Angel City’s Savy King ‘responsive’ in hospital after collapsing on field during Utah Royals game

The 20-year-old U.S. youth international received treatment on the pitch at BMO Stadium before being taken to hospital.

Angel City defender Savy King is “responsive” and with family in hospital after “a medical event on the field” during her side’s NWSL game against Utah Royals on Friday night.

King, 20, went down around 74 minutes into the match at the BMO Stadium, Los Angeles. She received medical attention on the field before being taken off on a cart and then transported by emergency medical services to hospital.

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After the game, Angel City and Utah players and staff gathered in a circle on the field with heads bowed. Utah defender Alex Loera, who played with King at Bay FC in 2024, appeared to lead the group in a prayer.

Eleri Earnshaw, Angel City’s senior assistant who was leading the team due to the suspension of interim head coach Sam Laity, gave an update on King in her post-game news conference.

“She was transported to hospital, she was evaluated,” Earnshaw said. “She is responsive and her family are with her, as are our medical staff. She’s in good hands.”

On the two teams gathering after the full-time whistle, Earnshaw added: “It was one of the Utah players that suggested it, that we get together. Some people prayed, some people shared their energy. Just to show unity in that moment in support of Savy without knowing the update at that time.

“It was obviously a scary situation to be in and, at that point, it was much bigger than football. Really grateful to the Utah player that did that, I can’t remember off the top of my head who it was but really grateful for it.”

Earnshaw also praised Angel City defender Megan Reid, who previously trained as an emergency medical technician.

“I just gave a shoutout in our locker room to Meg Reid, (who) as you know, is a trained paramedic,” Earnshaw said. “While Christen (Press) and her teammates were instrumental in getting the group together and making contact and just being with one another, Meg saw out of the corner of her eye that they were starting to move Savy onto a stretcher and reiterated to the group that that was a really good sign.

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“She just stepped into paramedic mode and helped calm the group, which was massive. It was still scary, you still don’t know how the team’s going to respond after that. My ask was that we were together, we stayed communicative throughout the rest of the game, keep each other concentrated and that we give our energy to Savy.”

The game resumed on 85 minutes, with 12 minutes of stoppage time played. Press, on as a substitute, had opened the scoring in the 66th minute before Alyssa Thompson added a second in the seventh minute of stoppage time.

Utah head coach Jimmy Coenraets suggested that the match should not have continued after King went down.

“In those moments, I’m not sure if we should have continued the game,” Coenrates told reporters. “You’re emotionally — not only them but also our players were just scared. That’s not the right situation to be in but in the end, we played on. That’s the decision other people have taken, which is fine. It was a really tough moment.

“It’s the same after the game. Like, what do you want to focus on after the game? Yes, you have the result of the game but you want to make sure people feel safe, healthy and good and I think that was the focus after the game for us.”

An NWSL rulebook from last year states that “NWSL recognizes that emergencies may arise which make the start or progression of a game inadvisable or dangerous for participants and spectators. Certain event categories automatically trigger the league office into an evaluation of whether delay or postponement is necessary, including … serious incident, injury or fatality to a player, coach, official, team representative or spectator or other medical concern.” The rules add that no game should be postponed without permission from the league office, unless one is required by law enforcement. The Athletic has contacted NWSL for comment on whether the league was consulted on the decision to continue the game and who made that call.

King joined Angel City in the postseason from Bay FC and has started all eight of the team’s NWSL matches in 2025. She has also played for the United States Under-19s and Under-20s.

(Photo: Jessica Alcheh-Imagn Images)

Source: Utah News

Angel City FC’s Savy King hospitalized after collapsing on field vs. Utah

Christen Press and Alyssa Thompson score in a 2-0 win, but all thoughts are with King after a frightening incident in the second half.

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Members of both Angel City FC and the Utah Royals gather at midfield for a prayer at the end of their NWSL match on Friday, May 9, 2025, at BMO Stadium. Angel City FC won, 2-0. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr., Contributing Photographer)

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LOS ANGELES — Angel City defender Savy King collapsed on the field and medical staff appeared to do chest compressions on her before she was carted off during a 2-0 victory over Utah on Friday night at BMO Stadium.

Angel City first assistant coach Eleri Earnshaw, who was filling in for interim coach Sam Laity, told reporters after the match that King, 20, was transported to a local hospital, evaluated and is responsive.

“Her family is with her, as is our medical staff, so she’s in good hands,” Earnshaw said.

Other players were visibly shaken as trainers rushed to King’s side after she went down in the 74th minute.

Both sidelines cleared and gathered around the medical staff as King was being treated and teams throughout the NWSL along with the league office offered support for King via their social media channels.

Christen Press came off of the bench and scored almost immediately to spark Angel City to a win, but the goal and the victory took a distant back seat to King’s frightening situation.

Press, who entered the game in the 65th minute, scored scored 25 seconds after taking the field to give Angel City (4-2-2, 14 points) the lead.

Press, moving down the left wing, made a cut inside, losing defender Madison Pogarch, and curled a left-footed shot over the outstretched arm of goalkeeper Amanda McGlynn into the top left corner of the goal. The goal was the first for Press since her comeback last season from four ACL injuries.

The excitement from Press’ goal left the stadium in the 74th minute when King went down and was quickly administered to by the training staff. After a lengthy period, King was eventually put on the stretcher and carted away.

Video review showed King kicked a ball away from a Utah attacker, then she sat down on the turf and laid back. Both teams joined in a prayer circle after the game for King.

