Utah
Utah Valley University Announces 2023 Honorary Degree Recipients
OREM, Utah — Utah Valley College (UVU) officers introduced right now that Elaine
S. Dalton, Scott C. Keller, and Duff Thompson will obtain honorary doctorate levels
on the college’s graduation on Could 4, 2023, together with the graduation keynote
speaker, Brandon Sanderson.
Sanderson will obtain an honorary diploma in humane letters, Dalton will obtain a
diploma in public service, and each Keller and Thompson will obtain levels in enterprise.
The honorary levels might be introduced in the course of the graduation ceremony at 6:30 p.m.
within the UCCU Heart on UVU’s Orem Campus.
“Elaine, Scott, and Duff epitomize UVU’s values,” stated Astrid S. Tuminez, president
of UVU. “Elaine and Duff served boldly and successfully as chairs of UVU’s Board of
Trustees. Each navigated the college by means of a presidential search and transition
and demonstrated distinctive care by focusing their efforts on first technology college students.
“Scott displays the grit, ingenuity, and generosity of UVU’s scholar physique. Not solely
did he forge a profitable profession in actual property improvement, however by means of his gracious
assist, UVU has a brand new dwelling for the state’s largest enterprise faculty. They’ve all
personally donated their time, vitality, and assets to strengthen UVU and assist our
college students succeed. We’re proud to honor them.”
Elaine S. Dalton
Elaine S. Dalton is well-known in Utah and at UVU. She is greatest recognized for serving as
the thirteenth president of the Normal Younger Girls Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints from 2008 to 2013. Most just lately, she served because the UVU Board
of Trustees chair and presently serves because the president of the Stella Oaks Basis,
a nonprofit group that works to offer scholarships for single moms.
Dalton enjoys the outside, climbing along with her household, and dancing along with her granddaughters.
She has run 17 marathons and certified for and accomplished two Boston Marathons. She
is the writer of three books for girls and younger ladies and speaks to teams of younger
ladies and ladies about their identification, potential, and goal.
Dalton was born and raised in Ogden, Utah. She acquired a bachelor’s diploma in English
from Brigham Younger College. She later married Stephen E. Dalton, and they’re the
mother and father of 5 sons and one daughter. After 50 years of marriage, they discover themselves
surrounded by 21 blond-haired grandchildren! She says an important titles she
ever held are that of spouse and greatest good friend to her husband, mom to 6 magnificent
grownup youngsters, and grandmother.
Scott C. Keller
Scott C. Keller is CEO of Keller Funding Properties in Centerville, Utah, and chairman
of The Bronze Buffalo Membership Firms, which incorporates Teton Springs Golf Membership and Resort
in Victor, Idaho.
Keller’s profession started as a white-water river information navigating all main western rivers,
together with the Colorado River by means of the Grand Canyon. His guiding years deepened
his love for nature and out of doors recreation.
From 1977 to 1983, Keller labored for a nationwide transportation and logistics firm,
the place he directed the group’s enterprise in 5 states and was honored for his
experience and repair. He later shifted his focus to his rising actual property holdings.
For the subsequent 35 years, he grew to become one of many largest single-private house house owners
within the Western U.S. His funding portfolio has grown to incorporate communities in 4
states, offering houses for 1000’s of households and college students.
Keller serves on the Nationwide Advisory Board for UVU’s Woodbury Faculty of Enterprise.
UVU honored him by naming the brand new enterprise constructing after him in January 2022. He
has additionally served in lots of nonprofit and public service organizations.
Keller and his spouse, Karen, had been married in September 1976 and dwell in Bountiful,
Utah. They’ve 5 youngsters and seventeen grandchildren and counting. He studied
enterprise on the College of Nevada at Las Vegas, Utah Tech College, and Brigham
Younger College-Idaho.
Duff Thompson
For 29 years, Duff Thompson has been a managing normal accomplice of EsNet, Ltd., a Utah-based
personal funding agency lively in the actual property and expertise industries. He has
served on a number of philanthropic and company boards for personal and public enterprises,
most just lately as chairman of the board of Qualtrics, Inc., from 2012 to 2019.
In 2013, Thompson was appointed to UVU’s Board of Trustees, the place he served for eight
years as vice chair and chair. Thompson holds a bachelor’s diploma in economics and
an MBA from Brigham Younger College. He acquired a regulation diploma from Brigham Younger
College’s J. Reuben Clark Regulation Faculty.
