lunes, 30 de septiembre de 2019

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Added: 01/10/2019

‘Bad to worse’: Provo man with mysterious vaping illness tells his story

Maarius Dennis talks about using oxygen during an interview Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. Dennis used to vape and now has a lung-related illness. Maarius Dennis talks about using oxygen during an interview Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. Dennis used to vape and now has a lung-related illness. | Josh Szymanik, Deseret News

PROVO — Maarius Dennis thought vaping was safe.

When the Provo resident took up the habit, he knew it likely wasn’t totally harmless — his vape pen was a vessel for nicotine, after all. But it seemed “totally safe” at the time, as he remembers it. A “great alternative to cigarettes” for a former smoker.

He doesn’t feel that way anymore. Now, when he looks at his vape pen, he wonders why he started in the first place.

“Five years later I’m in the ICU, trying to figure out why I’m waking up on hospital beds with tubes sticking out of me in all directions,” Dennis said Monday, sitting in his home with an oxygen tank by his side.

Dennis is one of 71 Utahns who have experienced a mysterious, seemingly vaping-related lung disease in recent months, with 10 more potential cases under investigation. And the illness isn’t unique to Utah. More than 800 cases have been reported across the country, with at least 15 reported deaths.

Since he was first hospitalized in July, Dennis has undergone three surgeries. Both of his lungs have collapsed. He now uses an oxygen tank 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

“It was bad to worse to worse to worse,” Dennis said, recalling his nearly two straight months spent in the hospital this summer. “They were grasping at straws, because they hadn’t seen anything like this yet. And all of a sudden all these places all around the country started having similar problems, and then they were saying it was an epidemic.”

Maarius Dennis spends some time drawing Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. During an interview Monday, Dennis talked about vaping and now having to using oxygen due to a lung-related illness. Josh Szymanik, Deseret News
Maarius Dennis spends some time drawing Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. During an interview Monday, Dennis talked about vaping and now having to using oxygen due to a lung-related illness.

It was late July when Dennis first became feverish. With his temperature of 104 degrees, he agreed after several days of urging from his fiancee to go to the hospital. It was likely pneumonia, the doctors told him, possibly from exposure to cleaning chemicals the previous day. They put him on oxygen his second day in the hospital, as he was having a hard time breathing, and released him on oxygen after a week. There was nothing in the X-rays to suggest that there was anything wrong with his lungs.

Twelve hours after leaving the hospital, one of Dennis’ lungs collapsed. It started with a cough while watching TV, then quickly turned turned into a pain, and then a gasping. He couldn’t breathe.

“It’s like when you’re in a swimming pool too long, when you’re down in the water and you’re like, I’ve got to get to the top,” Dennis said. “But I was not in the water and I was just breathing, gasping, and it was scary.”

Everything was “fuzzy.” He thought he might die.

Dennis was admitted to the hospital a second time, where he underwent an emergency surgery.

Since then, Dennis’ life has been a blur of surgeries, medications, and excruciating pain. Though the details are hard for him to remember, his family tells him he nearly died three times in a two-week span. His other lung collapsed, too. He couldn’t breathe without having forced air. He was on a two-hour rotation of various pain medications while in the hospital, he said, along with an epidural. The doctors described it as atypical pneumonitis.

On multiple occasions, his family tells him, he asked to die.

“‘Just let me die,’ because it was so unbearable at the time,” Dennis said.

The exact cause of the lung disease is still largely a mystery to scientists, but vaping either nicotine or THC appears to be a common link between all of the cases. Doctors in Utah have said they have made some progress toward finding an effective treatment.

“That’s part of the scary thing,” Dennis said. “They still aren’t sure exactly what caused it.”

The majority of lung disease patients — about 77% — reported using THC in the 30 days before the symptoms set in, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About 57% reported using nicotine-containing products, with just 16% of patients using only nicotine products rather than a mix of nicotine and THC.

Dennis, a nicotine user, says he exclusively bought his oil from local vape shops.

At the time of Monday’s interview, Dennis had been home from the hospital for two weeks. He was back in the emergency room later that day.



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‘Beacon of hope’: New ovarian cancer drug improves survival rates, Utah doctors say

Bob Garretson pours beverages for dinner while chatting with his wife Jane Garretson at home in Midway on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. Jane Garretson participated the VELIA ovarian cancer clinical trial. The results were recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Bob Garretson pours beverages for dinner while chatting with his wife Jane Garretson at home in Midway on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. Jane Garretson participated the VELIA ovarian cancer clinical trial. The results were recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

2 Huntsman Cancer Institute patients tell their stories about clinical trial that doctor calls ‘practice changing’

SALT LAKE CITY — Jane Garretson went to her doctor for a routine visit in late 2016 to get a prescription renewed. But she soon received sobering news: She had stage 3 ovarian cancer.

The mother of two and grandmother of five from Cincinnati, along with her husband, decided to stay in Utah, their favorite vacation spot, while she received treatment at the Huntsman Cancer Institute.

And then hope came along in the form of a clinical trial.

According to the American Cancer Society, an estimated 22,530 will receive an ovarian cancer diagnosis in 2019. Meanwhile, 13,980 women will die from the disease.

“Because ovarian cancer doesn’t get the attention that breast cancer does, I think anything we can do to bring that to light and add to treatment for women, is a huge plus,” Garretson, of Midway, recalled Monday. “Because, like so many women who have been diagnosed with ovarian cancer, I was very asymptomatic.”

That’s why she chose to participate in a worldwide study testing a new drug that targets the ovarian cancer cells, called the PARP inhibitor veliparib. The Huntsman Cancer Institute — with 20 patients — was one of more than 200 hospitals worldwide that played a role.

Jane Garretson poses for a photo with her dog Bo at home in Midway on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. Garretson participated the VELIA ovarian cancer clinical trial. The results were recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Kristin Murphy, Deseret News
Jane Garretson poses for a photo with her dog Bo at home in Midway on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. Garretson participated the VELIA ovarian cancer clinical trial. The results were recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

On Saturday, the study results were published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The medication, used in combination with standard chemotherapy, significantly improved survival rates and halted cancer progression, researchers said.

Dr. Theresa Werner, Huntsman oncologist and the institute’s principal investigator on the study, said the medication targets and kills certain cancer cells in those with newly diagnosed cancer, by making the cells more sensitive.

Certain cancer cells, including the majority of ovarian cancer cells, are “exquisitely sensitive to this medication, I would say,” Werner explained.

The medication worked so well, especially for some, because between 10% and 15% of people with ovarian cancer harbor an inherited mutation called a BRCA mutation. The mutation increases the risk of certain kinds of cancers — especially breast and ovarian — by causing a loss of the gene that repairs tumors, according to the doctor.

Doctors at the University of Utah actually helped discover the genetic mutation, Werner said.

While the medication had the strongest positive effect on those with the mutation, Werner said it worked for those whose cancer cells only had the mutation, and those who did not have the mutation at all.

“It’s way more applicable than people thought,” Werner said.

On average, those in the group of women with the BRCA mutation went 34.7 months without disease progression — almost three years on average — compared to 22 months for the women who received a placebo.

During the trial, the participants received pills — either the medication itself or a placebo — while undergoing chemotherapy and after their chemotherapy for maintenance “to see if we could prolong their remission,” Werner said.

Patients at Huntsman are continuing with follow-up visits at Huntsman “and they’ve had no evidence of recurrence so far,” the doctor said.

For participant Karen Edson, of Salt Lake City, “I was so happy to be a part of the study. I don’t know if I had any side effects from the drugs, because I was having side effects from the chemotherapy.”

“But to be on the study, it gave me hope, and it gave me hope that I was doing everything possible to defeat the cancer. And Dr. Werner and her team were incredibly compassionate and helpful during the treatment. And I also wanted to feel that I was doing something bigger than myself to contribute in some way to fighting this disease of cancer. And I kind of looked at it as, it takes a village of trials to combat the cancer and I was happy to do my small part,” Edson recalled.

The retired nurse said that when she received her diagnosis right before a long-planned trip to Butan, India, her experience in the health care field left her with the feeling her prognosis wasn’t good. It was her second time fighting cancer — five years before, she overcame breast cancer.

But along with help from doctors, she said she received support from her family, who “helped me look forward instead of backward, and how lucky every single day is.”

Candy ginger and Cheetos helped her through treatment, Edson said. “And now I hate both of them.”

Though she lives with pain in her feet, a symptom of chemotherapy, Edson says, “I really look at every day as a wonderful gift.”

Garretson agreed with the importance of remaining optimistic for those facing cancer diagnoses.

