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Salt Lake magazine offers an insightful and dynamic coverage of city life, Utah lore and community stories about the people places and great happenings weaving together the state’s vibrant present with its rich past. Its Community section highlights the pulse of Salt Lake City and around the state, covering local events, cultural happenings, dining trends and urban developments. From emerging neighborhoods and development to engaging profiles long-form looks at newsmakers and significant cultural moments, Salt Lake magazine keeps readers informed about the evolving lifestyle in Utah.

Trump Meets His Mormon Match

By City Watch

A recent commentary on The Week makes one of the more surprising suggestions to #StopTrump.

“The secret to bringing the demagogue to his knees? Mormons.”

 

Senior Correspondant Damon Linker’s revelation came after Utah Republicans tossed Trump out on his ear—giving him only 14 percent of their vote.

“Trump has finally met his match—the force in the Republican Party that can stop his populist juggernaut in its tracks,” Linker says.

And it’s not because Mitt Romney says Trump is a jerk, Linker explains before listing six reasons for Mormon enmity, including that Trump is vulgar, has a garish lifestyle and picks on Muslims.

Read the list here.

Terrified by their home-grown bully boy, even the New Yorker recognized the Mormons as good for something other than cheap laughs in Broadway musicals.

O.C. Tanner for Fortune

By City Watch
Each year, Fortune joins forces with Great Place to Work to identify the 100 Best Companies to Work For. Extensive surveys are given at random to company employees and asked a series of work-related questions. From those survey’s, Fortune determines the best places to work in corporate America.

 

Since 1927, O.C. Tanner has helped companies thrive through the power of employee recognition. By creating and maintaining a positive workplace for companies, O.C. Tanner has assisted employees to be satisfied in their work. For the second year in a row, Utah-based company O.C. Tanner made the sought-after Fortune’s 2016 list, 100 Best Companies to Work For. Ranking 61, O.C. Tanner is not far below giant global companies such as Google and American Express and alongside 29 of their clients.

To celebrate the hard work and commitment of O.C. Tanner employees, executives held a company-wide event, just in time for Employee Appreciation Day on Friday March 4th. To learn more about O.C. Tanner, visit their websitehere.

Single in the City

By City Watch, Lifestyle

Courtship has changed through the years. Or has it?

 

What is Dating?

Adam, a 30-something professional, posed this as a serious question recently.

“When are you allowed to say that?” he continued. “When are you dating? When are you friends-with-benefits? When are you just sleeping together and not even friends-with-benefits? It has come to the point where people ask me ‘Are you two dating’ and I saw, ‘I don’t know.’ I say, ‘We’re hanging out,’ because that seems to be the failsafe answer.”

“There are no boundaries,” sighed Adam. It is Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdomeout there.” Adam isn’t alone in his frustration with modern courtship. Single Utahns in the thousands are desperately trying to find love or something that passes for it in a strange new landscape.

 

Dating in the 21st century is hard, even in tradition-bound Utah. Meet someone at a bar, a coffee shop or through friends or at church? No more. It’s all online and through phone applications now. What used to be a fairly straightforward mating game has become far more complicated and nuanced digital cat-and-mouse game.

Swipe left. Swipe right. Wink. Like. Match. Message. Poke. Be charming. Be smart (but not too smart!). Flirt (but don’t act like a slut!). Be agreeable, but have opinions (not too many opinions, am I right, ladies?). And gentlemen, please be at least 6-foot-1 with a six pack. Ladies, make sure you’ve got a yoga butt and perfect hair. Isn’t dating fun? No pressure, everyone!

And even as dating apps congratulate themselves on having blended the human rainbow, sites pop up prism-like to subdivide Utahns into Jewish singles, Christian singles, Mormon singles, elite singles, farmer singles, single-parent singles—even a Utah-based white singles site.

 

But what app developers promote as the best of times for singles is becoming the worst of times for couples. Once you’re past the initial meeting and seeing each other on the regular, things should get easier. Everything should fall into place; a routine should begin. Ordinarily, you’d be in a romance, or at least a “relationship.”