The game was restarted after a near 15-minute real time break.

King, who is from Agoura High, joined Angel City in a trade with Bay FC in the offseason. This is her second season in the NWSL. She quickly settled into the center back spot, alongside Sarah Gorden this season.

“It was one of the Utah players that suggested it (postgame prayer circle) that we get together,” Earnshaw said. “Some people prayed, some people shared their energy. Just to show unity in that moment in support of Savy, without knowing the update at that time, obviously it was a scary situation to be in and at that point, it’s much bigger than football.”

Angel City put the game away midway through the 12-minute stoppage time on Alyssa Thompson’s goal, handing Utah (1-6-1, four points) its sixth loss in the past seven games.

Laity was unavailable after receiving a red card late in last Friday’s road win against the Washington Spirit and had to serve a one-game suspension.

The game was the first for Angel City since April 18 and the first after a tough three-game stretch against some of the league’s top teams (Gotham FC, Orlando and Washington). Angel City lost two of the three, but came away with valuable lessons in the process.

The win is the second in a row for Angel City and its first shutout of the season vaults the club into third place, but with two days of Week 7 games still to be played.

Angel City returns to action next Saturday in Northern California against rival Bay FC.

Source: Utah News

Years worth of top prospects are in Salt Lake City this weekend. Will Utah gymnastics benefit?

Utah leaned more toward the Elite ranks with its roster in 2024, but of the newcomers in 2025 only one — Norah Christian — is an Elite. Stroud, the only 5-star prospect in Utah’s class, is a Level 10 …

Starting Friday at the Mountain America Expo Center in Sandy, top college prospects from across the country will compete against each other at the 2025 USA Gymnastics Women’s Development Program national championships.

Otherwise known as DP nationals, the three days of competition will pit the best American gymnasts at Levels 8, 9 and 10 against each other.

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The gymnasts competing this weekend will ultimately comprise the majority of college signing classes in the coming years, starting next season and going through 2029.

The only type of top college prospects not competing this weekend are Elite gymnasts, among whom are national team members who have a chance to compete in international competitions like the world championships or the Olympics.

Multiple Utah signees and/or commits are slated to compete this weekend, including 5-star signee Bailey Stroud and 4-star signee Abbi Ryssman, both of whom are members of Utah’s No. 7-ranked 2025 signing class, plus Madison Denlinger, a Utah commit for 2026.

Source: Utah News

Report: Utah exports topped $18B last year, supported 70K jobs

Gardner researchers found Utah companies moved $18.2 billion worth of exported goods in 2024, while directly supporting 70,171 jobs with $3.9 billion in earnings and contributing nearly $8 billion to …

KEY POINTS

  • A new report finds Utah companies export revenues topped $18 billion last year.
  • Utah export business supported over 70,000 jobs and pumped $8 billion into the state GDP.
  • While still a major economic driver, export volumes were down over 3% in 2024.

Utah has been an overachiever for years when it comes to the state’s volume of import/export business and a new report finds international trade continues to be among the major drivers behind one of the country’s leading economies.

While the ongoing tumult fomented by President Donald Trump’s chaotic tariff policy changes has cast a cloud of uncertainty over the broader business community, the just-released Utah International Trade, 2024 analysis from the University of Utah’s Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute provides insight into this powerful economic sector.

Gardner researchers found Utah companies moved $18.2 billion worth of exported goods in 2024, while directly supporting 70,171 jobs with $3.9 billion in earnings and contributing nearly $8 billion to the state’s gross domestic product and $15.9 billion to Utah’s gross industry sales output.

Utah’s 2024 export revenues have also helped propel the state’s overall economy to a new plateau.

For the first time ever, Utah’s GDP, a measure of the total value of goods and services produced in the state, broke the $300 billion mark in 2024, hitting $301 billion last year. Utah’s GDP year-over-year growth rate in 2024 came in at 4.5%, the highest in the U.S. The state is also holding down the No. 1 spot in cumulative GDP growth over the last 10 years with a 64% rate.

Highlights from the new international trade report include:

Utah exports — Utah’s merchandise exports tallied $18.2 billion in 2024 and shipped to 201 countries. After adjusting for inflation, the state’s 2024 exports decreased $659.0 million over 2023, a 3.5% decline.

Largest trading partners — The United Kingdom received the largest value of Utah’s exports at $7.9 billion in 2024 or 43.6%. Approximately $7.6 billion of Utah’s exports to the UK consist of unwrought gold. Canada at $1.5 billion, China at $1.1 billion, Mexico at $1.1 billion and Japan at $700 million round out Utah’s top five export trading partners.

Primary metals — Primary metal manufacturing contributed 44.7% of Utah’s total exports and $8.1 billion in value; gold represents 97% of this value. Computer and electronic products came in second at $1.7 billion (9.6%), followed by chemicals at $1.5 billion (8.0%).

National comparison – Over the last decade (2014 to 2024), Utah exports increased by 12.0%, compared with national growth of 15.8%, adjusted for inflation.

Utah imports – Utah’s merchandise imports totaled $21.9 billion in 2024 and shipped from 154 countries. That led to a goods trade deficit of $3.7 billion.

Economic impacts – Utah’s exports in 2024 supported an estimated $8.0 billion in GDP, $3.9 billion of earnings, $15.9 billion of output, and 70,171 jobs. These impacts represent 2.6% of GDP, 2.3% of earnings, 3.0% of output, and 2.9% of total employment in Utah.