“Attitude is extremely important as well. And so whether one was facing chemo, or surgery, or being offered an opportunity for a clinical trial, I think having an attitude of this is going to work and this is going to be helpful to me is a positive as well.”

Werner called the study’s findings “practice changing.”

“A lot of times we do these trials, and you’re like, ‘Oh, that’s interesting. They did a little better with that drug,’ and people still maybe use it. But this trial is going to change the way we take care of women who have what we call advanced stage, stage 3 or 4, ovarian cancer in the sense that there is a treatment option now available,” Werner said.

She said the drug should soon be presented to the FDA for approval. “The hope is that these results will expedite its availability to the public.”

Because the results were so “practice changing,” the approval could come in weeks to months.

Garretson, a retired guidance and substance abuse counselor, said that in addition to the benefit of receiving prolonged care, being part of the trial was a “wonderful way to give back.”

“And for this drug to be available now, to me, is just an additional beacon of hope,” she said.



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Latter-day Saint Charities reaffirms commitment to U.N. World Food Programme as famine crises deepen

Sister Sharon Eubank, first counselor in the Relief Society general presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, talks with David Beasley, United Nations World Food Programme executive director, outside of the Church Office Building in Salt Lake City on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. Sister Sharon Eubank, president of Latter-day Saint Charities and first counselor in the Relief Society general presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, talks with David Beasley, United Nations World Food Programme executive director, outside of the Church Office Building in Salt Lake City on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

SALT LAKE CITY — Straight-talking former South Carolina Gov. David Beasley initially recoiled at the thought of leading the U.N. World Food Programme for the same reason Latter-day Saint Charities was wary about partnering with the organization.

Neither thought it was up to the red tape and inefficiency for which the United Nations is known. Latter-day Saint Charities President Sharon Eubank said leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints “were afraid the bureaucracy would just grind us up” rather than help them achieve their goal to provide quick and nimble aid during emergencies.

Yet Beasley stood in front of the church’s Salt Lake Temple on Monday’s sunny, windy afternoon and trumpeted the partnership between the World Food Programme and Latter-day Saint Charities after a tour of the faith’s humanitarian facilities with church officials.

“What’s driving the rate of increasing hunger in the world today is man-made conflict,” the WFP’s executive director said, “so to have a partner that understands that the most powerful weapon on Earth is love — in times like this when there’s so much destabilization and so much conflict — to have a partner that understands reconciliation is extremely important today.”

Sister Eubank, who also is the first counselor in the church’s Relief Society general presidency, stood by Beasley and described the two organizations’ five-year relationship as among the most significant for the faith’s humanitarian arm.

The two leaders said each organization benefits from working with the other.

The World Food Programme helps the church gain easier access to help people in places where it does not have members, such as Yemen and Somalia.

The church gives the WFP millions of dollars, including $3 million in 2016.

“We’re very grateful,” Beasley said, “because they’re one of our world’s largest partners in the nongovernmental sector. We work together in many countries, and we talked today about many of those opportunities and how we can end hunger around the world.”

On Monday, leaders of the two groups learned they have more ways they can create synergy.

For example, Beasley said he was unaware of the church charity’s expertise in agricultural practices, yield and productivity. He said that expertise could help the WFP’s efforts to introduce better, healthier, more productive seeds and crops to people who don’t want handouts but a hand up.

The WFP, for example, helped self-reliant people rehabilitate half a million acres of land for farming last year. Beasley said if it the church’s agricultural expertise can lift that project, he can help provide infrastructure to get the food where it needs to go.

“We learned a lot more about the World Food Programme’s ability with infrastructure,” Bishop W. Christopher Waddell, second counselor in the Presiding Bishopric of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. “I wasn’t aware of that as some of the things they do building roads and bridges, etc., that allow food to be moved from the location where it’s been grown to where it needs to get.”

Last year, the WFP built 10,000 miles of roads and bridges to help get food to people and food from fields to markets.

“Sometimes the greatest disaster for farmers comes when they have a very successful yield and they don’t have any way to get to the market, so it all rots in their backyard, so to speak,” Beasley said. “Forty percent of the food in some nations is lost between the field to the market. Worldwide, that amounts to $750 billion worth of food that will feed 2 billion people that’s being lost in post-field losses.”

Beasley toured the Bishop’s Central Storehouse, Welfare Square and Temple Square. He, Sister Eubank and Bishop Waddell lunched with Bishop Gérald Caussé, the church’s Presiding Bishop, and Sister Jean B. Bingham, general president of the Relief Society.

Beasley and Sister Eubank both expressed interest in partnering to provide school lunches to hungry children.

The WFP helps provide food support to about 90 million people in 83 countries each year. Bishop Waddell said the church is small in comparison. Still, in 2017, the church pledged $11 million to 11 organizations, including the WFP, to help feed 1.1 million people in some of the most difficult places in the world, like Yemen, Niger, Somalia and South Sudan.

The WFP launched a movie trailer last week that will air in 35 countries. It shares a somber message: 3 million children die of hunger each year. Beasley, the Republican governor of South Carolina from 1995-99, said mothers in Afghanistan tell his people their husbands don’t want to join ISIS, but they do to save their daughters from starving to death.

Beasley earned the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award for pushing for the removal of the Confederate flag from the state capitol dome. He also taught at the Harvard University Kennedy School of Government.

He said he came to Utah to see where the heart of the church’s members is.

“Probably the most significant thing, frankly, is the spirit, the spirit of cooperation, truly wanting to help the poor and needy and least of these that we all bring to the table. I think that was probably the biggest takeaway,” he said. “I meet with a lot of people around the Earth, and you’re looking for partners in truth. I think that is the biggest thing, that compassion for helping not just those of your own church, but people that are suffering, God’s children all over the world. And that’s the heart that I like working with anywhere and everywhere.”

The church first partnered with the World Food Programme in 2014 to help feed people during the Ebola crisis. In 2015, they worked together again during a drought in Ethiopia.

In 2016, the church’s First Presidency and other world religious leaders and scholars issued statements through the World Food Programme calling for an end to world hunger.

“We invite people everywhere to open their hearts and minds to this growing need and make resources available to the effort of eliminating hunger where they live,” the statement said.



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Letter: Listen to the students

Letter to the Editor Deseret News

I’m writing to express my support for the millions of students from around the world, and the thousand students in Utah who, on Sept. 20, joined in protest to demand “an end to the age of fossil fuels.”

I also appreciate the nearly 2,000 people who, on April 29, 2017, marched to the governor’s residence to submit the Utah Climate Resolution written by Utah high school students. This resolution acknowledged the role of fossil fuels in climate change and encourages the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. After some revisions to the resolution, it was approved by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Herbert.

These students will inherit the world we leave them, and they don’t want to live with the rising sea level and other problems that climate scientists have warned about. According to a Washington Post poll, more than 7 in 10 teenagers and young adults say climate change will cause a moderate or great deal of harm to people in their generation.

Russell Patterson

West Valley City



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In our opinion: Election Day 2020 is 400 days away. Can Congress focus on anything but impeachment?

AP

Monday of this week marked 400 days until Election Day 2020. With time quickly ticking away, Americans should demand real action in Washington to address serious issues. The hard work of legislating should be a key to election victory, not political mudslinging or impeachment hearings, important as they may be.

Congress and the president need to address the following:

Immigration: The ongoing problems at the nation’s southern border seem intractable, but with political will, progress could be made in four key areas.

  1. Washington should quickly assess the effectiveness of the temporary white-tent courtrooms set up at the border to handle asylum cases. The Deseret News sent a reporter to the border on the day these opened, providing valuable insights to its problems and weaknesses. The system relies on asylum-seekers remaining in Mexico until their cases come up, and that leaves people vulnerable to criminals who aggressively prey on them. Funding a solution that ends the “stay in Mexico” program, or that makes the process safer for families, should be a priority.
  2. Millions of undocumented workers already live and work in the United States, but they are forced into the shadows. Congress and the president should finally pass a guest-worker program that rewards people who contribute positively to the economy and allows authorities to easily identify those who are here for nefarious reasons.
  3. Congress should negotiate and pass a solution that allows the undocumented children of those who came to this country without papers to remain. President Trump canceled the program known as DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) that protected these people. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear a challenge to that decision later this year, but Congress need not wait. These children are Americans in every sense and should be allowed to contribute openly if they can show they have acted responsibly.
  4. Secure the border. This doesn’t necessarily mean building a wall, which provides a false sense of security. Congress should allocate greater resources toward border enforcement, and the administration should gain greater cooperation from Mexico to counter cartels, coyotes and others who want access to underground markets in the U.S.

