Tag Archives: Utah

Seatbelt Law

One of the bills up for voting in the Utah Legislature this session is the Prmiary Seat Belt Law. The Utah Senate has already voted in favor of it.

Currently the seat belt law is a “secondary” law – that is, you cannot be pulled over for not wearing your seat belt. If you are pulled over for some other offense, you can then be cited for not wearing your seat belt. If it becomes a primary law, you can be pulled over for not wearing a seat belt.

This type of bill really bothers me and I am opposed to such legislation. I view it as an insult to citizens’ intelligence as to what safety measures to take for themselves. I know full well that wearing a seat belt increases my chances of surviving a crash or minimizing injuries in a crash. So does nearly everyone else. I feel it is entirely inappropriate for our representatives to be discussion a bill that dictates to citizens what they must do to protect their own bodies.

If I am not wearing a seat belt, it hurts no one but me. It has no impact on the driver or passengers in the cars around me. I resent being told I am breaking a law that was implemented “for my own good”.

The billed passed out of committee with a 4-2 vote. Sens. Curt Bramble, R-Provo, and Scott Jenkins, R-Plain City, dissented.
“The question is what’s the best way to motivate citizens — I don’t think (the bill) is the best way,” said Bramble, whose daughter’s life was saved by wearing a seat belt when she was in a serious accident in Hawaii.
“Utah’s seat-belt use is well above the national average; it’s well above states that already have primary laws.
“I think educational campaigns are a more effective way (to promote seat-belt use),” Bramble said.

I concur with Bramble. It’s all about education, not dictatorship.

For the record: I am not opposed to wearing seatbelts. I am opposed to the government dictating to me that I must wear one or I will be cited for a misdemeanor. This is a waste of our legislators time (to even consider such legislation). IF passed and police officers begin pulling over citizens for not wearing seat belts, they will be spending time ticketing these offenders rather than being available for more serious crimes and incidents. Further, I don’t accept the excuse that not wearing a seatbelt increases the budget for emergency health care expenses for people who cannot afford to pay them.

Bull. This is a bad piece of legislation.

Hill Happenings

Yesterday’s Utah Legislative Report Summary
Articles in published in today’s Utah newspapers about the Yesterday’s Utah Legislature news:

Salt Lake Tribune
Short Sessions: Legislative briefs
Abortion foes score two wins in House Approved: One bill deals with parental consent, another with fetal pain
Group holds meeting at Utah Capitol to educate about Gay-Straight Alliance
End of the line for 900 South trains? Funding plan could bring neighbors relief by 2008
Lawmakers Queasy Over Anti-Violence Bill
Research Plan Advances in Legislature
Railroad bill can claim a number of parents
Panel Kills U. Rec Center
Option of sales tax for open space in 3 counties clears committee
Transport funds may get a shield Panel backs HB112, which would make them harder to raid
Bill calls for justice system watchdog

Deseret News
Utah lawmaker pushing to end ‘social promotion’
Game over for video bill; free speech is a concern
Charters seek funding equity: $800-per-student discrepancy is cited by school leaders
Charter funding requests for session
House OKs bill requiring parental consent on abortions: Valentine says issue may not fly so easily in Senate
‘Progressive’ students card lawmakers
House measure would raise divorce filing fee from $95 to $500
Utah Science and Technology Research bill takes a step
Primary seat-belt law gets a Senate green light
Panel reverses course on airport security bill
Bill promotes aid for consumers
Multi-Faith Day is Feb. 16 at the Utah Legislature
Measure would facilitate demise of 900 S. rail line
Senate bill would expose roots of political attacks
Goal of ID legislation is Utah-federal harmony
House bill seeks to add funds to transportation
House panel approves bill on racial, ethnic fairness
Action on fire sprinklers stalls in House panel
Repeal sought on portion of ’05 economic measure

S.B. 70 – Envirocare – A P.R. Ploy

S.B. 70, the bill that would allow Envirocare to double its capacity for receiving toxic waste, has apparently been halted – at least for this year. Envirocare officials claim that there are too many hurdles to jump and have withdrawn their submittal to the legistlature to expand. However……..our representatives are STILL scheduled to vote on this today or Monday (you know, it’s good for our economy…..jobs…..all that stuff.).

