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Utah legislators hear from Kevin Franke on life coach regulation

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Utah legislators hear from Kevin Franke on life coach regulation


SALT LAKE CITY— A Utah Senate committee heard from Kevin Franke, the ex-husband of a mommy vlogger, currently serving prison time for aggravated child abuse.

Sen. David Hinkins, R-Orangeville, told the Senate Business and Labor Committee Monday, Kevin Franke, ex-husband of Ruby Franke, approached him just before the start of the 2024 General Legislative Session in January.

Hinkins stated that Franke aimed to address life coach regulation after his ex-wife and her business partner, Jodi Hildebrandt, a note life coach, pleaded guilty to aggravated child abuse. Both are currently in prison.

Franke, who could not attend Monday’s hearing in person, wrote a letter that Hinkins read to the committee:

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“These people (life coaches) literally ghosts, and are free to sell their supposed life expertise to anyone willing to purchase it,” Franke’s letter said.

“Numerous life coaches today are free to offer the same services provided by licensed mental health professionals, but carry none of the responsibilities…care or liabilities associated with that profession.”

Hinkins’ bill, SB 251, would require life coaches to be registered with the Utah Division of Professional Licensing.

According to committee chair, Sen. Curtis Bramble, R-Provo, the bill has some key support, based on conversations he had with, for example, the DPL.

However, some questions brought up by lawmakers were left unresolved. Hinkins noted that Franke approached him just before the session and they did not have time to work out the kinks.

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Ultimately, the committee voted to put the bill on hold to give it time to be refined before the 2025 General Legislative Session.

 

 

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Arizona baseball takes series at Utah, moves closer to Pac-12 title

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Arizona baseball takes series at Utah, moves closer to Pac-12 title


The way it started, Arizona’s final road series of the season had the potential to torpedo its chances of a Pac-12 title. The way it finished has put the Wildcats on the cusp of conference crown.

The UA scored eight runs in the 5th and 6th innings en route to a 10-4 win at Utah on Sunday night, taking the series and reducing its magic number to one.

Arizona (32-18, 19-8) will take a 1.5-game lead on Oregon State (39-12, 17-9) into next weekend’s series at Hi Corbett Field, needing to win only one game against the Beavers to clinch its second regular-season title in the last four years and earn the No. 1 seed in the Pac-12 Tournament. The UA has won 10 consecutive conference games at home.

The UA hit three more home runs, giving it 10 on the 4-game road trip after hitting only 42 in its first 46 games. Andrew Cain’s 2-run homer tied the game at 2 in the 5th, part of seven consecutive batters to reach base with two out, with Garen Caulfield giving the Wildcats the lead for good with a 2-run single with the bases loaded and Brendan Summerhill following with an RBI single for a 5-2 lead.

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After Utah (31-18, 16-11) scored in the bottom of the 5th to get back within two, Maddox Mihalakis opened the 6th with a solo shot and the UA added two more 2-out runs on a Mason White single and a bases loaded walk to Summerhill.

Summerhill would add a 2-run homer in the 9th to go 3 for 4 with four RBI.

Arizona was outhit 12-11 but drew six walks and had two batters hit, with five of those free passes scoring during that 8-run push in the middle innings.

Cam Walty allowed three runs and nine hits over five innings, including a leadoff home run on the first pitch of the bottom of the 1st, but worked out of trouble multiple times to pick up his conference-leading 8th victory. Five relievers followed, with Eric Orloff, Tony Pluta, Jaeden Swanberg and Kyler Heyne combining to hold the Utes scoreless over the final three innings.

The UA and Oregon State begin the season-ending series Thursday at 6 p.m. PT at Hi Corbett. Expected to be on the mound for the Beavers is right-hander Aiden May, who was in the Wildcats’ starting rotation last season before transferring.

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Funeral arrangements for Santaquin Police Sgt. Bill Hooser

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Funeral arrangements for Santaquin Police Sgt. Bill Hooser


SANTAQUIN — Funeral arrangements for Santaquin Police Sgt. Bill Hooser are taking place Sunday afternoon, starting with a public visitation at Apple Valley Elementary.