But, when the entire dating population of the city is still at your literal fingertips, you wonder. Is someone better just a swipe away? Authentic relationships are rare as everyone keeps looking for the next best thing.

And, to Adam’s question, what defines “dating” these days? Like everything else with courtship and sex, it’s a bit of a negotiation.

“When you go out and have dinner with a woman and then you go back to her place and have sex, I would think that constitutes a date,” says a Salt Lake high school teacher. “I was doing that with one woman for three months, but she insisted we weren’t dating.”

Linda, a petite social worker, puts it bluntly: “If I’m sleeping with you, I might not be dating you. But if I’m not sleeping with you, I’m definitely not dating you.”

 

In Victorian times, courtship was strictly regulated with comforting rules for both sexes such as: “No physical touch is to be permitted between the sexes before marriage, excepting a gentleman offering his hand on an uneven road.” The 1990’s had so many dating rules that women turned to a book, simply titled, The Rules. Advice within included: “Don’t accept a Saturday night date after Wednesday,” and “Don’t call him and rarely return his calls.” The Rules, such as they were, were simple: Be coy, coquettish, play hard to get and you will land the Big Fish. (Note to men: In this scenario, you are a dimwitted fish to be hooked.)

But the dating landscape has evolved drastically in the last two decades. With the advent of smart phones and texting, it’s easy—and often expected—to be in constant communication with your partner. But how soon after meeting a new someone do you text? How soon after a date? Should you mark time after a text arrives before responding to it, or risk looking needy? After all, you’re a busy person doing very important things—definitely not checking your phone every five minutes, right? And if he or she doesn’t text you back, well, you’re obviously a hideous monster. Or they’re dead. It could go either way.

“Nobody knows what the new rules are,” says Dr. Claudia Geist, a sociology professor at the University of Utah. “Because there are no clear rules.” Oh well, that clears it up.

And is it true that we’re all just jumping in bed with each other all the time? Well, yes and no. And is that a bad thing? Again, yes and no. “The shift in gender relations has made it much easier for women to own their sexual agency,” Geist says. Hooray!

But wait! Geist warns there’s still the same old double standard in the way women who sleep around are treated compared to men with the same behavior. And, she says, “one of the things we don’t know yet is the link between casual sex and relationships.” In other words: Researchers don’t yet know if we are entering lasting relationships with people we’re having sex with or if casual sex is even conducive to healthy relationships at all.

So, will he still respect you in the morning? The data is inconclusive.

 

Jon Birger, author of Date-onomics, sees things a bit differently. He told Salt Lake magazine the current dating revolution is happening because there are more women than men on the market (It’s woefully out of balance for Mormons, page 80). Right now there are more college-educated women than there are men and, Birger says, people like to date within their socio-economic class. When the male-to-female ratio is out of balance in species from penguins to people, evolution pushes everyone into promiscuity.

Birger says it’s no coincidence that the Roaring Twenties came on the heels of World War I casualties—resulting in a shortage of young men. Nevertheless, a Georgia judge blamed the party era on the automobile, a “house of Prostitution on wheels.”

In other words, society will always skip a complex issue of biological imperatives to blame the latest technology for anything seen as moral slippage. Birger argues the current state of dating probably isn’t the fault of the iPhone or Tinder—it’s just 21st Century socio-economic gender imbalances.

Dating has always been hard. Dating in the digital world is insane. Read more about #dating here:

Illustrations by Savvy Jensen

Why Sane Liquor Laws Matter

By City Watch
With the Legislative session on the horizon, we offer the conclusion of Salt Lake magazine’s exploration of Utah’s Byzantine liquor laws.

Utah’s predominately teetotaling Legislature and governor are well aware of the dangers of alcohol abuse and the state liquor monopoly’s skyrocketing revenues—from $156 million in 2002 to $396 million in 2015. But what they don’t understand are the intangible aspects of wine, beer and spirits as a part of food culture, a passion and an art form.