Tariff uncertainty roils Utah business sector

The report also notes Trump’s trade policy gyrations, aiming to rebalance the global trade realm, have “increased uncertainty and will likely increase costs for businesses and consumers.”

Those business uncertainties were highlighted earlier this week in discussions featuring executives from Utah companies during the Crossroads of the World International Trade Summit hosted by Zions Bank and World Trade Center Utah.

Kimberley Honeysett, chief legal officer for Varex Imaging, an independent supplier of X-ray tubes and image processing solutions for medical and security applications, said her company’s strategy of locating manufacturing facilities proximate to customers was being upended by the new tariff policies.

“One of the risks, certainly, for a lot of companies that have both import and export functions is the opposite of what they’re trying to accomplish, pushing U.S. manufacturing outside the U.S.,” Honeysett said. “The risk is it backfires.”

Honeysett explained how trade levies, both those issued by the U.S. and reciprocal actions by other countries, were impacting Varex on both sides of the company’s import/export equation.

“We import goods, we’re the importer of record and we get the tariffs and our prices are increasing,” Honeysett said. “We also export so, on the other side, we get the tariff. From our perspective (the U.S. trade policies) are more harmful than beneficial.”

John Hortin, chief financial officer for Wavetronix, a Utah-based manufacturer of radar traffic detection devices, said the company’s business with China has “dried up” and he and the Wavetronix team are currently navigating trade tariff uncertainty by “biding our time and waiting to see where it will land.”

Hortin said he believes U.S. trade policy would lead to more effective outcomes if implementation was strategic and targeted, rather than broad-based.

“It’s important to be specific rather than broad,” Hortin said. “The rhetoric we’re hearing now is we’ve been taken advantage of across the board. And I’m not sure that’s true. Blanket tariffs, I really think, generate the trade war more than solve problems.”

Where Trump’s tariffs stand

Trump announced a raft of country-specific reciprocal tariffs last month along with a blanket 10% levy on foreign imports. On April 9, the president declared a 90-day pause on the reciprocal trade fees but kept the 10% assessment in place. That same day, Trump also announced an increase on imports from China that raised the effective levy on most imports from the country to 145%.

Here’s where new U.S. tariffs stand for the moment:

  • China tariffs are at 145%, following a series of increases.
  • Tariffs of 25% are in place on steel and aluminum imports, imported automobiles and goods from Canada and Mexico not covered by the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement.
  • Imports from all other countries are subject to a 10% trade levy.

Source: Utah News

Jefferson Moss, the Utah House majority leader, will resign from the Legislature

Jefferson Moss, the Utah House majority leader, is resigning from the Legislature to become the next executive director of the Governor’s Office of Economic Opportunity.

Jefferson Moss, a Saratoga Springs Republican and the Utah House majority leader, is resigning from elected office to become the next executive director of the Governor’s Office of Economic Opportunity.

His last day in the Legislature, where he has served since 2017, will be May 30, according to a Friday morning announcement from the Utah House.

“It has been the honor of a lifetime to serve the people of House District 51 and the state of Utah,” Moss said in a statement. “I’m incredibly proud of the work we’ve accomplished together to strengthen our economy, invest in education, and expand opportunity for Utah families. I look forward to continuing my work in a new capacity, helping lead Utah’s economic future.”

Republicans delegates will elect Moss’s replacement in the Legislature, likely at the May 31 Utah GOP convention, and the House GOP will pick their next majority leader in the coming weeks, according to a spokesperson.

Moss’s departure leaves a vacancy in Republican House leadership, where Rep. Karianne Lisonbee of Clearfield serves as the majority whip and Rep. Casey Snider of Paradise serves as the assistant whip.

“Rep. Moss is an extraordinary leader, a trusted colleague, and a loyal friend,” House Speaker Mike Schultz said in a statement. “His vision, work ethic, and collaborative approach have left a lasting mark on our state. Rep. Moss has a unique ability to bring people together, think outside the box, and solve complex challenges. While we’ll miss his leadership in the House, I know he will continue to serve Utah with the same passion and purpose in his new role.”

Gov. Spencer Cox announced the appointment of Moss in a separate announcement Friday morning, the Utah County Republican “brings a rare combination of public service, private sector experience, and a deep understanding of innovation and education.”

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) House Majority Leader Jefferson Moss, R-Saratoga Springs, during a news conference addressing legislation aimed at teacher retention, at the Utah Captiol in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2024.

In a separate statement, Moss said serving in the Legislature “has been one of the great honors of my life.” He added, “I’m grateful for the opportunity to continue serving the people of Utah in this new capacity and help advance the Governor’s vision for economic opportunity across the state.”

In his new role at GOEO, Moss replaces Ryan Starks, whose departure was announced by the governor last week. Starks, the office said in a release last week, was departing from the role to “pursue other professional endeavors.”

Moss also serves as the associated commissioner of innovation, commercialization and economic development at the Utah System of Higher Education and, according to the governor’s officer, will continue his leadership role at USHE.

Originally founded in 1981, the Governor’s Office of Economic Opportunity has a host of responsibilities, including recruiting new companies to the state, working to develop Utah businesses in local and foreign markets and overseeing groups like the Utah Film Commission and the Office of Tourism. The office, according to GOEO’s website, oversees more than $240 million in state and federal funding and has a staff of more than 100 people. GOEO also leads economic initiatives like the Utah Innovation Center and the Center for Rural Development.