The public visitation will start at 4 p.m. and end at 8 p.m.

Funeral proceedings for Hooser are expected to take place on Monday at 10 a.m. at UCCU Events Center at Utah Valley University.

Hooser will then be escorted to Santaquin City Cemetary.

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Mourners can meet at the Park and Ride near 1200 West Center Street at 6 p.m. Sunday night to help tie ribbons and post flags in Hooser’s memory.

Delays and closures are expected to occur around UVU along parts of 1200 West and 850 South. Southbound I-15 itself will either be closed or delayed.

Learn more about Hooser and his life by reading his obituary.

Semitruck driver hits, kills Utah officer, police say; driver in custody after hourslong manhunt

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Dickson: A salute to Utah women

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Dickson: A salute to Utah women


I have been a mother for the last one third of my life. The first two thirds, until I was 40, I could not not claim that title. On this Mother’s Day, I want to salute all of the women of our state, whether they have children or not, whether they care for children or not.

From where I sit, our communities and our lives are so intertwined. I am able to be a radio announcer and college professor because of the dozens of teachers and mentors who inspired me. Some of those people were women. Some of those women were mothers. ALL of them had a profound effect on my life.

I have had a firsthand look at the hard work of teaching in K-12 this year as a substitute teacher in the Jordan and Salt Lake school districts. In the nearly 40 different jobs I’ve had in my life, I have never seen any profession work harder. I’ve never felt that kind of stress in any other setting.

I acknowledge that daily stress and physical and psychological demands are common to many jobs, both in and out of the home, and it is for that reason that I want to salute all Utah women on this day.

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Research on challenges Utah women face

I read a research brief recently entitled Eleven Major Challenges Utah Women Face. It was done by the Utah Women and Leadership Project, founded and directed by Dr. Susan Madsen.

“3,500 people participated in the study,” Madsen explained. “2,433 gave qualitative answers. They wrote sentences and paragraphs. From those detailed responses, 11 topics rose to the top.”

The top one was lack of recognition, undervalued. That included things like sexism, bias and discrimination. Over a thousand people said that in Utah. Nearly a third of the respondents to the survey said this was a challenge for them.

Today I address that challenge directly, one I have certainly felt at different times in my life. I want to tell these women how much I appreciate you. I value what you do, what gets you up in the morning, the smile you give to others, the way you add to the neighborhood you live in, the way you encourage people on social media. My life would be so much less colorful without you.

Harassment

I would be remiss if I didn’t point out that 1 in 10 respondents in the survey, 355 women, said they are experiencing abuse, assault or harassment today. Look around your neighborhood, your workplace. One out of every 10 women is experiencing this abuse TODAY!

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“They asked the question, ‘If you reported a sexual harassment in your organization, do you trust that your organization would do something?’” Madsen explained. “The response was no. The organizations are going to cover. They’re not going to really care about their employees. We have some interesting data to support what we’re talking about.”

This ought to be a wakeup call to HR directors all over the state. It ought to be a wakeup call to all of us. There is harassment and abuse going on right in front of us. Why aren’t we seeing it? Why aren’t we stopping it?

Beyond flowers

Giving flowers on Mother’s Day is lovely, I sent my mother flowers every year until she passed 15 years ago. I am grateful to my own children and husband for wanting to love me in this way.

I just want to add something to this ritual. The women you encounter every day are all contributing to the quality of your life. Whether they are mothers or not, whether they are teaching your children or not. (Of course, the same is true for men. Gratefully men don’t seem to feel the same lack of recognition.)

Thanking the women you work with, the women you encounter every day, for what they do will cost you absolutely nothing. It isn’t subject to inflation, it applies across political parties and t is merely a gesture of gratitude and compassion that will go a long way to enriching all of our lives.

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Thank you for reading – and Happy Mother’s Day.

Dickson: Mother’s Day gifts we moms really want

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