 2023 — more money than generated by exports — benefitting 25% of households in the country.
The laws allowing expatriates to vote “aim to make sure that the voices of our compatriots are heard, that their opinions are taken into account and that their rights are respected in the electoral process,” Pérez said in a message to KSL.com.
Laura Morales, originally from El Salvador but now living in Kaysville, already cast her ballot online, a new option this election cycle open to Salvadorans who have registered their foreign addresses with Salvadoran election authorities. Now she’s keeping tabs on what’s happening in El Salvador in the lead up to next Sunday.
“It’s my first time voting in 24 years, and for my kids it’s the first time in their lives,” except for balloting in U.S. elections, she said. “It’s been a month of civic joy.”
The Salvadoran elections come at a critical time, observers and others say. Incumbent President Nayib Bukele, elected to his first term in 2019 and widely expected to win his second term handily, has spearheaded a massive crackdown on the gangs that once dominated life in the country. He warns the country could slide backward if he’s not reelected, according to Reuters. But he’s not without critics, who charge his administration with employing repressive tactics and blast changes to election laws enabling his reelection bid.
Among the other hopefuls are Manuel Flores, a leftist former mayor and Salvadoran Legislative Assembly deputy, and Joel Sanchez, a conservative aspirant, according to CNN en Español.
Whatever the case, Zelaya and Morales are enthusiastic Bukele supporters, both crediting the leader with turning the country’s fortunes around. Back in the 1980s and 1990s, the country was wracked by civil war, violence that pushed many out of the country. Mara Salvatrucha and other gangs dominated the urban landscape after that, also pushing many from the nation.
“Mara Salvatrucha — that’s all we were known for, crime and nothing more,” said Zelaya, who fled El Salvador in 1981 during the nation’s civil conflict and now lives in Herriman. She was operating the information desk at the Kearns Library Friday with Gladis Rodríguez, another Salvadoran now living in Utah, as part of their volunteer efforts with Comunidad Salvadoreña de Utah, a cultural group.
Street crime, kidnappings and gang violence pushed Morales and her family from the country to the United States in 2000. “The last 20 years has been difficult for our country,” she said.
Changes implemented by Bukele, though, have inspired a renewed sense of pride in El Salvador, prompting much of the excitement among expatriates in Utah like Morales in the presidential contest. What’s more, Bukele has pointedly reached out to Salvadorans living abroad, opening more consulates, including the Salt Lake consulate, and streamlining the voting process for expatriates, she said.
“It’s a peaceful environment,” she said, describing the changed atmosphere in El Salvador thanks to the crackdown on gangs and street crime. “All the Salvadorans living abroad support the president so we can keep cleaning up the country.”
Francisco Raymundo, a Salvadoran expatriate now living in Taylorsville, is an unabashed supporter of Bukele and his New Ideas political party, promoting the incumbent’s candidacy among Salvadorans here in Utah. He left El Salvador with his wife and four kids in 2002, worried about crime and violence and fearful of getting caught up in it.

