Thursday, October 10, 2013

Ogden Woman Makes Citizen’s Arrest Against Theft Suspects

Sodden reminder: Average Joes shouldn't attempt a citizens' arrest, unless they know exactly what they're doing

At risk of coming off as "late to the party," we'll highlight these uplifting stories from the Standard-Examiner and Fox News 13, who report on a situation which unfolded Sunday afternoon on Ogden's Two-Five Drive, as two 25th Street business owners engaged in a little "self-help," and "took a bite out of crime":
OGDEN -- After a weeks-long social media effort and a few close calls, CJ Bovee finally earned what she called vindication.
The owner of Sock Monkey'n Around Antiques on 25th Street, Bovee was victimized last month when two men and a woman allegedly stole an antique bracelet from her store. But on Sunday, Bovee turned the tables on the alleged perpetrators, when she and a friend took them into custody in a citizen's arrest:
Here's the video story, from the Fox News website:


Charlie Trentelman devotes some electronic ink to this story too:
Charlie aptly notes that "making a citizens' arrest is a dicey thing;" and he's right.  Here's the possible "downside" of taking the law into your own hands, straight from Salt Lake Criminal Defense Attorney Clayton Simms' website:
    A citizen’s arrest is an arrest made by someone who is not a law enforcement official.  In Utah, you are allowed to make a citizen’s arrest when a crime is committed or attempted in your presence, or when a felony is committed and the citizen has reasonable cause to believe that the person they want to arrest committed the felony.
    However, just because Utah gives a citizen the right to make a citizen’s arrest, it does not mean that citizens should be assisting law enforcement all the time.  A person making a citizen’s arrest could expose himself to possible lawsuits by the arrestee or criminal charges if the arrest was done improperly (assault, false imprisonment, kidnapping, or wrongful arrest).
    Consider what happened to a man who tried to make a citizen’s arrest of Governor Herbert while he was running for Lieutenant Governor in 2004.
    U.C.A. § 77-7-3: Arrest by Private Persons;
    A private person may arrest another: (1) For a public offense committed or attempted in his presence; or (2) When a felony has been committed and he has reasonable cause to believe the person arrested has committed it.
    As noted in the Fox News story, Cindy's a Utah Bail Enforcement licensee, who's had special training, and taken her fair share of criminal fugitives into custody in her lifetime.  In other words, this is a special case, meaning that you average Joes shouldn't attempt a citizens' arrest, unless you know exactly what you're doing.

    Interesting side note: this is the second  time within recent memory that we've reported about self-help apprehension by a 25th Street business owner of  a criminal on Two-five Drive, lending credence to the notion that "criminals always return to the scene of the crime," and bolstering the accuracy of Ms. Simones' newly-coined motto: "Don't mess with 25th Street," not to mention Cindy's own, personal "street cred."

    Tuesday, October 08, 2013

    Breaking: Herbert Picks State Rep. Spencer Cox As New Lieutenant Governor

    GOP "moderate" Gary Herbert  appoints another political "moderate" to the Utah Lt. Governor Post

    Amidst a all the WCF-sponsored  hullabaloo, and on the heels of way too much silly Utah media speculation, here's the latest good news for Utah GOP moderates, and a kick in the head to the science denying, religious wacko GOP Utah Tea-party corporo-fascists, as they watch in awe, whilst  Governor Gary, the "bane" of  Utah Right Wing  wackos, appoints another fellow  GOP "moderate" to the second most powerful Utah executive government position, and decides to fill the soon-to-be-vacant Utah Lt. Governor post with a fellow Utah Non-tea Party moderate:
    This is one Lt. Gubernational appointment which we'll be loving to watch, as the Utah GOP tea-party nitwits, and other wackos in the Utah religiouislature ultimately decide whether to approve this
    GOP "moderate" appointment.

    No doubt about it.  The progress of this appointment-pending will be interesting to watch.

    Sunday, October 06, 2013

    Standard-Examiner: Ogden Sells Lots to Kick-start Inner-city Housing Development

    Now's your chance to play the role of Ogden City urban planner for a day

    One of our thoughtful WCF readers asks this question:

    "What do you think of the city's plan to put single-family homes on this property just a block from 25th Street. Shouldn't we be promoting higher density within walking distance of a major transit corridor?"

    Here's this morning's Standard-Examiner writeup:
    "The block is currently populated with homes around its perimeter but is virtually vacant through the center," according to the Standard-Examiner reporter Mitch Shaw.

    And to verify that statement, we've provided the Google Earth "bird's-eye" project view:

    2300 Fowler Avenue Infill Project

    What say you, folks?

    Higher density housing might be something to contemplate, since a nascent Ogden Street Car project still remains on the transportation planning back-burner, or so it seems to us.