Budget: President Trump signed a continuing resolution last week that keeps the government running until Nov. 21. However, continuing resolutions are a mark of failure. They postpone the real work. Both parties agreed to broad budget outlines earlier this year, but Congress must approve 12 separate appropriations bills to put that plan into practice.

So far, the House has passed 10; the Senate has passed none.

The underlying budget agreement was flawed. It would add trillions to a national debt that already tops $22.6 trillion. The annual federal deficit, meanwhile, has surpassed $1 trillion.

What the American people need is a good dose of austerity from Washington, or at least a sign lawmakers are moving to quell the spending and borrowing spree.

Health care: A complete overhaul of the nation’s expensive and complicated health care system may be impossible in a little more than a year’s time; but Congress could tackle some smoldering problems, such as the opioid epidemic and the dramatic increase in vaping, especially among young people.

The administration recently provided $1.8 billion in grants to help states and cities battle the opioid problem. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention received another $900 million to help track the problem and recommend strategies.

Congress could do more to assure addiction treatment. But it also must bear in mind that, used correctly, opioids have tremendous benefits for pain control.

On the subject of vaping, Congress should approve a widespread ban on the products and fund thorough research into their ingredients, making sure that, if they are reintroduced to the marketplace, they are carefully regulated. Recent figures on the number of people injured (805 hospitalized, with 12 deaths) are alarming.

Trade: The biggest trade issue facing Congress is the need to ratify the U.S.-Mexico-Canada-Agreement, or USMCA. Ratification would ensure a level of stability in supply chains and the exchange of commerce among the three neighboring nations.

Gun violence: Nobody expects a comprehensive gun control package to pass this Congress, but evidence exists that lawmakers could compromise on a measure to expand background checks. Clear and concise support for this from the president likely would get the job done.

Foreign policy: The world is a dangerous place, and Congress should be heavily engaged in matters as far-flung as diplomacy with North Korea, redrafting a nuclear treaty with Iran and working with China to resolve questions concerning the South China Sea and Hong Kong.

The president and the executive branch negotiate with foreign powers, but Congress should play an active role in influencing the direction of those efforts.

These items make for an ambitious 400-day agenda. While the House may occupy itself with impeachment hearings, seeking important answers to troubling recent allegations, that should not be allowed to dominate every working hour until Election Day.

If so, America’s representatives will have failed their constituents.



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In our opinion: Election Day 2020 is 400 days away. Can Congress focus on anything but impeachment?

AP

Monday of this week marked 400 days until Election Day 2020. With time quickly ticking away, Americans should demand real action in Washington to address serious issues. The hard work of legislating should be a key to election victory, not political mudslinging or impeachment hearings, important as they may be.

Congress and the president need to address the following:

Immigration: The ongoing problems at the nation’s southern border seem intractable, but with political will, progress could be made in four key areas.

  1. Washington should quickly assess the effectiveness of the temporary white-tent courtrooms set up at the border to handle asylum cases. The Deseret News sent a reporter to the border on the day these opened, providing valuable insights to its problems and weaknesses. The system relies on asylum-seekers remaining in Mexico until their cases come up, and that leaves people vulnerable to criminals who aggressively prey on them. Funding a solution that ends the “stay in Mexico” program, or that makes the process safer for families, should be a priority.
  2. Millions of undocumented workers already live and work in the United States, but they are forced into the shadows. Congress and the president should finally pass a guest-worker program that rewards people who contribute positively to the economy and allows authorities to easily identify those who are here for nefarious reasons.
  3. Congress should negotiate and pass a solution that allows the undocumented children of those who came to this country without papers to remain. President Trump canceled the program known as DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) that protected these people. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear a challenge to that decision later this year, but Congress need not wait. These children are Americans in every sense and should be allowed to contribute openly if they can show they have acted responsibly.
  4. Secure the border. This doesn’t necessarily mean building a wall, which provides a false sense of security. Congress should allocate greater resources toward border enforcement, and the administration should gain greater cooperation from Mexico to counter cartels, coyotes and others who want access to underground markets in the U.S.

Budget: President Trump signed a continuing resolution last week that keeps the government running until Nov. 21. However, continuing resolutions are a mark of failure. They postpone the real work. Both parties agreed to broad budget outlines earlier this year, but Congress must approve 12 separate appropriations bills to put that plan into practice.

So far, the House has passed 10; the Senate has passed none.

The underlying budget agreement was flawed. It would add trillions to a national debt that already tops $22.6 trillion. The annual federal deficit, meanwhile, has surpassed $1 trillion.

What the American people need is a good dose of austerity from Washington, or at least a sign lawmakers are moving to quell the spending and borrowing spree.

Health care: A complete overhaul of the nation’s expensive and complicated health care system may be impossible in a little more than a year’s time; but Congress could tackle some smoldering problems, such as the opioid epidemic and the dramatic increase in vaping, especially among young people.

The administration recently provided $1.8 billion in grants to help states and cities battle the opioid problem. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention received another $900 million to help track the problem and recommend strategies.

Congress could do more to assure addiction treatment. But it also must bear in mind that, used correctly, opioids have tremendous benefits for pain control.

On the subject of vaping, Congress should approve a widespread ban on the products and fund thorough research into their ingredients, making sure that, if they are reintroduced to the marketplace, they are carefully regulated. Recent figures on the number of people injured (805 hospitalized, with 12 deaths) are alarming.

Trade: The biggest trade issue facing Congress is the need to ratify the U.S.-Mexico-Canada-Agreement, or USMCA. Ratification would ensure a level of stability in supply chains and the exchange of commerce among the three neighboring nations.

Gun violence: Nobody expects a comprehensive gun control package to pass this Congress, but evidence exists that lawmakers could compromise on a measure to expand background checks. Clear and concise support for this from the president likely would get the job done.

Foreign policy: The world is a dangerous place, and Congress should be heavily engaged in matters as far-flung as diplomacy with North Korea, redrafting a nuclear treaty with Iran and working with China to resolve questions concerning the South China Sea and Hong Kong.

The president and the executive branch negotiate with foreign powers, but Congress should play an active role in influencing the direction of those efforts.

These items make for an ambitious 400-day agenda. While the House may occupy itself with impeachment hearings, seeking important answers to troubling recent allegations, that should not be allowed to dominate every working hour until Election Day.

If so, America’s representatives will have failed their constituents.



from Deseret News https://ift.tt/2n9t5ii

Kanye West’s new album ‘Jesus is King’ won’t have any swearing or curses (as of right now)

FILE - In this Aug. 28, 2016, file photo, Kanye West appears at the MTV Video Music Awards at Madison Square Garden in New York. In this Aug. 28, 2016, file photo, Kanye West appears at the MTV Video Music Awards at Madison Square Garden in New York. West has held an outdoor worship service that attracted thousands of people to the Wyoming city where he owns a ranch. The Billings Gazette reports West held the free event Sunday, Sept. 22, 2019, on the grounds of The Buffalo Bill Center of the West in Cody. The center estimates 3,800 people attended the hour-long “Sunday Service” in the Robbie Powwow Garden. | Chris Pizzello/Invision/Associated Press

West’s new album was supposed to drop Sunday. It didn’t.

Kanye West teased his new album again over the weekend, and it appears that it won’t have any curse words on it.

What’s going on: West’s new album, called “Jesus is King,” was originally slated to drop on Sept. 27. It didn’t. West’s wife, Kim Kardashian West, teased that the album would drop on Sunday, Sept. 29. It didn’t. And as of this writing, the album has yet to appear anywhere commercially.

  • But West spent the last weekend playing and performing the unfinished album across three cities, including Detroit, Chicago and New York City. He has invited celebrities and and fans to watch his performances. At these events, he played songs from the album, offered commentary and sold merchandise.

No curses: And, according to The New York Times, the new album didn’t have any cursing. West nor his collaborators, which included Ty Dolla $ign, Pusha T and No Malice, avoided curse words and focused on religion.

Tracks: Tracks on the album include “On God,” “Water” and “Use This Gospel.” Other titles include “Selah:” and “New Body,” which had originally leaked online with secular and sexual lyrics and had been redone to include more religious and spiritual lyrics.

West’s words: “This has been an incredible journey,” West told the crowd at the event in New York City, according to The New York Times.

  • “By having the luxury of having an amazing choir around me every Sunday,” he continued, “I came to know the truth and the joy of Jesus Christ. This album has been made to be an expression of the gospel and to share the gospel and the truth of what Jesus has done to me. When I think of the goodness of Jesus and all that he does for me, my soul cries out.”