Since the turn of the century Utah’s population has been bolstered by young professional transplants who see drinking a part of a “good life.” Consumption overall is going up and wine drinkers are becoming more discriminating—the national trend is towards higher-price, higher-quality wine. Utah’s one-style-suits-most wine and spirits selection doesn’t cater to a wide selection of interests and palates, which is why aficionados return from places like California and Washington—where stores may stock more intriguing or rare wines—with bottles stashed in their suitcases. Buying wine is just like buying anything else—tastes differ. Some fashion customers shop at Nordstrom, some shop at Walmart.

Joel LaSalle

“One of the things that is sort of intuitive is that visitors come here for convention and leisure travel and they’re a different demographic than the majority of folks who live in the state,” Scott Beck, president of Visit Salt Lake, told The Salt Lake Tribune. “Outside of Utah, drinking is not a moral issue. It’s a social issue.”

 “If we want the highest quality in hospitality, in food and beverage—they go hand in hand,” says restaurateur Joel LaSalle, “especially for visitors and people who are moving here who are foodies. Around the world, everyone knows that great wine means great dining.”

Click here for DABC Smashed in chapters.

Or read the article on our digital edition.

DABC Detox

By City Watch

Editor’s note: When the Legislature meets later this month, they are expected to consider “tweaks” to Utah’s arcane liquor laws. But restaurateurs, bar owners and resort executives say that falls far short of the fixes required to keep the state competitive in bringing in tourists, conventions and developing a robust local dining culture.

In short, the myth, “You can’t get a drink in Utah,” is alive and well.

 

Mike Mower, long-time Republican political operative, hustles down a Capitol staircase to a meeting. “I love it,” he says of his job as Gov. Gary Herbert’s deputy chief of staff. “As a kid in Ferron, I would have never have believed that someday I would be working in this beautiful building.”

Mower is good at his job. You would never guess from his Boy Scout enthusiasm that he was handed the nightmare task of controlling the spreading public rage at Utah’s dysfunctional Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control. On this sunny afternoon, Mower cheerfully explains that the Governor’s Office’s scrutiny of the DABC is just a part of a state-wide efficiency program being implemented by Kristen Cox, executive director of the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget.

In truth, DABC’s problems are vastly more politically perilous. Besides an avalanche of complaints, Mower is faced with DABC Commission meetings at which former employees, wine lovers and even a state senator leveled charges of employee abuse and gratuitous firings, inept customer service, security problems, inventory shortages and arrogant disregard of the state’s tourism economy that depends on providing quality wine and liquor. Utah hoteliers and restaurateurs bitterly complain that after a short period of progress under former Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr., Utah is again the laughingstock of the world for its puritanical and absurd liquor laws.

“The morale at the DABC has never been lower,” says Brent Clifford, retired wine buyer at the agency for 37 years, who has become one of DABC management’s angriest and most knowledgable critics. “Employees feel they are under siege and badgered to constantly do more. And the current leadership is clueless.” Tracey Creno, a police officer who provides security at the Sandy store, complained of intimidation, spying and retaliation against employees. “I’ve had a gutfull of DABC,” she told the commission.

Sen. Karen Mayne, a West Valley City Democrat, tore into the DABC over “email after email” she had gotten from employees complaining of arrogant managers who bully them. Two wine experts quit the Metro Wine Store downtown in protest of their work environment and the decline in quality of selection. “[Selling alcohol and wine] is a skilled craft and should be treated that way,” Mayne told the commissioners at a public meeting. “We [the state] are generating millions of dollars from your business.”
The roiling controversy at the DABC has spread far enough to splatter Herbert.

 

“That’s how I got involved,” Mower explains his role. “If there isn’t enough time for people to meet with the governor, I meet with them. I look to see if some changes need to be made. I said, ‘Let’s get Kris’s team on the ground. Let’s see if there are changes that should be made—operational stuff.’ ”

But Clifford, who resigned in 2012 from the DABC, protesting the agency’s short-sighted shift to profits over quality, and other critics inside and outside of the agency aren’t optimistic Herbert will do much. “Mower’s one of the best political handlers out there,” says Clifford. “Gary Herbert wants the bad press to go away. He wants it to happen before he runs [for reelection]. I don’t believe he’s serious about fixing the issues down there.”