    Now's your chance to play the role of Ogden City urban planner for a day.

    And yes, this will be on "the test."

    Saturday, October 05, 2013

    Weber State Football Game Day Special: WSU v. EWU

    Still ample opportunity for our Wildcats to get the football program back on track

    The WSU Wildcats are back on the road this weekend, where they'll be meeting up this afternoon at 5:00 p.m. (MT), with Big Sky Conference rival Eastern Washington U, on the Eagles' butt-ugly home "turf." Kinda makes your eyes bleed, dunnit?

    Roos Field, Cheney, WA
    Here's the pre-game "hype" from the Standard-Examiner, which includes the somewhat "bitter-sweet" news that Coach Sears' "quarterback rotation dilemma" is over:
    And here's the skinny from the the Eagles' hometown newspaper, the Cheney Free Press, which quite delicately, and in a highly sportsman-like manner, avoids any expression of over-confidence:
    Looking at the Vegas odds, however, we find that our WSU Wildcats are (surprise of surprises) 30-point underdogs, Uh-oh!

    Click to enlarge image

    And here are the obligatory links to the live streaming audio and video, Wildcats fans:
    Remember, folks. With Weber State only one game outta first place, and with another seven games remaining to go, there's still ample opportunity for our Wildcats to get the football program back on track.

    Right, Folks?


    Repeat after me: Go Wildcats!

    Update 10/5/13 8:14 p.m.:  Whatabummer.  Our WSU Wildcats fall to the EWU Eagles, by a score of  41-19.  Lookin' at the bright side however, WSU scored more points tonight than in the last three games, which is a victory of sorts, don'tcha think? And as an added consolation, the "Cats did beat the spread.


    Update 10/6/13 7:00 a.m.:  Roy Burton's Post-game story describes last night's "stomping":

    Friday, October 04, 2013

    Salt Lake Tribune: Donna McAleer Again Running Against Rep. Rob Bishop

    As to candidates Clemens and McAleer... Too bad we can't choose them both

    Good news for the beleaguered voters of  Northern Utah's Congressional District One, as we learn that another Democratic Party candidate, one fairly  familiar to us, i.e., Donna McAleer, has again thrown her hat into the ring, with an intent to unseat Republican Congessman-for life, Rob Bishop in the 2014 1st Congressional District race
    With Ogden's own Peter Clemens also already having declared his own 2014 Congressional District 1 candidacy, it looks like the Utah Democratic Party has some tough nomination decisions to make.

    Seems that incumbent District 1 Congressmman Rob Bishop has caught signifiicant heat locally, due to his lemming-like support of this week's Republican Party-borne U.S. government shut-down, by the way, in connection with yesterday's Ogden protest, outside Rob Bishop's "vacant" Ogden Federal Building Office:

    First question: "will any of this 'stick?'" Sodden question #1:  Once U.S. House representatives such as Congressman Bishop ultimately back down from their bizarre political stance, by which they've taken America hostage, by shutting U.S. government down,  will Northern Utah voters still remember remember who was responsible for this idiotic and ill-conceived political stunt?
    Sodden question #2:  Would even a re-incarnated Joseph Smith (or maybe even Bringem Young) be capable of "winning" the 1st District Congressional race against our GOP-entrenched Mormon "Bishop," for instance, if either of them might hypothetically  ran as a Democrat? So many questions... so few answers. As to candidates Clemens and McAleer... let the best of them win the Demo nomination.

    Too bad we can't choose them both.

    Wednesday, October 02, 2013

    Standard-Examiner: Ogden Airport Manager Fired, Replaced by Former Police Chief Jon Greiner

    Submit your job apps without delay, folks, so former top-cop Greiner can get back to what he does best, i.e., playing golf. 

    Thanks to a flurry of tips from a flurry of sharp-eyed and alert Weber County Forum readers, we'd like to direct your attention to this blockbuster news from the Standard-Examiner:
    OGDEN — Ogden-Hinckley Airport manager Royal Eccles has been dismissed by the city and will be replaced by former Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner.
    On Tuesday, Ogden City Chief Administrative Officer Mark Johnson confirmed that Eccles had been let go, but said the city couldn’t comment further on the matter.
    “We have decided to move in another direction and there is a change at the airport,” Johnson said.
    Johnson said Greiner would take over the airport manager position on an interim basis, but was not sure how long the temporary period would last. [Links added].
    You can zoom in to the full story here:
    With a full 7.114 billion folks residing on this planet, it seems odd that the Caldwell would replace one featherbedded Boss Godfrey crony with yet another, dunnit?  Then again, taking into account our acute awareness of how things "work" in Ogden, maybe not.