Thompson stated his most necessary and enduring negotiation was persuading Sharleen
Olsen to marry him practically 50 years in the past. They’ve seven sons and 18 grandchildren.
Utah
Utah authorities seek those responsible for damaging panel of ancient outdoor engravings
Authorities this week said they want to find anyone involved in the installation of climbing bolts at the site of an ancient outdoor engraving in northeastern Utah.
Climbing bolts, also known as anchors, were discovered at the site of the Pregnant Sheep Petroglyph Panel on federal land in the northeastern corner of the state on Nov. 10, the Uintah County Sheriff’s Office said.
On Thursday, the sheriff’s office and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management asked for the public’s help in tracking down anyone involved in the installation of bolts near Highway 40’s Musket Shot Springs Overlook, which is about 11 miles from Dinosaur National Monument in neighboring Colorado.
In a statement on Facebook, the bureau characterized the act as vandalism.
The sheriff’s office characterized the installation as having taken place on the petroglyph panel. Sheriff’s officials did not immediately respond to a request for more information.
Information on the specific panel was not immediately available.
Elements associated with similar engravings in Wayne County, Utah, in the southern third of the state, have been radiocarbon dated by Colorado State University geomorphologist Joel Pederson to 1100 A.D., according to the Natural History Museum of Utah.
Collaborator Steven Simms, a Utah State University anthropologist, is quoted by the museum as stating some of the state’s petroglyphs represent “persistence, reformulation, and integration of art, iconography, and ideology among peoples.”
Autumn Gillard, the cultural resource manager for the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, told NBC affiliate KSL of Salt Lake City that installing bolts at the site of a petroglyph is “disrespectful” to the state’s indigenous people because the engravings are sacred to many.
“For us, as tribal people, these are our churches,” she told the station earlier this month. “When folks go in and they vandalize panels, or they vandalize cultural sites, we correlate it to the same thing as if somebody was to go into a temple or a religious space and were to write graffiti all over it or to write their name all over it.”
The search for the bolts’ installer is taking place as climbing advocacy group Access Fund celebrated a December victory for legislation called Protecting America’s Rock Climbing, passed by Congress as part of the Expanding Public Lands Outdoor Recreation Experiences Act.
The bill, in part, “clarifies that climbing and the placement, use, and maintenance of fixed anchors (including bolts, pins, and slings) are appropriate, and not prohibited, within wilderness areas,” the nonprofit group said in a statement on Dec. 19.
The Access Fund said the National Park Service this month backed off a proposal that would have prohibited fixed anchors on federal land.
On Dec. 2, Utah’s Kane County Sheriff’s Office said two people wanted for questioning in the alleged defacing of a petroglyph near Wire Pass, known for its photogenic rock formations, were located and contacted.
Bureau of Land Management district manager Harry Barber told KSL a woman was arrested and could face multiple felony counts connected to the incident. Barber said in a video update posted to Facebook that the woman allegedly wrote her name “and/or other things” on the petroglyph.
It wasn’t clear if the woman has a lawyer, and the status of the case was not available. The federal public defender’s office for Utah did not immediately respond to a request for comment Saturday night.
In Uintah County, roughly 500 miles northeast of Wire Pass, sheriff’s officials indicated any leads that develop in their search for the bolt installer would be forwarded to federal agents.
“BLM law enforcement is asking the public to report any information they may have identifying the person(s) responsible for this incident,” the sheriff’s office there said in its Thursday statement.
Utah
Opinion: Cox’s support for Trump’s immigration policies is imprudent
Earlier this month, Gov. Spencer Cox stated that he “remained committed” to the Utah Compact on Immigration, a document first released in 2010 and reaffirmed by state leaders in 2019. Cox said, “The principles of the Compact, I think, are still very important.” That is good news for Utah. The bad news is Cox’s support for President-elect Donald Trump’s plans for mass deportation.
Cox was not elected to the Utah House of Representatives until 2012, two legislative sessions after the Utah Compact was released followed by unprecedented support by former Gov. Gary Herbert and the conservative state Legislature for comprehensive state-based immigration reform. And despite his welcome support recently for the Utah Compact, I cannot seem to locate a moment when Cox actually signed the document — though I will happily stand corrected if wrong.
My point is that supporting the principles in the Utah Compact while supporting Trump’s mass deportation plans feels a bit like double-dealing.