“We really didn’t want to go but we left to keep my family safe,” he said. “It was personally painful to see people dying every day, people being extorted.”
Accordingly, seeing the change in the country and being able to vote and have a say in the nation’s future is exciting for him. “We are excited and engaged,” he said.
Salvadorans in Utah who wanted to vote in the 2019 elections had to travel to the Salvadoran consulate in Las Vegas, the closest one before the Salt Lake office opened, or cast a ballot by mail. Raymundo had hoped to vote by mail, but his ballot arrived from El Salvador after voting ended.
Morales, too, is charged by the new atmosphere in El Salvador. She already cast her ballot online and recalled the strong emotion as she clicked the screen prompt on her computer so her vote could be tallied.
“You cry. When you click and it says, ‘You voted,’ you cry,” she said.
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Three motorcycles crash on Trapper’s Loop in northern Utah
HUNTSVILLE , Utah (KUTV) — Three motorcycles crashed on Trapper’s Loop in northern Utah, according to the Utah Highway Patrol.
Officials said one motorcycle traveling northbound on SR-176 near milepost 10 failed to maintain its lane while navigating a curve.
The bike crossed into oncoming southbound traffic, where it collided with two other motorcycles. Officials said all three riders were taken to a nearby hospital in stable condition. All were wearing helmets and protective gear.
Speed is believed to have been a contributing factor in the crash.
_____
Utah
Discover the deliciousness of New York-style pizza at Fini Pizza in Utah City
The beloved Fini Pizza made quite the impact during its debut in Utah City.
Just days after opening, the pizza joint sold out of everything by 5 p.m. on a Monday afternoon. The demand for the delicious New York-style pizza was higher than expected.
Owner Sean Feeney and the rest of his team worked late into the night to prep for the week, building pizza boxes, slicing pepperonis and doing all they could to prevent that from happening again.
Feeney said he has three goals with Fini Pizza:
- “Make something that is excellent and delicious and cravable.”
- “Do it in a way where you’re making others feel like they matter and you want their days to be better.”
- “How do we then go outside of these doors and really show people how proud we are to be a part of this neighborhood?”
For the first time, Fini Pizza also opened up Fini Cafe, a charming little cafe that serves up bagels, sandwiches, coffee and pastries.
“You can start your days with us,” Feeney said. “And we can start our day together on a good foot.”
Choosing Utah
This is the first location of Fini Pizza outside the New York City area. Why did Feeney choose Utah? It goes all the way back to his childhood.
Feeney visited the Beehive State to participate in the AAU National Basketball Championship at 11 years old in Salt Lake City. During that trip, he met Jazz legend Frank Layden and former players, like Luther Wright and John Crotty. He also said he “fell in love with Utah” on his first visit.
His family kept coming back to the state they fell in love with, and Feeney said he always wanted to plant some kind of roots in Utah.
“I just resonated with the family-first values-driven environment,” Feeney said. “When I visit Utah, I feel like there is a strong sense of family. There’s a very values-driven environment that I just love. I think about the mountains. I think about the active lifestyle people live here.”
So when a friend showed him some renderings of plans for Utah City, an up-and-coming neighborhood in Vineyard, he figured this was how he could bring Fini Pizza to the state he loved so much.
“I saw the mountains, and I got very excited about building a community from the ground up. And we start with pizza,” Feeney said.
A history of Fini Pizza
Plans for Fini Pizza started taking shape at the end of 2020.
“I’ve always loved pizzerias,” Feeney said. “I grew up in New Jersey, and most of my greatest memories of meals and birthday parties, and after soccer practices or even after funerals and wakes, we would go to our local neighborhood pizzerias growing up.”
Feeney had already found success with two Italian restaurants and decided it was time to try out his pizza dream. He noticed at the time that his neighborhood in Williamsburg in New York City was getting more and more polarized. He thought, why not open a pizza place to bring people together?
“I thought, that would be an exciting thing to try to do and add a pizzeria that was really focused on bringing people together and delivering good days,” Feeney said.
He opened four more Fini Pizza establishments in Brooklyn over the span of six years.
Now, in the Utah City cafe, illustrations of the four restaurants decorate the walls, reminding customers of the history of the place.
“I thought the concept of Fini would resonate with just kind of what I love about Utah,” Feeney said.
Growing up around food
In New Jersey, Feeney grew up having the dinner table as an important part of his days. His mom is Italian and his dad is Irish, and he recalls having their entire families come down to their house on the Jersey Shore.
“We would have these big Sunday suppers and cookouts,” Feeney said. “And I saw my Italian aunts and grandma and my mom and her sisters cooking all day and everybody else just having the best time. And I would get to see my dad be so proud to host everybody in his backyard.”
His family also made the restaurant experience special for him and his siblings. His dad would make reservations for the family at “incredible restaurants” in New York City, and then he would study up on them and share the history of the restaurant and what to order.
“It was all ingrained in me from an early age,” Feeney said.
In 2003, Feeney moved to New York City from New Jersey to work in finance. He loved trying out new restaurants after work, and he would take clients, friends and co-workers out almost every night of the week.
“Over the course of 16 years doing that five nights a week, sometimes six, I started becoming just really great friends with people in the industry,” Feeney said.
He became friends with a neighbor who was a chef, and they ultimately decided to open a restaurant together — Lilia in Williamsburg. Two and a half years later, he left his day job to pursue the restaurant industry full time.
Feeney said the hospitality industry “kind of found me. I just kept feeding the passion for it. And then it turned out that the people I loved most were like, ‘You should do this. You seem really happy, and you love it.’ And I haven’t really looked back since.”
The ‘magic’ of owning a restaurant
The best part of owning a restaurant is the people he gets to work with, according to Feeney.
“They’ve changed my life in a big way,” Feeney said. “The people that I get to work with every day and having this amazingly awesome responsibility of being in their charge, I truly am grateful. I never thought I would be in that position ever. And it’s just changed my life forever.”
He called what his employees do in the hospitality industry “noble” and says when they help make a person’s day better by serving up delicious food that they create “magic.”
“What they produce every single night, what we do together, it’s bigger than the sum of its parts,” Feeney said. “And that’s what I’ve loved. And I’ve loved being able to just witness people doing this for others.”
Fini Pizza giving back
Fini Pizza offers 25% discounts year-round to firefighters, police officers and educators. They also have a program where children under 17 can read three books, share the title and two sentences about the books, and then receive a free pizza for them and their family.
“I just wanted to continue to find creative ways to invest in the community, make the neighborhood more together, more stronger, and more connected,” Feeney said.
Another way Fini Pizza is getting involved with the community is through a program called Fini Hoops.
The Fini Hoops program hosts basketball teams on its own court — he tried it out in New York and loved it, so the Utah City location is also getting its own court, which is currently being built up. It will open up in June.
At the court, Fini Hoops will host basketball tournaments, camps and clinics to get more kids playing ball, and then afterwards, they can enjoy some pizza. Winners of the Fini Hoops tournaments receive free pizza for life.
“I just wanted to create moments for youth in basketball and connect it to pizza as well,” Feeney said.
What I ordered
When I stopped into Fini Pizza on a Wednesday night, I was greeted by smiles and friendly hellos from the staff. The aesthetic of the place is beautiful, with wood accents and a woodsy green color.
Here’s what I ordered:
The Sicilian Pizza: I ordered a slice of the Sicilian pizza, which has a thicker crust, sweet crushed tomato sauce, chili oil, garlic breadcrumbs, freshly shaved parmigiano and pepperoni. There was a little heat that I really liked, maybe from the pepperoni and chili oil? This was a very good slice of pizza.
The White Pizza: I ordered a whole box of this one to share with my sister, and I’m glad I did. The crust is classic New York style crust. The pizza comes with three cheeses — fresh mozzarella, parmigiano and fontina — and on top is drizzled olive oil and lemon zest. I wasn’t sure what I would think of the lemon, but it surprised and delighted me in the best way. It’s refreshing and a beautiful final note to the overall taste.
Storefront information
- Address: 875 N. Main St. Suite A, Vineyard, UT 84059
- Hours: Monday-Sunday, noon-10 p.m.
- Price: $
Utah
The story behind our ‘one-of-a-kind’ Travel Issue cover story
The soaring desert vistas of Canyon Point, Utah, provide the backdrop to our June 2026 cover shoot, setting the stage for a Travel Issue titled ‘The Great Escape’ – a series of ‘horizon-expanding adventures and voyages of discovery’, as Wallpaper* editor-in-chief Bill Prince describes.
The luxurious base camp for the shoot was Amangiri, a unique 600-acre estate that is part of the Aman hotel group and appears out of the ochre-coloured desert like a modernist oasis. Completed in 2008 by architects Marwan Al-Sayed, Wendell Burnette, and Rick Joy, it has become a pilgrimage for design aficionados seeking the ultimate escape: indeed, the various low-lying structures are designed to fade away into their surroundings, so that visitors feel entirely consumed by the area’s majestic – but desolate – landscapes.
The story behind our June 2026 cover story
Dress, $1,800; boots, price on request, both by Calvin Klein Collection (calvinklein.co.uk)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)
‘It has always been a dream to shoot at Amangiri,’ says Wallpaper* fashion and creative director Jason Hughes, who collaborated with American photographer Geordie Wood on the story. Landing in Las Vegas, the team – including model Colin Jones, who was born in Spanish Fork, Utah – travelled through Nevada and Arizona on a five-hour car journey to Amangiri, where they set up in one of the new private villas on the estate. ‘It was amazing to witness the way the landscapes changed across the journey,’ says Hughes.
Despite the serene end result, shooting in such a remote location did hold some challenges: notably, the rapidly shifting March weather. ‘It was insane to witness out of nowhere a one-hour-long snow storm, turning the entire landscape white, before disappearing again within an hour after the sun came out,’ says Hughes. ‘Colin was an absolute trooper, braving the conditions and battling through to deliver the best pictures.’
Jones, who has previously walked the runway for houses like Maison Margiela, Ferragamo and Givenchy, wears a series of pieces from the S/S 2026 collections in the images, which were selected to echo the landscape. ‘We wanted the tones and textures to reflect the backdrops, which were incredibly inspirational,’ says Hughes. ‘It was a truly one-of-a-kind shoot.’
Discover the full shoot below.