    Jon Greiner
    For any folks who'd like to submit their application for permanent appointment to Eccles's former job, we link below the newly-opened Ogden City job listing, which lists, along with certain other airport-related technical prerequisites for new hiring (and we are not making this up), that "[w]hile performing the duties of this job, the employee is frequently required to sit, walk and talk or hear":
    Submit your job apps without delay, folks, so that former top-cop Greiner can get back to what he does best, i.e., playing golf.

    Standard-Examiner: Meet Candidates for Ogden City Council at Library (Tonight) Wednesday, Oct. 2 - Cancelled

    Hopefully you'll be able to work this into your evening calenders

    Via the Standard-Examiner, we'll relay an announcement of tonight's 2013 Ogden City Municipal elections event, something that no self respecting Ogden City political wonk will want to miss:
    OGDEN  -- The Weber County Democratic Party will host a meet-the-candidates forum for the candidates for Ogden City Council from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 2, at the Weber County Library Main Branch, 2464 Jefferson Ave. in Ogden.
    The forum is expected to last two hours, and candidates will be allowed to introduce themselves and will field questions from the audience.
    Our apologies for our belated announcement of this important event. Although we'd indirectly caught wind of the scheduling a few days ago, this is the first formal announcement that's popped up anywhere.  Weirdly enough, there was no info at all, even on the Weber County Democratic Party's website, even as recently as this morning.

    "Better late than never," we suppose.

    Hopefully you'll be able to work this into your evening calenders, despite the "tardiness" of the notice, for which we profusely apologize, although it's REALLY NOT our fault.

    Update 10/2/13 7:33 a.m.:  We just received this info from At-Large Seat "B" candidate Courtney White, concerning an email which he received from the Weber County  Democratic Party County Chair:
    "Greetings Ogden Municipal Candidate, 
    I have the solemn duty of contacting you to give notice that the Weber county Democratic Party’s event scheduled for October 2nd at the Weber County main library will have to be canceled."
     Looks like this "important" event has been called off. Dang!

    Update 10/2/13 11:00 a.m.:  We've just received word from Weber County Democratic Party Chairman Ben Pales, confirming that this evening's event has indeed been canceled.

    Monday, September 30, 2013

    Standard-Examiner: Mansions May Be Coming to Ogden's Riverside

    Mayor Caldwell and the Ogden RDA: Clearly "on mission" with the primary Ogden RDA raison d'etre

    Eye-opening morning story from the Standard-Examiner concerning the latest Mike Caldwell Administration/ Ogden Redevelopment Agency "tweak" to the still-struggling Ogden River Project:
    OGDEN — Large mansion homes along the Ogden River? They could be coming, and the city says they would help clean up what has been one of the city’s rougher areas.
    The city council last week approved a city real estate purchase of 4.16 acres at 1810 Gibson Ave. The Ogden City Redevelopment Agency bought the land from Richard L. Christiansen and paid $425,000 for it.
    The parcel of land could be the starting point for a large residential development of about 10 acres along the northwestern end of the Ogden River.
    As of now, the city is calling the development “Gibson Grove,” and it would feature town homes, condos and several “mansion homes” that would be tucked away at the end of a private road with immediate connection to the Ogden River Parkway.
    The plan currently calls for 48 condos, 39 town homes and five mansions.
    Read up, folks:
    And here's the kicker:
    On the very site of what could eventually be Gibson Grove sits an abandoned building that provides shelter to transients. Ogden Police Officer Kevin Mann said he finds transients illegally camping out in the building on a weekly basis.
    Brandon Cooper, deputy manager for Ogden’s economic development department, said the city is currently exploring options to raze the building.
    "An abandoned building that provides shelter to transients?"  S-E reporter Mitch Shaw said a "real mouthful" there, wethinks.  In this connection, check out this illuminating video from and earlier S-E story on this Gibson Avenue topic:


    Added Bonus:  From last week's RDA packet, we've gleaned this image, which preasumably provides a preview of what these proposed Gibson Grove "mansions" will look like, within walking distance of the newly remodeled Ogden LDS Temple:


    While we suppose we could all quibble about the architectural aesthetics, we believe we can all agree that it's a heckuva lot better than the structure which is presently in place, right?
      

    The primary raison d'etre for the Ogden Redevelopment Agency is to "encourage private investment in blighted areas of the community;" and Mayor Caldwell and the Ogden RDA are thus clearly "on mission" with this project, we believe. In contrast with certain other misguided Ogden RDA projects which have been clearly "off mission," Weber County Forum is delighted to give this project a giant "thumbs-up."

    So what about it, O Gentle Ones? Is there anyone among our collection of Ogden political wonks who will argue that Ogden City ought not pursue this project at full throttle? 

    Sunday, September 29, 2013

    2014 Utah General Election: Ogden Doctor to Challenge Rep. Bishop for Congressional Seat

    Tantalizing question:  Will there soon be "a 'Doctor' in the House" in 2015?