 

Others, including retired DABC Human Resources Specialist Kerri Adams, who has brought the employee complaints to the commission and Mower, also fears the governor’s office is doing little more than letting employees vent, hoping it will mollify them. After all, only the Legislature can make meaningful fixes and Adams and Clifford agree there is little appetite on the Hill for significant law changes to make liquor sales easier.

Click here to continue with DABC: A Peculiar Institution

Or read it in its entirety on our digital edition here.

DABC SMASHED

By City Watch

Mike Mower, long-time Republican political operative, hustles up a Capitol staircase to a meeting. “I love it,” he says of his job as Gov. Gary Herbert’s deputy chief of staff. “As a kid in Ferron, I would have never have believed that someday I would be working in this beautiful building.”

Mower is good at his job. You would never guess from his Boy Scout enthusiasm that he was handed the nightmare job of controlling the spreading public rage at Utah’s dysfunctional Department of Alcoholic Beverages. On this sunny afternoon, Mower  cheerfully explains that the his office’s scrutiny of the DABC is just a part of an state-wide efficiency program being implemented by Kristen Cox, director of the Governor’s Office of Planning and Budget.

In truth, DABC’s problems are vastly more political. Besides the avalanche of complaints, Mower is faced with DABC Commission meetings at which former employees, wine lovers and even a state senator, leveled charges of employee mistreatment and gratuitous firings, inept customer service, security problems, inventory shortages and arrogant disregard of the state’s tourism economy that depends on providing quality wine and liquor. Utah hoteliers and restaurateurs bitterly complain that after a short period of progress under former Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr., Utah is again the laughingstock of the nation for its puritanical and absurd liquor laws.

In short, the reputation that you “can’t get a drink in Utah” is alive and well.

“The morale at the DABC has never been lower,” says Brent Clifford, retired wine buyer at the agency for 37 years, who has become one of DABC management’s angriest and most knowledgable critics. “Employees feel they are under siege and badgered to constantly do more. And the current leadership is clueless.”

Sen. Karen Mayne, a West Valley City Democrat, tore into the DABC Commission over “email after email” she had gotten from employees complaining of a culture of arrogant managers who spy on and bully them. Two wine experts quit the Metro Wine Store downtown in protest of their work environment and the decline in quality of selection. “[Selling alcohol and wine] is a skilled craft and should be treated that way,” Mayne told the commissioners at their April public meeting. “We [the state] are generating millions of dollars from your business.”

The roiling controversy at the DABC has spread far enough to splatter Herbert.

“That’s how I got involved,” Mower explains his role. “If there isn’t enough time for people to meet with the governor, I meet with them. I look to see if some changes need to be made. I said, ‘Let’s get Kris’ team on the ground. Let’s see if there are changes that should be made—operational stuff.’ ”

But Clifford, who resigned from the DABC, protesting the agency’s short-sighted shift to profits over quality in 2011, and other critics inside and outside of the agency aren’t optimistic Herbert will do much. “Mower’s one of the best political handlers out there,” says Clifford. “Gary Herbert wants the bad press to go away. He wants it to happen before he runs [for reelection] next year. I don’t believe he’s serious about fixing the issues down there.”

Others, including retired DABC Human Resources Specialist Kerri Adams, who has brought the employee complaints to the commission and Mower, also fears the governor’s office is doing little more than letting employees vent, hoping it will mollify them. After all, only the Legislature can make meaningful fixes and Adams and Clifford agree there is little appetite on the Hill for significant law changes to make liquor sales easier.

A Peculiar Situation

It speaks volumes about the culture of the DABC that many restaurant, bar and club owners refused to speak on the record for this article. As one put it, “You have no idea of the power of the DABC. They have long memories and they arevindictive.”

But Joel LaSalle, who is an owner of several restaurants and bars and is president of the Salt Lake Area Restaurant Association, was clear. First and foremost, he says, the absurd Zion Curtain requirement must be eliminated. He’s talking about the Legislature’s 2010 requirement that a partition be erected between restaurant patrons and bartenders preparing drinks to  prevent non-drinking customers from witnessing drinks being made. Former Sen. John Valentine, ironically dubbed “Mr. Liquor” as thepoint man for the law changes, the governor and other lawmakers feared that the entertaining spectacle of cocktail mixing would lure children into drinking.

