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Gehrke: Taking money out of Utah’s underfunded schools is not the way to solve the tax problem

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It shouldn’t really come as a surprise anymore. Last week, the Census Bureau released its latest numbers on how much each state spends educating each of its students and — you’ll never guess — but Utah was last.

It’s been that way every year, pretty much since Utah kids have been going to school. Chances are it will be that way every year until this year’s kindergartners have great-grandchildren in the school system.

As a state, we have a lot more kids than most, but it remains a dubious distinction to be last in the nation.

Still, let’s give credit where it’s due: The state has been plowing mountains of money into schools in recent years, injecting $1.1 billion in new money over the past four years, according to the governor’s office. It has barely made a dent in Utah’s standing, but it is a substantial sum.

And part of the reason lawmakers have taken that approach, with some grumbling along the way, is that since 1946 all of the money the state collects from income taxes has been earmarked to schools. For 50 years, that meant just K-12, but voters approved an amendment in 1996 that expanded it to colleges and universities, too. The economy has been strong, so that has meant schools have received lots of new money.

It’s possible that will change.

Later this month, a special task force will hold its first of eight scheduled public meetings around the state with the goal of overhauling Utah’s tax system and one of the proposals being suggested by some legislators is changing Utah’s Constitution to get rid of that education earmark.

Sen. Curt Bramble, R-Provo, has opened a bill file to do just that because, he says, legislators have used it “as a dodge,” instead of answering directly to voters about how they spend taxpayer dollars.

“Every state that is at the top in per pupil spending doesn’t have an earmark. Let’s stop the charade and let education claim its rightful place in the budget,” he said. “The reason I’m doing it is to get [the idea] out there and get the public discussion going. I wouldn’t want to do it in a vacuum.”

Sen. Dan McCay, R-Riverton, is taking a different approach. Last session, he proposed a constitutional amendment that would let lawmakers spend income tax revenue on social services (the second largest part of the state budget) in addition to education. His proposed amendment didn’t get a vote in the House, but he said it should be on the table.

“I think it has to be,” he said. The point of earmarking the education money is to make a statement that schools are a priority. “The thing we ought to be asking ourselves now is: Do our social services programs deserve the same attention?”

Both senators say their proposals won’t take income tax money away from schools.

But one thing is certain: Neither idea will mean MORE money for education. And logically, the only thing legislators gain from amending the Constitution to remove the earmark is it unties their hands to spend income tax money in other areas.

Instead of having a guaranteed stream — or in good times, a river — of revenue, schools will compete with every other program and ultimately at the mercy of a sometimes fickle Legislature.

In an ideal world, that might work. Voters could hold lawmakers accountable if they aren’t satisfied with the way schools are funded.

But we don’t live in an ideal world. We live in Utah where about one in 20 races are competitive in any given election year, so the accountability to voters is almost nonexistent.

That said, the lawmakers are not wrong: Utah has a tax problem.

The sales tax collected in the state isn’t growing fast enough to keep up with demands for social services, public safety, courts, roads and everything else it once paid for. That’s because our economy has shifted from buying things to buying services — car washes, accountants, Lyft rides, cosmetic surgeries, haircuts, real estate agents, lawyers.

Gov. Gary Herbert and the Legislature initially wanted to start taxing those services to pay for other parts of the state government. But naturally that met with huge opposition from the doctors and lawyers and accountants and Realtors who would be taxed — who also happen to be well-connected and have very good lobbyists.

It still remains the best option to fix the problem, but maybe not the only option.

Perhaps, go back to the way the tax system was structured when the income tax was instituted in 1931. Back then, 75% was dedicated to schools, leaving lawmakers 25% to spend on whatever else they needed, including higher education.

Maybe the answer is to follow the lead of other states and put more of the burden of paying for education on the property tax than we do now.

Any of those options will come with a high political price.

But really, the only way it makes sense to rewrite the Constitution to take away the guaranteed education money is if you absolutely trust legislators to do right by our schools.

And, frankly, I do not.


‘You need a state to be willing to take that plunge’ — report says Utah could lead the way on sales tax modernization

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A D.C. think tank is urging Utah lawmakers to blaze a trail for other states by updating sales tax structures that are rooted in Depression-era consumer spending patterns.

A number of states have taken stabs at modernizing their sales tax systems, but the most comprehensive attempts have been stymied by political challenges inherent in such a large undertaking, the Tax Foundation’s Jared Walczak said.

“Often you need a first mover on something like this. You need a state to be willing to take that plunge,” said Walczak, a senior policy analyst with the foundation. “Utah seems uniquely positioned to take that next step.”

The Tax Foundation on Tuesday published a 35-page guide for the Utah policymakers as they look at reforming the state’s tax code, possibly in a special session later this year. A poorly designed tax reform package could cause inequity and act as a drag on the economy, while a strong plan would set the state up for future revenue stability, the foundation argued.

Senate President Stuart Adams called the report a "decent blueprint" for state lawmakers in ongoing tax reform talks.

“I’ve got 15 grandkids,” the Layton Republican said. “This is our chance to put tax policy in place for future generations, and the key to this is we need a tax code that can be adapted to a changing economy.”

The problem, as perceived by state leaders and the Tax Foundation, is that an ever-increasing share of consumer spending is on service transactions that generally escape the sales tax. The result is that the Utah’s sales tax stream — the supply line for most of state government — is growing at a sluggish pace, officials say.

The state says it has enough money overall, but its surpluses are mostly from income tax revenue, which is constitutionally earmarked for public and higher education and can’t be spent elsewhere.

The May state revenue report showed a 5.2% increase in sales tax revenues the first 10 months of the fiscal year. Individual income tax collections during the period were up 7.3% during the same period.

That income tax earmark, unique to Utah, makes the state especially dependent on its sales tax and could provide an added impetus for modernization, Walczak said. Consensus among Utah’s leadership gives the state’s reform effort another added boost, he said.

“You rarely get this convergence where you have a governor and two chambers of the legislature that are all saying that sales tax modernization is a serious consideration,” he said.

Ultimately, Walczak argues, states across the nation will be forced to confront these economic realities.

“Eventually, the dam is going to break,” he said. “Utah has the opportunity to lead on this and it’ll be exciting to see how this plays out over the course of the summer.”

Brett Hastings, a founder of the Utah Legislative Watch, says the Tax Foundation report left him unconvinced about the existence of a revenue problem. State lawmakers have plenty of money, he says, and they can achieve more budgetary flexibility by cutting government spending or finding workarounds to the income tax earmark.

But he believes lawmakers are naturally drawn to new taxing opportunities, whether or not they’re necessary.

“They see all these services out there, and they have tax envy. ... They can’t help themselves,” Hastings said.

Lawmakers this year tried to balance the state’s revenue sources with a bill that would’ve extended the sales tax to a wide range of services, but the legislation, HB441, faltered amid opposition from the business community.

After the bill’s collapse, state leaders formed a task force charged with examining a wider array of options, from expanding the sales tax to removing the constitutional earmark on income tax funding. The task force is holding a series of public meetings and is scheduled to present findings to fellow lawmakers at the summer’s end.

One of HB441′s major flaws was that it would’ve applied sales taxes to a swath of business-to-business transactions — when a company hires an architect, engineer or accountant, for instance, Walczak wrote. These layers of taxation accumulate and ultimately inflate the cost of the product or service that a consumer buys.

Business-to-business transactions would've accounted for about three-quarters of the sales tax base added by HB441, according to the tax policy report.

Policymakers can avoid this problem by exempting businesses from paying sales taxes on services or by refraining from taxing services used chiefly by companies, like advertising or business consulting, Walczak advised.

Sen. Lyle Hillyard, who is co-chairman of the state’s tax task force, said “the devil is in the details” when it comes to tax reform, and public buy-in will be key to any success. The perception that lawmakers are trying to increase taxes could derail the effort, the Logan Republican said.

“This is not a tax increase. This is a tax change,” he said.

Political Cornflakes: Former Senate Leader Harry Reid now says the time has come to open impeachment inquiry

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Happy Wednesday!

Former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada is joining a growing chorus of Democrats who say it is time to open an impeachment inquiry of President Donald Trump. As recently as last month Reid, of Nevada, warned Democrats not to go down the impeachment path. [USAToday]

Topping the news: Senator Mitt Romney gave his first Senate address, calling out China as a greater threat than Russia going forward because of its rising economic and military strength. He called for the United States to foster closer ties with its allies. [Trib] [WaPo] [DNews]

-> Five Utah nursing homes risk losing Medicaid and Medicare eligibility if they don’t improve after being flagged for quality issues by federal administrators. [Trib]

-> Former Downtown Community Council Chairman Christian Harrison withdrew from the Salt Lake City mayoral race and endorsed David Garbett. [Trib] [DNews]

Tweets of the day: From @pinkneyforssl: “Lessons I’ve learned on my first canvass as a candidate:

Lose the clipboard, you look like you’re a salesperson (thank you minivan)

Bring water (rookie move)

You know more than you think (deep breathes, you got this)

#utpol #citycouncil #ssl #pinkneyforssl #canvassdiaries”

-> From @alvarezmark: “Just the facts: More than 3,216,750 Utahns will not be running for governor in 2020. Few will make an announcement. Tweets will be tweets. #utpol #journalism”

-> From @bbart76: "My now 11 yo when I spend hours cooking an amazing meal: “this is gross”

Same 11 yo when I cook him Mac’n Cheese: “This is delicious”

#DadLife"

-> From @youngandjoven: “Can someone write an article on millenials killing the doorbell industry by texting “here"

Happy Birthday: Happy birthday to Ernest Burgess of the Taylorsville City Council!