    A full thirteen months in advance of the 2014 General Elections, Utah's upcoming First Congressional District race is already heating up, as Ogden Physician Dr. Peter Clemens announced at a Friday (9/27/13) fundraiser that he'll be "running" for Republican Congressman Rob Bishop's U.S. House "seat," under the Democratic party banner:
    Those WCF readers who are social networking-inclined can follow Dr. Clemens campaign via Facebook and Twitter:
    We also find the rudiments of an under-construction website online, for those WCF readers who'd like to volunteer and/or make an early campaign contribution:
    As we've learned the hard way, getting at the wily Congressman Bishop's House Seat is easier said than done.

    A Weber County Tip O' the Hat to the good Dr. Clemens for getting the ball rolling early, along with best wishes for a robust and competitive campaign.

    Tantalizing question:  Will there be "a 'Doctor' in the House" in 2015?

    You know. A trained physician who can capably operate a proctoscope?

    Saturday, September 28, 2013

    WSU Homecoming Game Day Thread: Weber State U. Hosts Sacramento State - Updated

    Lets all doll up in purple, get out to Stewart Stadium and "put some butts into some seats"

    Big doings today on the Weber State campus, where our (1-3) Weber State Wildcats  will square off this evening versus Big Sky Conference opponent Sacramento State Hornets (1-3) for each team's first 2013 Big Sky Conference gridiron battle.  Notably, the "Wildcats hope to end a three-game losing streak that coincides with three difficult road games," and "[t}he angry Hornets are looking to create some buzz for themselves after losing a heartbreaker in overtime last week to Southern Utah."

    Kickoff is set for 6 p.m. at Stewart Stadium.  Hopefully, rabid WSU fans will show up in force, on a day which is shaping up for perfect football weather. Adding further excitement to tonight's gridiron tilt:  It's  WSU Homecoming Week, folks!

    The Standard-Examiner has a couple pre-game stories, of course, just to set the mood:
    And here's a little something from the Deseret News:
    Even KSL News is getting into the act:
    Here's the pregame viewpoint from the Sacramento Bee, the Hornets' home town newspaper, wherein we find this dismal historical stat: "Ogden, Utah, is a place where the Hornets are 0-8." :
    If the Vegas odds provide any real "guidance," it looks like this actually may prove to be a pretty competitive football contest, one worth watching, although for the fourth week running, our Wildcats remain "underdogs" (slightly, at least):

    Click to enlarge image
      
    Big Sky TV is back in action tonight with this live video feed, featuring Carl Arkey:
    You can catch the live streaming audio here, of course:
    Our "Purple Posse" desperately need your support this week; so what say you? Lets all skip the live broadcasts, doll up in purple, get out to Stewart Stadium and "put some butts into some seats" for once, at least. No lame excuses, please.

    See ya's at Stewart Stadium.

    Update 9/29/13 7:18 p.m.:  Hornets lead 14-0 at the half, thanks to a multitude of dumb WSU penalties and turnovers.  "It coulda beeen worse," Carl Arkey remarks, when Sac State muffs an easy 39-yard field goal as the halftime clock runs out.

    Update 9/29/13 8:45 p.m.:  Final score, Sac State 31, WSU 3. Sacramento State comes out on top @ Stewart Stadium for the first time EVER.  Looks like it'll be a l-o-o-o-n-g conference season, Wildcats fans.

    Update 9/30/13 7:00 a.m.: The Standard's Roy Burton provides two scathing post-game stories, brimming with frustration:
    "Time for some big changes or the program might not survive," opines one disgruntled Wildcats fan.

    Update 9/30/13 6:15 a.m.: More naval gazing  from the Standard's Roy Burton:

    Friday, September 27, 2013

    Standard-Examiner: Our View: GOP Should Heed ‘Count My Vote’ - Updated

    A Weber County Forum Tip O' the Hat to the Standard-Examiner for unequivocally standing up on this issue
    “Count My Vote,” ...would do away with the caucus and allow all candidates to move to a primary. We believe a primary is the most inclusive system. The caucuses are a reflection of citizen populism, and that has been a positive. However, the caucus system also prevents many from having a voice in choosing their party’s candidate. And the low percentage of voters in recent elections may be a reflection of the state caucuses being dominated by political factions which are outside the mainstream. Utah should join most of the nation in implementing a primary voting system.
    Standard-Examiner Editorial
    Our View: GOP should heed ‘Count My Vote’
    September 27, 2013
    Minor modifications to the caucus system by the state Republican Party probably won’t be enough to sway voters to retain the current caucuses.
    Standard-Examiner Editorial
    Our View: GOP should heed ‘Count My Vote’
    September 27, 2013

    Top-notch editorial from the Standard-Examiner, leaping aboard the Count My Vote bandwagon, and joining with Weber County Forum in leading the charge amongst the Utah print and online media to replace Utah's bizarre and un-democratic caucus/convention nomination system with a sensible and citizen-inclusive procedure, whereby each Utah lumpencitizen can actively participate in the candidate nomination process with their own direct primary vote:
    We'll be standing by, waiting for other Utah media opinion leaders to follow suit.

