Utah Runnin’ Utes contacted Rutgers’ Jeremiah Williams via transfer portal

As Utah basketball coach Alex Jensen and his staff strive to round out their squad’s backcourt rotation for the 2025-26 season through the transfer portal, it a …

As Utah basketball coach Alex Jensen and his staff strive to round out their squad’s backcourt rotation for the 2025-26 season through the transfer portal, it appears former Rutgers guard Jeremiah Williams could be a name to watch for the Runnin’ Utes.

According to 247Sports’ Dushawn London, Utah is one of many schools that the 6-foot-4 Williams has heard from since entering the portal last month.

A former three-star recruit and product of Chicago-based Simeon Academy, Williams spent the first two seasons of his college career at Temple, where he averaged 8.5 points, 3.0 rebounds and 2.2 assists while making 43 appearances for Aaron McKie’s program. Williams transferred to Iowa State ahead of the 2022-23 campaign, though he didn’t play any games with the Cyclones due to a left Achilles injury that sidelined him for the season.

Williams missed a chunk of games during his first season with the Scarlet Knights after pleading guilty to underage gambling in 2023. When he returned to action, Williams put up 12.2 points, 3.4 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.2 steals per game.

Williams was less productive in his second season at Rutgers, averaging 7.0 points while attempting 5.9 field goals per game (down from 10.5 attempts in 2023-24). He scored in double-figures in eight contests, highlighted by a season-high 20 points against Texas A&M on Nov. 30. Williams also posted 11 points in a win over UCLA on Jan. 13.

The Utes have landed commitments from four players via the portal this spring, including 6-foot-6 forward Jahki Howard, 6-foot-4 guard Elijah “Choppa” Moore (Syracuse), 6-foot-8 forward James Okonkwo (Akron) and 6-foot-3 guard Terrence Brown (Fairleigh Dickinson). Utah also hosted Iowa transfer Seydou Traore on a visit to campus Wednesday.

A dozen players from Utah’s 2024-25 squad entered the portal, including 6-foot-9 forward Ezra Ausar (12.5 ppg, committed to USC), 6-foot-8 wing Mike Sharavjamts (7.2 ppg, committed to South Carolina) and 6-foot-4 guard Miro Little (5.3 ppg, committed to UC Santa Barbara). Gabe Madsen is also departing via graduation, making the Utes’ need for backcourt depth that much more apparent.

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Source: Utah News

Congress explores limiting cellphones in classrooms as states like Utah issue bans

Under legislation making its way through the U.S. Senate, a bipartisan group of lawmakers, including Utah Sen. John Curtis, is pushing for increased research on the effects of mobile devices in …

Under legislation making its way through the U.S. Senate, a bipartisan group of lawmakers, including Utah Sen. John Curtis, is pushing for increased research on the effects of mobile devices in …

Source: Utah News

A judge ruled the University of Utah didn’t have to help a sex assault victim because the attack happened off campus

The University of Utah had no obligation to help a sex assault victim — even though she was allegedly raped by one of the school’s football players — because the attack happened off campus, according …

Note to readers • This story discusses sexual assault. If you need to report or discuss a sexual assault, you can call the Utah Rape and Sexual Assault Crisis Line at 801-736-4356.

The University of Utah had no obligation to help a sex assault victim — even though she was allegedly raped by one of the school’s football players — because the attack happened off campus, according to a federal judge.

That significant ruling issued last month from U.S. District Court Judge David Barlow now dismisses the U. from the lawsuit filed by Marissa Root, bringing her high-profile case to a quiet end after more than three years of fighting.

“Because this record does not supply the required nexus between the university and the off-campus party at a private residence, the university cannot be liable under Title IX,” wrote Barlow in his decision. That’s the federal law that charges universities with ensuring students receive education without sex-based discrimination; it also mandates that schools operate offices that provide support to students who have been sexually assaulted.

Root’s December 2021 filing had initially drawn widespread attention when she alleged that both the U. and Utah Valley University, where she remains a student, both declined to provide her any resources after she reported being assaulted. UVU was previously released from the case in 2023, when Barlow similarly determined that the Orem school had no responsibility because the alleged attacker wasn’t a student there.

Ultimately, Root has said that neither school helped her when she first reached out with allegations against the player. With both now dismissed from the case, it’s left her questioning: Where should victims go for support? Where can they get assistance?

“I had barriers at every single turn, from the hospitals to the universities to the police department to the district attorney,” she told The Salt Lake Tribune. “For me, now that this has been dismissed, there wasn’t an avenue that I got to feel heard in.”