In other news: The Forest Service revealed a 15-year plan to use logging to clear out the beetle-devastated spruce stands of Utah’s Wasatch Plateau. [Trib]

-> Salt Lake City’s Mayor Jackie Biskupski has proposed raising parking fees. [Fox13]

-> The Salt Lake City Council decided Tuesday to find funding for the Fourth Avenue Pump House project. [Trib]

-> Salt Lake City teachers walked out of a board of education meeting Tuesday in protest over proposed salary raises they say are too small. [Trib] [DNews]

-> Utah police are attempting to navigate rules around medical marijuana. [Trib] [Fox13]

-> Pride flags on lamp posts stirred up controversy in Heber City. [Fox13]

Nationally: Republican senators threatened to block President Trump’s plan to impost tariffs on Mexican imports [NYT] [WSJ]

-> A New Yorker who threatened to kill two senators over their support for Supreme Court Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh was sentenced to 18 months in prison [NYT]

-> The White House instructed Hope Hicks, former aide to President Trump, not to comply with a congressional subpoena to hand over documents from her time working at the White House. Hicks has agreed to give Congress documents from the 2016 campaign. [WaPo] [Reuters]

-> Joe Biden announced support for the Green New Deal and released a 22-page climate plan [WaPo] [NYT]

-> Biden’s campaign acknowledged lifting language from others for its climate and education policy positions. [WaPo]

-> More than two dozen liberal groups authored a letter expressing frustration with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and urging her to bring impeachment proceedings against President Trump [WaPo]

-> The Trump administration banned cruises to Cuba [Reuters]

-> Elizabeth Warren has proposed investing $2 trillion in American green technology [Reuters]

-> New ICE director Mark Morgan says the agency plans to deport more families [WaPo]

-> China has warned its citizens against visiting or studying in the United States [WSJ]

-> United States stocks were at their highest in five months on Tuesday [WSJ]

-> The House passed a bill Tuesday to give Dreamers a path to citizenship. Rep. Ben McAdams was the only Utah member of Congress to vote for it. Trump has threatened to veto the bill, which still has to go through the senate [WaPo] [Fox]


Got a tip? A birthday, wedding or anniversary to announce? Send us a note to cornflake@sltrib.com.

Dan Harrie and Sara Tabin

Global study says Salt Lake City is a rare place where traffic congestion is decreasing as population booms

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A new global study about traffic congestion says the Salt Lake City metro area is one of the few places in North America making significant improvement, and it could serve as a model for others.

“We’ve been pleased to uncover some positive developments in cities like Portland, Oregon, and Salt Lake City, which might serve as examples for other cities,” said Nick Cohn, senior traffic expert for TomTom, a Netherlands-based navigation software company.

It just released its annual TomTom Traffic Index with statistics about congestion in 403 cities across 56 countries, gleaned from travelers who use its navigation systems.

It found that congestion is getting worse or is stable in 75% of the cities it studied worldwide.

Among the 93 large North American cities or metro areas that it evaluated, 17 saw congestion drop last year — and the Salt Lake City area had the second-best decrease, even amid its rapid population growth.

TomTom figures Salt Lake City area drivers spend an extra 17% of their driving time stuck in traffic, down from 19% the previous year.

The 2 percentage point drop was tied with New Haven, Conn., for second-best in North America, behind only the 3 percentage point drop in Portland, Ore.

The study says Salt Lake City, Portland and New Haven improved for similar reasons: sophisticated traffic light optimization, expanded bike lanes and rental possibilities, and better transit options.

“It’s a big accomplishment with all the growth you’ve been having to have a slight decrease” annually in congestion, Cohn said in a telephone interview. “There are a lot of good things happening to at least handle the growth.”

For example, he praises work by the Utah Department of Transportation that developed a first-in-the-nation system to better coordinate signals throughout the area — better allowing groups of vehicles to move together through lights that switch green just at the right moments. It became a hot topic at national conventions and drew visits from officials in other states hoping to copy it.

“Almost all of the signals are connected" in one system, he noted. "There’s been a lot of innovative work optimizing the signals so that wait times are really reduced and the whole system is really working together as much as possible. So I think that’s certainly had an effect in Salt Lake.”

Cohn also praised added bike lanes and trails in the area, and efforts by Salt Lake City with its GREENBike rental program, along with allowing electric scooter rentals.

(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Salt Lake Tribune file photo)  An electric scooter rider braves the rain in downtown Salt Lake City on Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2018. GreenBike was on track to have their best year yet but then Lime and Bird scooters derailed their momentum.
(Francisco Kjolseth | Salt Lake Tribune file photo) An electric scooter rider braves the rain in downtown Salt Lake City on Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2018. GreenBike was on track to have their best year yet but then Lime and Bird scooters derailed their momentum. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

“Cycling facilities have been getting better. It’s hard to prove that that actually immediately reduces traffic congestion," Cohn said. But in cities where congestion is decreasing, “it’s basically where there are options for the public to make trips in different ways.”

He also notes that in recent years, the Utah Transit Authority expanded its TRAX light rail and FrontRunner commuter rail systems. Salt Lake City also is using its taxes to contract with UTA to increase bus system offerings beginning in August — again adding more options to reduce congestion and pollution.

The study liked some UDOT innovations seeking to handle congestion, making note of its recent “flex lanes” on 5400 South between Redwood Road and Bangerter Highway. They accommodate heavy rush-hour traffic by reversing the direction of some lanes during the day.

“The Salt Lake area, but also Utah in general, has been really innovative for a number of things relating to traffic,” Cohn said.

For the record, Los Angeles had the worst traffic congestion in the United States — with drivers adding 41% extra travel time to commutes while stuck in traffic. The other most congested U.S. cities were New York City (36%); San Francisco (34%); San Jose, Calif. (32%); and Seattle (31%).

Worldwide, the worst congestion was in Mumbai, India (65%); Bogota, Colombia (63%); and 58% each in Lima, Peru, New Delhi, India, and Moscow, Russia.

Ralf-Peter Schaefer, TomTom vice president of traffic information, said, “Globally, traffic congestion is rising. And that’s both good and bad news. It’s good because traffic increases often indicate a strong economy, but the flip side is drivers wasting time sitting in traffic, not to mention the huge environmental impact.”

He said his company and its products allow drivers to make smarter choices in planning routes and avoiding congestion.

“We’re working towards a future where vehicles are electric, shared and autonomous so that our future really is free of congestion and emissions,” Schaefer said. “We have the technology to make this future happen, but it takes a collaborative effort.”

No more free bags, a cannabis vendor and other news as Salt Lake City’s Downtown Farmers Market opens Saturday

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If you forget to take a reusable bag to the Downtown Farmers Market, it will cost you.

Organizers of the state’s premier summer market — which kicks off its 28th season this Saturday — have decided to stop giving away bags to forgetful shoppers.

“We’re trying to change behaviors,” said market manager Alison Einerson. And the best way to to that, she added with a tinge of sarcasm, "is to invite people to pay.”

Farmers will sell reusable bags for $1 — they’ll make a 50 cent profit on each one, said Einerson. Other vendors will have bags, too. But they likely will cost more.

The market continues every Saturday through October from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Pioneer Park, 300 South and 300 West. This year it will feature some 200 food producers and vendors — many who have been selling for two decades — and nearly 100 artists and crafters.

Here are six other things to expect at the 2019 event:

Weather makes it green • While most people have tired of Utah’s rainy weather, they might appreciate it more once they see the abundance of greens, which thrive in cool, wet temperatures. Lettuces, kale, herbs and other leafy vegetables “will be in full force” Saturday, Einerson said. There should also be plenty of spring fruit from berries and apricots to plums. On the flip side — tomatoes and peppers may arrive later than usual.

Legal cannabis debuts • Pure Mystics of Salt Lake City will be the first vendor to sell legal cannabis — aka CBD — products. Their items include natural and flavored tinctures, gels and topicals made from a special strain of organically grown hemp. Look for them on the east side of the park near 300 West.

Shipping container grower • Reed Snyderman grows leafy greens in shipping containers. The founder of Ascent Farms uses a vertical, hydroponic system — think water, no soil — to grow kale, arugula, wasabi and more. These “living lettuces” still have their roots attached and stay fresher longer, said Snyderman, one of five new farmers at the Downtown Market. In all, 50 growers will be selling fresh, Utah-grown vegetables and fruits.

(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Reed Snyderman's hydroponic farm grows over 100 pounds of leafy greens, including butterhead lettuce, Toscano kale, basil, arugula, chard and more in vertical slats in a shipping container the equivalent of 1.5 acres, year round. "The goal is better for you, better for the environment," said Ascent Farms owner Reed Snyderman, while tending to his organic hydroponic grown lettuces and leafy greens that he grows in a recycled shipping container June 4, 2019. Snyderman will be selling his greens at this year's Downtown Farmers Market beginning this Saturday.
(Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune) Reed Snyderman's hydroponic farm grows over 100 pounds of leafy greens, including butterhead lettuce, Toscano kale, basil, arugula, chard and more in vertical slats in a shipping container the equivalent of 1.5 acres, year round. "The goal is better for you, better for the environment," said Ascent Farms owner Reed Snyderman, while tending to his organic hydroponic grown lettuces and leafy greens that he grows in a recycled shipping container June 4, 2019. Snyderman will be selling his greens at this year's Downtown Farmers Market beginning this Saturday. (Leah Hogsten/)

Construction is done, really! • Salt Lake City’s face-lift of Pioneer Park is complete, but the fencing on the south side will remain until August to protect the new grass and trees, Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski said Wednesday during a news conference promoting the market. The nearly $1 million project includes a new soccer field, with lights and concrete path. The market was able to work around the construction in 2018 by creating a smaller, triangle-shaped area for food vendors. That configuration will remain this year.