    Special note to the Utah Eagle Forum and their radical ilk, who are now on the verge of becoming an endangered Utah species:
    Your days of tilting Utah politics toward your narrow and extremist political agenda are numbered.
    A Weber County Forum Tip O' the Hat to the Standard-Examiner for unequivocally standing up on this issue.

    Update 9/28/13 9:00 a.m.:  Following the lead of the Standard-Examiner, the Deseret News steps forth with this blockbuster editorial, blowing the doors off the argument of the Eagle Forum crowd, i.e., that the current caucus/convention system "mitigates" the influence of "big money" in Utah politics:
    Bully for the Deseret News.  We'll be standing by with abated breath, of course, to hear something similar from the Salt Lake Tribune

    Thursday, September 26, 2013

    Salt Lake Tribune: Attorneys: Count My Vote Proposal Passes Legal Muster

    The signatures of fifteen past Utah Bar Presidents ain't a half-bad touch either

    There's encouraging news for supporters of  Utah political nomination reform from the Salt Lake Tribune this morning, as Robert Gehrke reports that the folks of Count My Vote, who are hell-bent to replace the state’s current and decidedly undemocratic caucus/convention nomination process with a direct primary election procedure, have completed the next important procedural step in qualifying their Utah citizens initiative petition for general circulation, pursuant to Title 20A Chapter 7 Section 202, which provides that once an application for an initiative has been submitted, the Lieutenant Governor reviews the measure. The application will be rejected if the measures is "patently unconstitutional," "nonsensical," could not become law if passed, contains more than one subject, or does not clearly express the subject in its title.

    Here are the key paragraphs from the Salt Lake Tribune:
    Count My Vote organizers delivered a letter to the lieutenant governor’s office signed by 15 past presidents of the Utah State Bar, vouching for the constitutionality of the group’s proposed election reform.
    The letter and an accompanying 21-page legal memo state that the Count My Vote proposal of replacing the current caucus-and-convention system parties use to pick nominees with direct primaries is clearly constitutional and would address a "compelling" interest — increasing voter participation.
    "We believe the initiative would not impose any burden … on party associational rights because parties would remain free to endorse favored candidates, select nominees without state input, and determine which voters participate in their primary elections," the letter states.
    Read the full article here:
    And here's a PDF copy of the above-referenced letter for our WCF readers' own review:
    Even upon casual reading it ought to be clear that this proposed citizens initiative petition does "pass legal muster;" and the signatures of 15 past Utah Bar Presidents ain't a half-bad touch either, wethinks.

    What say you, O Gentle Ones?

    Time to get this show on the road, don'tcha think?

      Wednesday, September 25, 2013

      Invitation to Tonight's Town Hall Meeting

      A "golden" opportunity to "grill" our "full*" Weber County House legislative delegation, in advance of this year's 2014 legislative session

      Thanks to a tip from one of our gentle readers, we're pleased to belatedly announce this evening's upcoming political event:

      Join Utah House Speaker Becky Lockhart, and Utah House Representatives Gage Froerer, Jeremy Peterson, Dixon Pitcher, Lee Perry, and Ryan D. Wilcox, in a Special Town Hall Meeting hosted by the Walker Institute at Weber State University.

      Here are the space-time coordinates:

      Town Hall Meeting: Conversations with the Utah House
      Date: September 25, 2013
      Time: 6:30 - 8:30 p.m.
      Place: Shepherd Union Building, Room 3313A

      Here's you "engraved" invitation, which we received late yesterday evening:


      Don't miss this "golden" opportunity to "grill" our "full*" Weber County House legislative delegation, in advance of this year's 2014 legislative session.

      * Rep Brad Dee: Missing in Action?

      Monday, September 23, 2013

      Salt Lake Tribune: Utah GOP Chairman: Count My Vote Will Prevail if Party Fights Change

      The oderiferous essense: Average Utah lumpencitizens are simply too danged dumb to nominate their own candidates via a Direct Primary Nomination System

      The Salt Lake Tribune reports that the Utah GOP Central Committee, the month-to-month governing body of the Utah Republican Party, met Saturday (9/21/13) to plot their strategy to fight against the "Count My Vote" initiative, among other things.