The Tribune generally does not identify victims of sexual assault, but Root has agreed to the use of her name.

From the beginning, Root says the process for her to report the assault was marred by missteps. That included, she said, a hospital nurse telling her she’d have to pay for her own rape kit, which is not correct; staff later realized the error, but not before Root said she had a panic attack in the emergency room and it nearly stopped her from moving forward.

The Unified Police Department, where she ultimately reported the alleged September 2019 assault, also lost critical evidence in her case — a recording of the U. football player, Sione Lund — and delayed sending in Root’s DNA test for months, according to court documents.

Without the recording, and with Lund refusing to come in again when the department noticed it was gone, prosecutors told Root that moving forward with a criminal case would be severely hampered.

Lund, a former linebacker who was dismissed from the team when charges were later filed, was ultimately sentenced in April 2023 under a plea deal to 30 days in jail. He was originally facing two felony counts of rape and forcible sodomy; he pleaded guilty to one felony count of attempted forcible sodomy.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Sione Lund, a former University of Utah football player, at a preliminary hearing in West Jordan on Thursday, July 28, 2022.

A U. spokesperson responded to the judge’s latest ruling with a statement calling it “a tragic case with far-reaching implications for everyone involved.” The school, the statement said, is committed to preventing violence and making sure “students feel safe, supported and heard.”

It continued: “We hope Marissa and the people who love and support her find opportunities for healing from this traumatic experience.”

Root, now 29, feels the school could have done more to help her heal but chose not to.

“I have to heal on my own from what happened,” she said. “… But even though I have been silenced over and over and over again for over five years, that forced me to find my own voice. And that’s never going away.”

What the ruling means

Root had argued in the lawsuit that both schools showed deliberate indifference and left her to deal with the alleged assault alone.

As a UVU student, she argued, the school should have been obligated to help her. And she asserted the U., where the football player attended, also could have provided her resources.

But under the judge’s ruling, a college does not have to help victims or survivors of sex assault — even if they are students there — if the alleged assault did not happen on campus or at a school-sponsored event.

The brief seven-page decision from Barlow said the U., specifically, didn’t have substantial control based on the location of the alleged attack to make the school liable for responding to it. It didn’t own the property — a private residence in Holladay owned by Lund’s parents — and it didn’t organize or sponsor the party that Lund held there that night.

That varies widely, Barlow said, from a location like a fraternity house where a university would have some jurisdiction, even if technically off-campus, because it sanctions the activities.

That goes against, though, what most advocates had thought Title IX ensured and what guidance at the time from the Department of Education suggested.

S. Daniel Carter, president of SAFE Campuses, LLC, previously said Title IX does not instruct schools to send their own students to the school of an alleged perpetrator for help. But even if it did, the second school should also have felt some responsibility to offer assistance.

“Legal requirements aside, a ‘pass the buck’ system can be deadly,” Carter has said.

The U. had previously filed a motion in the court in August, calling for the case to be dismissed. The school’s attorneys argued, in line with Barlow’s ruling, that the university cannot be responsible for what its students do off campus in situations it doesn’t control.

That would leave schools broadly open to lawsuits and “expand liability” beyond what the law says, they asserted. Barlow only ruled on that part of the U.’s arguments, suggesting it was enough to dismiss the case.

But the U. went further in its filing to say it also didn’t owe Root anything because she was not a student at the university entitled to resources there. They called her “a nonstudent without sufficient connections to the university,” saying her arguments that she attended several sporting events and often studied at the U.’s library were not enough. It would leave them responsible, the school said, for every person who ever walked on campus.

And the university argued it also didn’t know of any prior instances of alleged sex assault with Lund that would make it responsible for taking action against him.

Root contends, though, that the U. knew Lund was “an unsafe person.”

“He was defended. He was protected,” she said. “That was my biggest worry and why I wanted to go in there and make a complaint in the first place, so they understood there was a person on their campus who was a huge risk and a huge danger.”

Discovery in the lawsuit notes that Lund had previously been placed on probation by the U.’s football staff for being under the influence of drugs or alcohol at least twice, in violation of team policy.

He was disciplined both times, the U. said. But that didn’t make him a red flag to potentially assault someone, they contended. And though school policy instructs players to treat women with respect and not drink, that doesn’t mean the school has control over whether players follow it, as Lund’s attorneys argued.

The judge agreed with the university.