Why it matters: But the music may also point to principles for young people. Simon Boyle of The Sun called the album an “evangelical rant about the evils of the modern world — including the suggestion that it’s time for youngsters to put down Instagram.”



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A huge facial for teen Jane Wilde's pretty face

Watch Jane as she manipulates and seduces Charles to have sex with her. He goes in for a hungry kiss. Jane slides down to her knees and takes Charles cock out of his pants, spitting on it as she takes...

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Added: 01/10/2019

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Photos: A show of force — Men and women in blue step up to help the Red Cross

Madison Esmay, an American Red Cross collection specialist, checks on Salt Lake County Sheriff’s chief deputy Matt Dumont as he donates blood at the Salt Lake County Jail in South Salt Lake on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. The Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Office and the Unified Police Department teamed with the American Red Cross for the event. Madison Esmay, an American Red Cross collection specialist, checks on Salt Lake County Sheriff’s chief deputy Matt Dumont as he donates blood at the Salt Lake County Jail in South Salt Lake on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. The Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Office and the Unified Police Department teamed with the American Red Cross for the event. | Steve Griffin, Deseret News

Madison Esmay, an American Red Cross collection specialist, checks on Salt Lake County Sheriff’s chief deputy Matt Dumont as he donates blood at the Salt Lake County Jail in South Salt Lake on Monday. The Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Office and the Unified Police Department teamed up with the American Red Cross for the event.

See the world through the eyes of award-winning photojournalists. Click through the gallery above to view the unique images our visual storytellers captured today. Follow the official Deseret News Instagram account for more photographs and videos from the staff.



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Hot girlfriend fingers herself while showing tits

Beautiful blonde decided to play along with the camera by whipping out her massive tits.

Author: uploadyourporn
Added: 01/10/2019

Salt Lake City asks court for a ruling in Inland Port lawsuit

FILE - Salt Lake City Mayor Jacki Biskupski speaks at a press conference at the City and County Building in Salt Lake City about a lawsuit filed against the Utah Inland Port Authority on Monday, June 24, 2019. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

SALT LAKE CITY — Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski is asking the court to make a ruling in her lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the Utah Inland Port Authority.

A motion for summary judgement filed Monday is the latest development in the lawsuit filed in March by the city, which argues that legislation passed by the state usurps the city’s land use and taxing authority and violates the Equal Protection Clause by disproportionately taxing Salt Lake City residents.

Now Biskupski is asking the Third District Court to make a decision in the case, on the grounds that the state has not disputed any of the material facts in the city’s lawsuit over the creation of the port. Located on the city’s west side, the port has been envisioned as a global distribution hub of train, truck and air connections to maximize manufacturing, imports and exports.

“What happened to Salt Lake City is wrong,” said Biskupski in a statement Monday. “The State’s actions threaten to deny city residents the power to control their own destiny and robs them of taxes which help pay for services like police, fire, parks and road repair.”

A bill passed by the Legislature and signed by the governor earlier this year created a “hub and spoke” model, allowing the port to expand outside of its Salt Lake City “hub.” The bill’s sponsors said it would let rural areas establish “satellite offices” so that smaller communities with exports could clear international customs without having to ship goods to Salt Lake City.

The city claims that this “hub and spoke” model creates an unconstitutional “two-tiered tax system.” For other Utah communities, using tax revenue for the Inland Port project is optional; “whereas Salt Lake City residents were forced to give up 100% of property tax increment, as well as a portion of (the) city’s sales tax for a period of up to 40 years,” a statement released by the city Monday argues.

“Not only has the state illegally usurped the constitutionally protected powers of our municipality, but it has authorized the treatment of Salt Lake City taxpayers as second-class citizens, denying us the same opportunities enjoyed by others in Utah,” Biskupski said.

The lawsuit also claims that state legislation violates the so-called “ripper clause,” a section of Utah’s constitution aimed at keeping the state out of city matters.

The clause says the Legislature “shall not delegate to any special commission, private corporation or association, any power to make, supervise or interfere with any municipal improvement, money, property or effects, whether held in trust or otherwise, to levy taxes, to select a capitol site, or to perform any municipal functions.”

The state has two weeks to respond to Biskupski’s motion for summary judgement. A hearing is scheduled for Nov. 18, at which the court will also consider the city’s request for a preliminary injunction filed in June.

“Everything needs to come to a screeching halt until the courts can make a decision about our constitutional challenge,” Biskupski said at the time.



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Utah submits ‘fallback’ Medicaid waiver for public comment

Utah released for public comment its “fallback” Medicaid waiver, which would expand coverage to those who make up to 138% of the poverty level, with some requirements. | Adobe Stock

Waiver would expand Medicaid coverage to those making between 100% and 138% of the federal poverty level

SALT LAKE CITY — Utah released for public comment its “fallback” Medicaid waiver, which would expand coverage to those who make up to 138% of the poverty level, with some requirements.

“This waiver is finally a move toward the full Medicaid expansion supported by Utahns for more than five years, and passed by voters in 2018. The delay has cost the state millions of dollars, and has cost too many Utahns their lives,” said Stacy Stanford, policy analyst for advocate group Utah Health Policy Project, in a news release Monday.

Last week, Stanford’s group said not fully expanding the program is costing the state $6.6 million extra a month while the state pays 30% instead of 10%, as it would under full Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act. The state disputed that number, saying it instead is costing $2.5 million extra.

“While we celebrate this progress, we also fight against harmful red tape and cost-sharing barriers. Full expansion, with no strings attached, is still the best option for Utah,” Stanford said.

Utah had been trying to “expedite” the process of preparing the fallback waiver, which is required by state law to be submitted to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services by March 15, 2020, according to the health department.

The Utah Department of Health began accepting comments on the fallback waiver on Friday and will continue through Oct. 27.

Utah has been in a holding pattern since it received an informal rejection from the federal government on waivers under its limited plan that covers adults up to 100% of the federal poverty level with a self-sufficiency requirement and per-capita cap.

Utah sought a federal 90% funding match from the federal government, but the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said it would deny waivers from states that were allowing fewer people to be enrolled than required by the Affordable Care Act.

Kolbi Young, spokeswoman for the state Medicaid program, said the program has not received a formal denial from the federal government yet.

“The intention was that if there was no action or no decision, that we would still be moving forward and trying to implement Medicaid expansion here, without having to have that approval,” Young said.

The fallback plan would cover those making up to 133% of the poverty level but would include a self-sufficiency requirement, and require enrollment in an employer’s plan with premium reimbursement when offered.

According to expansion bill SB96 — passed as an alternative to full expansion called for by voters under Proposition 3 — the state has to work through a couple of options before Medicaid would be fully expanded. If those proposals are not approved by U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services by July 1, 2020, the health department must then institute full expansion in Utah, increasing eligibility to those making between 100% and 138% of the federal poverty level under the Affordable Care Act.

People can comment on the fallback waiver during two public meetings. The first will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 7, in Room 1020C at the Multi-Agency State Office Building, 195 N. 1950 West in Salt Lake City. The second will take place from 2 to 4 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 10, in Room 125 at the Cannon Health Building, 288 N. 1460 West in Salt Lake City.



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Utah governor rescinds 2018 drought emergency declaration

Gov. Gary Herbert talks about the Utah Department of Transportation’s I-15 Technology Corridor construction project at the Rain office in Lehi on Wednesday, April 25, 2018. FILE - Gov. Gary Herbert talks about the Utah Department of Transportation’s I-15 Technology Corridor construction project at the Rain office in Lehi on Wednesday, April 25, 2018. A strong water year prompted Herbert to rescind a 2018 executive order declaring a statewide emergency due to drought. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

A strong water year prompted Gov. Gary Herbert to rescind a 2018 executive order declaring a statewide emergency due to drought.

SALT LAKE CITY — A strong water year prompted Gov. Gary Herbert to rescind a 2018 executive order declaring a statewide emergency due to drought.

Precipitation has been well above normal statewide this year, with regional averages between 110% to 200% of normal, according to the Colorado Basin River Forecast Center, the agency that reports precipitation for Utah. Heavy snowfall and rainfall significantly reduced drought conditions in the state.

“What a difference a year makes,” Herbert said in a statement Monday.

No area of the state is currently experiencing severe drought conditions, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, comprised of a group at the University of Nebraska and federal agencies.

About 15% of Utah — mostly in San Juan, Kane and Washington counties — is experiencing moderate drought. When the governor declared the drought emergency, 99% of the state was in a moderate drought, with over 88% of Utah experiencing at least severe drought conditions.