We eat Swahili • Those who follow Salt Lake City’s Spice Kitchen Incubator may already be familiar with Namash Swahili Cuisine and its hand-wrapped samosas, chapati bread, chicken curry and coconut beans. It’s one of five new food vendors at this year’s market. Others include: Dapper Dogs, handcrafted hot dogs with cosmopolitan toppings; Dominique European Deli, baguette-style sandwiches with European fillings such as smoked salmon and dill or brie and arugula; Kuya Del, another Spice Kitchen business that serves foods from Asia, the Pacific Islands and Mexico; and Royal Dosa, which specializes in the foods of India.

(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Reed SnydermanÕs hydroponic farm grows over 100 lbs. of leafy greens including butterhead lettuce, Toscano kale, basil, arugula, chard and more in vertical slats in a shipping container the equivalent of 1.5 acres, year round. ÒThe goal is better for you, better for the environment,Ó said Ascent Farms owner Reed Snyderman, while tending to his organic hydroponic grown lettuces and leafy greens that he grows in a recycled shipping container June 4, 2019. Snyderman will be selling his greens at this year's Downtown Farmers Market beginning this Saturday.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) ÒThe goal is better for you, better for the environment,Ó said Ascent Farms owner Reed Snyderman, while tending to his organic hydroponic grown lettuces and leafy greens that he grows in a recycled shipping container. Snyderman will be selling his greens at this year's Downtown Farmers Market beginning this Saturday.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) ÒThe goal is better for you, better for the environment,Ó said Ascent Farms owner Reed Snyderman, while tending to his organic hydroponic grown lettuces and leafy greens, June 4, 2019, that he grows in a recycled shipping container. Snyderman will be selling his greens at this year's Downtown Farmers Market beginning this Saturday. The recycled shipping container used to transport apples.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Reed SnydermanÕs hydroponic farm grows over 100 lbs. of leafy greens including butterhead lettuce, Toscano kale, basil, arugula, chard and more in vertical slats in a shipping container the equivalent of 1.5 acres, year round. ÒThe goal is better for you, better for the environment,Ó said Ascent Farms owner Reed Snyderman, while tending to his organic hydroponic grown lettuces and leafy greens that he grows in a recycled shipping container. Snyderman will be selling his greens at this year's Downtown Farmers Market beginning this Saturday.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Reed SnydermanÕs hydroponic farm grows over 100 lbs. of leafy greens including butterhead lettuce, Toscano kale, basil, arugula, chard and more in vertical slats in a shipping container the equivalent of 1.5 acres, year round. ÒThe goal is better for you, better for the environment,Ó said Ascent Farms owner Reed Snyderman, while tending to his organic hydroponic grown lettuces and leafy greens that he grows in a recycled shipping container, June 4, 2019. Snyderman will be selling his greens at this year's Downtown Farmers Market beginning this Saturday.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) ÒThe goal is better for you, better for the environment,Ó said Ascent Farms owner Reed Snyderman, while tending to his organic hydroponic grown lettuces and leafy greens that he grows in a recycled shipping container. Snyderman will be selling his greens at this year's Downtown Farmers Market beginning this Saturday.

Waste not • The market will continue its push to be a zero-waste event. Once again, there will be no plastic bottles sold, Einerson said. This year, Wasteless Solutions will be collecting and transporting still-edible produce and food products to the hungry. Food that no longer can be donated will be hauled to Wasatch Resource Recovery’s new digester. The North Salt Lake facility turns food waste into natural gas and fertilizer.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) A truck from Momentum recycling dumps a load of food waste at Wasatch Resource Recovery in North Salt Lake on Friday, May 24, 2019.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) A truck from Momentum recycling dumps a load of food waste at Wasatch Resource Recovery in North Salt Lake on Friday, May 24, 2019. (Rick Egan/)


Hugh Hewitt: Mueller fiasco proves that a special counsel position can’t work

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"He took a mulligan and hit it into the lake." So said historian Jon Meacham, my co-panelist on Sunday's "Meet the Press," in a quippy but devastating conclusion about former special counsel Robert Mueller. He did so after I had delivered the center-right legal world's hardening conclusion that the report of the special counsel was not only incomprehensible but also indecipherable (news organizations are divided on something as basic as whether there are 10 or 11 specific fact patterns reviewed in Volume II) and profoundly irresponsible.

Page 8 of Volume II of the report, its "conclusion," begins "Because we determined not to make a traditional prosecutorial judgment, we did not draw ultimate conclusions about the President's conduct." But there was an implied conclusion in the report that Mueller left to Attorney General William Barr to make explicit as the Justice Department's conclusion: There was insufficient evidence that President Donald Trump obstructed justice or committed any other crime.

The sidebar chatter on whether a president can be prosecuted has nothing to do with this bottom line that there was insufficient evidence to conclude that the president committed any crime. Former U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit judge J. Michael Luttig — one of America’s great legal minds, whose law clerks now populate the federal bench and highest levels of government — rarely goes on the record about law or politics. He did so in this paper last week, saying that “The fact that a president cannot be prosecuted does not foreclose a finding by a special counsel of whether a president committed a crime.” He is 100 percent correct.

For two years on television, radio and print, I have defended the special counsel's integrity. I don't know him, but share many friends and colleagues, and I think him among the most honorable of men: a decorated combat veteran of Vietnam, a lifelong prosecutor, a defender of the country as a superb leader of the FBI after 9/11. I still believe these things. But these truths are not inconsistent with a fumble of the last ball he was tasked with carrying, and fumble it he did.

With the Mueller fiasco, the damage to the idea of a special counsel is complete, and that is a good thing. Long ago I served as law clerk to the panel of circuit court judges that selected "independent counsels" because the judge I clerked for, Roger Robb, was its senior member. As a special assistant to Attorneys General William Smith and Ed Meese, and a member of the White House Counsel's Office under the estimable Fred Fielding, I saw firsthand how difficult it was for the Justice Department and the White House to deal with the bizarre idea of a prosecutor independent of everyone, an idea deeply at odds with the framers' design for the executive branch. I've taught constitutional law for 25 years and always teach that the Supreme Court affirmed the constitutionality of the independent counsel statute that replaced the ad hoc special counsel arrangements of the Nixon era. But I also point out that, crucially, Congress decided not to renew that statute because of its malignant consequences.

The sorry collapse of the Russia investigation proves — again — that neither the “special counsel” nor “independent counsel” position can be made to work, even by as upright and experienced men as Robert Mueller and Kenneth Starr. The regulations concerning matters which trigger these fiascos should be deleted from the Federal Register, and the attorney general and Congress should be charged with investigation of executive branch wrongdoing. And if wrong-doing is found, the attorney general, Congress and voters can decide on the consequences.

Crucially, the attorney general has assigned experienced prosecutor John Durham, the U.S. attorney in Connecticut, to investigate a critically important question: Whether, as Barr put it, a small group of senior law enforcement officials developed among themselves a "Praetorian Guard mentality," and set about to "stop Trump" by whatever means necessary.

I now offer the left the same counsel on Durham that I offered the right on Mueller: Withhold judgment until his report. But when Durham concludes his investigation, if he finds no crime was committed, he or the attorney general ought simply to declare the investigation is complete and no crimes were committed that the Justice Department could prove to our law’s requirements.

That is what Hillary Clinton was owed, and denied, by James Comey. That is what Trump was owed, and denied, by Mueller. That is what all the people under a cloud because of “Spygate” charges around the Steele dossier are owed, whether you like them or not. One of our country’s great principles is “innocent until proven guilty.” Politics is corrupting this standard, and Mueller, for whatever reason, contributed to that corruption.

GOP senators line up against Trump’s 5% Mexico tariff plan

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Washington • In a rare confrontation, Republican senators are declaring deep opposition to President Donald Trump’s threatened tariffs on all goods coming into the U.S. from Mexico. But it’s unclear they have the votes to stop him, and Trump said they’d be “foolish” to try.

All sides, including officials from Mexico meeting with Trump negotiators in Washington this week, remain hopeful that high-level talks will ease the president away from his threat. But with the tariffs set to start next Monday — and Trump declaring them "more likely" than not to take effect — fellow Republicans in Congress warned the White House they are ready to stand up to the president.

The public split and looming standoff over 5% tariffs on all goods imported from Mexico revealed a fundamental divergence in values between the president and his party. Trump uses tariffs as leverage to get what he wants, in this case to force Mexico to do more to halt illegal immigration. For Republicans, tariffs are counter to firmly rooted orthodoxy and viewed as nothing more than taxes they strenuously oppose.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday with understatement, "There is not much support in my conference for tariffs, that's for sure."

At a lengthy closed-door lunch meeting at the Capitol, senators took turns warning Trump officials there could be trouble if the GOP-held Senate votes on disapproving the tariffs. Congressional rejection would be a stiff rebuke to Trump, even more forceful than an earlier effort to prevent him from shifting money to build his long-promised border wall with Mexico.

"Deep concern and resistance," is how Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas characterized the mood. "I will yield to nobody in passion and seriousness and commitment to securing the border, but there's no reason for Texas farmers and ranchers and manufacturers and small businesses to pay the price of massive new taxes."

Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, who was among the senators who spoke up, said, "I think the administration has to be concerned about another vote of disapproval. ... I'm not the only one saying it."

The outcome would be uncertain — Trump could try to veto a disapproval resolution as he did before. But many Republicans who voted against Trump earlier this year actually supported his ultimate goal of building the border wall. They were just uneasy with his executive reach to do it. Now, the president doesn't have anywhere near the same backing for the tariffs.

The GOP opposition is grounded in fears over what Trump's tariffs would do to the livelihoods of ordinary Americans . Senators worry they would spike U.S. consumers' costs , harm the economy and imperil a major pending U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade deal .

With jitters running high, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Tuesday he's prepared to respond to protect the economy, and stocks rallied on that signal that the Fed will likely cut interest rates later this year.

Mexico is concerned about the tariffs as well, but top officials seemed optimistic about a resolution.

"By what we have seen so far, we will be able to reach an agreement," Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said during a news conference at the Mexican Embassy in Washington. "That is why I think the imposition of tariffs can be avoided."

Trump, during a press conference in London, offered mixed messages.

"We're going to see if we can do something," he said on the second day of his state visit to Britain.

"But I think it's more likely that the tariffs go on," he said. He also said he doubted Republicans in Congress would muster the votes against him. "If they do, it's foolish."

The Mexican officials arrived in Washington over the weekend as Mexico launched a diplomatic counteroffensive and fresh negotiations. On Tuesday, Mexico's trade negotiator Jesus Seade was meeting with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, and Ebrard will meet Wednesday with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Republican senators are hopeful those talks will prevent the tariffs. But if negotiations should fail, the lawmakers warn they may have no choice but to take action to stop Trump.

"Our hope is the tariffs will be avoided," McConnell said.

Lawmakers and business allies worry the tariffs will derail the long-promised United-States-Mexico-Canada trade deal— a rewrite of the North American Free Trade Agreement that Trump campaigned against and promised to replace.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, chairman of the Finance Committee, told reporters Tuesday the tariffs make passage of USMCA "more difficult."

Questions remained, meanwhile, over how, exactly, the president would invoke executive authority to slap tariffs on the Mexican goods -- and what Congress could do to block him.

Trump has indicated he will rely on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, a national emergency executive action he can take without congressional approval.

But lawmakers say they can quickly vote on a resolution to disapprove. That's what happened earlier this year when Congress, stunned by Trump's claim of executive power, tried to block him from taking funds for the border wall with Mexico. Congress voted to disapprove of Trump's actions, but the president vetoed the resolution.

This time, Republicans warn the numbers could be higher against the president — possibly a veto-proof majority in the Senate. But it's unclear the president could be blocked in the House where Republicans may be less likely to oppose him.

Democrats and some Republicans doubt the tariffs will ever take effect. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday that "Trump has a habit of talking tough and then retreating."

Trump struck back against Schumer on Twitter, insisting the tariff threat was "no bluff."

Earlier Tuesday, Trump claimed "millions of people" are entering the U.S. through Mexico and criticized congressional Democrats for not passing new laws. He said, "Mexico should not allow millions of people to try and enter our country."

It is unclear what more Mexico can do and what would be enough to satisfy Trump on illegal immigration, a signature issue of his presidency.

The United States has not presented concrete benchmarks to assess whether the U.S. ally is sufficiently stemming the migrant flow from Central America. Mexico calls the potential tariffs hurtful to the economies of both countries and useless to slow the northbound flow of Central American migrants.

Associated Press writer Padmananda Rama contributed to this report.

Utah Royals FC coach, two players to provide analysis on Fox 13 during Women’s World Cup

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With the FIFA Women’s World Cup starting Friday, all of the teams in the National Women’s Soccer League will have players in France vying to bring a title to their home countries. Utah Royals FC have a total of six players in the tournament — from four different nations.

The remaining players on Utah’s roster will have to hold down the fort while the internationals are gone. But that doesn’t mean that some players, and even coach Laura Harvey, will be left out of the World Cup experience.

Starting on Friday, Harvey, Amy Rodriguez and Vero Boquete will serve as soccer analysts during World Cup games broadcast on Fox 13 throughout the tournament, Fox 13 general manager Tim Ermish told The Salt Lake Tribune last week. Those three and others from the Royals will appear on various Fox 13 news shows to preview games and also provide postgame analysis.

“It might be the most inclusive expert analysis that we’ve ever done on a sport with team players,” Ermish said.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Royals vs. Washington Spirit, soccer at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Saturday May 5, 2018. Royals coach Laura Harvey.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Royals vs. Washington Spirit, soccer at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Saturday May 5, 2018. Royals coach Laura Harvey. (Trent Nelson/)

Rodriguez and Boquete have both played for national teams and competed in past World Cups. Rodriguez played in the 2011 and 2015 tournament, the latter of which U.S. won. Boquete also appeared in the 2015 World Cup with Spain, but her country did not make out of the group stage that season.

The 2019 World Cup opens on Friday and runs through July 7 and the United States Women’s National Team are favored to win this year, which would be a back-to-back championship after winning in Canada in 2015. The Tribune broke down and predicted the outcome of the entire tournament, with the Americans taking home the trophy once again.

Becky Sauerbrunn, Christen Press and Kelly O’Hara will represent the United States during the World Cup. Rachel Corsie is the captain for Scotland, Katie Bowen plays for New Zealand and Desiree Scott is on Canada’s national team. Fox 13 news director Marc Sternfield said the station has profile stories in the can with various players who will compete in the tournament.

“[We are] really trying to make sure that our audience knows that there are plenty of Royals FC players to watch in this tournament beyond the USA,” Sternfield said.

Harvey, Rodriguez and Boquete will be compensated for their television appearances, per a Royals spokesperson.

Getting members the Royals to be analysts during the World Cup was in the works as early as February, Ermish said.

“The expertise of these players and the experience of some of them playing on certain national teams, and the fact that they are right here in Utah ... it would be a crime if we didn't take advantage of it,” Ermish said.

Editor’s note: The Salt Lake Tribune and FOX 13 are content-sharing partners.


Utah brewers earn 24 medals — including 5 golds — at beer competition

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Utah brewers brought home two dozen medals — including five golds, eight silvers and 11 bronzes — from the International Beer Awards competition, held this past weekend in Idaho Falls.

Red Rock Brewing Co., of Salt Lake City, was the big winner, awarded five medals — including two golds for its Marvella Tripel and Citra Pils, an American-style Pilsner.

Other first-place awards went to Epic Brewing Co. and Shades Brewing Co., both in Salt Lake City, and Hoppers Grill in Midvale.

Two of Salt Lake City’s newest brewers — Kiitos and TF Brewing Co.— were medalists, as were two Ogden breweries — Roosters and Talisman. The showing marks a good sign for the future of brewing in the state, especially as producers prepare for Nov. 1, when higher-alcohol beer will be allowed in Utah grocery and convenience stores.

Sanctioned by the North American Brewers Association, the competition featured nearly 2,000 beers, ciders, meads and sodas from around the country in 20 categories and numerous subcategories.

Here’s a list of the winning brews from Utah.

GOLD

Marvella (Tripel) • Red Rock.

Imperial Stout • Epic Brewing.

Citra Pils, (American Style Pilsner) • Red Rock.

This is the Pilsener (Bohemian-style) • Hoppers Grill.

Kveik Series Pina Colada (Specialty/Experimental) • Shades Brewing.

SILVER

Czech Your Head, (Bohemian-style Pilsner) • Proper Brewing Co., Salt Lake City.

Sir Malcolms Stout • Bonneville Brewing Co., Tooele.

Ninerbock (Doppelbock) • Roosters Brewing, Ogden.

Clear Daze Juicy IPA (American-style strong pale ale) • Uinta Brewing Co., Salt Lake City.

Comin In Hop (Sessions-style India Pale Ale) • Talisman Brewing Co., Ogden.

White Rainbow (Belgian-Style India Pale Ale) • Red Rock.

Croggy Brett Saison, (Brett Beer) • Uinta.

Terpene IPA (Specialty/Experimental) • TF Brewing.

BRONZE

Rita is a Hose Monkey (Bohemian-style Pilsner • TF Brewing.

American Light Lager • Shades.

Deuce Coupe Copper Lager (American-style Amber) • Salt Flats Brewing, Salt Lake City.

Cutthroat Pale Ale (English-style) • Uinta.

Antelope Amber Ale (Ordinary Bitter) • Bonneville Brewing.

Uplifted (Scottish-style) • Talisman.

Alt Bier • Bohemian Brewery, Midvale.

Barley Wine • Kiitos Brewing Salt Lake City.

Biere de Mars (Biere de Garde) • Red Rock.

Brainless Belgian (Strong Ale) • Epic Brewing.

Zwickelbier (Sessions beer) • Red Rock.

Salt Lake City mayoral candidates push for free-fare UTA ridership ahead of tonight’s transportation debate

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As the race to become Salt Lake City mayor heats up ahead of the August primary, several candidates are pushing for free UTA fares within city boundaries and for city taxpayers as a way to promote transit ridership and improve air quality.

The idea was floated by Jim Dabakis and Stan Penfold in separate interviews with The Salt Lake Tribune ahead of a debate Wednesday evening co-hosted by Bike Utah and the Utah Transit Riders Union at the downtown Salt Lake City Library, where candidates were expected to address other topics related to transportation.