Restaurant owners—and about two-thirds of Utahns surveyed by Utah Policy.com—say the  Curtain should come down. “The biggest single issue is the Zion Curtain because it is a barrier that is sitting out there for everyone to see,” LaSalle says of the partition’s symbolic power. “It’s in our customers’ faces. And it’s an absolute embarrassment for us in serving people coming from out of town.”

From a restaurateur’s point of view, the Zion Curtain is a financial burden, too. LaSalle says the partition at Current cost $16,000 to install. And it impact doesn’t stop there, he says, “It costs us thousands of dollars a month in sales—I can’t seat people at the bar—they don’t want to sit six or seven inches from a glass wall.”

Another absurdity for diners and restaurant owners is the “intent to dine” requirement, which forces restaurant servers to quiz patrons on whether they intend to order food before they can serve them a drink. Like many of the state’s vague liquor laws, it annoys customers and ultimately is probably unenforceable. As one beverage manager  asked, “What can I do if they get up and leave before they order food?”

LaSalle is more to the point: “A judge in a court of law would be hard pressed to go against a restaurateur who said, ‘We own a restaurant, we serve food and they asked for a table—we could only assume food was what they were there for.’

Mower deflects such frustrations by patiently explaining that Utah’s monopolized liquor regulations really are not that much different from the 17 other states that directly control liquor sales. And, he points out, these fixes can only be implemented by the Legislature. “I’m not here to defend or change the liquor laws,” Mower says. “The Legislature will do that.”

But Utah diners, imbibers and restaurants say that’s a simplistic brush off—Herbert is complicit in the status quo. Huntsman obviously was able to push through liquor changes. “Things like this make us look like idiots,” the owner of one of Utah’s trendiest restaurants says of the international perception of Utah liquor laws.

LaSalle puts it more diplomatically: “It’s not very welcoming.” And, he says, it hurts the state’s economy. “We have a convention center, a new performing arts center and huge hotels, yet we still aren’t able to compete with Seattle, Denver, Phoenix or even Portland because this state has reinforced a misconception that you can’t get a drink in Utah.”

Spies and Bullies

Beyond the state’s irrational laws, the DABC has internal problems.—The employees point to arrogant, incompetent managers who spy on and intimidate them,  driving out knowledgable store managers and employees and undermining customer service. A “metrically” guided ordering system has reduced the inventory of fine wines and alcohol. And a budget cut last year exacerbated the situation with poorer pay, dependence on part-time workers and requiring store managers to take on two or more outlets. “The new clerks know zero about wine and liquor,” says one bar owner.

For purveyors of new and unusual liquors and exceptional wines and residents who seek out products not in the stores, the state’s special ordering system that was supposed to allow them to bring in case lots has been a fail. “If you really want to satisfy these customers, you need to hire enough staff, but they won’t,” Clifford says of the issue. “The system was set up to fail.”

Cox says that while some of the allegations are employee “grousing” and finger pointing, “When they’re legitimate, we’ll look at them.” Cox’s office’s review of DABC operations (completed in November but not released before Salt Lakemagazine went to press) may clear up many of the employee problems and customer service issues—including special ordering, Cox says. “It will take effect over 18 months,” she says. “The work is never done.”

Cox explains she wants to instill an efficient, yet compassionate environment at the DABC. “We want to meet customer demand, to be profitable for the state and to have a culture where our employees feel respected and honored and feel like they are contributing and feel like they are paid fairly,” Cox says. But she defends the Legislature- and Herbert-driven “improvements” made six years ago that led to many of the issues the DABC faces now. “There were changes that needed to be made down there. There are people who were impacted by those changes that are upset by the current management. They have made their opinions loud and clear.”