Utah experienced unprecedented drought conditions last year, which harmed the livelihood of many families and strained agriculture, industry, wildlife and recreation, the governor said. Reservoir levels across the state were depleted in the face of a historically dry summer and below average snowpack.

Citing the conditions in all of Utah’s 29 counties and low reservoir levels, Herbert declared a state of emergency last October based on recommendations of the Utah Drought Review and Reporting Committee. Herbert’s drought declaration follows disaster declarations already made in Box Elder, Carbon, Emery, Grand, San Juan and Wayne counties.

The declaration allowed communities, farmers and others to access state or federal resources.

Even in a normal year, water in Utah is a scarce natural resource, Herbert said. Utahns, he said, should appreciate and continue to conserve water as communities, industries, neighborhoods and families.



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‘One of the best quarterbacks in the country’: Praise growing for Utah QB Tyler Huntley

Utah Utes quarterback Tyler Huntley (1) runs the ball into the end zone but the play is called back on a field shift penalty during the game against the Washington State Cougars at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Sept. 28, 2019. Utah quarterback Tyler Huntley (1) runs the ball into the end zone but the play is called back on a penalty during the game against Washington State at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Sept. 28, 2019. | Spenser Heaps, Deseret News

Huntley, Bernard win Pac-12 Player of the Week awards

SALT LAKE CITY — Utah quarterback Tyler Huntley is earning all sorts of recognition for his strong start to the season. The senior’s biggest accolade, thus far, may have followed Saturday’s 38-13 win over Washington State.

The praise, which has since been followed by Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Week recognition, came from Utah coach Kyle Whittingham.

“Tyler was outstanding again. He’s playing by far his best football since he’s been a Ute and he’s one of the best quarterbacks in the country in my opinion.”

The numbers back up the claim. While leading the 17th-ranked Utes to a 4-1 start, Huntley has yet to throw an interception. His completion percentage of .746 ranks seventh in the nation. He’s ranked eighth in ESPN’s national total QBR.

Overall, Utah’s offense is fifth in completion percentage (.752), ninth in fewest sacks allowed (0.8 per game), 11th in turnover margin (plus-7), 14th in team pass efficiency (176.49), and 22nd in fewest tackles for loss allowed (4.2).

The lone turnovers are two fumbles. Utah and Ohio State are the only FBS teams to have played five games without an interception.

Taking care of the ball is something Huntley takes great pride in. He listed it at the top following the win over Washington State.

“We executed every play,” said Huntley, who has thrown 118 straight passes without a pick.

Last week, Huntley was 21 of 30 for 334 yards and two touchdowns. He also rushed for a pair of scores.

“Tyler is the team leader. He’s doing things at practice you want to see your quarterback do,” Whittingham said. “He’s taking charge and making sure guys are lined up right and doing the right things. He’s acting like a field general which is what you want to see from your quarterback.”

In facing the nation’s top passing attack in Washington State, Whittingham repeatedly said the best defense would be a good offense. Huntley and the cast delivered. The Utes racked up 526 yards, 29 first downs and dominated time of possession by almost nine minutes.

Huntley and offensive coordinator Andy Ludwig are obviously working well together. The Utes are sixth in the nation in time of possession average (35:04). Huntley notes that Ludwig has “great attention to detail” and that’s part of what makes him great.

“When we brought Andy back, this is exactly what we envisioned,” Whittingham said. “We’ve got an offense that begins with the run game which opens up the pass game.

“Moving Tyler around and changing his launch point. Running the quarterback occasionally, but not a ton. This is exactly what we hoped would happen and now we’ve got to keep it going,” he added.

Production is also at a premium on defense. Utah ranks third nationally in rushing defense (53.8 ypg), fourth in interceptions (7) and 18th in total defense (282.5 ypg). The Utes have allowed just 20 second-half points this season. They shut out Washington State’s high-powered offense over the final two quarters on Saturday.

Utah linebacker Francis Bernard, who made a game-high 12 tackles and intercepted a pass in the game, was named Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Week for his efforts. It’s his second such honor of the season.

The Utes have a bye this week and return to action Oct. 12 at Oregon State. Kickoff is set for 6 p.m. (MT) and will be broadcast on the Pac-12 networks.



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Police seize 27 guns from Utahn charged with ‘savagely’ beating woman

Santiago Maese Santiago Maese | Salt Lake County Jail

South Jordan man was prohibited from possessing firearms, police say

SOUTH JORDAN — A man who was not allowed to possess firearms while his domestic violence case was pending has been rearrested after police reported finding 27 guns in his house.

Santiago Maese, 42, of South Jordan, was arrested Saturday for investigation of 27 counts of violation of a protective order and 27 counts of possession of a dangerous weapon by a restricted person.

On July 30, Maese was charged in 3rd District Court with assault and domestic violence in the presence of a child, both class B misdemeanors.

On Aug. 29, a pretrial protective order was issued in the case which stated, in part, that Maese “is prohibited from purchasing, using or possessing a firearm.”

On Sept. 24, police were called to Maese’s residence where he assaulted another woman, according to a police report.

“(Maese) held the victim down in his front entryway of his residence and repeatedly choked and punched her. Maese choked the victim until she could not breathe,” the report states.

According to an affidavit filed by prosecutors in the domestic violence case, Maese “savagely beat” his victim.

The woman lost partial consciousness and was transported to a local hospital for treatment, according to the police report.

While officers were at the house, they noticed firearms in plain view. Investigators returned a few days later with a search warrant for the house. A total of 27 firearms were seized, including “a shotgun, two AR-15s and multiple handguns,” the affidavit states.

Prosecutors are seeking to have Maese’s pretrial release revoked.

Help for people in abusive relationships can be found by contacting the YWCA’s Women in Jeopardy program at 801-537-8600, or the confidential statewide Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-897-LINK (5465). Resources are also available online at udvc.org.

October is Domestic Violence Awareness month.



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Sex assault case dismissed after accuser flees Utah to avoid deportation

Stephen Strate appears in Utah’s 4th District Court in Provo on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011. The Orem man, who was acquitted of murder, no longer faces assault charges in a separate case after prosecutors say the victim left the state to avoid deportation. Spenser Heaps, Deseret News

OREM — An Orem man who was acquitted of murder no longer faces assault charges in a separate case after prosecutors say the victim left the state to avoid deportation.

Stephen Edward Strate, 64, was accused of holding a gun to a hair salon employee in Provo, demanding sex acts and threatening her.

If she returns to Utah, prosecutors say they could refile the charges of aggravated sexual assault, a first-degree felony, and aggravated assault, a third-degree felony — a potential move made possible by a judge’s Thursday order dismissing the case without prejudice.

“Without her testimony, we cannot sustain the allegations against Mr. Strate,” said deputy Utah County attorney Craig Johnson. “Hopefully we can get her justice in the long term.”

The 33-year-old stylist managed to wrest control of Strate’s handgun at a hair salon in Provo on Jan. 18 after he kissed and groped her, unbuttoned his pants and tried to force her to touch him, charging documents state. When she refused, police say he pulled out the gun, held it to her “neck/head and told her he was going to shoot her in the head if she would not play his ‘game.’”

She ordered him to leave the salon and locked the door, and he later returned and gave her $200 so she wouldn’t talk to police, the charges allege. While he had previously offered her money in exchange for sex, no consensual sexual behavior had occurred, Johnson said.

Strate’s attorney, Ron Yengich, did not return a message seeking comment Monday. In 2011, a jury found that his client acted in self-defense when he fatally shot his brother-in-law, 51-year-old Marvin Sidwell, five times.

The hairstylist, who had received a deportation order after failing to appear for an immigration hearing, is not alone in cutting off communication with investigators in order to avoid detection by immigration authorities.

“It happens often enough that it’s a real concern to the state,” Johnson said, declining to say where she is living now. The Utah County Attorney’s Office worked with federal immigration officers in order to help her obtain a U visa, reserved for victims of crimes, but at some point the effort failed.

Last year, as President Donald Trump’s administration took a harder line on immigration, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement appeared to ramp up detention and deportation of those who applied for the visa, the Associated Press reported, though ICE officers denied any changes to U visa protocol at the time. Congress created the visas in 2000, as part of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act.

In Utah, Strate faces no current restrictions barring him from possessing a gun, Johnson said, but law enforcers hope his family members will dissuade him from doing so.

“Clearly with the number of incidents involving Mr. Strate and firearms, the state is concerned about the safety of the public as long as he has access to firearms,” Johnson said.