Dress, £960, by Hodakova (hodakova.com)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)

Dress, £2,840, by Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello (ysl.com)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)

Jacket, £4,610; trousers, £2,960, both by Versace (.versace.com). Boots, price on request, by Calvin Klein Collection (calvinklein.co.uk)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)

Jacket, £4,300, by Phoebe Philo (phoebephilo.com)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)

Gilet, £850; trousers, £1,350, both by Coach (coach.com). Top, price on request, by Durazzi Milano (durazzimilano.com). Boots, price on request, by Calvin Klein Collection (calvinklein.co.uk)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)

Top, price on request, by Durazzi Milano (durazzimilano.com). Top (worn underneath), £300, by Acne Studios (acnestudios.com). Skirt, £300, by Meryll Rogge (meryllrogge.com)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)

Coat, price on request, by Bottega Veneta (bottegaveneta.com)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)

(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)

Shirt; trousers, both price on request, by Victoria Beckham (victoriabeckham.com). Boots, price on request, by Calvin Klein Collection (calvinklein.co.uk)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)

Dress, £1,975, by Ferragamo (ferragamo.com)
(Image credit: Photography by Geordie Wood, fashion by Jason Hughes)
Saint Laurent
Lavallière Dress in Nylon
Acne Studios
Thin Ribbed Tank Top
Versace
Straight-Leg Leather Trousers
Phoebe Philo
Harrington Jacket
Victoria Beckham
Embroidered Woven Shirt
Model: Colin Jones at Women Management. Casting: Bert Martirosyan. Hair: Michael Thomas Lollo at The Only Agency using Living Proof. Make-up: Akiko Owada at The Wall Group using Chanel. Digi tech: Dayvid LeMmon. Photography assistant: Karen Goss. Fashion assistant: Lucy Proctor. Production: Danielle Quigley. Production assistant: Sheriff Production Retouching: May. Special thanks to Amangiri, Utah.
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