Plus, how much sleep your child needs to succeed this back-to-school season
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By Ariel Harmer day , 2024

Good morning! Here are today’s temperatures:

 

🌦️ 59 – 85° in Logan | 💧 40%

🌩️ 64 – 86° in Salt Lake | 💧 60%

🌤️ 78 – 98° in St. George | 💧 20%

 

As the director of social, cultural and constitutional studies at the American Enterprise Institute, Yuval Levin spends a lot of time thinking about American institutions and the ways in which they are struggling. From the family to three branches of government, the outlook can seem grim amid political acrimony and historically low levels of public trust.


Levin, however, brims with hope. America will be just fine, he says, if we can let go of the idea that we need to agree on everything.

 

Read more from Levin’s interview with the Deseret News.

 

Also on our minds:

  • How to see the northern lights and a meteor shower tonight 
  • SEG breaks ground on the Utah Hockey Club’s new training facility 
  • American medal winners totaled more than $8.6 million from the Olympics

How many visitors do the Wasatch canyons get?

 

An updated visitor use study commission by the Central Wasatch Commission demonstrates the proximity of Big and Little Cottonwood and Millcreek canyons are a big draw, attracting roughly 3.2 million visitors per year in an area spanning roughly 80,000 acres.


By comparison, Arches National Park — one of Utah’s beloved national parks — receives about 1.8 million visitors per year.


The analysis shows national forest lands within the canyons of the Central Wasatch receive roughly 3.2 million visits a year. In comparison, Arches National Park, which is nearly equal in size, receives roughly 1.8 million visitors per year. Despite the high level of use, Central Wasatch visitors are quite satisfied with their experiences. 

 

Read more about the popularity of Salt Lake City’s backyard canyons. 

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Back to school, back to routine

This week is back-to-school for many students across Utah. For many parents like Holly Richardson, it also means back-to-routines, something that benefits children and adults, including those who are neurodivergent and/or highly sensitive. Author Brianna Wiest noted: “As children, routine gives us a feeling of safety. As adults, it gives us a feeling of purpose.”

 

You can find lots of advice about transitioning your child to a more school-friendly bedtime in the last few weeks of summer vacation, or you can be like Holly and have one last “late night,” then get your child up extra early on the first day, knowing they’ll be tired in the evening. 

 

Children and adults benefit from morning routines. You can find, for example, books and podcasts on leadership that promote winning the day by getting up at 5 a.m. (or earlier) and having a series of steps (routines) that you do each day. Kids are no different, but sleeping in until 6 a.m. or 7 a.m. is just fine, of course.

 

Read more about how to build routines this back-to-school season. 

 

More in Utah

  • SEG breaks ground on new NHL practice ice at South Town
    (Deseret News)
  • What a Utah lawmaker learned from running the Paris Olympics marathon course (Deseret News)
  • Photo gallery: Westside CultureFest (Deseret News)
  • West Davis Corridor extension plans move ahead; Syracuse eyes development along roadway (KSL)
  • Heavy-duty drone to take gear to rescuers in Weber County (KSL)
12824-8_PLPCO_DesNews_Photo (1) (2)

FROM OUR SPONSOR UTAH PUBLIC LANDS

Stand for Our Land

 

Recently, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has significantly restricted access to Utah public lands and continues to restrict access. We need you to get involved. Learn how your access is being affected and voice your concerns to the BLM. Your input will help shape the future of Utah.

Round out your day (v5)

Politics

  • Trump says Iran hacked his campaign (Deseret News)
  • Judge impartiality questioned in criminal case as Trump seeks recusal (Deseret News)
  • 5 key moments from President Donald Trump’s conversation with Elon Musk (Deseret News)

The U.S.

  • Stressed and stretched: Americans battle financial anxiety (Deseret News)
  • As a new semester looms, students and colleges brace for more protests (NPR)

The World

  • What country paid the most to Olympic medal winners? (Deseret News)
  • UK’s Starmer urges Iran to refrain from Israel attack (BBC)

Sports

  • What Kalani Sitake shared about team’s first scrimmage of fall camp, the QB battle and more (Deseret News)
  • Utah is the top-ranked Big 12 team in the preseason Associated Press top 25 poll (Deseret News)
  • Was Utah State the unluckiest team in the country in 2023? (Deseret News)
  • ‘Continues to get better each day’: Why Isaac Wilson was named Utah’s backup quarterback (Deseret News)

Faith

  • A religious discrimination case against Dave Ramsey can proceed, federal court rules (Deseret News)
  • Latter-day Saint apostle Jeffrey R. Holland recounts phone conversation with Olympic medalist Kenneth Rooks (Deseret News)

Lifestyle

  • Northern lights to accompany Perseid meteor shower for a second night (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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