Also, heat kills — here's how to stay safe this summer
Good morning! Here are today’s temperatures: ☀️ 58 – 97° in Logan ☀️ 70 – 100° in Salt Lake 🌤️ 80 – 106° in St. George | 💧 10% Today is the last day registered voters can vote in Utah’s primary elections. You can drop off your ballot in a drop box location before 8 p.m. or visit Utah’s election website to find out where to vote in person. Read more about how to vote in the primaries and when you can expect results. Also on our minds: What the Supreme Court’s new case on gender-related health care for minors could mean for Utah How to get free J. Dawgs for the Utah chain’s 20th anniversary How Utah’s strange baby names sparked a nationwide trend |
| Everything you need to know about Utah’s Senate race |
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| | Utah’s first competitive Republican primary for an open U.S. Senate seat in 30 years will also be its most crowded. On Tuesday, June 25, registered Utah GOP voters will decide their pick to replace the onetime GOP presidential nominee and one-term Beehive State senator, Mitt Romney. They will have four candidates to choose from in a race that has been defined by big money, big promises and a big endorsement from former President Donald Trump. When Romney announced in September he would not be seeking reelection, a diverse cast of political veterans and congressional long shots saw a shining opportunity, while one candidate saw his stated reason for running disappear. Read more about the candidates running for Mitt Romney’s seat in the Utah GOP primary.
More in Utah Politics What GOP primary voters need to know: A guide to our 2024 primary coverage (Deseret News) Get caught up on Utah’s 2nd and 3rd Congressional district races (Deseret News) A railway proposed for the Uinta Basin to transport waxy crude has important national ramifications (Deseret News) What the Supreme Court’s new case on gender-related health care for minors could mean for Utah (Deseret News) | Summer is sizzling and experts have been warning about heat domes and other temperature-related dangers. But what does that mean and why so much concern? It’s a simple but largely unrecognized fact that heat kills more people than any other weather feature — no competitor comes close. And while those most at risk are children, older adults, pregnant women and sick or overweight individuals, according to Ready.gov, anyone can fall victim to high temperatures. To understand the lethal power of extreme heat, one need only consider the annual Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia just days ago, where an estimated 1,300 people died in record-breaking temperatures. In the Intermountain West, the Phoenix area has six confirmed heat deaths already this summer and is investigating nearly 90. Two people died of heat-related causes in Idaho, typically considerably cooler than many U.S. states. Read more about your susceptibility to heat and how to protect yourself as temperatures rise across the nation this summer. | Utah Deseret News Editorial Board: Utah needs the SLC sports, entertainment, culture and convention district (Deseret News) Utah favorite J. Dawgs celebrates 20 years with free dogs (Deseret News) Boil order issued for Washington County community after E. coli found (KSL) 20 hikers rescued from canyon after flash flooding hits Moab area (KSL) The West The fate of the Senate lies in the West (Deseret News) California hiker lost for 10 days in the thick Big Basin Redwoods, surviving solely on drinking water from his boot (Deseret News) The U.S. The biggest questions the Supreme Court will answer this week (Deseret News) Utah Sen. Mitt Romney joins other Republicans in criticizing Biden’s border policies (Deseret News) Pro-Palestinian protest outside LA synagogue turns violent, as Biden and others condemn it (Deseret News) The World Is air conditioning critical to Team USA’s performance at the Paris Olympics? Yes, say U.S. officials (Deseret News) Russia promises retaliation against US for Ukraine strike on Crimea (Reuters) Sports How faith is helping Kenneth Rooks chase his Olympic dreams (Deseret News) ‘I think it’s going to be fascinating this year’: What the Utah Jazz GM said Monday about this week’s NBA draft (Deseret News) ‘You just can’t ask for more than that’: BYU steeplechasers shine at U.S. track and field trials (Deseret News) 5-star Utah talent Jerome Myles reopens his recruitment (Deseret News) Faith In first broadcast, new ‘Music & the Spoken Word’ host promises messages of ‘joy, hope and peace’ (Deseret News) ‘The Boy with a Hundred Questions’: New children’s book helps kids understand different faiths (Deseret News) Opinion Meg Walter: You mocked Utah for our baby names, but who’s laughing now? (Deseret News) Asma Uddin: ‘Normies’ can be democracy’s renewing force (Deseret News) |
Check your inbox tomorrow morning for more news from the Beehive State and beyond! And reply to this email or email [email protected] to tell us what you think of Utah Today. Thanks for reading! — Ariel |
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