This story is breaking and will be updated.

Source: Utah News

‘Existential threat’: Utah businesses grapple with the uncertainty of Trump’s tariffs

Utah business leaders say tariffs are challenging and forcing changes to strategy, but uncertainty about what lies ahead is even more difficult.

As Utah businesses grapple with trade wars and uncertainty surrounding tariffs, two former secretaries of state — including Donald Trump’s former top diplomat — say the president needs a clearer vision and messaging about what he is trying to accomplish with his sweeping trade duties.

“President Trump hasn’t been clear about his overall strategic objective here,” Pompeo told Utah business leaders during the “Crossroads of the World” forum sponsored by Zions Bank and World Trade Center Utah.

“He’s talked about using tariffs for fentanyl, trying to keep it out of the country. He’s talked about balancing trade. He’s talked about bilateral trade deficits,” Pompeo said Wednesday. The uncertainty and lack of a clear purpose for the tariffs are harming business, he further explained.

Pompeo’s sentiment was echoed by Antony Blinken, the secretary of state under former President Joe Biden.

“The first question we all have to ask and continue to ask is: What is the intent? What’s the purpose? What’s the goal?” Blinken said, speaking at the forum Thursday.

The tariffs have been pitched as a means to raise revenue, bring manufacturing back to the U.S., stop fentanyl, and erase trade deficits — none of which, Blinken said, add up.

High tariffs hinder trade; relocating manufacturing facilities takes years and a stable economy; and almost no fentanyl comes to the U.S. from places like Canada. And, Blinken said, the U.S. is bound to have trade deficits with some countries and surpluses with others, which isn’t necessarily bad and won’t be fixed by tariffs.

“These across-the-board tariffs, I think, are a recipe for a downward spiral,” he told Utah business leaders.

Trump has imposed a global 10% tariff on all imports to the U.S. and a 25% tariff on steel, aluminum, cars and some automobile parts. China, in particular, has been targeted by a 145% duty on all imports, and China has issued its own reciprocal tariff.

But the president exempted certain products, like cell phones, and paused the tariffs for 90 days while the administration tries to work on trade deals. Trump‘s Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and trade representative are expected to have trade talks in Switzerland later this week — the first time the two nations have had face-to-face trade talks.

“We are feeling the pain”

On Thursday, Trump announced a tentative trade deal with Britain, which is Utah’s largest trading partner, according to a new report by the Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute at the University of Utah.

The institute reported that Utah sent $7.9 billion worth of goods to the U.K. last year, the vast majority of it in gold. Overall, Utah exported $18.2 billion in goods in 2024 and imported $21.9 billion. The exports supported 70,171 jobs.

Trump‘s tariffs, according to the report, will likely increase the cost of goods for Utahns and impact the state’s housing market, as the cost of imported lumber and other supplies rises, and a larger portion of residents’ household incomes goes to cover other expenses.

The roiling trade war, the lurching rollout of the tariffs and the uncertainty of where they will land in a few months have proven challenging for Utah companies, executives said Wednesday.

“Traeger is in the middle of the bullseye of everything bad in global trade,” said Jeremy Andrus, CEO of Traeger Grills, which gets about 75% of its grills from China and uses a lot of non-U.S. steel.

When tariffs were at 10%, Andrus said it was manageable. But once the rate reached 125%, it was a shock.

“We are feeling the pain,” Andrus said. “It’s really hard for us right now, but it’s an interesting moment.”

Lindsay Shumlas, CEO of Cotopaxi, said her company moved much of its production out of China during the COVID pandemic, but it now makes products in Vietnam, Cambodia, Indonesia, India and the Philippines, plus some remnants in China.

“The most challenging part is the uncertainty, the uncertainty of what will happen after [July 8],” when the pause on tariffs is set to expire, she said. Right now, Cotopaxi is working on its 2027 line, Shumlas said. “How do we manage through future supply chains?”

The story was similar for Skullcandy, the Utah-based headphones maker, according to CEO Brian Garofalow. Skullcandy moved much of its production from China to Vietnam during the first Trump term, which could give the company an advantage over competitors, depending on where tariffs land.

Allocating resources on investments “to go play offense,” Garofalow said, has been challenging. “We don’t know if Vietnam is going to go back to 46%, or go down to zero or go to 146%. So we essentially have plans that are everything from accelerating growth to cutting to the bone.”

Darin Parker, president of PMI Foods, a global food distribution company with offices on six continents, said his company has been forced to adapt. For example, instead of exporting U.S. meat to China, it would provide its Chinese customers with meat from Australia that wouldn’t be subject to the steep tariffs.

“For the U.S. division, it’s horrific. It’s terrible, especially for China. The other markets, we’re still importing against 10% duties here and there. I mean, we can deal with that,” Parker said. “The elimination of the [Chinese] market entirely. That’s just not sustainable.”

For Wavetronix, which manufactures traffic radar systems, “our Chinese business has dried up,” said John Hortin, the company’s chief financial officer. So far, Hortin said, the harms have outweighed the benefits, “especially the way it has been administered. The uncertainty is the biggest problem we face.”

Kimberly Honeysett, chief legal officer for Varex Imaging, which makes medical devices, said the company has been trying to reevaluate its supply chain and diversify its suppliers, but that can be challenging from a regulatory standpoint.

“We work in a highly regulated medical industry, and so are not able to easily pivot,” she said, “because components have to get cleared and verified.”