Barlow wrote: “Reliance on the 2019 Players Policy Manual’s general instruction that football players should treat women with respect both on and off campus does not mean that the university has control over the context of virtually every off-campus location in which one or more of its athletes attends a private party.”

The University of Utah had originally used similar arguments when it denied responsibility for the death of student athlete Lauren McCluskey in October 2018, saying her attacker was not a student so the school didn’t have any authority over him.

That prompted concern among students about the implications, including when their university would be obligated to protect them. The U. ultimately settled the case with McCluskey’s parents, acknowledging it was aware that McCluskey reported her concerns several times to the campus police department and housing officials and the school failed to take them seriously before she was killed outside her dorm.

(Photo courtesy of Jill McCluskey) In this undated photo, Lauren McCluskey makes the “U” with her hands.

What happened in the criminal case

Root had just started her sophomore year in fall 2019 at Utah Valley University when she went with a group of friends to the party at Lund’s parents’ house, she detailed in her lawsuit. Most of the men at the party were University of Utah football players, she said.

She later told police that at some point, Lund isolated her in his room. Root told him, “No,” several times, according to the charging documents, and repeated that she did not want to have sex with him. The police documents state that he then allegedly forced himself on her, as well as allegedly forced her to perform a sex act on him.

Root went to a hospital after with two friends. Following that, she sought help at UVU, where staff said she should talk to the U. instead, since the reported attacker was a student there.

Root argued in her lawsuit that the U. declined to help her and said their obligation was instead to the player, who was their student. She said the advocate there never asked for his name and dissuaded her from saying it.

The university said in its filing that the Title IX employee felt Root did not want to name her attacker and didn’t press her on it. That’s the first time that detail, gathered during a deposition, had been disclosed.

The U. said in a statement for this story: “After Root made an initial report to the University of Utah’s Office of Equal Opportunity, staff repeatedly reached out to her to try to ascertain the name of the perpetrator.”

Root denies that. When the school later learned it was Lund, after police in February 2020 started interviewing members of the football team about the case, the U. says he was suspended indefinitely and removed from the team.

The school also says it provided training for all football players about preventing sexual assault three weeks after Root told the U. staffer what happened.

Meanwhile, police bungled Root’s case, according to both her lawsuit and statements from the Unified Police Department in the court docket. The original detective failed to make any significant notes in the files for roughly two years. And the recording of Lund was not saved.

That detective later resigned. And when Root and her mom called the department for an update, the sergeant who answered couldn’t initially find her report. “We’re going to figure this out. But there’s nothing in your case file,” Root remembers him saying.

She was devastated. “I lost it. I became so emotional,” she said. “I’d been doing this for two years and there was nothing.”

She had to repeat telling a new detective everything she had already recounted about the assault. Given the hurdles, prosecutors later worried about taking the case to trial, Root said.

Root went forward with a plea deal; her biggest ask was that Lund be added to the sex offender registry, and he was. His name was ordered on the list for years.

“Although I did agree to this plea deal because I want closure,” Root said on the day Lund was sentenced, “it does not change the fact that he is guilty of rape.”

Lund apologized to her. But members of Lund’s family sat in the courtroom and audibly scoffed when Root spoke. The judge in the case, 3rd District Court Judge Kristine Johnson, addressed that behavior and said she found it “incredibly troubling.”

“This was not consensual sex,” Johnson said. “Let me be crystal clear.”

Root’s life now

Nothing in the process went how she hoped, Root said. Still, she said she would go through it again.

“It took five years of my life,” she said. “But I did my best to protect other women.”

For the first time, with the lawsuit now closed, Root spoke openly about the trauma that feels like a constant shadow.

“I think that this will forever affect me,” she added. “He got 30 days. I got a life sentence.”

Because of the assault, she said, she was “emotionally comprised.” She feels she made self-deprecating choices that she wouldn’t otherwise have. She says she didn’t consider herself worthy of anything, which destroyed her relationships.

That feeling hasn’t gone away entirely. She’s married now, though, with a 2-year-old daughter.

Root is also pushing to finish her degree at UVU. Her timing for that fell off track, she said, after the attack; and she moved all her classes online, uncomfortable to be on campus at a school she said didn’t support her. She’s expecting to graduate this fall with a degree in public relations.

She said she wants to be an advocate for victims and survivors of sexual assault.

“It is a hard journey to go through the justice system,” she said.

Choking back tears, Root said she knows she deserves to be heard, and she will teach her daughter that.

