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Situational awareness - February 14, 2018

Wednesday, February 14, 2018 - 10:30am
Utah Policy

Situational awareness - February 14, 2018

 

Good Wednesday morning from Salt Lake City. Happy Valentine's Day! It's also Ash Wednesday.

Lawmakers reach the halfway point of the 2018 election. Legislators still have to set the budget next year, but they still don't know how much money they'll have to spend. The White House is still reeling from the fallout of abuse allegations against a top aide.

Tick Tock:

  • 22 days until the final day of the 2018 Utah Legislature (3/8/2018)
  • 23 days until the filing period for candidates in the 2018 election opens (3/9/2018)
  • 29 days until the filing deadline for the 2018 elections (3/15/2018)
  • 34 days until the statewide caucus meetings for Utah Republicans and Democrats (3/20/2018)
  • 66 days until the Utah GOP State Convention (4/21/2018)
  • 73 days until the Utah Democratic State Convention (4/28/2018)
  • 132 days until the 2018 Primary Election (6/26/2018)
  • 264 days until the 2018 midterm elections (11/6/2018)
  • 348 days until the first day of the 2019 Utah Legislature (1/28/2019)
  • 994 days until the 2020 presidential election (11/3/2020)

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Here's what's driving the day:

We're halfway done with the 2018 session

Well, a little more than halfway right now. Lawmakers have already tackled some big issues, but there's plenty still on their plate in the final days before they adjourn on March 8 [Utah Policy].

Setting the budget

Lawmakers still don't know how much extra money they'll have to spend next year. Sen. Jerry Stevenson plans to fast-track a bill to improve data sharing between the tax commission, governor's office, and the legislature so they can get a better handle on the budget situation [Utah Policy].

Overhauling Medicaid

Sen. Daniel Hemmert wants the state to ask the feds for a block grant to administer their own Medicaid program. If that fails, he wants to implement work requirements and other changes [Utah Policy].

Slowing the flow of bill requests

One lawmaker reportedly opened a whopping 82 bill files this year. Rep. Dan McCay wants to make known just how many bill requests a lawmaker submits, which should cut down on that behavior [Utah Policy].

Candidate field filling up

Democrat Kurt Weiland jumps into the race in Utah's 1st District against Republican Rob Bishop [Utah Policy].

Other Utah headlines:

  • Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams renews his promise to pull back his support of a new homeless shelter in South Salt Lake if lawmakers don't come through with funding for the facility [Deseret News, Tribune].
     
  • Rep. Mike Noel's company owned land inside Grand Staircase-Escalante at the same time he was fighting to overturn the monument [Deseret NewsTribune].
     
  • The House narrowly passed a bill allowing the state to grow medical marijuana. The bill now moves to the Senate [Deseret News].
     
  • Rep. Gage Froerer is back with his proposal to abolish the death penalty in Utah [Tribune].
     
  • A House committee approved a bill to direct the Utah Transit Authority to follow spending priorities set by counties when they're using money raised through a voter-approved sales tax hike [Deseret News, Tribune].
     
  • Salt Lake City leaders are pushing back against a state proposal to establish control over a new inland port in the city's northwest quadrant. The city has countered with a plan to share governing responsibility [Deseret News].
     
  • A House panel refused to debate a resolution that recognized climate change is happening and it is caused by human-related activity [Deseret News, Tribune].
     
  • A House committee put the kibosh on a proposal to study the gender-based wage gap in Utah [Deseret News, Associated Press].
     
  • As we first told you in yesterday's newsletter, Jan Garbett is running for Congress under the United Utah Party banner in Utah's 2nd District. The third party also announced Eric Eliason will challenge Rep. Rob Bishop in the 1st District [Deseret NewsTribune].

National headlines:

  • What?!! President Donald Trump's lawyer says he paid a porn star who had claimed she had an affair with Trump $130,000 out of his own pocket to buy her silence during the 2016 campaign [New York Times].
     
  • The Trump White House is preparing to heap blame on Democrats if the Senate is unable to reach a deal on immigration. Right now, the prospects for any sort of agreement are dim [Politico].
     
  • Leaders of U.S. intelligence agencies are warning that Russia is planning to interfere in the 2018 midterm elections by using social media to spread disinformation, much like they did in 2016 [Reuters].
     