      Party Chair James Evans took a "pragmatic" view, and lectured the gathered Central Committee  that if Utah's "ruling" party continues to "fight change," the Utah Caucus Nomination System is doomed:
      Click to enlarge image
      These "elite" Utah Republican Party political aparatchiks again took no action to address this looming issue, of course.

      Remember, folks, "elite" Utah caucus-elected convention delegates are smarter and better informed than you.  When you distill the Utah GOP argument down to its basic oderiferous essense, average Utah lumpencitizens are simply too danged dumb to nominate their own candidates via a Direct Primary Nomination System.

      Right?

      Update 9/23/13 10:06 a.m.: Fascinating Deseret News commentary this morning from Bob Bennett, who was ousted in a recent Utah "nomination primary." Here's his take, in a nutshell, for what it's worth:
      Set aside the question of whether or not these choices were wise ones; my point is that the current closed convention/primary structure does not shield the process from the power of political money.
      Read up:
      Bennett's right; and he would know, no?

      Update: 12:47 P.M 1250 PM:  Somebody  please  "esplain" why the main local discussion of this issue seems to be happening on Facebook, and not on Weber County Forum.

      If you don't use it; you will lose it, in Re WCF, as the old saying goes

      Saturday, September 21, 2013

      Weber State University Game Day Thread: WSU v. McNeese State

      WSU Coach Sears: "Happy to (finally) return to playing against someone at our own level."

      WSU v. McNeese State
      Our Weber State Wildcats definitely have their hands full again this evening, as they travel to Lake Charles, Louisiana, to face the McNeese State University Cowboys  at Cowboy Stadium/Louis Bonnette Field in a game set for kickoff at 6:00 p.m. (Mountain Time).

      The Cowboys boast of a 3-0 season record and a No. 2 national rating in scoring offense (51.7 points per game), whilst our hapless Wildcats (1-2) are coming off successive blowout road losses to NCAA FBS Division powerhouses Utah and Utah State.

      WSU coach Sears certainly isn't about to write this game off however, as "the ’Cats are happy to return to playing against someone at their own (FCS) level."

      Just to get your Wildcat fan juices flowing, here are the pregame writeups from the Standard and the Tribune:
      And for the other side ot the story, read what the Lake Charles, Louisiana-based American Press newspaper has to say about tonight's cross-continent Saturday evening gridiron contest:
      Sorry, folks.  Seems the bookmakers don't seem to be laying odds for this game. So for those sports "punters" among us... you're on your own.

      You can catch the live streaming audio here, of course:
      And as an added bonus, rabid WSU fans can watch the live Cowboys' streaming video broadcast here, provided you're willing to cough up that measly seven bucks:
      And what are the magic words?  That's right... Go Wildcats! 

      Update 9/21/13 8:52 p.m.: Final score: McNeese State 43, WSU 6.  Dang!

      Update 9/21/13 10:00 p.m.:  The Trib is the first to carry a post-game story:
      Update 9/22/13 7:15 a.m.:  Better late than never, the Standard's Roy Burton chimes in with his own morning writeup:

      Friday, September 20, 2013

      “23 Murders in 1987” Claim Still Uncorrected After Nearly Two Weeks

      Another sign that all is not well at the Standard-Examiner

      By Dan Schroeder

      It was the top story on the front page of the Saturday Standard-Examiner, and it began like this:
      Late in 1988 Ogden officials to their civic relief proclaimed the city was no longer the murder capital of Utah. 
      Numbers had dropped below 1987’s watermark of 23 homicides, then-Mayor Cliff Goff announced at an Ogden City Council meeting. The 1987 tally having exceeded Salt Lake City’s total.
      Twenty-three homicides in Ogden in a single year! More than Salt Lake City! Yet we now know that this statistic is absolutely pants-on-fire false. And the Standard-Examiner knows it’s false. And after nearly two weeks they still haven’t printed a correction.

      As Weber County Forum reported the following day, I checked the “23 homicides” claim against the freely available FBI data as soon as I saw it on September 7.  According to the FBI, Ogden had only six murders in 1987, and this number was typical for the late 1980s. (The online FBI data go back only to 1985.) I immediately posted a comment to this effect on the Standard-Examiner web site, along with a graph of the FBI homicide data for both Ogden and Salt Lake City (which had 13 murders in 1987, somewhat on the low side for that era).

      I naively hoped that my comment and graph (not to mention the Weber County Forum coverage) would be enough to prompt someone at the Standard-Examiner to verify the error and print a correction. But by Tuesday, September 10, no correction had appeared. So I emailed the reporter, Tim Gurrister, to make sure he had seen my comments, and to ask him more about the “23 murders” claim.

      Mr. Gurrister replied that he had seen my comments, but he expressed some skepticism about the accuracy of the FBI data. He also explained that the “23 murders” claim was based on his vivid memory of what Mayor Goff said at a city council meeting that Gurrister covered soon after he began working for the Standard-Examiner in late 1988.