“I get to have that confidence that I didn’t give up,” she said. “I fought for myself when no one else did. … A lot of times we don’t get justice. As hard as that is, that’s not what’s the most important thing. The most important thing is that I used my voice when there are thousands of women who don’t get to use theirs.”

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) Marissa Root, seen here in Salt Lake City on Friday, March 21, 2025, had her lawsuit against Utah Valley University and the University of Utah’s Title IX offices thrown out after years in the legal system. Root says she received little assistance from the the offices after reporting a sexual assault in 2019.

Source: Utah News

What “fertilization president” Trump can learn from state efforts to expand IVF access

State-level efforts to regulate fertility coverage reveal the gauntlet of budgetary and political hurdles such initiatives face.

For nearly three agonizing years, Mariah Freschi and her husband have been trying to have a second baby. The California mother recently underwent surgery to remove her blocked fallopian tubes, leaving in vitro fertilization as her only option to get pregnant. But the cost quoted by her Sacramento-area clinic was $25,000 — out of reach for Freschi, a preschool teacher, and her husband, a warehouse worker.

“When we first found out IVF was our only option, it just felt so overwhelming,” said Freschi, who has insurance through the California marketplace. “No one sets aside 20, 30 grand to grow your family.”

The Freschis are far from alone in requiring medical assistance to have children: About 13% of women and 11% of men in the U.S. experience infertility, while others are in a same-sex relationship, single, or want to preserve their eggs or sperm before undergoing various medical treatments.

And, like the Freschis, many Americans do not have health insurance that pays for IVF.

freschi.jpg

Mariah Freschi of Rocklin, California, and her husband, Jarred, would like to have a second child but are struggling to afford the necessary in vitro fertilization and don’t have infertility coverage.

Mariah Freschi


During his campaign, President Trump vowed that the government would cover IVF or require insurers to cover it. In February, he signed an executive order seeking policy recommendations on expanding IVF access, dubbing himself the “fertilization president” a few weeks later.

Whether the administration’s efforts will change policy remains unknown, but state-level attempts to mandate fertility coverage reveal the gauntlet of budgetary and political hurdles that such initiatives face — obstacles that have led to millions of people being left out.

“There are economic opponents, and there are ideological opponents,” said Sean Tipton, a lobbyist for the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. “It is a tough lineup of opponents. And that’s very consistent from state to state.”

Twenty-two states have passed legislation requiring insurers to cover at least some fertility care, and 15 of those require coverage for IVF. The laws vary widely, though, when it comes to who and what gets covered, largely because of debates over cost. Fertility services can range from diagnostic testing and ovulation-enhancing drugs to IVF, widely considered the most effective but also the most expensive treatment, during which one or more lab-fertilized eggs are transferred to a uterus.

It’s mostly those footing the bill amid rising health care costs and state deficits that have voiced opposition. State insurance mandates “factor in significantly” when it comes to whether employers continue to provide coverage at all because of financial concerns, according to Chris Bond, a spokesperson for AHIP, which represents health insurers, who also said employers “want to have flexibility with how these benefits are structured.”

States cite concerns about higher premiums and the budget impact of having to cover government workers. In the past few years, infertility coverage bills in Minnesota, North Dakota, and Louisiana, for example, failed largely over cost.

IVF advocates, however, cite data from a decade ago showing that fertility care in states with mandates has accounted for less than 1% of total premium costs, a figure similar to estimates for newer mandates. And advocates often argue that building a family is a human right, though fertility care is disproportionately used by wealthy, white women. Covering IVF for the Medicaid population, which includes more than 70 million Americans, rarely works its way into legislative proposals.

The California example

California is a case study in how many of these conversations play out. Cost concerns sank IVF legislation in the state for several years before lawmakers approved a mandate last year. SB 729 goes into effect July 1 and requires large employers with state-regulated health insurance to cover infertility diagnosis and treatment, including IVF. State employees will get coverage in 2027.

California’s mandate is considered one of the most comprehensive and inclusive in the country, said Barbara Collura, president of Resolve: The National Infertility Association, making same-sex couples and single parents eligible for coverage. But it still leaves out most of the state’s insured population, including those covered by Medicaid, the Affordable Care Act marketplace, and self-insured companies, which account for the majority of workers and are federally regulated.

Mimi Demissew, executive director of Our Family Coalition, an LGBTQ+ rights nonprofit that co-sponsored SB 729, said her group envisioned the broadest possible mandate, which would have included people covered by small employers, the marketplace, and other privately purchased plans. “We dreamed big,” she said. “But the pushback and the whittling down was because of the budget.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s finance department opposed SB 729 over concerns about the state’s budget and higher premiums. And groups representing the state’s health plans and employers cited costs in their opposition, with the California Chamber of Commerce calling health care “one of the most formidable expenses a business experiences,” per a legislative analysis.