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Woman killed in I-215 crash

A 40-year-old woman died after her car crashed into a median near 4900 South on I-215 on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. A 40-year-old woman died after her car crashed into a median near 4900 South on I-215 on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019. | Utah Highway Patrol

TAYLORSVILLE — A 40-year-old woman was killed in a crash on I-215 Monday.

Just after noon, a Honda Accord headed north drove off the right shoulder of the freeway near 4900 South and grazed the barrier, said Utah Highway Patrol Sgt. Nick Street. The vehicle then went across all four lanes of traffic and struck the median barrier.

The woman, who was not wearing a seat belt, died as a result of the crash, Street said. What caused the woman to go onto the shoulder was still being investigated.

The woman's name was not immediately released.



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NFL locals: How Matt Gay earned redemption — and hit a career-long 58-yard field goal — in Buccaneers’ wild win (+week 4 highlights)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers kicker Matt Gay kicks a field goal against the Los Angeles Rams during the second of an NFL football game Sunday, Sept. 29, 2019, in Los Angeles. | Mark J. Terrill, Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY — Matt Gay turned his fortunes around in a week.

After missing a potential game-winning field goal and two extra points in a one-point loss in week 3, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers rookie kicker made two key field goals and hit all seven point-after attempts in the Buccaneers’ wild 55-40 win over the previously unbeaten Los Angeles Rams on Sunday.

Gay, the Utah and Orem High product, appreciated the trust Tampa Bay coach Bruce Arians showed in him.

“Especially after last week, being able to stick with me and have confidence in me, and then throwing me out there for a long one, that’s shows that he trusts me and he believes in me,” Gay told the Tampa Bay Times.

Gay’s first field goal, a career-long 58-yarder, put the Buccaneers ahead 31-20 in the third quarter after Tampa Bay had watched its once 21-point lead dwindle to eight midway through the third.

His next field goal was much shorter — a 21-yarder — but it was equally important. Gay’s second field goal put the Buccaneers ahead by eight with 2:35 to play, forcing Los Angeles to score a touchdown and a two-point conversion to try and tie the game.

A Ndamukong Suh 37-yard fumble return for a touchdown capped the Tampa Bay victory just over a minute of game time later, and Gay added his seventh extra-point make of the day to account for the final score.

“It’s huge and so is the confidence we have in the guy,” Arians told the Times about Gay. “He knows we have confidence. He’s not going anywhere. This kid’s talented. One kick doesn’t define you.”

Here’s a look at how each of the Utah ties on active NFL rosters performed during the fourth week of the 2019 NFL season:

EAGLES 34, PACKERS 27

Philadelphia

  • No locals on active roster

Green Bay

  • Kyler Fackrell, LB, Utah State: Played 13 defensive snaps and three on special teams.
  • Jamaal Williams, RB, BYU: Started at running back but left the game after being injured on the Packers’ first offensive snaps after taking a helmet-to-helmet hit. Williams was taken off the field on a stretcher and was evaluated for head and neck injuries.

TITANS 24, FALCONS 10

Tennessee

  • LeShaun Sims, CB, Southern Utah: Had a solo special teams tackle while playing 12 special teams snaps.

Atlanta

  • No locals on roster

BROWNS 40, RAVENS 25

Cleveland

  • Sione Takitaki, LB, BYU: Had an assisted special teams tackle while playing 17 special teams snaps.

Baltimore

  • No locals on active roster

PATRIOTS 16, BILLS 10

New England

  • Kyle Van Noy, LB, BYU: Started at linebacker and had two sacks for a loss 17 yards, both on third-and-1 inside Patriots territory to force a field goal, two forced fumbles and three quarterback hurries, two of which led to interceptions, including one on the Bills’ final offensive play with just over a minute and a half to play to seal the win. Van Noy also had a team-high eight tackles, including six solo stops and a tackle for loss, while playing all 83 defensive snaps for the Patriots.

Buffalo

  • Maurice Alexander, LB, Utah State: Played 22 special teams snaps.
  • Taron Johnson, CB, Weber State: Not active for game with a hamstring injury.
  • Star Lotulelei, DT, Utah, Snow College and Bingham High: Started at defensive tackle and had two solo tackles while playing 27 defensive snaps and three on special teams.

CHIEFS 34, LIONS 30

Kansas City

  • Daniel Sorensen, S, BYU: Had four tackles, including two solo stops and two special teams tackles, and a pass deflection on a third-down play while playing 22 defensive snaps and 26 on special teams.
  • Darwin Thompson, RB, Utah State: Played three offensive snaps and 14 on special teams.

Detroit

  • Miles Killebrew, S, Southern Utah: Played 19 special teams snaps.

PANTHERS 16, TEXANS 10

Carolina

  • Tyler Larsen, C, Utah State and Jordan High: Played four special teams snaps.

Houston

  • No locals on roster

RAIDERS 31, COLTS 24

Oakland

  • Jordan Devey, OL, Snow College and American Fork High: Started at right guard and played 52 offensive snaps and four on special teams.
  • Andre James, OT, Herriman High: Played two special teams snaps.
  • Dallin Leavitt, S, Utah State and BYU: Had an assisted special teams tackle while playing 15 special teams snaps.

Indianapolis

  • No locals on active roster

CHARGERS 30, DOLPHINS 10

Los Angeles

  • Michael Davis, CB, BYU: Started at cornerback and had his first career interception, picking off near the sideline in the fourth quarter to set up a Los Angeles field goal, three solo tackles and a pass deflection while playing all 52 defensive snaps for the Chargers and four on special teams.
  • Sam Tevi, OT, Utah: Started at right tackle and played 61 offensive snaps and two on special teams.

Miami

  • Eric Rowe, CB, Utah: Started at cornerback and had six tackles, including three solo stops, and a pass deflection while playing all 67 defensive snaps for the Dolphins and seven on special teams.

GIANTS 24, REDSKINS 3

New York

  • No locals on roster

Washington

  • Tony Bergstrom, C, Utah and Skyline High: Started at center and played all 51 offensive snaps for the Redskins.
  • Donald Penn, OT, Utah State: Started at left tackle and played all 51 offensive snaps for the Redskins.

SEAHAWKS 27, CARDINALS 10

Seattle

  • Ezekiel Ansah, DE, BYU: Had five solo tackles, two quarterback hurries, a tackle for loss and a 12-yard sack on the game’s final play while playing 39 defensive snaps.
  • Cody Barton, LB, Utah and Brighton High: Played 17 special teams snaps.
  • Marquise Blair, S, Utah: Not active for game.
  • John Ursua, WR, Cedar and Westlake High: Not active for game.
  • Bobby Wagner, MLB, Utah State: Started at middle linebacker and had 11 tackles, including six solo stops and two third-down tackles short of a first down, while playing all 63 defensive snaps for the Seahawks and four on special teams.

Arizona

  • No locals on active roster

BUCCANEERS 55, RAMS 40

Tampa Bay

  • Matt Gay, K, Utah and Orem High: Made field goals of 58 and 21 yards in the second half and hit all seven of his extra-point attempts while playing 10 special teams snaps.

Los Angeles

  • JoJo Natson, WR/Ret., Utah State: Had one kickoff return for 22 yards while playing 12 special teams snaps.
  • Eric Weddle, FS, Utah: Started at free safety and had a game-high 15 tackles, including 10 solo stops, and two pass deflections, both on third-down plays, while playing all 74 defensive snaps for the Rams.

BEARS 16, VIKINGS 6

Chicago

  • Patrick Scales, LS, Utah State and Weber High: Played nine special teams snaps.

Minnesota

  • No locals on roster

JAGUARS 26, BRONCOS 24

Jacksonville

  • No locals on active roster

Denver

  • Garett Bolles, OT, Utah, Snow College and Westlake High: Started at left tackle and made a tackle after a Denver turnover while playing all 55 offensive snaps for the Broncos and four on special teams.
  • Devontae Booker, RB, Utah: Had three kickoff returns for 69 yards — a 23.0 yards-per-return average — while playing 16 special teams snaps.

SAINTS 12, COWBOYS 10

New Orleans

  • Taysom Hill, QB, BYU: Had two carries for 16 yards while playing six offensive snaps and four on special teams.
  • Marcus Williams, FS, Utah: Started at free safety and had an interception on the final play of the game on a Hail Mary pass and added two solo tackles and a pass deflection while playing all 58 defensive snaps for the Saints.

Dallas

  • Dalton Schultz, TE, Bingham High: Played two offensive snaps and four on special teams.
  • Xavier Su’a-Filo, OG, Timpview High: Played two special teams snaps.


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Is it time to end daylight saving time?

