RECENT ARTICLES
Salt Lake City protesters call for defunding police, not kneeling with them
Loading...MarketplaceBetaSpenser Heaps, KSLLoading...SALT LAKE CITY — Protests in Salt Lake City on Tuesday took on a harsher tone, calling for defunding police rather than acts of unity with them and seeking the release of protesters jailed in recent rioting in the city.“We need to stop asking cops to kneel with us,” Daud Mumin, one of the event organizers, exclaimed through a microphone. “For us to put our communities of color at risk ... by asking them to kneel with us, to raise their fist, is a disappointment, and you’re on the wrong side of history.”No longer hampered by rain, the...…Loading...MarketplaceBetaSpenser Heaps, KSLLoading...SALT LAKE CITY — Protests in Salt Lake City on Tuesday took on a harsher tone, calling for defunding police rather than acts of unity with them and seeking the release of protesters jailed in recent rioting in the city.“We need to stop asking cops to kneel with us,” Daud Mumin, one of the event organizers, exclaimed through a microphone. “For us to put our communities of color at risk ... by asking them to kneel with us, to raise their fist, is a disappointment, and you’re on the wrong side of history.”No longer hampered by rain, the...WW…
Central Wasatch Commission approves funding for 6 projects in Cottonwood canyons
SHARESALT LAKE CITY — Hikers in the Cottonwood canyons will see some improvements this summer after the Central Wasatch Commission approved roughly $60,000 in funding for six new projects.Two new bridges for the Dog Lake Trail in Big Cottonwood Canyon, continued maintenance of Forest Service bathrooms and a kiosk for “wag-bags” — essentially a portable toilet — at the Jacob’s Ladder trailhead to Lone Peak are among the improvements people looking to to recreate in the Wasatch Mountains can expect to see. About $20,000 was aimed at supporting the Utah Open Lands Trust and its efforts to buy...…SHARESALT LAKE CITY — Hikers in the Cottonwood canyons will see some improvements this summer after the Central Wasatch Commission approved roughly $60,000 in funding for six new projects.Two new bridges for the Dog Lake Trail in Big Cottonwood Canyon, continued maintenance of Forest Service bathrooms and a kiosk for “wag-bags” — essentially a portable toilet — at the Jacob’s Ladder trailhead to Lone Peak are among the improvements people looking to to recreate in the Wasatch Mountains can expect to see. About $20,000 was aimed at supporting the Utah Open Lands Trust and its efforts to buy...WW…
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