“I am convinced that one of the first steps for getting people on transit is to eliminate the fare,” Penfold, a former Salt Lake City councilman who worked on establishing the first free-fare day for red air during his time on the body, said in an interview before the debate. “I think that’s the No. 1 thing we can do, personally, to work on our air quality is provide opportunities to get out of a car. So that’s a priority for me.”

Dabakis, a former state senator, noted that 11% of the agency’s revenue comes from fares — a small price to pay, he argued, when considering that past free-fare days have boosted ridership.

“Eleven percent, it’s not worthy,” he said. “How much does it cost just to collect that? To have people checking in to have set up all those boxes and collecting the money out of them and auditing and the rest?”

Earlier this year, UTA and other partners offered three free-fare days, which resulted in about a 16 percent total overall ridership increase, according to UTA officials. The agency estimated that had removed about 10,500 vehicles from the road each day and had each day prevented more than 2.5 tons of pollutants and 80 tons of greenhouse gases.

Some bus systems in Utah — in Park City and Cache County — already offer free fares at all times, so Salt Lake City wouldn’t be the first to do this. UTA has been offering it, thanks to a federal grant, on its new Utah Valley Express bus rapid transit system in Provo and Orem. The agency has said that quintupled ridership from the old bus routes it replaced.

In an experiment to reduce air pollution, the Legislature this year created a pilot program to create more free-fare days in the future, which will be triggered by forecasts of an inversion.

From public transportation to scooters to bikes, nearly all of the eight candidates running for Salt Lake City mayor told The Salt Lake Tribune they would be committed, if elected, to promoting alternatives to cars — particularly in the face of massive population growth.

“We’re not going to be able to expand and see capacity for cars in this city anymore," said David Garbett, the former executive director of the Pioneer Park Coalition. "And with growth, in order to have a city that people can move around quickly, we know that we’re going to need to get more people out of cars. And so I think that’s really a strategy of getting more people onto bikes, getting more people to walk, getting more people to use public transit.”

Candidates also noted that they view transportation as intimately related to affordable housing, another major issue facing the city’s next mayor.

Housing advocates have estimated there’s a gap of at least 7,500 apartments that are affordable to renters making $20,000 or less. Meanwhile, rent in the county jumped from an average of $720 a month in 2010 to $1,072 last year, according to Cushman & Wakefield’s midyear 2018 Apartment Market Report.

“We have 200,000 people leave here every night and come back every morning; 40% of them want to live in the city but can't because of affordable housing,” said businessman David Ibarra. “If we could get them here and then move to a way that we move people throughout this city — and I believe that way is an autonomous electric car system that moves folks from grid to grid to grid to location — we would then improve our environment, improve our affordable housing opportunities and we'd improve transportation.”

While candidates are focused on public transportation and other alternatives to cars, that doesn’t mean they’re not thinking about city roads, two-thirds of which are in poor or worse condition, according to a pavement survey commissioned in 2017.

State Sen. Luz Escamilla said she would take a “holistic approach” to transportation, if elected, and would look at everything "from roads that are decent roads” for cars, to ensuring people who are interested in bicycling “have a road area and the roads where they can do that in a safe manner.”

Salt Lake City residents last year approved an $87 million road reconstruction bond to fix some of the failing roads. But Salt Lake City Councilwoman Erin Mendenhall said that’s not an end-all solution away and argued she’s best equipped to lead the city forward.

“As bold as [the bond] was, that’s only a fraction of the actual need for our streets," she said. “So we need a mayor who is willing and understands the financial realities of what it’s going to take to really improve our roads."

Aaron Johnson, a veteran and novice politician, said that as mayor he would look to do away with one-lane areas in downtown, which he said causes congestion during peak rush hours. Richard Goldberger, a freelance journalist, said he would like to create a program, if elected, where block captains and co-captains would work to clean the city’s “filthy” sidewalks and would push for an expansion of transit to the prison.

The Salt Lake Tribune will update this story

One man has been killed, another wounded in Kearns shooting

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One man is dead and another has been wounded in a shooting at a Kearns home on Wednesday morning.

According to Unified Police, gunshots were reported by neighbors near a home in the area of 4800 South and 4700 West about 7:30 a.m. When officers arrived, they discovered a man dead on the ground outside the home and “additional blood inside of the home,” said UPD Sgt. Melody Gray.

Police were notified that a second man who had suffered a gunshot wound had arrived at a emergency clinic seeking treatment; he was transported to Intermountain Medical Center in serious condition. Police said the second man was wounded at the same home where the dead man was found.

Neither man’s name has been released.

“We don't know what led to the shooting. We don't know, at this time, who did it or why,” Gray said.

One man was taken into custody and is being questioned. “We don’t know what his involvement was, if any," Gray said.

Six other people who were inside the home are also being questioned.

This story will be updated.

Queen Elizabeth, world leaders honor veterans on D-Day anniversary

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(David Vincent | AP) Canadian World War II and D-Day veteran Earl Kennedy attends a commemoration ceremony at the Beny-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery in Reviers, Normandy, France, Wednesday, June 5, 2019. A ceremony was held on Wednesday for Canadians who fought and died on the beaches and in the bitter bridgehead battles of Normandy during World War II.(David Vincent | AP) A member of the Canadian Armed Forces holds a photo of a Canadian World War II soldier during a ceremony at the Beny-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery in Reviers, Normandy, France, Wednesday, June 5, 2019. A ceremony was held on Wednesday for Canadians who fell on the beaches and in the bitter bridgehead battles of Normandy during World War II.(Andrew Matthews | PA via AP) D-Day veterans gather during a D-Day commemoration event at the Historical Dockyard in Portsmouth, southern England, Sunday June 2, 2019. There are many events over the coming days to mark the 75th anniversary of the landings by the Allied forces on Tuesday June 6, 1944, in Normandy, France, that became known as D-Day.(Thibault Camus | AP) WWII enthusiasts watch French and British parachutists jumping during a commemorative parachute jump over Sannerville, Normandy, Wednesday, June 5, 2019. Extensive commemorations are being held in the U.K. and France to honor the nearly 160,000 troops from Britain, the United States, Canada and other nations who landed in Normandy on June 6, 1944 in history's biggest amphibious invasion.(Alex Brandon | AP) A flyover trails colored smoke to conclude a ceremony to mark the 75th Anniversary of D-Day, when the Allied soldiers, sailors and airmen conducted an invasion that helped liberate Europe from Nazi Germany, Wednesday, June 5, 2019, in Portsmouth, England.(Jack Hill | Pool via AP) Leaders from left, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Governor-General of New Zealand Patsy Reddy, President of France Emmanuel Macron, with Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and Prime Minister Theresa May, during a meeting of the Allied Nations at the 75th Anniversary of the D-Day landings, in Portsmouth, England, Wednesday June 5, 2019. Commemoration events are marking the 75th Anniversary of the D-Day landings when Allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy in northern France during World War II.(Matt Dunham | AP) D-Day veterans, front row, stand on stage during an event to mark the 75th anniversary of D-Day in Portsmouth, England Wednesday, June 5, 2019. World leaders including U.S. President Donald Trump are gathering Wednesday on the south coast of England to mark the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings.(Alex Brandon | AP) An honor guard marches on stage during a ceremony to mark the 75th Anniversary of D-Day, when the Allied soldiers, sailors and airmen conducted an invasion that helped liberate Europe from Nazi Germany, Wednesday, June 5, 2019, in Portsmouth, England.French President Emmanuel Macron, left, British Prime Minister Theresa May, Prince Charles, Queen Elizabeth II, President Donald Trump, first lady Melania Trump, Greek President Prokopis Pavlopoulos, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, Luxembourg Prime Minister Xavier Bettel, and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, watch a flyover at the conclusion of a ceremony to mark the 75th Anniversary of D-Day, when the Allied soldiers, sailors and airmen conducted an invasion that helped liberate Europe from Nazi Germany, Wednesday, June 5, 2019, in Portsmouth, England. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)(Chris Jackson| Pool Photo via AP) Britain's Queen Elizabeth with US President Donald Trump and Melania Trump during commemorations for the 75th Anniversary of the D-Day landings at Southsea Common, Portsmouth, England, Wednesday, June 5, 2019.(Chris Jackson | Pool Photo via AP) Britain's Queen Elizabeth and U.S President Donald Trump look on during commemorations for the 75th Anniversary of the D-Day landings at Southsea Common, Portsmouth, England, Wednesday, June 5, 2019.(Alex Brandon | AP) A veteran is shown during an event to mark the 75th anniversary of D-Day in Portsmouth, England Wednesday, June 5, 2019. World leaders are gathering on the south coast of England to mark the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings.(Alex Brandon | AP) A veteran wipes his eyes during a ceremony to mark the 75th anniversary of D-Day, Wednesday, June 5, 2019, in Portsmouth, England.(Alex Brandon | AP) British Prime Minister Theresa May speaks on stage during an event to mark the 75th anniversary of D-Day in Portsmouth, England Wednesday, June 5, 2019. World leaders are gathering on the south coast of England to mark the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings.

Portsmouth, England • Queen Elizabeth II and world leaders, including U.S. President Donald Trump, gathered Wednesday on the south coast of England to honor the troops who risked and sacrificed their lives 75 years ago on D-Day, a bloody but ultimately triumphant turning point in World War II.

Across the Channel, American and British paratroopers dropped into northwestern France and scaled cliffs beside Normandy beaches, recreating the daring, costly invasion that helped liberate Europe from Nazi occupation.

With the number of veterans of World War II dwindling, the guests of honor at an international ceremony in Portsmouth were several hundred men, now in their 90s, who served in the conflict — and the 93-year-old British monarch, also a member of what has been called the "greatest generation."