  • President Trump reportedly still does not believe that Russia meddled in the 2016 election. Trump confidants say he believes the allegations make it sound like Trump had help winning instead of winning on his own [CNN].
     
  • It's day #8 of the Rob Porter scandal:
    • FBI Director Chris Wray contradicted the White House's version of when they became aware of the abuse allegations against Porter. He testified before Congress the FBI notified the White House multiple times about the allegations against Porter [New York Times].
       
    • White House chief of staff is reportedly losing the confidence of his staff because of the way he handled the Porter scandal. One White House official called him a "big fat liar" [Washington Post].
       
    • Porter blamed his ex-wife's black eye on an accident during an off-the-record chat with reporters who pressed him about the photograph [Politico].
       
  • Take note: New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman says White House officials are now "prefacing or concluding their sentences in conversations with reporters by making clear they can't swear by the information they've just given" [Twitter].
     
  • Issue to watch: Economists are warning we may be headed toward an economic downturn in 2019 [Washington Post].
     
  • A top Democratic consultant has resigned amid allegations of sexual misconduct [Huffington Post].
     
  • EPA administrator Scott Pruitt, who is under fire for spending lavishly on luxury travel and hotels, got a waiver to fly business class on Emirates Airlines, which has some of the most luxurious business class cabins in the world. Government officials are required to use U.S. air carriers for travel funded by the government [CBS News].
     
  • Prominent Republican women are getting frustrated with the way the Trump White House has handled abuse charges against men. They fear it could hurt the party's efforts to attract female voters in the 2018 midterms [Associated Press].
     
  • Another federal judge has blocked the Trump administration's plan to end the DACA program next month [Reuters].
     
  • Democrats have flipped another Republican-held legislative seat, this time in Florida. It's the 36th seat they've flipped from red to blue since the 2016 election [Washington Post].
     
  • Uh oh! Law school graduates may pay "significantly more" on their student loans under President Trump's budget proposal [Above the Law].

On this day in history:

  • 1778 - The United States flag is formally recognized by a foreign naval vessel for the first time, when French Admiral Toussaint-Guillaume Picquet de la Motte renders a nine gun salute to USS Ranger, commanded by John Paul Jones.
     
  • 1779 - James Cook is killed by Native Hawaiians on the Island of Hawaii.
     
  • 1835 - The original Quorum of the Twelve Apostles in the LDS Church is formed in Kirtland, Ohio.
     
  • 1849 - James K. Polk becomes the first serving president to have his photograph taken.
     
  • 1859 - Oregon is admitted as the 33rd state.
     
  • 1876 - Alexander Graham Bell applies for a patent for the telephone, as does Elisha Gray.
     
  • 1899 - Congress approves voting machines for use in federal elections.
     
  • 1912 - Arizona is admitted as the 48th state.
     
  • 1920 - The League of Women Voters was formed in Chicago.
     
  • 2005 - Video sharing site YouTube is launched by a group of college students.

 

 

Today At Utah Policy

Lawmakers will need to fast-track a bill this week to help set next year's budget
By Bryan Schott, Managing Editor
Lawmakers are anxious to get started setting the final budget for next fiscal year. But, they can't get started until they figure out exactly how much money they'll have to spend....

Weekly survey: What initiatives do you think will make the 2018 ballot?
By Bryan Schott, Managing Editor
There could be six initiatives on the 2018 ballot, but only if their backers can gather the required number of signatures before mid-April....

Lawmakers reach the halfway point in the 2018 session
By Bob Bernick and Bryan Schott
Utah Legislature is at the halfway point of the 2018 session, and as is usually the case, most of the heavy work remains to be done....

Proposal could crack down on lawmakers who open an excessive number of bill files
By Bob Bernick, Contributing Editor
Transparency will solve so many problems in government, believes Rep. Dan McCay, who wants the public to know who in the heck opened 82 bill files this session....

Lawmaker wants Utah to push feds to approve Medicaid block grants or make changes to the existing program
By Bryan Schott, Managing Editor
With the talk about Medicaid expansion taking up all the oxygen on Utah's Capitol Hill, there's a new proposal to overhaul Utah's existing Medicaid system....

Democrat Kurt Weiland files for CD1 race
By Bryan Schott, Managing Editor
A recent FEC filing shows that Democrat Kurt Weiland is in the race to challenge longtime Republican Rob Bishop in Utah's First Congressional District....