Robert Spendlove, a senior economist at Zions Bank and former state lawmaker, said he has heard from more than one Utah CEO that “this will be the end of us. This is an existential threat that we can’t adjust to.”

But Pompeo and the Utah business executives said they believe normalcy will return.

Pompeo said that while Trump “may have gotten it wrong” by taking such an aggressive approach toward tariffs initially, he suspects the administration will refine its approach over time.

“I hope [they] will focus it on our adversaries — the Chinese Communist Party, the Iranians, the Russians — and befriend the Canadians and the important supply chain that runs through Mexico, our partners in Europe and Japan and Asia,” Pompeo said. “Those are folks who add enormous value and build wealth for America, and we should be very careful to anger them and we should make sure they’re not treating us poorly, too.”

Parker, with PMI Foods, said it’s simply not possible for the U.S. to separate its economy from China, but it may take some time for that realization to set in.

“I think we just need to calm down right now, see how this is going to go. Cooler heads will prevail,” he said. “I bet in a couple weeks we feel a lot different about things.”

Source: Utah News

Antony Blinken speaks in Utah about Ukraine, Trump’s cuts to foreign aid and tariffs

The former secretary of state, who served for four years during the Biden administration, was in Salt Lake City Thursday where he spoke about cuts to USAID and American global leadership.

The former secretary of state, who served for four years during the Biden administration, was in Salt Lake City Thursday where he spoke about cuts to USAID and American global leadership.

Source: Utah News

Utah quietly removes transgender kids’ mental health reports from DHHS website

Between February and March, reports on transgender students’ mental health were quietly removed from Utah’s Department of Health and Human Services website.

Editor‘s note • This article discusses suicide. If you or people you know are at risk of self-harm, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline for 24-hour support. You can also reach The Trevor Project, which specializes in helping LGBTQ+ youth, by calling 1-866-488-7386, or by texting “START” to 678-678.

Utah’s transgender teens have previously indicated to state officials they are 3 ½ times more likely than their peers to consider taking their own lives, almost 4 ½ times more likely to experience severe depression and are two to three times more likely to experiment with drugs and alcohol.

But those figures documenting transgender students’ emotional struggles in conservative Utah are no longer available to the public, having been quietly purged from a state website.

Links to data on how transgender students’ mental health is faring on the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Substance Abuse and Mental Health site have been deleted, while other demographic-specific reports remain accessible.

Changes to the website come as orders from the White House increasingly act to erase the visibility of transgender Americans, including ordering public health data that President Donald Trump’s administration has labeled “gender ideology” taken down.

According to web page snapshots preserved by the Internet Archive, “Transgender Student Profile Report[s]” compiled from the statewide Student Health and Risk Prevention survey, commonly known as SHARP, were available on the Utah Office of Substance Use and Mental Health site on Feb. 2. By March 4 those reports had disappeared.

The Salt Lake Tribune accessed copies of the reports prior to their removal.

When reached Wednesday with questions about where the directive to remove the links came from, as well as whether other datasets were affected, a spokesperson for DHHS said the agency would not be able to provide answers until Thursday.

Surveys are conducted every other year, and Utah’s most recent survey data published in 2023. In 2021, the state reportedly didn’t have adequate data to complete a report on transgender students. The first report focused on transgender students published in 2019.

In 2023, 729 students who took the survey responded that they were transgender, representing about 1.4% of the 51,890 students in grades six, eight, 10 and 12 surveyed — although none of the sixth graders were asked if they are transgender.

Reports on gay or lesbian, bisexual and heterosexual, as well as “Not Sure or Other Orientation,” students remain online. The website also has links to health district-specific reports, separate information for males and females, and profiles of various racial and ethnic groups.

“The knowledge we’ve gained from the SHARP survey is invaluable,” the website where reports are posted says, “because it tells us where to look for problems and solutions.”

It continues, “Local health departments, local prevention coalitions, local schools and school districts, superintendents, health systems, public health professionals, and most importantly, parents use SHARP data to develop programs and services to help Utah youth and families.”

Survey results are also provided to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for its development of the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System. Portions of the pages where the surveillance data is displayed were deleted earlier this year, but a federal judge ordered them restored in February.

Now, a note at the top of the CDC page says, “Any information on this page promoting gender ideology is extremely inaccurate and disconnected from the immutable biological reality that there are two sexes, male and female. The Trump Administration rejects gender ideology and condemns the harms it causes to children, by promoting their chemical and surgical mutilation, and to women, by depriving them of their dignity, safety, well-being, and opportunities. This page does not reflect biological reality and therefore the Administration and this Department rejects it.”

The axing of Utah transgender youth’s mental health data comes as resources for the group, which has historically seen heightened risk of mental health challenges and suicide, are in jeopardy. The Trump administration is proposing cutting specialized help for young LGBTQ+ people from the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline.

Approximately 19 states, according to LGBTQ+ rights-focused think tank Movement Advancement Project, asked students about their gender identity in Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System surveys in 2021.

“[Government officials] try to defend this by saying they don’t want to advance certain ideologies, but the fact is that this is really not about ideology. It’s just about understanding population health,” said Ilan Meyer, a distinguished senior scholar at the Williams Institute at UCLA, which researches public policy around sexual orientation and gender identity.

