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Better Newspaper Award - Intermountain Catholic

Better Newspaper Award Jean Hill, director of the Diocese of Salt Lake City Office of Life, Justice and Peace, took first place in this year s Utah Press Association Better Newspaper Contest s Best Editorial category, Group 2. Her winning entry was Ask Legislators to Oppose HB90, which was printed in the Jan. 17, 2020 Intermountain Catholic. She is shown with the Most Rev. Oscar A. Solis, Bishop of Salt Lake City and publisher of the Intermountain Catholic. IC photo/Marie Mischel Jean Hill, director of the Diocese of Salt Lake City Office of Life, Justice and Peace, took first place in this year’s Utah Press Association Better Newspaper Contest’s Best Editorial category, Group 2. Her winning entry was “Ask Legislators to Oppose HB90,” which was printed in the Jan. 17, 2020 Intermountain Catholic. She is shown with the Most Rev. Oscar A. Solis, Bishop of Salt Lake City and publisher of the Intermountain Catholic. 

How Utah lawmakers decided spend $1 6 billion in federal COVID-19 funds

House Speaker Brad Wilson, R-Kaysville, hugs Rep. Karen Kwan, D-Murray, after Kwan’s resolution honoring Asian American and Pacific Islander communities passed unanimously in the House during a special session of the Legislature at the Capitol in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, May 19, 2021. Kristin Murphy, Deseret News Though controversy over critical race theory sucked most of the oxygen out of the Utah Legislature’s special session on Wednesday, lawmakers acted on a host of other bills including changes to the budget to accept over $1.6 billion in federal COVID-19 relief funds. In the special session called by Gov. Spencer Cox to deal with the budget and pass 22 bills including one to ban school mask requirements this fall except for special circumstances the Utah Legislature approved legislation to initially spend only $571 million of the federal funds funneled to the state by the American Rescue Plan Act, leaving the rest to be spent after more specifics can be iron

What Utah lawmakers decided to do with $1 6 billion in federal COVID-19 relief funds

SALT LAKE CITY Though controversy over critical race theory sucked most of the oxygen out of the Utah Legislature s special session on Wednesday, lawmakers acted on a host of other bills including changes to the budget to accept over $1.6 billion in federal COVID-19 relief funds. In the special session called by Gov. Spencer Cox to deal with the budget and pass 22 bills including one to ban school mask requirements this fall except for special circumstances the Utah Legislature approved legislation to initially spend only $571 million of the federal funds funneled to the state by the American Rescue Plan Act, leaving the rest to be spent after more specifics can be ironed out in the 2022 general session in January.

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