Many of those opinions were about DABC Director Sal Petilos and his team, whom Herbert-appointed Acting-director Christine Giani installed after—what its victims refer to as the “Reign of Terror.” Deputy Director Tom Zdunich, whom employees called Petilos’s “Dick Cheney,” resigned last summer in the middle of the controversy. Mower says a search is being conducted to replace him. But many critics and employees don’t think that any real change is possible at the DABC if Petilos and his minions stay.

Christine Giani declined to be interviewed for this article. Petilos’s Adminstrative Assistant Vickie Ashby put off interviews with Petilos until a week before the deadline for this article, only to report a few hours before the interview that Petilos had taken sick. She explained that DABC Chairman John T. Nielsen, who also had agreed to a meeting, declined to be interviewed without Petilos present.

Mower and Cox were reticent to discuss DABC personnel issues. But when Cox explained the DABC needs effective and compassionate managers who made “employees feel respected and honored,” it seemed fair to ask if Petilos fits that description.

“Yes, I think he’s a compassionate man. He does a good job,” Cox says, after prodding. “He needs to have a strong deputy on the operations side and he needs to work on some of the cultural issues—which I think he is addressing. It’s just this issue of respect. Management needs to respect employees and on the flip side, employees need to realize that management has constraints as well.” Most of all, Cox said she wanted the finger pointing to stop.

Mower and Cox launched a series of “reviews” into DABC operations. Salt Lakemagazine obtained the reports through a Government Records Access and Management Act request, but employee complaints, allegations or suggestions were not included.

Utah’s Alcohol Czar

Utah’s contorted drinking politics are impossible to compare to other states. In the dominant Mormon culture, the consumption of alcohol, like tobacco and coffee, is forbidden. Making alcohol a moral issue produces a backlash from the non-Mormon population, who complain of the puritanical control of the Legislature—and by extension the LDS Church. One indication of how peculiar the subject is is that the media specifically identifies the rare DABC commissioner who is “a social drinker.” (Two of the seven current commissioners imbibe—licensees consider this an unusually progressive panel.) Commissioners are appointed by the governor, and, by law, none can be involved in any aspect of the liquor business. (It is worth noting that the Utah Air Quality Board includes representatives of mining and oil-refining industries.)

On the other hand, Utah’s monopoly on the sale of alcohol brings ever-increasing treasure to state coffers—$396 million in 2015. Though state leaders are regularly jeered as cash-driven hypocrites—lawmakers say Utah’s regulations are it the best way to control alcohol abuse. In any event, Utah’s state booze trust is going nowhere soon.

Critics of the DABC, including Clifford, say that under an overwhelmingly teetotaling Legislature, real improvement in liquor distribution is unlikely because any alcohol consumption is considered dangerous and immoral. Many of the controversial liquor regulations were created under former Sen. John Valentine and former Senate President Michael Waddoups, a Mormon whose wife was seriously injured by a DUI driver. In just a couple of legislative sessions, they turned Huntsman’s so-called liberalized approach to providing alcohol on its head. (Huntsman signed his 2009 changes into law in the New Yorker restaurant’s bar. Core to the liberalization was the elimination of Utah’s “club” law that required imbibers pay to join a private club before they could order liquor.)

As the DABC controversy continues with lobbyists massing this month for the 2016 session, the Legislature has a new point man on liquor laws, Sen. Jerry Stevenson. G.O.P. leaders selected the Layton Republican “Mr. Alcohol”—point man for all drinking laws.

“When John [Valentine] walked in here and said I was the guy, he said it was because I was fair,” Stevenson says. “The selection is an informal thing—he passed the gauntlet.”

Stevenson is a non-drinking Mormon, but has relatives who imbibe and says he isn’t offended by social drinking. Still, he has a steep learning curve ahead. “Two weeks ago, I didn’t know what a flight of beer was,” he says. To get up to speed, Stevenson read Toward Alcohol Control, a 1933 study commissioned by John D. Rockefeller Jr. shortly after Prohibition ended.

If nothing else, Stevenson is frank. “Alcohol is a touchy issue in the state of Utah. [But] I don’t know that Utah liquor laws are that far off center,” he says. “It started with the Olympics—we spend a lot of money welcoming the world. We want people to come. We say we want them to like us—but we really want them to spend their money here. So, we want to make things comfortable for them.”