Meyer advocated for national public health agencies to expand their data collection on LGBTQ+ populations in the late 1990s as the Public Health Service questioned, amid the AIDS epidemic, whether it had enough data to include that group in its 10-year health priorities blueprint. Any loss of data on LGBTQ+ communities, he said, is “devastating.”

“It sounds to me like the state … government,” Meyer continued, “is saying, ‘We just don’t want to look, we don’t want to know about it.’”

‘We’re really in the dark’

Transgender students’ responses were scrubbed from the DHHS website less than a year after a law requiring parental permission for students to take the SHARP survey took effect, likely already inhibiting the amount of youth mental health data Utah is able to collect. Experts say limiting which demographic information is available is an additional blow to the usefulness of behavioral surveys like SHARP.

Sharon Talboys, a professor at the University of Utah who specializes in public health and behavior change research, said taking down the reports is a “disservice” to teens — and their caregivers — who agreed to share information about themselves.

Survey data on gender identity and other population characteristics help researchers pinpoint where students are suffering and how the institutions responsible for looking after them should improve. Without that information, Talboys said, “We’re really in the dark.”

An appendix at the end of the 2023 report detailed all of the questions asked in the survey, and possible answers students could give.

“Some people describe themselves as transgender when their sex at birth does not match the way they think or feel about their gender,” one question says. “Are you transgender?”

Students had the option to respond, “no,” “I am not sure,” “I don’t know what this question is asking” and “yes.”

“Why can’t kids be asked that?” Talboys asked. “It’s certainly something that the people who are affected think about. And we know that they have poor health outcomes, especially with mental health and substance use.”

This year was the fourth in a row that Utah passed laws imposing restrictions on its transgender residents, and the most acute effects of those measures are experienced by the youngest transgender Utahns.

Transgender girls were prohibited from participating in high school sports that align with their gender identity in 2022, and in 2023, Utah banned gender-affirming health care for transgender minors.

Last year, transgender Utahns were barred from using public restrooms and locker rooms that align with their gender identity in government-owned buildings, including schools. And during the recent legislative session, the state banned transgender students from living in dorms that align with their gender identity at public universities.

An article by researchers at The Trevor Project — an LGBTQ+ youth suicide prevention nonprofit — published in the journal Nature Human Behaviour last year concluded that state-level restrictions on transgender people lead to an increase in suicide attempts among transgender youth.

About a quarter of Utah’s surveyed transgender students reported in 2023 attempting suicide at some point during the previous year.

“Whatever it is that LGBT youth are going through is continuing, and just not knowing something doesn’t really address the underlying problem,” Meyer, of the Williams Institute, said. “By not knowing, you’re not going to be able to address it at all. And maybe that’s the point.”

This story is developing and may be updated.

Source: Utah News

Child tax credits, election law and the Bonneville Shoreline Trail: What Utah’s delegation is fighting for in Congress

He has also joined with both Curtis and Lee to sponsor the Historic Roadways Protection Act, following a decision by the BLM to close a number of historic Utah roadways. Should the bill become law, it …

In his first 100 days back in office, Donald Trump signed five bills into law — fewer than any president in decades — but Sen. John Curtis, Utah’s newest U.S. senator, isn’t blaming the president.

“This is not so much, in my mind, dependent on the president, but on us,” Curtis said during a recent interview.

Congressional Republicans currently have a majority in both chambers, holding 53 of 100 seats in the Senate and 220 seats in the 435-person House. Despite the majority, Congress passed six bills during the first 100 days of the Trump administration, according to a Time Magazine analysis.

“Having not been in the Senate with a new president,” Curtis said, “this is kind of a new experience for me, but my a-ha moment was, ‘Holy cow, we have a lot of nominations, and the reconciliation [budget process] is taking a lot of time.’”

In his last session as a member of the House of Representatives, where Curtis served beginning in 2017 until taking office as a senator this January, the former Provo mayor was ranked the fifth most effective House Republican by the Center for Effective Lawmaking, as three of the 48 bills he proposed during the session were signed into law by then-President Joe Biden.

He’s hopeful he’ll be back on the same track soon. Once lawmakers are through with the budget and the Senate is done confirming nominees, Curtis said he thinks Congress will make more legislative progress.

As of Wednesday, no member of Utah’s congressional delegation has had a standalone bill signed into law during Trump’s second term, though several pieces of legislation sponsored by the federal lawmakers have begun to move through the House and Senate in recent weeks.

The Salt Lake Tribune looked at all the legislation Utah’s congressional delegation has introduced so far this year. This assessment focused largely on bills — not resolutions — that are chiefly sponsored by Utah’s members, and do not include legislation they are signed onto as co-sponsors.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) U.S. Senate candidate Carolyn Phippen and Sen. Mike Lee host a joint town hall meeting in Lindon, on Friday, April 5, 2024.

Here’s a look at what all of Utah’s representatives are pushing in Congress right now:

Sen. Mike Lee

While most members of Utah’s congressional delegation have largely tailored their legislative proposals in the early months of this session to their areas of expertise and committee assignments, Mike Lee, the state’s senior U.S. senator, has proposed more than 50 bills already this year, which touch on a wide range of issues.

Lee’s office did not respond to a request for an interview or comment regarding his legislative priorities, though he has frequently highlighted his SAVE Act on social media in recent weeks. The bill, should it become law, would require proof of citizenship to vote, and a House version of the legislation passed the lower chamber last month.

In his public comments about the bill, Lee has frequently pushed misinformation about immigrant voters.