The law going into effect this year is estimated to cover around 9 million people, 5 million fewer than originally proposed. Annual premiums, whose cost is typically shared by employers and employees, are projected to increase for people with state-regulated health insurance by approximately $40 per person covered in the first year.

Mandates vary widely by state

More than 10 states — including California — have what fertility experts call “comprehensive” coverage, which requires some insurers to cover IVF with minimal restrictions. But even in those states, large swaths of the population miss out.

In Massachusetts, which has one of the country’s oldest, broadest mandates for infertility coverage, including IVF, only about 30% of women were eligible as of 2019.

Those covered by these mandates, however, are grateful. Luisa Lopez, a nonprofit executive, credited the three IVF cycles that New York’s mandate covered with allowing her and her husband to have a baby after 10 years of trying.

“I feel very lucky to live in a state that prioritized this,” Lopez said. Still, she said, she was on the hook for thousands of dollars in copays and other costs.

In states with narrow mandates, coverage is elusive. With limited exceptions, only state employees have qualified for IVF coverage through Utah’s mandate, for example. Joseph Letourneau, a University of Utah fertility specialist who successfully lobbied for fertility preservation coverage for Medicaid patients and state employees with cancer, said he couldn’t recall ideological opposition to fertility coverage but that some legislators were concerned about raising costs.

Oklahoma and Kentucky limit coverage requirements to patients who wish to preserve their fertility because of specific medical conditions.

Pushback beyond costs

Some opponents of IVF coverage say life begins at the moment of conception and have expressed concerns about the disposal of embryos during the IVF process.

Chieko Noguchi, a spokesperson for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the Catholic Church teaches that IVF is morally wrong because it “involves the death or freezing of embryonic children and treats human beings like products that can be bought and ordered.”

In Republican-controlled-Georgia, some advocates say the proposal of abortion restrictions has distracted from efforts to mandate fertility coverage. SisterSong, a reproductive justice nonprofit, supports two bills that would require private insurers and Medicaid to cover IVF in Georgia. But, the organization’s director of maternal health and birth equity initiatives, Leah Jones, acknowledged a steep uphill battle given the costs and anti-abortion legislation that some advocates fear could criminalize IVF. Having to fight just for the legality of IVF, she said, detracts from expanding access.

“We’re always on the defense,” Jones said.

Several states, including Georgia, are weighing or have passed bills that would protect access to IVF after Alabama’s state Supreme Court ruled that embryos created through IVF should be considered children, leading to temporary suspension of those services. Zemmie Fleck, executive director of Georgia Right to Life, said the Georgia anti-abortion bill would not make IVF illegal.

This fissure in Mr. Trump’s base over protecting versus restricting or even prohibiting IVF has raised questions about how his executive order will play out. Letourneau of Utah said some of his patients have asked if the order will cover their treatment costs.

The White House did not respond to requests for comment.

An uncertain road ahead

While a growing number of companies provide IVF coverage as a health benefit, most patients are left to find ways to pay on their own. Some have turned to loans — IVF financing startups such as Gaia and Future Family have raised millions in venture funding.

The Freschis have applied for grants, are crowdfunding, and have put their upcoming cycle on a credit card.

“It’s so scary,” said Freschi, describing worries about potential unexpected IVF costs. “It just feels like you’re constantly walking around with a weight on you.”

This article was produced by KFF Health News, a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism. KFF Health News is the publisher of California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation.

Source: Utah News

As Trump’s EPA ends ‘environmental justice,’ minority communities may pay a price

From her home on Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley,” Lydia Gerard looks down at her 8-month-old great-granddaughter and wonders if she will one day suffer the same fate as her many friends and relatives whose …

From her home on Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley,” Lydia Gerard looks down at her 8-month-old great-granddaughter and wonders if she will one day suffer the same fate as her many friends and relatives whose …

Source: Utah News

Transfer QB Devon Dampier has Utah fans excited for a rebirth on offense

Devon Dampier is poised to help lead Utah out of a two-season offensive malaise, a dual-threat transfer from New Mexico who is helping to reshape the identity a …

Devon Dampier is poised to help lead Utah out of a two-season offensive malaise, a dual-threat transfer from New Mexico who is helping to reshape the identity and culture of the Utes.