This is obviously a p.r. tactic to make Envirocare look “good” and allow legislators who are in favor of this dangerous bill to go ahead with it anyway. If legislators vote to in favor of this bill, Envirocare will get its way, without ruining its “reputation”.

HEAL Utah is calling for continued vigilance and action to make sure this issue stays alive and Envirocare doesn’t get its way. Learn how you can help HERE.

Sundance and its Volunteers

Sundance would probably function a lot differently were it not for its volunteers who are crucial in making Sundance happen.

The people that I know who volunteer for the famous film festival event do it because they love independent film, utah, and the festival – not because they want to see celebrities or mingle with them. Volunteers get to see films for free (in their spare time!) and they love meeting people who travel to Utah from all over to attend the event.

Many of the volunteers work full time jobs in addition to volunteering. One friend of mine (also a sister Radical Cheerleader!)spends 30 hours per week on top of her 40 hour per week social work job to volunteer at this event……and she loves it.

Thanks to all the volunteers out there who are making this happen!

West Jordan’s Sewage Problem – Continued

Yesterday I posted on the West Jordan sewage issue and the move of the city council to help pay for the repair of pipes of several homeowners whose homes unknowingly were dumping raw sewage into the Jordan River.

It seems that our elected officials are hesitating at giving assistance to residents (see my brief commentary on this at the end of the post).

The Salt Lake Tribune is reporting that now that Mayor David Newton on Tuesday attempted to give the five money from city coffers. That move – it would have been a $17,300 appropriation – was blocked because it wasn’t on the City Council’s agenda.

Councilman Rob Bennett argued that only the City Attorney can determine whether or not “homeowners deserve the compensation”.
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Hill Happenings

Yesterday’s Utah Legislative Report Summary
Articles in published in today’s Utah newspapers about the Yesterday’s Utah Legislature news:

Salt Lake Tribune
N-dump site won’t expand, for now
Envirocare: The move was approved, but skeptics say the firm is waiting for a more favorable political climate

House OKs bill ending food tax–Not a done deal: Despite Huntsman’s support, the Senate remains skeptical
Lawmaker ready to go to the mat for religion
Talk of the Morning: Surprise legislation

‘Driving privilege card is working’–Senate proponents say study confirms IDs for illegals should be retained
Committee OKs bill increasing state employees’, Lt. Gov.’s pay
Legislators tinker with rules on access to records
Measure to freeze credit data advances
Retailers, car dealers back it; credit bureaus opposed

Deseret News
Huntsman dismisses ‘sideshow’ legislation
House votes to dump food tax–Details now depend on February revenue update
“No” Votes on food sales tax
New school-voucher bill called a compromise–But an advocacy group still has questions about it
Measure would require sex offenders to register if visiting Utah–Not signing in within 12 hours of entering state would be felony
GRAMA bills pass out of committee — with changes
A reminder sought on school speech rights
Matheson assails permit bottleneck
Land-use bill raising eyebrows
‘Time not right’ for Medicaid drug list
Measure would allow certification of fire-alarm inspector

My New Opportunity in Education

Last October an opportunity came my way that is perfect for me. I took over as Coordinator of my school’s Service-Learning Program. The program was set up at the time for juniors and seniors to go into our community at various agencies and volunteer once per week during school time, with accountability in the form of written reports and reflections. Although my predecessor did a great job of “getting the ball rolling”, there were apparent (to me) flaws with the current system. After the first semester I changed the format of this program.

Beginning with this year’s juniors, all students must have one credit in service-learning, incorporate their experiences into their evolving portfolios at the end of each year, and develop a senior project (sort of like a thesis, only with a more hands-on approach).