“Illegal immigrants and non-citizens across the nation are being improperly registered to vote, allowing them to cast illegitimate ballots in federal elections,” Lee said in a statement last year when he first introduced the bill. “At a time when trust in voting is more important than ever, we must stop foreign election interference and pass the SAVE Act.”

According to voting rights organization The Brennan Center for Justice, cases of non-citizens voting are extremely rare: In a 2016 assessment of 42 areas in the U.S. with high immigrant populations, the center found just 30 cases of suspected noncitizens voting, or just 0.0001% of votes cast.

Lee has also proposed legislation that would ban the use of federal funds for a federal database tracking racial disparities in affordable housing access; lift restrictions on abortion clinic protesters; terminate the U.S.’s membership in the United Nations; require age verification for app store purchases and online adult content; ban the use of union “official time;” and shift Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, costs onto states, a move that could hit Utahns particularly hard.

Since taking office in 2011, Lee has introduced more than 500 bills. Six have been signed into law, according to GovTrack.

Sen. John Curtis

In his first term in the Senate, Curtis said he continues to focus on energy, climate and public lands issues, and that he sees the U.S.’s relationship to China and tackling the national debt as high-priority issues for this session.

“I’m not afraid to talk about Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and reform,” Curtis said. “I think it’s a false narrative that you have to take away benefits to do it better, and [for] Social Security, that you somehow have to hurt our seniors to reform it. So I’m going to be really aggressive about that, because the debt really, really bothers me.”

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) U.S. Rep. John Curtis (UT-03) speaks during the Conservative Climate Summit 2024 at Utah Valley University in Orem on Friday, Oct. 4, 2024.

One of the other early legislative focuses for Curtis has been the Fix Our Forests Act, which aims to reduce wildfire risks in U.S. forests.

“I think this is a really good example of coming together on an issue that Republicans and Democrats don’t always agree on,” Curtis said of the legislation. “Fires are becoming a bigger deal, and … I think this really is a very, very important bill.”

Despite its bipartisan group of co-sponsors, the bill has attracted some pushback from environmentalists, as it would allow for increased logging on federal land. A House version of the bill passed through the chamber in January.

Curtis has also introduced bills that, if passed and signed by Trump, would require a report on possible money laundering by the Chinese government, aim to address the presence of Hezbollah in Latin America and look into the expansion of Utah’s Bonneville Shoreline Trail.

“I aspire someday to have that run all the way across the state,” Curtis said of the trail. “The better that will be for recreation, for access, and once again, the more people that recreate there, the better. We’re giving them access, literally right out [in] their backyard, to just some amazing recreation.”

Curtis also had his first piece of legislation as a senator — a resolution undoing a Biden-era EPA rule — pass through the Senate earlier this month.

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Rep. Blake Moore

Rep. Blake Moore, who took office in 2021 and serves as the House Republican conference vice chair, is the first Utahn to serve in House leadership. A member of the House Ways and Means and Budget committees, most of the legislation Moore has proposed this year focuses on changes to the tax code. During a recent interview, he said the budget reconciliation process has been his central focus in recent weeks.

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) Republican Rep. Blake Moore speaks at the governorÕs mansion on election night in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024.

Moore, who represents Utah’s 1st Congressional District, is the main sponsor of the Family First Act, which aims to enhance the Child Tax Credit, a benefit for families of up to $2,000 for each dependent child under the age of 17. Moore said he is “highly confident” the proposal will be included in and passed via the reconciliation process.

“If we don’t do anything about the child tax credit in the next nine months, that will drop back down to $1,000, which is pre-2017 levels,” Moore said. “When you look at the time value of money, that would be a significant decrease in the Child Tax Credit, so we’re trying to enhance that, and it would be part of this larger package.”

Moore said he was not as confident that some of his other proposals would progress via reconciliation, including a bill that would provide an affordable housing tax credit for members of the armed forces, but that he intends to focus on passing them as standalone legislation once the budget process is complete.

As of Thursday, Moore has so far been the most successful member of Utah’s congressional delegation, having had two bills he is sponsoring, the MAPWaters Act of 2025 and the Hershel Woody Williams National Medal of Honor Monument Location Act, pass the House.

​”That’s going to be something that will be lasting and pretty neat to be able to have as a legacy piece that doesn’t cost the government any money,” Moore said of his work on placing the monument in Washington. “The development of it, the design of it, is all in conjunction with private owners … so it’s a neat little thing that is fiscally sound and also will enhance visitation to our nation’s capital and honor those… [who have] entered our armed services.”

Rep. Celeste Maloy

Rep. Celeste Maloy joined the delegation in 2023 following the resignation of former 2nd Congressional District Rep. Chris Stewart, and has so far proposed legislation this session related to water rights, congressional authority to designate national monuments, and the right for states to decide if they want to stay on daylight savings time year round, among other issues.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) U.S. Rep. Celeste Maloy answers questions at a town hall in Salt Lake City on Thursday, March 20, 2025.

Maloy became one of the first members of Utah’s delegation to get a full vote on the House floor last week, as the House passed a joint resolution she sponsored to block a National Park Service rule limiting the use of off-road vehicles and ATVs in Glen Canyon Recreation Area.

“I introduced a resolution to nullify a senseless rule that limits recreation in a National Recreation Area, and I’m thrilled to see the House advance it,” she said in a statement. “Ensuring that agencies are managing land for multiple uses, as directed by Congress, is a continuous battle that I will continue to fight so that people in Utah and across the country are free to continue exploring and enjoying the land that was set aside for them.”