 

Policy News

 

Utah Farm Bureau lists 'Issues to watch for in 2018'
The Utah Farm Bureau has released its list of 'Issues to Watch For in 2018' upon returning from the national agricultural convention for the American Farm Bureau Federation and is it implements its policy priorities during the 2018 Utah general legislative session....

Local Headlines

Salt Lake Tribune

Op-ed: Elected officials changing the will of the people before they even get a chance to vote

Editorial: The attorney general should join the effort against Big Pharma

Wary of saying humans are responsible, Utah lawmakers postpone vote on two climate-change resolutions

Rolly: If southern Utah lawmaker Mike Noel keeps pushing policies that hurt Salt Lake City residents, they should get to hurt him - at the ballot box

Bill advances to allow bicyclists to roll through stop signs, red lights

$1.5 billion in bonds for prison, highways now will come with an extra $10.5 million cost

Mayor Ben McAdams touts Operation Rio Grande, is sure Legislature will deliver funding help to areas near new homeless centers

Lawmakers vote to stiffen penalty for killing police dogs

By a single vote, the Utah House avoided a strikeout on bills that would legalize medical marijuana for terminally ill patients

Bill that would allow small Utah farmers to be free of some safety rules passes House

Lawmakers will consider - again - whether to abolish the death penalty in Utah

Jan Garbett is running as a United Utah Party candidate against Rep. Chris Stewart

Bill advances to strip power from UTA on how to spend new tax money in Weber, Davis counties

Rep. Mike Noel's company owned land inside Grand Staircase-Escalante while he fought against the monument

Deseret News

Jay Evensen: Legislative sex scandals - entrapment, or something else?

Boyd Matheson: Indentured servitude or a contract with value?

Inside the movement for paid time off to have a baby - in Utah and beyond

Bill allowing cyclists to roll through stop signs clears first hurdle

Renewing driver's license? Bill would tell you about improving air quality

Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams renews pledge to pull support of homeless site if revenue bill fails

Utah Senate committee ices proposed gender-based wage gap study

Bill ensuring UTA follows priorities for Prop. 1 tax dollars advanced by Utah House committee

House committee ices climate change resolution but backs new emission-busting efforts

Senate approves tougher penalty for killing a K-9 police dog

Salt Lake City counters state's pitch for inland port authority

United Utah Party candidates to challenge 2 congressmen

Group says Utah lawmaker didn't disclose land in Grand Staircase

Washington County GOP elects lawyer to replace Utah House member caught in sex scandal

Should Utah Constitution include protection against electronic data searches?

Bill directing cultivation of cannabis in Utah narrowly passes House as several switch votes

Other

Editorial: Utah needs to remove the stigma from breastfeeding in public (Standard-Examiner)

Northern Utah US House race draws two new hopefuls, both wary of Trump's tone (Standard-Examiner)

Utah Rep. Gage Froerer won't run again for House, to seek county spot instead (Standard-Examiner)

National Headlines

Trump Makes Gains Ahead of Midterms but Risks Remain for GOP (Morning Consult)

Feds Collect Record Taxes in First Month Under Tax Cut; Run Surplus in January (CNS News)

Justice for Gemmel Moore? Family wants answers in escort's death at Dem donor's home (FOX News)

Record Number of U.S. Small-Business Owners Say It's a Good Time to Expand (Bloomberg)

Letter with white powder for Trump Jr. calls him 'awful,' says he'll get what he 'deserves' (FOX News)

Jeff Sessions's 'Anglo-American' comments, and the danger of the liberal Trump outrage machine (Washington Post)

Total US household debt soars to record above $13 trillion (CNBC)

Bill Murray praises Republican tax cuts (Daily Mail)

How Wall Street's 'fear gauge' is being rigged, according to one whistleblower (MarketWatch)

Stocks Edge Higher as a 3-Day Win Streak Restores Some Calm (Associated Press)

Even Bill Gates is worried that Silicon Valley will unleash the Apocaplypse (Vanity Fair)

Wise Words

Perspective

"Millions saw the apple fall, but Newton was the one who asked why." Bernard Baruch
 

 

Lighter Side

Crazy

"People are still excited about the Philadelphia Eagles winning their first Super Bowl! And did you know this? I read that Eagles coach Doug Pederson was coaching high school football just 10 years ago. Which sounds crazy, until you remember that just FIVE years ago, our president was firing Clay Aiken from a TV show." Jimmy Fallon