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Selwyn Councillor Phil Dean Steps Down
Selwyn Councillor Phil Dean Steps Down

Scoop

time30-04-2025

  • Business
  • Scoop

Selwyn Councillor Phil Dean Steps Down

Selwyn District Councillor Phil Dean has resigned to focus on other commitments. The first-term councillor will be step down on May 16 after handing in his resignation to chief executive Sharon Mason. Dean said it was a difficult call, but he needed to strike the right balance with other commitments. 'It was a really tough decision to make and one that I have thought long and hard about. 'I feel honored to have worked with some amazing people on the council and council staff, and I feel that Selwyn is in a strong position for the future.' 'I'm proud of watching our community grow and how our council has adapted to such rapid growth and managed to tackle the big decisions put in front of us.' As well as being an councillor, Dean is also working full-time and said balancing the two roles has become too difficult. His resignation will likely leave a vacant chair at the council table until the elections in October. Under the Local Electoral Act, the council can decide whether to fill the seat before the next Local Body Elections in October. The council will consider the option of a by-election at its meeting in May following Dean's departure. Mason said Dean's thoughtful consideration of the wide breadth of issues and decisions that crossed the council table will be missed. 'Phil brought a range of experience and skills to the council table, with his background in Police community development, road safety, as well as being well-known in the Selwyn theatre and business communities.' Dean said he plans to continue as an active member of the Rolleston Residents' Association as well as continued involvement in the creative arts and theatre community.

What Utahns had to say about where the economy and their personal finances are headed
What Utahns had to say about where the economy and their personal finances are headed

Yahoo

time16-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

What Utahns had to say about where the economy and their personal finances are headed

Just weeks ahead of the international trade tumult that dragged down U.S. investment markets and sparked new recession worries, Utahns were feeling fairly optimistic about their household finances and the direction of their state's economy. But not so much when it comes to where they believe the overall U.S. economy is headed. And the new data, gathered in a statewide Deseret News/Hinckley Institute of Politics survey conducted Feb. 18-25, comes amid other state and national readings that show consumer sentiment is on the decline. Phil Dean, chief economist at the University of Utah's Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute, told the Deseret News that the poll results reflect a running trend among Utahns who typically register higher confidence in their local economy than nationally. He said he believes it's a view that is well-founded, even as worries continue to rise about a potential looming recession. 'There's definitely a risk of recession out there right now,' said Dean, who co-chairs the Utah Economic Council. 'I don't think there's a guarantee but definitely a risk with all of the different challenges emerging. 'But we continue to trend better than the U.S. in sentiment and I think there's good reason for that given our economic performance. We're continuing to do well as a state.' A plurality of Utahns surveyed, 41%, say their personal financial situation is currently steady while 31% report things are getting worse on the personal financial front and 26% say it's improving. There was only a small partisan difference among those who said their finances were the same, with that group made up of 44% Republicans and 39% Democrats. A similar partisan divide was present among respondents who said their finances were improving, 31% Republican versus 26% Democrats. For those who reported their financial situations were worsening, the political divide widened with 24% of Republicans in that camp along with 35% Democrats. The drumbeat of political affiliation sounded a bit louder, however, when it came to poll Utahns' views on the current economic tides for the state and the nation. When asked, 'In general, do you think Utah's economy is on the right track or is it off on the wrong track?', 51% of respondents said the state was on the right track, 32% said wrong track and 17% weren't sure or said they didn't know. Utah Republicans and Democrats were deeply divided on the right track view, with 67% of the group identifying with the GOP and 34% with the Democratic Party. Among those who said Utah was on the wrong track, 19% were Republicans and 44% Democrats. Views of Utah's economic path were also markedly different among income groups with 67% of those who earn over $100,000 per year deeming the state's economy on the right track with only 30% of those earning under $50,000 sharing the same feeling. When asked the same right track/wrong track questions about the American economy, nearly half of respondents, 47%, said the country's economy was off course, 39% believe it's on the right track and 15% weren't sure or didn't know. Partisan disparities were profound on national economic views as well, with those who say the right track made up of 57% Republicans and 19% Democrats. Conversely, 30% Republicans and 71% Democrats say the economy is on the wrong track. The latest Deseret News/Hinckley Institute of Politics poll was conducted by HarrisX Interactive of 805 registered Utah voters. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points. Earlier this week, another measure of Utahns' collective economic outlook was released by the Salt Lake Chamber in partnership with the Gardner Policy Institute. Data from the February 2025 Roadmap to Prosperity Dashboard reveals that Utah consumer sentiment fell 3.5% in January, while U.S. sentiment declined at a steeper 9.8% rate. While economic uncertainty took a toll on consumers in January, with U.S. sentiment falling to its lowest level since November 2023, Utah sentiment also trended downward, but remains higher than the average 2024 sentiment (81.1) at 88.1, according to the new report. 'Economic indicators appear mixed in the early months of 2025, underscoring the uncertainty being felt about the state of the economy,' said Natalie Gochnour, director of the Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute, in a statement. 'While Utah's economy continues to be top tier among states, declining consumer sentiment, slowed job growth and concerns over federal trade policies are tempering expectations for the near future.' The latest national reading from the University of Michigan's closely watched Surveys of Consumers released Friday, finds U.S. consumer sentiment declined even further in the first part of March, down 11% from February. 'Many consumers cited the high level of uncertainty around policy and other economic factors; frequent gyrations in economic policies make it very difficult for consumers to plan for the future, regardless of one's policy preferences,' wrote Surveys of Consumers director Joanne Hsu in Friday's report. 'Consumers from all three political affiliations are in agreement that the outlook has weakened since February.' Dean said Utah's economy was still outpacing most of the country but was showing some signs of cooling down. Dean said rising economic uncertainty was being driven, in part, by international trade issues and that element of the current economic environment puts business operators and consumers on shaky ground when it comes to planning for their financial futures. 'If you have certainty, you feel confident, one way or another, knowing what to do. You have firm guideposts showing you direction,' Dean said. 'It just amazes me how inventive, how solution-oriented people are when they know what the parameters are. But when those are up in the air, it's hard to determine a clear direction forward.' Dean said that Utah continues to run on strong economic momentum but noted some indicators reflect a cycle of moderation could be in the offing. He noted that while the state is outperforming most areas of the country, the Utah economy is not immune to the impacts of national economic dynamics. 'While our state economy is strong, we're not an island,' Dean said. 'We're deeply connected to the rest of the country and national policy issues that disrupt the overall economy impact us as well.'