Long before she ever thought about running for the Utah Legislature, state Rep. Marsha Judkins was frustrated with the biannual time changes to extend daylight an extra hour into the evening during the longest days of the year. Long before she ever thought about running for the Utah Legislature, state Rep. Marsha Judkins was frustrated with the biannual time changes to extend daylight an extra hour into the evening during the longest days of the year. | Shutterstock

Utah part of national effort to stick to daylight saving time year round

SALT LAKE CITY — Long before she ever thought about running for the Utah Legislature, state Rep. Marsha Judkins was frustrated with the biannual time changes to extend daylight an extra hour into the evening during the longest days of the year.

“I have seven kids and some of them have just real sleep difficulties. I always thought, ‘Why don’t we stop this insanity of changing our clocks? If I was a legislator, that’s what I would do,’” the first-term Republican lawmaker from Provo said.

She got her chance at the end of the 2019 Legislature, getting a resolution passed on the final day of the session that backs a bill in Congress introduced in July 2018 by U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, calling for states to have the power to decide whether to continue the “spring forward” and “fall back” routine.

“This resolution was a happy place for a lot of people,” Judkins said of succeeding where other Utah lawmakers have failed in their attempts to win support for time-change related legislation. “So that pretty much flew through. ... At that point, it was watered-down enough.”

Now, the Utah Senate sponsor of Judkins’ resolution, Sen. Wayne Harper, R-Taylorsville, is putting together a bill for the 2020 Legislature that would make daylight saving time the law year-round in Utah — once at least four other states in the region do the same and the federal government gives the go-ahead.

Sen. Wayne Harper, R-Taylorsville works in the Senate at the Capitol in Salt Lake City, Thursday, March 13, 2014. Ravell Call, Deseret News
FILE - Sen. Wayne Harper, R-Taylorsville works in the Senate at the Capitol in Salt Lake City, Thursday, March 13, 2014.

Although states can “ditch the switch” to stay on standard time throughout the year, as Arizona and Hawaii have done, they can’t move to a permanent daylight saving time schedule without action by Congress. That system, originally set up to save fuel during World War I and World War II, has been modified over the years by Washington politicians.

There are currently about four months of daylight saving time, which ends this year on Nov. 3 at 2 a.m.

“There’s been pros and cons and discussions on this for decades,” Harper said, with little action. But that’s changing, with states like Washington, Oregon, California, Florida, Maine and Tennessee already on board and others considering a similar strategy of making it clear to Congress they want the choice.

Bishop, whose bill is still awaiting a hearing despite support that includes both progressive Democrats and Freedom Caucus Republicans, said state lawmakers “shouldn’t have to beg for Congress to allow the state of Utah something that they want to do that’s beneficial to their citizens. There is that element to it.”

He said that’s why his bill would leave it up to the states to decide whether to keep the current system or adopt either standard or daylight saving time, the way the longtime congressman said he believes the federal government should handle most issues.

“States should be able to make decisions for themselves without the perimeters basically being restricted by the federal government, especially when it doesn’t make sense,” Bishop said. He doesn’t bother changing his own clocks, he said, preferring instead “the mental exercise to either add or subtract an hour to what’s on the clock.”

U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., is also running time change legislation. Rubio’s Sunshine Protection Act would establish daylight saving time nationwide. Florida lawmakers already decided in 2018 to shift the state to that schedule as soon as Congress permits.

But even with two bills pending, the issue isn’t getting much attention in Washington.

“Obviously, this isn’t going to make the MSNBC broadcast tonight,” Rubio spokesman Nick Iacovella told the Deseret News. But he said the office is “pretty hopeful that we will have a hearing in (the Senate) Commerce (Committee) at some point this year.”

Iacovella said the action taken by Florida has helped spur interest in ending the time change around the country.

“The trend is certainly going in that direction. So that’s helpful,” he said of state efforts, including in Utah. “If people in Utah realize this is something that’s worth doing and the lawmakers there feel that way and they take action on it, that would add to the growing number of states that are.”

The more states that take a stand on time change, the more pressure there will be on Congress, Iacovella said.

“It’s clearly an outdated practice, right? When you talk to people, no one likes it. But some people don’t know we don’t have to do it,” he said. “There’s clear benefits to making daylight saving time permanent. So once people realize that, too, they’re much more open to doing it. ... The biggest hurdle is really just that education front.”

Denver-based technology entrepreneur Scott Yates has been trying to build support for ending time changes for more than five years via a website that has attracted the attention of media outlets here and abroad, including National Geographic, The New York Times, NBC News and the BBC.

“#LockThe Clock — Stop Changing Clocks for Daylight Saving Time,” declares the homepage of his website, billed as “The official site of the movement to quit changing clocks in and out of DST” alongside art of a hammer coming down on an alarm clock.

“It’s just a hobby,” Yates said of his attempt to spread the word about the need to do away with changing clocks. He warns through medical studies he links to via his website that the practice causes everything from car crashes and harsher court sentences to more heart attacks, strokes and miscarriages, as well as hurting relationships and workplace productivity.

He said he’s agnostic on whether standard or daylight saving time should be adopted instead, and said he favors following what the European Union is doing, allowing member countries to choose for themselves once mandated daylight saving time ends after 2021.

“Most people and most businesses in most states prefer more sunlight later in the day, so in general it would be sticking with what we think of now as daylight saving time,” Yates said. But even if there’s a mix within the same time zone, he said it would still be less confusing than the twice-a-year shift.

Yates is optimistic that change is coming.

“Lots is happening. Since I started, it’s amazing how much activity there is,” he said. “It’s now a legitimate issue.”

In past years, resolutions on time change would surface in a few states but fail to pass, Yates said, but currently, some 30 bills are being considered in states around the country. In Canada, some 93% of British Columbia residents said they want year-round daylight saving time.

Harper said he believes that’s what most Utahns also want, preferring an additional hour of daylight in the evening to give them more time to spend outdoors with their families. And he said they really don’t like the effects of springing forward in April and falling back in November, especially on their health.

“I think we’re listening and responding to what we’re hearing. But it’s not just a single state that’s doing it,” Harper said. “We’re doing it together.”

Not everyone in the Utah Legislature is ready to back moving to daylight saving time for good.

“I’m not in favor of it. I think it’s hard on the recreation industry. It’s hard on the tourist industry. It’s not business friendly,” said state Sen. Don Ipson, R-St. George, president and CEO of DATS Trucking, a company that operates throughout the Intermountain West.

Changing the time forward or backward “takes you about 30 seconds. I don’t see that affects my business at all,” Ipson said. What is a problem is dealing with Arizona, which stays on standard time year round, meaning it’s out of sync with other states about a third of the year.

That’s “a nightmare” for scheduling shipments between states, Ipson said.

Still, he said he’s willing to consider a proposal that would put all states on the same clock, so the only changes would be between time zones.

“I just wish we would leave it alone,” Ipson, Senate vice chairman of the Legislature’s powerful Executive Appropriations Committee. “But if there’s a better way to do it, I’m broad-minded enough to accept that. But everybody’s got to get on board or I’m not in favor of it.”

Utah state Rep. Ray Ward, R-Bountiful, who recently made a presentation to a national legislative group about joining forces to put an end to the twice-a-year time change, said he started paying attention to the issue when a constituent survey showed residents of his district overwhelmingly agree it’s time to stop.

“At first I thought it was just silly,” Ward said. But unlike other topics lawmakers take on, whether clocks should continue to be changed twice a year “is the simplest issue you can get. Every single person understands what it means on a personal level.”



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‘Addicting a new generation’: What everyone should know about the vaping epidemic

A man exhales while smoking an e-cigarette in Portland, Maine, on Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2019. | Robert F. Bukaty, Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY — States aren’t waiting on the federal government to regulate electronic cigarettes, and at least four have issued all-out bans on the products, while several others are considering similar legislation.

Utah leaders have shied away from pulling e-cigarettes — also called mods, pens, pods and cigalikes — off the shelves, but at least one lawmaker wants the state to head in that direction.

“You’ll see a flavor ban in Utah, for sure,” Rep. Paul Ray, R-Clearfield, said this week. Ray has touted the dangers of tobacco products for years, passing various legislation that is inching Utah closer to prohibition.

His proposed ban would include all flavors, even menthol and mint, which he said are popular among youth, calling it “a good first step.”

Why is Ray so adamantly against the upward-trending nicotine-delivery alternative to smoking?

“People are dying,” he said.

And while experts don’t know exactly what it is about e-cigarettes that is killing people, vaping is wildly popular among teens, with more than a 900% increase in youth use since the devices became available over a decade ago in 2007.