Fans got their first look at Dampier in the 22 Forever spring game, when he broke an 18-yard run on the first play and finished the day completing 14 of 20 passes for 204 yards and two touchdowns.

Dampier followed offensive coordinator Jason Beck from New Mexico. He’s been jelling with his teammates on and off the field, and is so well-versed in Beck’s scheme that coach Kyle Whittingham likens him to being another coach on the field. 

Because of the way he scrambles and throws long passes, Dampier is expected to make it a long day for opposing defensive coordinators.

Utah Utes transfer quarterback Devon Dampier (4).

Utah Utes transfer quarterback Devon Dampier (4). / Jake Crandall/ Advertiser / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Dampier had a breakout season as a sophomore at New Mexico last fall. He led one of the most productive FBS offenses by passing for 2,768 yards and 12 touchdowns, and rushing for 1,166 yards and 19 TDs. 

The junior from Phoenix, of course, picks up where the Cam Rising Era left off, in an injury-marred 2024 season that saw the Utes struggle to a 5-7 finish in their first season in the Big 12, including a 2-7 league mark.

While Dampier is set as the projected starter, Whittingham said there’s a good battle for the No. 2 spot between Byrd Ficklin and Isaac Wilson that will continue through summer workouts and fall camp.

Utah Utes quarterback Isaac Wilson (11).

Utah Utes quarterback Isaac Wilson (11). / Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Wilson, who’s from Draper, played in nine games as a true freshman, with seven starts, before being hurt in the penultimate game. He completed 127 of 225 passes (56.4%) for 1,510 yards, 10 touchdowns and 11 interceptions. 

Ficklin is a three-star recruit from Muskogee, Okla. Whittingham said Ficklin has put on “15 pounds of good weight.”

MORE UTAH NEWS & ANALYSIS

Source: Utah News

Report: Utah WR Zacharyus Williams entering transfer portal

Wide receiver was already a position of need that Utah was looking to bolster in the transfer portal. That need potentially became even greater Tuesday, after On3’s Pete Nakos reported that Zacharyus …

Wide receiver was already a position of need that Utah was looking to bolster in the transfer portal.

That need potentially became even greater Tuesday, after On3’s Pete Nakos reported that Zacharyus Williams has entered the portal.

Source: Utah News

Utah officials mull $125M project to better link I-84, Trappers Loop in Morgan County

Utah roads officials are mulling a $125 million road project to better link I-84 and Trappers Loop in Morgan County, a site of continued growth.

State roads officials are mulling development of a new $125 million interchange along I-84 in Morgan County to accommodate growing traffic volumes brought on by development and interest in area recreational offerings.

“There’s just traffic congestion on the (existing) interchange and people trying to get on Trappers Loop. It’ll just continue to get worse as we continue to see development,” said Mitch Shaw, spokesman for the Utah Department of Transportation.

The plans near Mountain Green call for the extension of Trappers Loop Road, also known as state Route 167, south of where it intersects with Old Highway Road, directly to I-84, where the new full-access interchange would be developed. That would give both eastbound and westbound I-84 motorists more direct access to Trappers Loop to the north, Mountain Green and nearby recreational offerings to the north in Weber County, like Snowbasin ski resort and Pineview Reservoir.

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As is, access to the northbound section of Trappers Loop from I-84 is indirect, requiring motorists to traverse road stretches more apt for local traffic. The upgrade, according to UDOT estimates, would reduce the time it takes to get to I-84 from the Trappers Loop-Old Highway Road intersection from a little over five minutes to a minute. What’s more, with additional development in the works north of I-84, congestion could get worse if the current road configuration is maintained.

Development “doesn’t really show signs of stopping,” Shaw said.

The proposed interchange has been a focus of discussion for years, and UDOT completed its preliminary report with project proposal details earlier this month. It’s the focus of an online public meeting on Tuesday at 6 p.m. to be held via Zoom. Then it’ll be the focus of an in-person public hearing on Wednesday from 5:30-7 p.m. at Mountain Green Middle School, 6200 N. 5000 West.

The photo shows I-84 in Morgan County, near the site of a proposed new interchange designed to better link the interstate with Trappers Loop Road. The plans will be the focus of a public hearing on Wednesday. | Utah Department of Transportation

The photo shows I-84 in Morgan County, near the site of a proposed new interchange designed to better link the interstate with Trappers Loop Road. The plans will be the focus of a public hearing on Wednesday. | Utah Department of Transportation

Adding to the potential traffic pressure in the area, a team of Ogden-based developers is mulling a development, Nine Springs, that in its preliminary incarnation calls for 2,200 or more housing units on a swath of land north of I-84 between Mountain Green and Snowbasin. Likewise, Snowbasin operators have expressed aspirations of increasing housing and development around the resort to host Alpine skiing during the 2034 Winter Olympics in Utah.

