Home arrow Press arrow Current Issues
Current Issues
News pertaining to issues facing Utah County voters. Articles do not necessarily reflect the official stance of the Utah County Democratic Party.

Governor calls special session for Wednesday Print E-mail

As expected, Gov. Gary Herbert on Friday called a special session of the Legislature for Wednesday to handle several minor items — and avoided more controversial issues such as changes to Utah’s open-records law and a push to repeal Utah’s immigrant guest-worker program.

“The items on the call are generally minor housekeeping items, some of which are time-sensitive,” Herbert said.

The items he included for consideration include tinkering with health insurance rates, liquor commission guidelines, judicial evaluations, and adopting another resolution supporting a federal balanced budget amendment.

Other items include tweaking the makeup of a board created to study the relocation of the Draper prison and legislation about issuing bonds by special service districts.

The one-day session will cost little to nothing extra because it will piggyback on already-scheduled monthly interim meetings.

While the Utah Republican Party passed a resolution last month calling for the repeal of HB116, which would create a guest-worker law, the governor did not include it among items for the special session.

Sen. Steve Urquhart, R-St. George, said recently he doesn’t like taking on complicated matters such as HB116 during special sessions. “The bill doesn’t go into effect — if ever — until 2013, so I don’t see a huge rush to repeal.”

Also, no changes are expected to Utah’s open-meetings law. Although a task force has been contemplating changes to the law — after lawmakers were pressured into repealing revisions they passed this year — Sen. Curt Bramble, R-Provo, has said those revisions won’t be ready in time for the special session. He wants the bill to have several public hearings.

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

 
Dabakis elected chairman of Utah Democratic Party Print E-mail

Utah Democrats made history Saturday afternoon, electing the state’s first openly gay major party chairman and an openly gay candidate to fill a vacant Salt Lake City House seat.

Delegates at the Democratic state convention voted overwhelmingly, by 528-71, to elect Jim Dabakis as state party chairman. Dabakis, an art dealer and a founder of a founder of Equality Utah and The Utah Pride Center, ran against Robert Comstock, a political activist and middle school wood shop teacher.

Delegates also voted, narrowly, to put Brian Doughty, a small-business owner, in the legislative seat vacated by Jackie Biskupski.

With Doughty’s election, Utah’s gay community will continue to have at least one voice on the Hill. Biskupski, who resigned in June because she moved out of her district, was the last openly gay lawmaker in Utah. But Doughty, who lives near Liberty Park with his partner, served on the board of directors of Equality Utah until recently when he resigned to pursue the House District 30 seat.

“I think it’s important during these committee hearings and floor debates there’s actually someone who can speak from the heart,” said Doughty before pausing to collect himself in the emotional moment.

Biskupski said after the vote she was pleased to see Doughty, her House district chairman, win the seat. She said it’s good for both the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community and the Mormon community to have an openly gay lawmaker at the Capitol.

“I am excited that the LGBT community will have a voice again in the Hill because I’ve seen what a difference it makes to have someone on the floor who can articulate a personal message on some of the issues that arise, and that is really important especially during this critical civil rights time for the LGBT community,” Biskupski said.

Doughty said his first priority in office will be to work with the redistricting process “and make sure the House District 30 does not totally disappear.”

“Sugar House and Liberty Park is really a community of common interest and we don’t want to split that up and have it absorbed by surrounding House districts,” Doughty said.

It was a narrow victory for Doughty, in an election where many had expected longtime activist Nikki Boyer to win.

Six candidates vied for Biskupski’s seat, but none of them won the required 60 percent of delegate votes in the first round of voting. A second round of voting narrowed the field to the top two vote-getters, Doughty and William McDonnell, director of the U.’s Center for Children’s Environmental Health Law & Policy. Boyer announced before the second round that she’d like to give her votes to Doughty, who then came from behind to beat McDonnell by one vote.

Party leaders estimated about 1,200 attended the convention in Salt Lake City Saturday.

 

 
Waddoups seeks west-side U.S. House district Print E-mail

Salt Lake Tribune, July 10, 2011
Lee Davidson

Others have drawn congressional maps that would center new districts in Utah County, Salt Lake City or even Davis and Weber counties. So Utah Senate President Michael Waddoups, R-Taylorsville, is countering with one that would put Taylorsville and West Valley City at the center of a district.

“I wasn’t saying that Taylorsville should be the center of the universe. But I did want to emphasize that the west side of the county does have a significant population base,” he said on Friday about the new map he posted to the Redistricting Committee’s website, RedistrictUtah.com.

Waddoups’ latest map would form three urban House districts along a “doughnut hole” stretch of the Wasatch Front, surrounded by one vast, rural “doughnut” district. He says he does not actually favor creating a rural “doughnut” district, but wanted to put on the table a version of the increasingly debated idea that would create a west-side-centered district.

Read more...