“It’s the latest craze,” Suchitra Krishnan-Sarin, a bio-behavioral scientist and Yale professor of psychiatry, said in June. “It’s also a serious health concern.”

In 2018, more than 3.6 million United States youth — including 1 in 5 high school students and 1 in 20 middle school students — use e-cigarettes, according to an advisory from the U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams.

“We must take action now to protect the health of our nation’s young people,” he said.

Krishnan-Sarin said not a lot is known about the long-term effects of vaping or using e-cigarettes; what’s worse is that science can’t keep up with the product’s rapid explosion in popularity.

Use around the world has only continued to increase, with more than 15,000 flavors now marketed and new, compact devices coming out all the time. Krishnan-Sarin said it’s no wonder teens are intrigued.

“It’s perfect for the smartphone generation,” she said, adding that innovative and customizable features fit right into the desires of rising generations.

 Robert F. Bukaty, Associated Press
Andrew Teasley, a salesman at Good Guys Vape Shop, exhales vapor while using an e-cigarette in Biddeford, Maine, on Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2019.

That’s not water vapor

At least 13 vaping-related deaths have been reported in the United States, which is prompting consideration, and drawing extra attention to the fact that youth are at particular risk.

“Many teens think these devices produce water vapor and therefore are safe to use, but they could not be further from the truth,” Krishnan-Sarin said.

Electronic cigarettes do not just vaporize whatever is inside a cartridge. The battery-powered heating mechanism creates a chemical reaction and produces an aerosol of finely suspended particles of liquids and gases — including toxic solvents and alcohol — even metals used in device production, which are known to be harmful to the brain and haven’t been studied as inhalants.

“What is produced is definitely not water vapor,” Krishnan-Sarin said.

So why is vaping so bad for teens?

Research has shown that developing teen brains are more sensitive to even low levels of nicotine and other chemicals, causing teens to more easily become addicted and have a harder time quitting — 90% of smokers started before age 18. The changes that nicotine causes in the brain, Krishnan-Sarin says, can lead to decreased learning ability, memory and mental processing issues, cravings and anxiety that is characteristic to behavioral addiction. She said it can also impact other systems of the human body, including potentially impacting the health of future generations.

While e-cigarettes are believed to have been initially created to help curb nicotine addiction in smokers — and more than 10 million American adults have decreased their cigarette dependence with vaping — the unintended consequence of growing youth use is troublesome.

“While there is no doubt that providing smokers with a cleaner form of nicotine is and should continue to be a critical goal, we still do not know if these devices help people quit smoking,” Krishnan-Sarin said. “While trying to solve one huge public health problem — cigarette smoking — we may have created another colossal one.”

She added, “Now is the time for action ... a serious public education campaign.”

But what can be done?

Ray said with the recent death reports, “the awareness level has skyrocketed.” He’s had an influx of emails and comments from parents “who didn’t realize what their kids were getting into.”

“People are seeing that this is impacting kids — their kids,” he said. “And it’s a big deal.”

Current Utah regulations restrict the sale of vape products to anyone under age 19, though that doesn’t seem to be keeping it out of the hands of Utah youth, Ray said. Organizations, too, have called for tighter rules on product advertising, resulting in at least one major vape manufacturer, Juul, pulling its print, digital and TV ad campaigns, amid other issues within the company.

 Craig Mitchelldyer, Associated Press
A researcher holds vape pens in a lab at Portland State University in Portland, Ore., on April 16, 2019.

Rates skyrocketing

Ray believes Big Tobacco is only trying to sustain its business, “addicting a new generation” that isn’t so enamoured with smoking.

While smoking rates are down across the country, youth tobacco product use rates increased 38.3% in 2018, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A whopping 1.5 million more youth were using e-cigarettes in 2018 than in 2017.

“This increase — driven by a surge in e-cigarette use — erased past progress in reducing youth tobacco product use,” a CDC Vital Signs report states.

In Utah, which has lower teen smoking rates than many states, fewer than 3% of Utah youth surveyed in grades eight, 10 and 12 reported using actual cigarettes, a local health department study reveals. But use of e-cigarettes has doubled in the past five years, with 11.1% of Utah teens last surveyed reporting they have vaped.

Vaping is considered to be a safer, cleaner method of smoking. It’s discreet and convenient and the flavors are creatively named. All of that, and more, is clinching teens and getting them hooked.

“We live in a technology-crazed world where the latest devices get a lot of attention,” Krishnan-Sarin said. “We need to get out of the habit of automatically celebrating new technology and look with a critical eye, a medical lens, at what it is doing to our health.”

Nicotine, even with the small amounts contained in some e-cigarette cartridges, is extremely addicting — “the most addictive substance on the face of the Earth,” Ray said.

As evidenced in recent reports, it is deadly — perhaps more so in vaporized form, as it can take decades for damages from habitual cigarette smoking to appear yet e-cigarettes seem to already be making a mark.

Smoking, according to a number of health organizations and agencies across the globe, is the leading cause of lung cancer.

And now, vaping is believed to be tied to permanent lung damage and disease.

The vaping-related deaths — in California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri and Oregon — are but a small portion of the more than 530 confirmed and probable cases of lung disease believed to have been caused by e-cigarette use, the CDC states.

‘Urgent epidemic’

No one product or device is to blame, but the American Medical Association has cautioned people to lay off vaping while it is investigated further.

It recommends anyone who has recently used e-cigarette products to seek medical care. Coughing, shortness of breath and/or chest pain can be symptoms of serious health concerns. The American Medical Association “calls on physicians to make sure their patients are aware of the dangers of e-cigarettes, including toxins and carcinogens, and swiftly report any suspected cases of lung illness associated with e-cigarette use to their state or local health department.”

“The e-cigarette-related lung illnesses currently sweeping across the country reaffirms our belief that the use of e-cigarettes and vaping is an urgent public health epidemic that must be addressed,” Dr. Patrice A. Harris, president of the American Medical Association, said earlier this week. “We must not stand by while e-cigarettes continue to go unregulated.”

Adding to the public furor over vaping, U.S. President Donald Trump this month issued his own crackdown on vaping, pushing for a ban on all flavored e-cigarettes.

“We can’t allow people to get sick and we can’t have our youth be so affected,” Trump said.

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said flavors will no longer be available.

“The Trump administration is making it clear that we intend to clear the market of flavored e-cigarettes to reverse the deeply concerning epidemic of youth e-cigarette use that is impacting children, families, schools and communities,” he said. “We will not stand idly by as these products become an on-ramp to combustible cigarettes or nicotine addiction for a generation of youth.”

It will take time for federal regulators to work out the ban, though, and the rampant popularity and isolated disease that appears to be related to vaping is enough for some states to act independently.

Leaders in Michigan, New York and Rhode Island have taken matters into their own hands, instituting bans on sales on specific vape products. The most stringent ban, so far, however, is in Massachusetts, where the sale of all vaping products, including those containing THC, is prohibited for the next four months.

Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker called it a public health emergency.

“The use of e-cigarettes and marijuana vaping products is exploding, and we are seeing reports of serious lung illnesses, particularly in our young people,” he said this week.

A handful of other states are considering similar action, including Illinois, New Jersey and Delaware. And the governor of California signed an executive order to set an intense education and awareness campaign into motion.

 Robert F. Bukaty, Associated Press
E-cigarette pods are displayed for sale at Good Guys Vape Shop in Biddeford, Maine, on Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2019.

‘It’s everywhere’

“The FDA is constantly recalling items — most recently they recalled a blood pressure medication that might cause cancer — but, here we have a substance that is killing people,” Ray said. “It’s at epidemic levels. It’s time we get rid of it.”

Teen vaping Associated Press
Teen vaping

It is estimated that 21% of Utah teens are using e-cigarettes regularly, but Ray said school administrators report much higher numbers to him. Wasatch High School recently installed vape sensors to better enforce its campus vaping ban. Other schools have had to remove bathroom stall doors to keep it from happening there.

“It’s everywhere,” Ray said, adding that he also intends to bring back a bill that would increase taxes on all vaping products in Utah. He believes it has enough support to pass.

In addition to Ray’s efforts, a legislative working group focused on e-cigarettes has come up with at least four bills intended to curb youth use in Utah. Still, there may even be more focus on the issue during the legislative session that starts in January.

As of Sept. 23, the Utah Department of Health has reported 47 cases of severe lung disease associated with vaping THC, nicotine or both in Utah, with an additional 22 potential cases being investigated. New, increasing numbers are released every week.

“Our health, the health of our children and our future generations is far too valuable to let it go up in smoke, or even in aerosol,” Krishnan-Sarin said.



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