Utah ranks 39th in federal funds reliance — it still may be concerning for policymakers
Utah ranks 39th in federal funds reliance — it still may be concerning for policymakers

Yahoo

time12-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Utah ranks 39th in federal funds reliance — it still may be concerning for policymakers

The Utah Capitol is pictured with downtown Salt Lake City behind it on Friday, Jan. 26, 2024. (Photo by Spenser Heaps for Utah News Dispatch) How much does the federal government spend on programs such as Medicaid, food assistance and housing in Utah? Last fiscal year it was about $7 billion out of the state's full $26 billion budget. That, according to a Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute data analysis, was 27% of Utah's budget, making the state rank 39th among all other states for its share of federal funds in the state budget, according to a news release. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX 'Federal funds comprise a significant portion of Utah's state budget,' Phil Dean, chief economist at the Kem C. Gardner Institute said in the release. 'These funds vary over the business cycle, generally increasing during economic downturns as spending on cyclical programs like Medicaid and SNAP (food stamps) increases, then decreasing as economic conditions strengthen.' The share is just a little below the nearly 28% average recorded in Utah since 2006, and six percentage points below the 33% national average. The state uses 50% of that federal money to fund Medicaid. About 24% goes to other social services, housing and community development; 12% to public and higher education; 8% for transportation and infrastructure and 6% to other expenses. In comparison to other states, that's a low share. But, it still may be concerning for the state amid tumultuous budget negotiations in Congress. Congressional Republicans have floated plans to slash the size of the federal budget, in part to fund the extension of a 2017 tax cut passed under the first Trump administration, including possible cuts or limits on Medicaid. When then State Auditor John Dougall released a compliance audit of the 2023 fiscal year, in which federal funds were 26.5% of the state's budget, he warned that Utah 'continues to have a heavy dependence on federal financial assistance, which amounted to $9.7 billion in federal expenditures and $662 million in loans, loan guarantees, endowments, and nonmonetary assistance.' Dougall then cautioned Utah officials to consider the risks of 'such significant dependence on a single funding source with such dysfunction,' according to KSL. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

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