The queen, who served as an army mechanic during the war, said that when she attended a 60th-anniversary commemoration of D-Day 15 years ago, many thought it might be the last such event.

"But the wartime generation — my generation — is resilient," she said, striking an unusually personal note.

"The heroism, courage and sacrifice of those who lost their lives will never be forgotten," the monarch said. "It is with humility and pleasure, on behalf of the entire country — indeed the whole free world — that I say to you all, thank you."

About 300 World War II veterans, aged 91 to 101, attended the ceremony in Portsmouth, the English port city from where many of the troops embarked for Normandy on June 5, 1944.

Mixing history lesson, entertainment and solemn remembrance, the ceremony was a large-scale spectacle involving troops, dancers and martial bands, culminating in a military fly-past. But the stars of the show were the elderly veterans of that campaign who said they were surprised by all the attention: They were just doing their jobs.

"I was just a small part in a very big machine," said 99-year-old John Jenkins, a veteran from Portsmouth, who received a standing ovation as he addressed the event.

"You never forget your comrades because we were all in it together," he said. "It is right that the courage and sacrifice of so many is being honored 75 years on. We must never forget."

The event, which kicked off two days of D-Day anniversary observances, paid tribute to the troops who shaped history during the dangerous mission to reach beachheads and fight in German-occupied France.

D-Day saw more than 150,000 Allied troops land on the beaches of Normandy in northwest France on June 6, 1944, carried by 7,000 boats. The Battle of Normandy, codenamed Operation Overlord, was a turning point in the war, and helped bring about Nazi Germany's defeat in May 1945.

Wednesday's ceremony brought together presidents, prime ministers and other representatives of more than a dozen countries that fought alongside Britain in Normandy.

The leader of the country that was the enemy in 1944 , German Chancellor Angela Merkel, also attended— a symbol of Europe's postwar reconciliation and transformation.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who attended 70th anniversary commemorations in France five years ago, has not been invited. Russia was not involved in D-Day but was instrumental in defeating the Nazis on the Eastern Front.

The ceremony sought to take people back in time, with world leaders, reading the words of participants in the conflict.

Trump read a prayer that President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered in a radio address on June 6, 1944, extolling the "mighty endeavor" Allied troops were engaged in.

British Prime Minister Theresa May read a letter written by Capt. Norman Skinner of the Royal Army Service Corps to his wife, Gladys, on June 3, 1944, a few days before the invasion. He was killed the day after D-Day.

"Although I would give anything to be back with you, I have not yet had any wish at all to back down from the job we have to do," he wrote.

French President Emmanuel Macron read from a letter sent by a young resistance fighter, Henri Fertet, before he was executed at the age of 16 years old.

"I am going to die for my country. I want France to be free and the French to be happy," it said.

The ceremony ended with singer Sheridan Smith performing the wartime hit "We'll Meet Again," as many of the elderly assembled veterans sang along.

Then WWII Spitfire and Hurricane fighter jets, modern-day Typhoons and the Royal Air Force's Red Arrows aerobatic unit swooped over the dignitaries, veterans and large crowd of spectators.

The crowd beyond the security barriers loved the planes but loved the veterans even more. Whenever their images came up on the big screen, people cheered. The former servicemen have reacted to such shows of attention with humility and surprise, as many believed they had been forgotten.

"What happened to me is not important. I'm not a hero. I served with men who were," said Les Hammond, 94, who landed at Juno Beach with the Royal Electrical Mechanical Engineers. "I'm very lucky I'm a survivor."

On Thursday the focus shifts to France, where commemorations will be held at simple military cemeteries near the Normandy beaches. Some 300 British veterans will cross the Channel by boat to the beaches overnight, just as they did 75 years ago.

Events in France began early Wednesday morning with U.S. Army Rangers climbing the jagged limestone cliffs of Normandy's Pointe du Hoc to honor the men who scaled them under fire 75 years ago.

They were recreating a journey taken in 1944 by the U.S. Army's 2nd and 5th Ranger Battalions to destroy Nazi guns atop the cliffs, helping prepare the way for Allied troops to land on the coast.

Elsewhere in Normandy parachutists jumped from C-47 transporters in WWII colors and other aircraft, aiming for fields of wild flowers on the outskirts of Carentan, one of the early objectives for Allied troops.

Among the jumpers was American D-Day veteran Tom Rice, 97. He jumped into Normandy with thousands of other parachutists in 1944 and recalled it as "the worst jump I ever had."

Like many other veterans , Rice said he remains troubled by the war.

"We did a lot of destruction, damage. And we chased the Germans out and coming back here is a matter of closure," he said. "You can close the issue now."

Lawless reported from London. John Leicester in Carentan, France, Milos Krivokapic in Pointe du Hoc, France and Gregory Katz in London contributed.


Trump administration cancels English classes, soccer, legal aid for unaccompanied child migrants in U.S. shelters

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The Trump administration is canceling English classes, recreational programs, and legal aid for unaccompanied minors staying in federal migrant shelters nationwide, saying the immigration influx at the southern border has created critical budget pressures.

The Office of Refugee Resettlement has begun discontinuing the funding stream for activities - including soccer — that have been deemed “not directly necessary for the protection of life and safety, including education services, legal services, and recreation,” said U.S. Health and Human Services spokesman Mark Weber.

Federal officials have warned Congress that they are facing "a dramatic spike" in unaccompanied minors at the southern border and have asked Congress for $2.9 billion in emergency funding to expand shelters and care. The program could run out of money in late June, and the agency is legally obligated to direct funding to essential services, Weber said.

The move — revealed in an email an HHS official sent to licensed shelters last week, a message that has been obtained by The Washington Post — could run afoul of a federal court settlement and state licensing requirements that mandate education and recreation for minors in federal custody. Carlos Holguin, a lawyer who represents minors in a long-running lawsuit that spurred a 1997 federal court settlement that sets basic standards of care for children in custody, immediately slammed the cuts as illegal.

"We'll see them in court if they go through with it," Holguin said. "What's next? Drinking water? Food? . . . Where are they going to stop?"

More than 40,800 unaccompanied children have been placed into HHS custody after crossing the U.S.-Mexico border this year, a 57 percent increase from last year that is putting ORR on track to care for the largest number of minors in the program's history. Federal law requires the Department of Homeland Security to move unaccompanied minors from austere border jails to more child-appropriate shelters, and they must do so swiftly.

An average of 12,500 children and youths were held in federal shelters nationwide in April, according to HHS. They stayed an average of 48 days until a case worker could place them with a sponsor, usually a relative. While they wait in the shelters, minors attend school, study math and English, and participate in extracurricular activities such as ping-pong, soccer or other sports.

Most of the minors are teenagers fleeing violence and poverty in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

An HHS official sent an email Thursday to shelters across the country notifying them that the government will not pay for education or recreational activities retroactive to May 22, including related personnel costs. The official characterized those costs as "unallowable."

Holguin said schooling and exercise are "fundamental to the care of youngsters."

A shelter employee who spoke on the condition of anonymity to address the internal government directive, said the Trump administration's cuts have alarmed workers, who fear the quality of care for the children will suffer. The employee said the classes and sports activities are crucial to maintaining physical and mental health while the children are in custody.

"What are you going to do all day?" the shelter employee said. "If you're not going to have any sort of organized recreation or physical activity, what are you going to do, just let them sit in their rooms?"

Trump declared a national emergency at the border in February, as a record number of Central American families and unaccompanied minors surged across the southern border. Many are seeking asylum in the United States, and most are released into the U.S. interior while they await interviews and court hearings.

The White House had attempted to attach a $4.5 billion emergency spending request for the border - which includes $2.9 billion for HHS - to the disaster bill that passed this week, but lawmakers were unable to reach an agreement.

Persian kebabs and stews — spiked with nuts, herbs and spices — are a delight at Sumac Cafe in Cottonwood Heights

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(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Shish Kabob at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Boorani Bademjan (eggplant mixed with yogurt and garlic) at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Fessenjan at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Romina Sadegh, Elham Sadegh, Melina Sadegh, and Fariborz Sanavi at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Shirazi Salad at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Sholeh Zard (rice pudding with saffron, rose water, and almond) at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Soltani Kabob at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Vaziri Kabob at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Vaziri Kabob at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Ginger lemonade at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.

Cottonwood Heights • The lemonade is bright green from all the blended mint and it pops with real ginger. The olive appetizer, marinated in pomegranate syrup, zings. And the chicken stew is tart, sweet and silky.

The authentic Persian cuisine served at Sumac Café provides a lovely medley of flavors and textures, with dishes spiked with pistachios, flavored with saffron and sumac, stuffed with herbs, rubbed with spices.

Elham Sadegh moved from Iran six years ago. She opened the restaurant last December in a spot where she was running a coffee shop. She had been catering meals with her Persian dishes on the side, and “everybody told me, ‘We need this delicious food. … You have to change the coffee shop to a restaurant.’”

So she did, with the help of another owner and cook, and now she’s serving recipes she learned from her mother and grandmother in Tehran. She named the restaurant for the reddish-purple, citrusy spice she uses in the kabobs because of its antioxidant power.

The space, on Bengal Boulevard next to another restaurant, is small with elegant touches like fresh flowers and black table cloths. It serves stews, kabobs, salads, several appetizers and a small selection of wine and beer. There’s also Persian and saffron teas ($1.99-$2.99), the ginger lemonade ($4.99) and something called doogh ($2.99), described as a bubbly yogurt, water and mint.