But the state also is at the low end for DUIs, binge drinking and other alcohol abuse. “We don’t want that to change,” he says.

Stevenson declined to be specific about legislation that may emerge in the session beginning this month, but said his approach to making changes would be piecemeal—a couple fixes—rather than the sweeping omnibus-bill approach that Valentine favored. His goal, he says, to get three alcohol-related bills through.

“There’s a lot of tweaks that could make things much friendlier. But I don’t think we need to wholesale tear things apart and put them back together again. Let’s not choke on the elephant, let’s eat it a bite at a time. Some bills will deal with administration and most of them make sense, and we’ll move them forward under my name,” he says, then jokes: “I don’t think they’ll throw me out of church.”

One of his biggest challenges in fixing liquor regulation, Stevenson says, is that the players—bar, restaurant, distillery, brewery and resort owner—can’t agree on what they want changed. “If you walk into four different places downtown, you get four different conceptions on what needs to be done,” he says. He has spoken with LaSalle and the owners of Alamexo, the Gastronomy group and resort owners. “These are real business guys,” Stephenson says. “They want different outcomes if I run legislation than the people who sell beer and pizza.”

LaSalle says all players agree on one issue: tearing down the Zion Curtain. “I have high hopes for this Legislature,” LaSalle says. “I’m all for working with these people. I don’t think legislators know the harm that is being done [by the law].”

But Stevenson sees the issues more broadly than home-grown restaurateurs and barkeeps. For instance, more than an annoyance to local businesses, he fears some state liquor laws may be causing large resort and restaurant chains to pass over Utah because they run counter to their business models—including forcing modifications of restaurant architecture to meet the Zion Curtain requirement. Stevenson acknowledges that many Mormon legislators may be resistant to liquor law changes, but dealing with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he insists, isn’t much different than working with any other special interest. “The church has a set of gentlemen on Capitol Hill who are lobbyists.” Still, he acknowledges, “The LDS Church has a dog in this fight—their welfare program has seen the problems of over-use of alcohol.”

Surprisingly, Stevenson admits that some of the issues at the DABC are, indeed, the result of punitive actions by the Legislature. DABC managers had been “doing things that weren’t quite kosher,” he says of  Giani’s removal of top DABC managers for questionable financial dealings.  When all state agencies were told to take a 7 percent funding cut, Stevenson says, “We had a [DABC] director who basically said, ‘We produce a lot of revenue for the state. We aren’t going to do this.’

“I said, ‘I bet you do’ —we control the pursestrings.”

When state revenues came in better than expected, every agency saw the cuts returned to them—except the DABC. Stevenson admits it exacerbated the problems. “We made an error last year and part of it is my fault,” he says. “For some reason, we kept a half million dollars from DABC. Sometimes the Legislature punishes, for lack of a better word. DABC needs that money back if they are going to operate in an efficient way.” He vows the $500,000 in cut funding, and perhaps more, will return to the DABC.

“We are going to go through this. We are going to sort this out,” he says. “Besides this, I’m dealing with prison relocation—so I can take any kind of bullet you shoot.”

Still, Utah’s alcohol history has shown that Stevenson may be rashly confident.

DABC Misses a Bet

By City Watch

From the beginning Utah DABC insiders have argued that the only real fix for the “cultural” problems at the liquor agency would be a radical change in management.

The state liquor monopoly has been dogged over the last year with employee complaints that they are bullied and spied upon by arrogant managers, who have driven out knowledgable managers. Restaurateurs and resort owners say the system makes it difficult for them to compete with over western cities for tourists and conventions.

Because Director Sal Petilos appears be shielded by the governor’s office, hope rested on whomever would fill the No. 2 position of deputy director. The deputy runs most of the day-to-day operations.

Wednesday, the long awaited announcement was made: Cade Maier was appointed deputy director. He replaces Tom Zdunich, whom many employees called “Petilos’ Dick Cheney.” Zdunich retired in August at the height of the DABC controversies.

Meier is a DABC insider who has worked for the agency as an information technology project manager and a warehouse general manager, making him what critics call “the safe” choice, but not the best choice.