Maloy’s office did not respond to a request for an interview or comment regarding her legislative priorities this year.

Rep. Mike Kennedy

Rep. Mike Kennedy is Utah’s newest member of Congress and has thus far proposed eight pieces of legislation in the early months of his first congressional session.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Congressional candidate Mike Kennedy at the Utah Republican Nominating Convention in Salt Lake City on Saturday, April 27, 2024.

“It has been my priority since I arrived on Capitol Hill to be a voice for Utah issues and safeguard United States interests,” the 3rd Congressional District representative said in a statement to The Tribune. “So far, I have proposed legislation to clean up federal government waste in Moab, fight back against [Bureau of Land Management] overreach when it comes to our public lands, and protect children from the dangers of ultra-processed foods in their school lunches. As I continue my work, I remain committed to elevating Utah’s priorities at the federal level.”

Kennedy is the lead House sponsor on the Moab UMTRA Project Transition Act of 2025 — a bill that Curtis has taken on as the lead Senate sponsor — which aims to transfer federal land previously used for a uranium milling operation in southern Utah to Grand County.

He has also joined with both Curtis and Lee to sponsor the Historic Roadways Protection Act, following a decision by the BLM to close a number of historic Utah roadways. Should the bill become law, it would prevent the agency from closing certain roads while a court fight over closures is ongoing.

Additionally, Kennedy has waded into “Make America Healthy Again” territory with his school lunches bill, which would ban “ultraprocessed foods” and several types of food dyes under the National School Lunch Act.

Rep. Burgess Owens

Rep. Burgess Owens, who originally took office in 2021, has focused most of his legislative proposals through the early months of this session on culture war issues in the education system, including the Say No to Indoctrination Act, which would ban federal funding for any school teaching “radical gender ideology,” as Owens said in a news release last month.

(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Rep. Burgess Owens meets with people before giving remarks at a County Council meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 27, 2024, recognizing Black History Month.

“[T]oo many schools are using taxpayer dollars to push political agendas instead of focusing on outcomes,” Owens said in a statement at the time. “The Say No to Indoctrination Act codifies President Trump’s commonsense executive order and puts a stop to this, ensuring that federal education funds go where they belong — into the classroom, not activism.”

Owens, who represents Utah’s 4th Congressional District, has also been promoting his Accreditation for College Excellence (ACE) Act. The bill would require that accreditors, according to a release from Owens’ office, “confirm their standards do not require, encourage, or coerce an institution to support or oppose specific partisan or political beliefs, viewpoints on social or political issues, or support the disparate treatment of any individual or group.”

In practice, the bill would mean that accreditors could not consider diversity, equity and inclusion teachings in the classroom as part of the accreditation process, and would protect the right for religious schools to require students to adhere to a religious code of conduct.

Owens also recently introduced a bill that would require unions to disclose any payments to consultants and legislation he proposed regarding the disclosure of foreign investments in U.S. universities included in the Defending Education Transparency and Ending Rogue Regimes Engaging in Nefarious Transactions (DETERRENT) Act, which passed the House last month.

Owens’ office did not respond to a request for an interview or comment on his legislative priorities during this session.

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Source: Utah News

Utah QB Cam Rising retires for medical reasons— but has another football job lined up

Utah quarterback Cam Rising is hanging up his cleats, but he won’t be leaving the game of football entirely behind. Rising, 25, announced on social media Wednesday that he would be retiring from …

Utah quarterback Cam Rising is hanging up his cleats, but he won’t be leaving the game of football entirely behind.

Rising, 25, announced on social media Wednesday that he would be retiring from football over medical reasons after suffering a hand injury during a game against Baylor in September.

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“Due to a hand injury I suffered during the Baylor game, I’ve been advised by two orthopedic physicians that I will never be able to return to playing football,” Rising said. “I’ll be obtaining a 3rd medical opinion and will undergo the recommended surgery. I will continue to rehab and do all I can to get healthy. In the meantime, I will unfortunately be forced to medically retire from the game I love.

Cameron Rising announced his retirement from playing football. Getty Images

Cameron Rising announced his retirement from playing football. Getty Images

“My why has always been my family. I have always thought of my teammates as my brothers and always will. Thank you guys for always pushing me to improve and just making this game enjoyable. Thank you to the coaches for guiding me in the right direction to become a better man and football player. Coach Ludwig, thank you for turning me into a football nerd and showing me the correct way to respect that game. Lastly, thank you to all the fans and everyone that supported me throughout my career. You all made the moments special.”

While Rising won’t be on the field for Utah anymore, he will be on the sidelines for his high school alma mater, Newbury Park, as its offensive coordinator, ESPN reported.

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Rising was a three-year starter at the California high school from 2015-17 before spending his first college season at the University of Texas.

Cameron Rising of the Utah Utes wears a glove on his injured hand as he throws during warmups before their game against the Arizona Wildcats at Rice Eccles Stadium on September 28, 2024, in Salt Lake City, Utah. Getty Images

Cameron Rising of the Utah Utes wears a glove on his injured hand as he throws during warmups before their game against the Arizona Wildcats at Rice Eccles Stadium on September 28, 2024, in Salt Lake City, Utah. Getty Images

The 25-year-old played 30 total games during his time with Utah and led the program to Pac-12 championships in 2021 and 2022.

But injuries hindered his time on the field, and this past season, he played in just three games.

Source: Utah News