(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019. (Trent Nelson/)

We tried four appetizers and all were excellent. The kashk bademjoon ($7.99) is pesto-like, made with walnuts, sautéed eggplant and garlic and a skim of whey (the kashk part of the name) floating on top. It’s served with thin triangles of warmed pita. That bowl of tangy olives is called zeitoon parvardeh ($5.99). The mast o’kheeyar ($4.99) is yogurt mixed with herbs and cucumbers and cools the palate, while mirza ghasemee ($6.99) is a warm eggplant dip, made with tomatoes, garlic and a runny egg served on top.

All were good on their own but they go really well with the kabobs and stews.

The kabobs are juicy and tender and spiced with saffron, sumac, turmeric and black pepper, says Sadegh. The portions are plenty for two people, especially with the large amount of saffron-tinged rice that accompanies them. Beef comes either ground and molded into a skewer (called koobideh, $12.99), or as thinly sliced cuts of filet mignon (called barg, $17.99). Chicken is available as a kabob ($12.99) or comes on a platter as a whole Cornish hen ($17.99). All of them are served with whole roasted tomatoes and raw onion slices. Diners can combine the two beef kabobs, or the chicken with beef.

(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Shish Kabob at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Shish Kabob at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019. (Trent Nelson/)(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)
Vaziri Kabob at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Vaziri Kabob at Sumac Cafe, a new Persian Restaurant in Cottonwood Heights on Friday May 31, 2019. (Trent Nelson/)

Four stews round out the menu, also served with heaping rice. The fessenjan ($14.99) with large chunks of chicken was so good — sweet, tangy with pomegranate sauce and rich from the pureed walnuts. Sadegh cooks it for several hours.

I can see why Samin Nosrat, probably the most famous Persian-American chef, recently named fessenjan as one of her top 10 essential Persian dishes. The author of “Salt Fat Acid Heat” (who also stars in the same-named Netflix docuseries) recently explained in The New York Times that the stew, practically considered the national dish, comes from northern Iran where the main ingredients grow.

Two other dishes she mentioned also are on Sumac Café’s menu: The shirazi salad ($4.99), made of cucumbers, tomatoes, mint and onions served with lime juice and olive oil. It was something we didn’t try, but will next time. The cucumber yogurt dish was another essential bite, since it’s also a staple.

Don’t forget dessert. We skipped the baklava ($2.99) and tiramisu ($4.99) for the more unusual saffron rice pudding made with rose water and almond (sholeh zard, $3.99) and saffron ice cream (bastani zafferani, $5.99). They aren’t as sweet as Western versions but have an intriguing flavor and are dusted with chopped pistachios.

Sadegh says she opened the restaurant in part to satisfy Persians living in Utah who miss a taste of home. Her food is also making those of us who are new to the delights of Persian dishes crave those flavors, too.

Sumac Cafe • ★★★ (out of ★★★★) This authentic Persian restaurant serves kabobs, stews and appetizers packed with spices and herbs and zipping with tangy and sweet flavors.

Food • ★★★

Mood • ★★★

Service • ★★★

Noise • 1 bell

Location • 2578 E. Bengal Blvd, Cottonwood Heights; 801-733-4444

Online • https://sumaccafeslc.com

Hours • Tuesdays-Thursdays, 11 a.m.-9 p.m.; Fridays-Saturdays, 11 a.m.-10 p.m.; Sundays, 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Closed Mondays.

Children’s menu • No

Prices • $-$$$

Liquor • Wine and beer

Reservations • Yes

Takeout • Yes

Wheelchair access • Yes

Outdoor dining • Yes

On-site parking • Yes

Credit cards • Yes

Dana Milbank: What? You thought Romney was actually going to do something?

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Washington • Not since they strapped Seamus in his dog crate to the roof of the family car has a member of the Romney household been this distressed.

Mitt Romney has watched with varying degrees of displeasure as President Trump turned the Republican Party into the antithesis of the one he led in 2012 as its presidential nominee: alienating allies, degrading immigrants and splitting the nation with hatred. Now, Trump threatens to use an "emergency" declaration to circumvent Congress and start a trade war with Mexico.

And so Romney, now a senator from Utah, finally swung into action: He went to the Senate floor on Tuesday and … delivered a politely worded speech.

What? You thought he was actually going to do something?

This isn’t to pick on Romney; at least he speaks up. His 20-minute speech was a thorough rebuke of Trump, even if he took pains not to mention Trump by name: Romney spoke of the authoritarian menace of Russia and of North Korea, the benefits of immigration, the dangers of debt and the importance of allies when taking on China — all positions at odds with Trump’s actions. Romney assigned particular responsibility to the president in the need “to shut out the voices of hate and fear, to ignore the divisive and alarming conspiracies and to be more respectful, more empathetic to our fellow Americans.”

Amen. But if such jawboning is all Republican lawmakers can do to rein in the president, the cause is hopeless. Trump is plainly abusing his presidential powers, using "emergency" authority to ignore Congress so he can build a border wall, arm the Saudis and, now, slap tariffs on goods imported from Mexico. Republicans routinely grumble and sometimes threaten action but ultimately do nothing to stop him.

Maybe, just maybe, this is about to change. Republican senators on Tuesday declared publicly — and told White House officials privately at a lunch meeting — that they have the votes to reject Trump's threatened tariffs against Mexico and to override a veto. It would be a meaningful rebuke of the president and his capricious governing style — but only if Republican lawmakers could finally overcome their habit of cowering.

Trump, asked about the incipient rebellion at a news conference in London with British Prime Minister Theresa May, left himself little room for a climbdown, saying Republicans would be “foolish” to block his tariffs against Mexico, given his strength among Republican voters. “I have a 90 percent — 94 percent approval rating as of this morning in the Republican Party. That’s an all-time record. Can you believe that?” he said to May, who is resigning because she lacks support within her Conservative Party. “I love records.”

As The Washington Post's Philip Bump pointed out, no such poll seems to exist, and that figure wouldn't be a record, anyway. (That was in keeping with Trump's performance generally in the land of Orwell: He claimed that thousands of Britons were "cheering" for him rather than protesting.)

But Trump was animated in demanding that Mexico "stop this onslaught, this invasion" and prove that it isn't "run by the cartels and the drug lords." Trump predicted that the tariffs "will take effect next week" and called it likely that talks will occur "during the time that the tariffs are on."

Given his supporters' passion about illegal border crossings, it will be difficult for Trump to find a face-saving way to retreat from his threatened tariffs: He can't capitulate to lawmakers without also appearing to capitulate to Mexico — and a continued flood of immigrants.

Back in Washington, some Republicans were already seeking a way out for Trump. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) cheerfully predicted a "solution that solves all problems" with Mexico, and he sided with Trump on his constitutional power to impose tariffs and sell arms under emergency decrees. "The president has the authority to do it," McCarthy told reporters, an hour after Trump warned Republican lawmakers not to be foolish.

Romney, at least, was true to his principles. He told Bloomberg's Sahil Kapur that "tariffs on Mexico are a bad idea all the way around." And he broadened his critique of Trump on the floor. As Trump chastised NATO allies and endorsed a split in the European Union, Romney said: "We should strengthen our alliances, not dismiss or begrudge them." As Trump, in London, stoked feuds with critics and trading partners, Romney said: "When it comes to cooling the rhetoric and encouraging unity, there's no more powerful medium than the bully pulpit of the president."

Well said. But if Romney and other Republicans really care about the president's abuses, they'll do more than grouse and grumble this time.

Dana Milbank | The Washington Post
Dana Milbank | The Washington Post

Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.


Reports: Jazz’s Donovan Mitchell plans to participate in USA Basketball minicamp

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Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell is planning to participate in a USA Basketball minicamp this August in advance of September’s FIBA World Cup to take place in China, according to reports by the New York Times and ESPN.

Marc Stein of the Times first wrote that Charlotte guard Kemba Walker had committed to participating, and that superstars James Harden and Anthony Davis were also strongly considering it. ESPN further reported that minicamp invitations had also been issued to the Blazers’ Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum, the Bucks’ Khris Middleton and Brook Lopez, the Rockets’ Eric Gordon and PJ Tucker, the Wizards’ Bradley Beal, the Cavaliers’ Kevin Love, the Spurs’ LaMarcus Aldridge, the Pistons’ Andre Drummond, the Celtics’ Jayson Tatum, and the Lakers’ Kyle Kuzma.

ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski confirmed that Mitchell plans to attend the minicamp with the intention of playing in China.

In his recently completed second season, Mitchell helped lead the Jazz to 50 regular-season wins and a postseason appearance. He averaged 23.8 points, 4.2 assists, 4.1 rebounds, and 1.4 steals per game, while shooting 36.2% from 3-point range.

The training camp is scheduled to take place Aug. 5-8 in Las Vegas, and the World Cup is slated for Aug. 21-Sept. 15 in China.

Leonard Pitts: What would you give to save your world?

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Elmo Cook knew nothing about it.

He'd heard the sirens in the middle of the night alerting all of Abilene that something had happened, but when he tried to turn on the radio, he found that his power was out. And when he left for work in the morning, the paperboy had not yet made his rounds.

As a result, Cook was one of the last people in town to hear about D-Day.

The anecdote is from the Abilene Reporter-News for June 7, 1944, and it offers a visceral illustration of how the nation has changed in the now-75 years since American and other Allied forces stormed beaches in the Normandy region of France. Indeed, from the vantage point of 2019, the idea that one might not know that a fleet of over 6,000 vessels had ferried over 150,000 men to an enemy shore where they charged into machine gun fire sounds, to put it mildly, ridiculous.