I am a co-author of the Utah Compact. While I ran Sutherland Institute, we played an instrumental role in changing public opinion on immigration — from 70% of Utahns favoring Trump-like enforcement-only policies early in 2010 to 70% favoring the Compact and the comprehensive reforms passed by the state Legislature in 2011. I was present from beginning to end of those historic and precedent-setting policy reforms.
In other words, I know whereof I speak when I say that the Utah Compact stands in stark contrast to Trump’s rants on mass deportation policies. The policies underlying the 2011 immigration reforms strove to bring otherwise law-abiding undocumented immigrants to the surface of society, leaving the residue of criminal immigrants for law enforcement to clean up. Utah warmly embraced existing undocumented immigrants already living among us peaceably and productively.
In contrast, Trump’s policies underlying mass deportations — insomuch as anyone knows what that means today — portray undocumented immigrants as criminals. And while the label is legally true — a person crossing our border for the first time, for any peaceful and productive reason, commits a misdemeanor — no decent Utahn would treat that person as a hardened criminal. In fact, the offense was simply an “infraction,” like a speeding ticket, when the Utah Compact was created.
I am quite sure that Gov. Cox does not really have in mind deporting every undocumented resident of Utah. The governor is a decent and prudent man, not inhumane or impractical. And yet, what does he mean by supporting Trump’s policies?
Cox announced a five-prong strategy for the state to work with federal immigration officials focusing on “criminal behavior.” Nothing about those five policies gives me concern. What does give me concern is probable overreach by the Trump administration when it deems “criminal behavior” to include otherwise law-abiding undocumented immigrants. My concern is when malum prohibitum is equated with malum in se — when an infraction or misdemeanor is equated with murder, rape and other felonies.
Prior to the historic immigration reforms in 2011, Sutherland Institute published an essay, “Onus or Opportunity: Immigration and Conservatism,” in which we made an authentic conservative argument for those comprehensive reforms.
A serious consideration for us at the time was to ensure that the growing tide of opinion favoring enforcement-only immigration policies did not produce a new police-state mentality. Authentic conservatives certainly believe in law and order but we don’t believe in police states. The Trump-Cox policies proposed are one slight interpretation away from a police state. If “criminal behavior” includes mere undocumented immigrants, authentic conservatives have reason for concern.
The principles of the Utah Compact are the most prudent model to maintain justice and humanity. I know Gov. Cox understands this in his heart.
Utah
‘A taste of home’: Watch adorable dogs at Utah shelter get presents from Santa
Dogs at an animal sanctuary in southern Utah had a paw-sitively delightful Christmas morning as they picked out presents from Santa’s sleigh.
Best Friends Animal Sanctuary in Kanab, just north of the Arizona border, hosted a “Santa Sleigh” Christmas morning for dogs at the shelter. The shelter says the pups “joyfully picked out toys” from a sleigh “decked out in holiday trimmings and loaded with more than 500 toys” donated by the non-profit’s corporate partner, Pet Supplies Plus and Blue Buffalo.
Video footage shared by Best Friends shows dozens of dogs sniffing around for the best presents, which included ropes, balls and squeaky toys. The shelter dogs also got cuddles and treats from Best Friends volunteers and staff members.
Dozens of shelter dogs receive toys from ‘Santa Sleigh’
Dozens of dogs at the Best Friends Animal Sanctuary in Utah picked out gifts from “Santa Sleigh.”
‘Meaningful tradition’
Best Friends Animal Society CEO Julie Castle said in a statement that the event “is a truly meaningful tradition at Best Friends.”
“It gives the Sanctuary dogs a taste of home until they find loving families of their own,” Castle said. “It also makes our caregivers happy to provide this special experience for the dogs they care for every day.”
The sleigh made the rounds to more than a dozen locations at the Sanctuary’s Dogtown, delighting more than 400 dogs awaiting adoption. Best Friends said the dogs at the sanctuary came from shelters in Utah and across the country.
Dogtown is described as a “place of healing, learning and fun for dogs and puppies.”
Founded in 1984, Best Friends, is a leading animal welfare organization with shelters across the country. The organization aims to end the killing of dogs and cats in America’s shelters and make the country no-kill in 2025. The sanctuary, meanwhile, is the largest of its kind in the U.S., according to Best Friends website and is “tucked into the majestic canyons of southern Utah.”
Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at sshafiq@gannett.com and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7.
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