      At that point I speculated that Mayor Goff really had said something about 23 murders or deaths, but that either he or Mr. Gurrister had gotten mixed up over the locations, or time frames, or types of deaths that were included in the statistic.

      Unable to quench my curiosity, I then emailed Ogden City Recorder Tracy Hansen, and asked whether she could quickly check her electronic archive of city council minutes for any such statement by Mayor Goff.

      Ms. Hansen’s reply came back after less than an hour. She had searched the minutes for all of 1988 using the keywords “murder” and “homicide”, and found no relevant statements at all by Mayor Goff. She did, however, find a brief statement on the subject that he made on March 16, 1989. The minute entry reads in full:
      Mayor Goff re: “Murder Capital”.
      Mayor Goff reported that he received a call from a reporter at the Deseret News today. She indicated that so far this year, there have been no murders in Ogden and eight have occurred in Salt Lake City. The Mayor discussed the need to eradicate the image of Ogden as the “Murder Capital.”
      So it’s absolutely true that Mayor Goff was concerned about Ogden’s reputation as a murder capital. It’s even conceivable that he made a similar statement at a 1988 meeting that wasn’t recorded in the minutes, and that he mentioned the number 23—but if he did, the city has no record of it.

      Mayor Goff’s statement in March 1989 came after the presentation of the Ogden Police Department’s annual report to the city council. That report was for calendar year 1988. The minutes from March 1988 show no statement by Mayor Goff upon the presentation of the report for 1987, the year of the alleged 23 murders. Ms. Hansen generously offered to dig both of these reports out of her (non-electronic) archives, and I accepted. A few hours later, the extraordinary Ms. Hansen emailed both of these newly scanned documents. The reports are concise and informative, so I recommend that interested readers take a look at them: 1987 OPD Annual Report; 1988 OPD Annual Report.

      The annual reports essentially confirm the FBI data: five homicides in Ogden in 1987 and nine in 1988. The reports also include statistics on Ogden traffic fatalities: ten in 1987 and nine in 1988. And the reports include some historical data from earlier years:

      Year     Homicides     Traffic fatalities
      19815
      19825
      19838
      19847
      1985810
      198635
      1987510
      198899

      In short, Ogden averaged about six murders per year during the “murderous” 1980s. The minor discrepancies with the FBI data probably come from inconsistencies in how to classify certain manslaughters and automobile homicides. I can’t find any reasonable way to obtain the number 23 from the data in the OPD reports.

      Of course I immediately forwarded these reports, as well as the city council minute entry, to Mr. Gurrister. At that point he acknowledged that some sort of correction to the “23” claim was called for. He later told me he’ll be writing a follow-up article, but due to his other assignments he couldn’t predict when it would appear.

      We all make mistakes, and I commend Mr. Gurrister for admitting his mistake and being willing to correct it. I’m less sympathetic to the Standard-Examiner editors, who obviously saw no need to fact-check such an outrageous and undocumented claim, and who seem to be in no hurry to print a correction. Perhaps they’re overly intent on reinforcing the narrative that Ogden has miraculously recovered from a crime-ridden past. Or perhaps they’re just stretched so thin, trying to put out a daily paper with inadequate staff, that they no longer have the luxury of caring about accuracy. Either way, this incident is yet another sign that all is not well at the Standard-Examiner.

      Alternate Reality Department: Ogden School Board Renews Superintendent's Contract for Two Years

      The knuckle-headed Ogden School Board crosses over into... The Twilight Zone

      Alternate Reality Dept.
      Some stories we read in the Standard-Examiner simply defy rational explanation. Try this one on for size, O Gentle Ones:
      Bob Becker "nails it," down in the S-E comments section:
      So, the CEO of OSD got $50k in bonuses while laying off school librarians and over-crowding classrooms. This is the Lehman Brothers model of executive compensation. This school board would likely have voted the Captain of the Titanic a fat bonus as they scrambled aboard the lifeboats.
      We're filing this one under the topic label "Alternate Reality Department," inasmuch as the knuckle-headed Ogden School Board has clearly crossed over into... The Twilight Zone.

      As school board elections approach in November of 2014, the lumpencitizens of Ogden City certainly have their work cut out for themselves, no?