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Currently, no roadway extends south of the proposed new I-84 interchange. But the project “would not preclude a future, separate” proposal to create a roadway connection heading in that direction, reads the report on the UDOT plans. The sprawling Wasatch Peaks Ranch resort project, geared to high-income clients and also in Morgan County, sits south of I-84.

Preliminary estimates put the cost of the interchange project at $125 million, Shaw said. After taking public input — to be accepted through May 8 — UDOT officials would likely refine the plan and come up with a more precise cost estimate, possibly by next fall. No project timeline has yet been determined, and funds, at this stage, haven’t been put aside for the project.

Apart from the I-84/Trappers Loop interchange, the proposal calls for a signalized intersection just to the north where Trappers Loop meets Old Highway Road. The partial I-84/Old Highway Road interchange, Exit 92, would be removed.

Source: Utah News

Planned Parenthood closing two Utah clinics after Trump cuts all federal reproductive health funds to state

Under a Trump administration directive to freeze some federal funds that subsidize reproductive health services like birth control and disease testing, Planned Parenthood Association of Utah will …

Every year for the last half-century, thousands of the poorest Utahns have turned to Planned Parenthood for free or discounted family planning health care, like birth control or testing for sexually transmitted infections.

But under a directive from President Donald Trump’s administration to freeze the federal funds that helped pay for those services, Planned Parenthood Association of Utah was forced to raise its fees earlier this month. And now, it will close a quarter of its clinics in the state — the two furthest from Salt Lake City, and ones most accessible to some of Utah’s most rural residents.

“When the Title X news came to us, we were unhappy, shocked in a way, but not surprised,” said Sarah Stoesz, the interim CEO for Planned Parenthood Association of Utah. “We’ve been giving it a lot of thought for some time, and had been creating contingency plans. We didn’t know how deep the cut would be, we didn’t know how permanent it might be.”

According to Planned Parenthood, it provided services to 26,000 Utah patients using Title X funds at clinics last year. The organization was slated to receive $2.8 million toward that care this year.

The Logan clinic will close on April 30 and the St. George location will shut its doors on May 2.

The shuttering of clinics comes about a month after the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services informed nine Planned Parenthood state affiliates that their approved Title X grants were being “temporarily withheld,” Politico reported.

Interim President Shireen Ghorbani said, “This is not a decision we have made lightly. This is a decision we are forced to make because of the Trump administration.”

Planned Parenthood Association of Utah is the only Title X recipient in the Beehive State, meaning Utahns are losing the entirety of the more than $2 million set aside to help them seek care. According to an analysis by KFF Health News, Utah is one of seven states to have all of its Title X funds blocked.

Signed into law by Republican President Richard Nixon in 1970, the program is meant to empower low-income Americans to establish healthy families by connecting them to resources that allow them to plan when and how many children they have. It also covers disease prevention.

Since its inception, none of the money distributed through Title X could be used to pay for abortions.

“We have been around for so long in Utah and in this country,” Stoesz said, “that we have served women who are now in their 60s and 70s, and we have served their daughters, and we are serving their granddaughters.”

She continued, “That service, that ability to get the health care that they need, has opened the door to infinite possibility for infinite numbers of people, and it is a terrible, terrible shame and a stain on this current administration and political leadership here in Utah and all across the country that this is being permitted to happen.”

Letters HHS sent in March, according to Politico, pointed to alleged “possible violations” of federal civil rights law and Trump’s executive orders barring efforts to promote diversity, equity and inclusion. They also cited the organization’s practice of providing medical care to immigrants without permanent legal status, what it termed “taxpayer subsidization of open borders.”

Planned Parenthood Association of Utah declined to share copies of correspondence with HHS regarding its Title X grant with The Salt Lake Tribune, citing legal concerns. A spokesperson confirmed that the organization was notified grant money would not come on March 31.

In response to emailed questions about the status of Utah’s grant, and whether the agency could provide the letters detailing its reasons for withholding it, an HHS official wrote in an email, “On background to an HHS official: Some Title X grantees received notification that their grants were paused pending a compliance review. Each of the organizations with grants on hold received a detailed letter explaining the reason for the pause in funding and requesting documentation within 10 days to assess compliance with grant terms and conditions.”