My job also entails attending conferences and service-learning fairs at local colleges. I designed and developed two projects as and added feature to this program whereby undergraduate students will come into our school and work with me on the service-learning opportunities for a given class they are taking. My projects were recognized and accepted by local colleges and universities for this semester.

Service-Learning is a vital component in the school. The vision is to incorporate it into the curriculuar structure of each course taught in our school. My job is to provide education and opportunities to facilitate the implementation of this concept.
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Citizen Lobbying; S.B. 70 – Envirocare Update

Jen’s Green Journal has an account of the Citizens Lobbying 101 Training, organized by HEAL Utah, held last night at the Utah Capitol Complex.

HEAL Utah has this update and request on Utah S.B. 70:

The State Senate is likely to vote on SB 70 today (Thursday) or perhaps Friday. I want to thank everyone who has sent in a comment to the legislators we’ve been emailing out. Your comments keep this process we call democracy working. If you haven’t yet done so, I’ve listed the legislative leadership in the senate below. You should send a comment in the next few hours (even if you’ve already sent a comment, forward it to numbers 4 and 5, who we haven’t included yet).

1) Senate President John Valentine, (801) 224-1693, jvalentine@utahsenate.org
2) Senate Majority Leader Peter Knudson, (435) 723-2035, pknudson@utahsenate.org
3) Senate Majority Whip Dan Eastman, (801) 295-5133, deastman@utahsenate.org
4) Senate Minority Leader Mike Dmitrich, (435) 637-0426, mdmitrich@utahsenate.org
5) Senate Minority Whip Gene Davis, (801) 484-9428, gdavis@utahsenate.org
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Hill Happenings

Yesterday’s Utah Legislative Report Summary
Articles in published in today’s Utah newspapers about the Yesterday’s Utah Legislature news:

Salt Lake Tribune
Short Sessions: Legislative Briefs
Update: “Lori’s Law” bill passes House committee
Lori’s Law would stiffen sentences of Utah killers
A Father’s Plea

Proposal has legislators choose senators
Bill would reverse 17th amendment, have party caucuses choose nominees

Guv gets support in waste dispute
Power fight: Ex-governors say Huntsman should have the final say on the sites

Report lists ‘questionable’ campaign-fund spending
Disputed: Financial disclosures show donations have been used for personal matters; Lawmakers take issue with the conclusions

Bill to require notifying long-term care facilities when ex-cons move in
Information disclosure: The legislation is meant to head off potential problems as the number of aging inmates grows

Land-use bill shines spotlight on zoning
Balance of power: Municipal leaders see it as curbing their authority, but developers say it will give them a fair shake

Deseret News
House panel passes ‘Lori’s Bill,’ — 15-year minimum for murder
Crowd seeks disabled services–Funding DSPD needs would cost $8 million; surplus is $1 billion
Legislation aims to preserve hunting
House panel is pumped over Lake Powell pipeline–Measure flows to full House without a dissent
House OKs test program for disabled
Senator to modify bill’s ‘soft repeal’ of 17th–‘Vote of confidence’ by a caucus is one alternative
Use of campaign funds targeted–Advocacy group wants to restrict how they are used
House panel backs measure on right-of-way for disabled
Lawmakers may have to report conflicts of interest each year
Bill to ensure imate care passed

West Jordan Council Ignores its Citizens

I live in West Jordan, Utah which is historically a very politically conservative suburb of Salt Lake City.

Here is “democracy in action” in West Jordan:
Yesterday the West Jordan City Council approved a settlement with Utah Power, that will allow a controversial power substation to be built where neighbors don’t want it.

Despite the fact that the land for the proposed substation is near two elementary schools, a park, a church and the planned site of a private religious school, and that this issue has long been opposed by citizens, the council voted 6-1 to approve it. In exchange for the vote to approve the substation, Utah Power has agreed to implement “optimum enhancements” (trees, walls, etc.). But that does not satisfy residents who do not want the substation at all.
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