      Thursday, September 19, 2013

      Count My Vote Launches Initiative to Dump Utah's "Quaint" Caucus/Convention Nomination System - Updated

      Democracy in Utah - What a concept
      "We're confident people want a change." "We're the only state where a handful of people, just a handful of people, routinely choose" candidates.
      Former Governor Mike Leavitt - Deseret News
      Count My Vote launches initiative to change Utah's primary elections
      September 18, 2013
      "In the process, as it exists, every [election] year there are legislators who get elected by 30 or 40 people and there are literally thousands of people who don’t get a chance to have their voice heard."
      Former Governor Mike Leavitt - Salt Lake Tribune
      Count My Vote launches effort for direct Utah primaries
      September 18, 2013
      "The current path to get on the ballot through the caucus and convention system ensures that only the most narrow ideological selection of candidates is available to Utah voters. Those politicians have to run on an extremely limited ideological platform to appeal to the extremes."
      Bryan Schott - UtahPolicy.Com
      Bryan Schott's Political BS - Held Hostage by the Caucuses
      August 29, 2013

      On the heels of the rejection of serious Utah election nomination reform  by the Utah Republican Party apparatus, Both the Deseret News and the Salt Lake Tribune report that "[o]rganizers of the Count My Vote movement filed paperwork with the lieutenant governor’s office Wednesday, officially launching their bid to replace Utah’s system of nominating candidates with a direct primary system":
      Needless to say, right-wing wacko Utah power brokers, such as the Utah Eagle Forum, are absolutely apoplectic over this development:

      "Why do you think these extreme elements want to hold on to the current system? Because it gives their issues a stronger voice. Moving to a primary to nominate candidates means more broad-based campaigning and appealing to a larger slice of the electorate," says UtahPolicy.Com's Bryan Schott:
      We'll be standing by awaiting details of the upcoming petition drive of course, folks.  When the petitions are available for distribution and your eager signatures, our ever-gentle WCF Readers will certainly be the first to know.

      Democracy in Utah.  What a concept.


      Update 9/19/13 7:26 a.m.: As a bellwether indicator of just how stressed-out these right wing Utah wackos are, at the prospect of turning the political nomination process over to the broad-based Utah electorate, we find that no fewer than four "ubiquitous," cut/paste, anti-democracy, pro-caucus status quo "talking points" have already been "lodged" in our comments section below.

      Update 9/20/13 9:36 a.m.:  Via Bob Bernick: "Regular ole citizens should love the CMV petition. For it gives them a chance to recapture the nominating process of their particular political parties. In a one-party dominate state like Utah, the more people who get the chance to vote on a GOP candidate the better. It is as simple as that":

      Wednesday, September 18, 2013

      Standard-Examiner: Snowbasin Resort Development Plan Moves Ahead in Morgan County

      Will Godfrey's heretofore un-sated Gondola passion be finally quenched?

      Gondola???
      Interesting story in this morning's Standard-Examiner, reporting that "the Morgan County Council will vote Oct. 1 on a proposed Snowbasin resort plan that a local planner says will eventually double the number of dwelling units in the county":
      Remember, folks, Morgan County economic development is now former Ogden Mayor Matthew "Gondola Boy" Godfrey's private sector consulting turf.

      So what about it, O Gentle Ones?  Gaze into your ever-infallible crystal balls. Will the proposed public financing and construction of a multi-millon dollar gondola be the next hot issue dividing Morgan County lumpencitizens?

      Will Godfrey's heretofore un-sated Gondola passion be finally quenched?

      Tuesday, September 17, 2013

      Standard-Examiner: DUP Irritated at Perceived Snub from Ogden Mayor

      Sodden Question: Is it time for the lumpencitizens of Ogden to up the ante with a written inquiry to Miss Manners?

      Interesting story in this morning's Standard-Examiner.  Almost a full month after this angry letter to the editor, and almost two months post-blunder, the Standard finally gets around to reporting on how Ogden Mayor Mike Caldwell somehow managed to ruffle the feathers of one of Weber County's most prominent and conservative historical preservation organizations, the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers, by ham-handedly failing to show up at what ought to have been a routine "ribbon cutting ceremony" event:
      Highly probative comment from veteran WCF and frequent S-E comment board contributor Bob Becker, tidily framing the issues and identifying some still-unanswered questions:  
      Mayor Tenspeed tick off someone in the newsroom? The DUP still being miffed six weeks later, and after the organization's letter to the editor appeared weeks ago, justifies a long news story about their still being miffed? If they're still in a snit six weeks from now will we get another story? We don't even get an explanation of why, his office having accepted the invitation and confirmed it the day before, Hizzonah didn't show. Staff messed up? Mayor didn't say that in the story. Did he just opt to do other things instead and stiff the DUP? We don't know. I'm hard put to find any real news here. Why is the SE still flogging this?
      So what about it O Gentle Ones? Can future socio-political Mayoral gaffes such as this be avoided by simply assigning Mayor Mike's calender management system to somebody on Mayor Mike's staff; or is it time for the lumpencitizens of Ogden to up the ante with a written inquiry to Miss Manners?


      Just axin'

      © 2005 - 2014 Weber County Forum™ -- All Rights Reserved