According to its spokesperson, Planned Parenthood Association of Utah submitted a response reaffirming that the organization is operating in compliance with Title X before the April 10 deadline. It has not yet heard back from the Trump administration.

It’s clear that Planned Parenthood is being targeted by Trump, said Amy Friedrich-Karnik, the director of federal policy at sexual health and reproductive rights think tank Guttmacher Institute. But when it comes to the other recipients whose funding is in jeopardy and the states impacted, Friedrich-Karnik said the decisions seem random.

The future of the program, altogether, is uncertain. Inside Health Policy reported last week that a leaked White House draft budget proposes eliminating the office that runs the Title X program.

This isn’t the first time Planned Parenthood — including Utah’s chapter —has had its access to Title X funds cut off by Trump. After his last administration changed Title X requirements to block grant recipients from referring patients to doctors who can perform abortions, which critics call the “gag rule,” affiliates across the country withdrew from the program.

Utah’s affiliate also joined a lawsuit challenging the move, an option the organization said is once again on the table. Utah rejoined the program after President Joe Biden took office and undid Trump’s refashioning of the law.

‘Because … I had access to care’

The closing clinics in Utah, which are the association’s northernmost and southernmost, are both within walking distance of university campuses — the Logan one near Utah State University, and the St. George location in the neighborhood of Utah Tech University.

The two locations collectively serve thousands of patients annually. The most common services sought there are birth control and testing for sexually transmitted infections and diseases.

While the southern Utah location has never offered abortion care, the Logan clinic provides medicated abortion. It is also a 20-minute drive from the Idaho border, which has one of the most restrictive abortion bans in the country. According to Planned Parenthood Association of Utah’s annual report, the organization cared for 233 Idaho patients last year.

The CDC tracks who benefits from Title X through its Family Planning Annual Report. In Utah, 41% of the nearly 20,000 patients in 2023 lived below the poverty line, and 47% were uninsured.

“When you attack this one program, the ripple effect is huge, and people’s access to health care overall is compromised,” Friedrich-Karnik said.

(Clarissa Casper | The Salt Lake Tribune) Planned Parenthood Association of Utah’s Logan Health Center is shown on Monday, April 21, 2025.

Sentiments included in reviews left for the clinics on Google reflect the story told by CDC numbers.

“Went in for an STI screening without an appointment and they fit me only had to wait about 30 minutes,” one patient who gave the Logan health center five stars wrote. “Everyone I interacted with was polite, knowledgeable, and courteous. I don’t have health insurance and they were able [to] help with financial assistance towards the cost of the tests.”

Another review for the St. George clinic said, “It’s never very crowded and the ladies at the front desk [are] ANGELS! They are. They help you so much and don’t pressure you if you can’t afford to pay.”

For the patients who rely on Planned Parenthood, there are few alternatives. That’s true across the country, Friedrich-Karnik said.

“In many communities, if Planned Parenthood were to shut down, there is not really many other options for folks who are low-income, who face access barriers to care, to be able to receive these services,” she said. “It’s a huge blow to communities that already face substantial barriers to care, whether it’s rural communities, low-income folks, LGBTQ folks [or] young people.”

As Planned Parenthood Association of Utah loses its grant funding, it faces other financial hurdles.

The cost of staffing its clinics has increased as medical facilities across the country confront health care worker shortages. In 2023, Planned Parenthood’s Logan clinic closed for several months because it did not have enough providers to operate.

Slashes to Medicaid being eyed by Congress would be another hit.

For now, the organization will work to raise money from private donors to subsidize as much care as it can.

(Chris Samuels | The Salt Lake Tribune) Planned Parenthood Association of Utah’s interim President Shireen Ghorbani, left, drapes a banner is draped over one of the organization’s locations in Salt Lake City on Thursday, Aug. 1, 2024.

Like the attacks Planned Parenthood has seen on the national level, it has also faced retaliation from Utah officials as it sues to stop a near-total abortion ban in the state. That law is blocked, and abortion is currently legal up to 18 weeks.

Lawmakers earlier this year blocked the organization from providing sex education in the state, and in a previous session attempted to ban abortion clinics from operating. They later repealed that law after it was blocked in court and would have likely delayed a ruling in the larger abortion ban lawsuit.

“[The government] doesn’t seem to understand that the very reason that I never had to seek abortion care … is because I had information, and I had access to care,” Ghorbani, describing the ways she has benefitted from Title X services she received when she was younger, said.

Source: Utah News