In 2019, we would know. The attack would be live streamed. French civilians hiding in their cellars would tweet eyewitness accounts. CNN would run breaking news graphics and stand military consultants atop holographic maps to give the play-by-play. Because these days, the world is wired and we are all better connected — if by “connected,” one means superior communications technology.

But connectedness is about more than mobile phones and social media. It is also about the investment each one makes in a common us, larger than the challenges and troubles of any single life. Seventy-five years ago, that investment, that connectedness, made people save scrap metal and bacon grease, grow their own food, ration gas, buy war bonds and go without.

And then on D-Day, it made companies take out newspaper ads exhorting people to go to their churches or synagogues to pray for the men in harm's way, something a modern retailer would be unlikely to do. "Thoughts and prayers," after all, has become a cliche and besides, what business wants to marginalize Muslims or atheists? Yet, there is something in those old ads, in the implicit assumption that the same burdens, hopes and faith were borne by all, that is undeniably affecting.

Tom Brokaw famously dubbed the Americans who fought World War II "The Greatest Generation." Whether you buy that or not, they were without question a generation that courageously faced the nation's greatest existential threat since the Civil War. And like the Civil War generation, this one was forced to confront the realization that America's survival was not preordained, that everything they loved could go away.

History demanded of them the answer to a pointed question: What would you give to save your world? Estimates vary, but by one authoritative count, 2,501 Americans gave their lives on D-Day alone.

Many of them rest beneath white marble headstones at Le Cimetire Amricain — the American Cemetery — which sits atop a bluff overlooking one of the windswept beaches where these men waded ashore. Back at home, their families huddled around radios or snatched up newspapers, hungry for news.

They were not a perfect generation, the tendency to romanticize them notwithstanding. But they knew, better than their children, better than their children's children, how to be a country — what it took, what it meant, and why it mattered. They pulled together and believed in something more important to them than their own lives. And so, they were bound to one another, connected to one another in ways unachievable by social media. It is something you and I might find difficult to imagine.

But we owe it to our country to try.

Leonard Pitts Jr.
Leonard Pitts Jr. (CHUCK KENNEDY/)

Leonard Pitts is a columnist for The Miami Herald. lpitts@miamiherald.com

Utah second baseman Oliver Dunn and two other Cottonwood High products are taken in the MLB Draft

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When his Utah baseball team’s season ended in May, coach Bill Kinneberg commended the college career of junior second baseman Oliver Dunn, expecting him to turn pro after the Major League Baseball draft.

Kinneberg also spoke excitedly that day about his eight incoming freshmen, but now he must await the MLB decisions of five of them – including two Utah high school products, Cottonwood pitcher Porter Hodge and Dixie shortstop Kayler Yates. Three of those five selections came late in the draft, though, logically reducing the chances of the players forgoing college baseball.

Dunn, an All-Pac-12 player and third-team All-American from Cottonwood, went to the New York Yankees in the 11th round Wednesday as the three-day, 40-round event concluded. Players taken after the 10th round are eligible for a signing bonus of up to $125,000.

Dunn was picked in his projected range, after batting .366 as a junior and leading the Utes in multiple offensive categories. Speaking after the Utes' final game, Dunn sounded relatively certain of launching his pro baseball career if his draft outcome was favorable, and Kinneberg said, “We're going to miss him.”

Hodge, whose pitching helped Cottonwood win two state championships in three seasons, went to the Chicago Cubs in the 13th round. Others who signed with the Utes in November and were drafted Wednesday included Randon Hostert, a pitcher from Idaho Falls, Idaho (Texas, 15th round); Yates (Los Angeles Dodgers, 31st round); TJ Clarkson, a first baseman from Gilbert, Ariz. (Cleveland, 33rd round); and Brock Rudy, a catcher from Walnut Creek, Calif. (Houston, 39th round).

Players with ties to the state picked Wednesday also included Paxton Schultz, a pitcher from Orem High and Utah Valley University (Milwaukee, 14th round); Jayden Murray, a pitcher from Uintah High and Dixie State University (Tampa Bay, 23rd round); Wil Jensen, a pitcher from Cottonwood and Pepperdine (Oakland, 28th round); and Cy Nielson, a pitcher from Spanish Fork High (Cleveland, 40th round).

Schultz and Murray each broke their schools’ season record for strikeouts in 2019, with roughly one per inning. Schultz, a junior, is the highest-drafted player in UVU’s Division I era and Murray went 10-3 with a 3.78 ERA as a DSU senior.

Nielson is among three BYU signees who were drafted, joining Cutter Clawson, a pitcher from Laguna Beach, Calif. (Washington, 33rd round) and Tyson Heaton, a pitcher from Yucaipa, Calif. (Los Angeles Angels, 40th round).

Cougar shortstop Jackson Cluff was drafted by Washington in the sixth round Tuesday.

White House downplays chance of deal to avert Mexico tariffs

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Washington • White House officials downplayed expectations ahead of the high-level, face-to-face meeting Wednesday between the U.S. and Mexico over President Donald Trump’s threatened tariffs on Mexican goods flowing into the United States.

The first tariffs — 5% taxes on imports from Mexico — are to go into effect on Monday barring an agreement that seems increasingly unlikely before then, despite continuing negotiations as well as stiff opposition from many of Trump’s fellow Republicans in Congress.

The U.S. delegation to Wednesday’s talks, led by Vice President Mike Pence, was ready to listen to Mexico’s ideas for meeting Trump’s demands that the country step up its efforts to halt Central American migrants from making their way to the U.S. border, according to two officials, who spoke only on condition of anonymity ahead of the private meeting at the White House.

But they said they did not expect a deal to emerge during Wednesday's meeting that would stop the tariffs.

The tariffs carry enormous economic consequences for both countries, and politically they underscore a major ideological split between Trump and his party. Trump has increasingly relied on tariffs as a bludgeon to try to force other nations to bend to his will, dismissing warnings, including from fellow Republicans, about the likely impacts on American manufacturers and consumers .

While some have suggested the president, who is currently traveling in Europe, is not serious about going through with his threat, he insisted in a tweet Tuesday that he was not "bluffing" and told reporters the tariffs were "more likely" than not to take effect.

Still, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said in an interview with CNN that there were commitments Mexico could make Wednesday to avoid the tariffs, which he said "may not have to go into effect precisely because we have the Mexicans' attention."

Administration officials have said since Trump's announcement that Mexico can prevent the tariffs by securing their southern border with Guatemala, cracking down on criminal smuggling organizations and entering into a "safe third country agreement" that would make it difficult for those who enter Mexico from other countries to claim asylum in the U.S.

The U.S., however, has not proposed any concrete benchmarks or metrics to assess whether the U.S. ally is sufficiently stemming the migrant flow from Central America. And it is unclear whether even those steps would be enough to satisfy Trump on illegal immigration, a signature issue of his presidency and one that he sees as crucial to his 2020 re-election campaign.

Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill, Republicans in Congress have been threatening a rare confrontation with Trump, warning the White House Tuesday that they are ready to stand up to the president to try to block his tariffs, which they worry would spike U.S. consumer costs, harm the economy and imperil a major pending U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade deal .

At a lengthy closed-door lunch meeting at the Capitol, senators took turns warning Trump officials there could be trouble if the GOP-held Senate votes on disapproving the tariffs.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday with understatement, "There is not much support in my conference for tariffs, that's for sure."

"Deep concern and resistance," is how Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas characterized the mood.

It is unclear, however, whether they have the votes to stop Trump, and he said they'd be "foolish" to try.

Mexico has been engaged in an all-out lobbying effort this week to try to stave off the tariffs before Trump's June 10 deadline. Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard, who was to meet with Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at the White House, said Tuesday he thought tariffs could be avoided.

"By what we have seen so far, we will be able to reach an agreement," he said during a news conference at the Mexican Embassy in Washington.

Analysts, however, were not optimistic that the initial phase of tariffs could be avoided.

"Trump has got his new tool and he wants to use it and he will use it, not just because he can. He will use it because it's part of his negotiation tactics," said Duncan Wood, director of the Mexico Institute at the Wilson Center think tank in Washington.

He said Wednesday's talks were likely "just the beginning" of a weeks-long conversation and predicted a tit-for-tat.

"Mexico will offer to do a lot more on migration, but they will also say that they will retaliate against tariffs and a lot of people are going to lose a lot of money," he said.

Tony Wayne, a former U.S. ambassador to Mexico, said the two sides could have a good meeting and reach a deal, but still not satisfy the "wild card" president.

"The tweets have said 'stop everybody' and 'stop drugs.' That would be an impossible task to do in the near term," he said.

The economic stakes are enormous. The 25-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement made trade with Mexico largely duty free. As a result, manufacturers have built up complicated supply chains that straddle the border. Americans bought $378 billion worth of Mexican imports last year, led by cars and auto parts. Mexico is America's No. 2 export market behind Canada.

The back-and-forth could also imperil the NAFTA revamp, which Trump pressured Mexico and Canada to agree to last year. The U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement has been signed by all three countries but must be approved by their legislatures.

Trump, speaking to reporters in Ireland Wednesday, said he thinks Mexican officials "want to make a deal" and said he would know more after the meeting.

"Mexico can stop it. They have to stop it. Otherwise we just won't be able to do business," he said. "It's a very simple thing."

Associated Press writers Paul Wiseman, Lisa Mascaro, Darlene Superville and Padmananda Rama contributed to this report.


Letter: Storms are God’s punishment for Trump supporters

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