According to former wine buyer and critic of the DABC Brett Clifford, the agency missed a bet by rejecting another candidate who is a liquor and wine broker in the private sector. (Herbert says he wants the state’s monopoly run on a business footing.)

 

“You had a very rare opportunity to pick someone who truly knows the liquor and wine business with an extensive background in the industry,” Clifford emailed Mike Mower, Gary Herbert’s deputy chief of staff. “He is also intimately familiar with the peculiarities of Utah’s broken wholesale and retail system as well the hospitality business. You don’t need another “yes” man—you need someone who can be honest about what’s wrong with the system and knows how to correct bad practices.”

Salt Lake magazine’s in-depth feature on the DABC troubles and Utah’s love-hate relationship with alcohol is arriving on newsstands now.

1 Liquor License Available!

By City Watch
You can ignore phone calls from your landlord.

You can ignore phone calls from the repo man.

You can even ignore phone calls from your ex.

But don’t ever, ever blow off the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control. Never.

The owners of The Woodshed Bar tried that ploy to their grief.

 

“Someone want to take them to the woodshed?” quipped Chairman John T. Nielson. But he wasn’t smiling.

A compliance officer told the commission that the owners of the The Woodshed Bar, 800 S. 60 East, SLC, never answered their phone or returned his calls to confirm they had gotten the required insurance for their business. (At one point, the wily compliance officer borrowed a cell phone and they didanswer that call. Way bad.)

The upside is: One (1) highly prized, rarer-than-hen’s-teeth, liquor license is available for the more than a dozen tavern-owner wannabes on the waiting list.

If, of course, they’re willing to answer their phone.

Live From Russia With Edward Snowden

By City Watch
“It’s good to be back in the United States.” Edward Snowden said with a laugh, “And I didn’t even need a pardon.” So began opening night at Park City’s Eccles Center—an evening that Park City Institute’s Terri Orr acknowledged was an unusual booking for the music and dance venue.

Snowden wasn’t really in the United States, of course. His face was on the screen of a bizarre Robot looking thing on wheels, streaming live from Russia, where he has been hiding from the United States government with Vladimir Putin’s blessing since he released documents above top secret to journalists in 2013.

The event was moderated by KUER’s Doug Fabrizio, who the program says was “vetted and approved” by Edward Snowden in advance.

 

Snowden seemed nothing if not well-rehearsed through the 90-minute Q&A session. But, to this observer, his insistence that he did what he did for the love of liberty rang a little hollow, given the location of his current residence.

He walked the audience through his version of the events that led to his fleeing the country, “I was exposed to things that I recognized were immoral and wrong,” Snowden told the not-quite-sold-out-crowd, “But like others in the intelligence community, I justified it… These are good people doing bad things.” And so, eventually, he says, he reached a point that he could no longer justify the government’s actions—and that’s when he contacted journalist Glen Greenwald and others with what he knew.

“I never published a single document. I worked in concert with journalists who then make a public interest decision,” Snowden explained, saying he instructed the journalists he worked with to tell the government what they planned to print before they printed it, to give the government a chance to respond or make an appeal based on public safety.

At times during this part of the conversation, Snowden seemed to railroad Fabrizio—interrupting him and determining the direction of the conversation. He bristled at Fabrizio’s mention of former C.I.A. Director James Wooley’s claim that Snowden has blood on his hands for the Paris attacks last month. Snowden defended himself against the claims by noting that the PRISM documents he released mentioned text messages and Skype, both of which were used by the Paris attackers. “This is a indication,” Snowden said, “That terrorists were not reading these documents.”

Snowden then upped the ante. “I haven’t talked about this publicly because I don’t think it’s right to play politics with people’s lives,” he said. But, he claims that the programs he uncovered have not stopped a single terrorist attack. “Paris. San Bernadino. This is the strongest evidence yet that mass surveillance does not save lives.”

Snowden claims he has offered to go to trial for his crimes. “Political exile as a political strategy has worked for thousands of years,” he said. Later noting that he and his lawyers are waiting for the government to call him back. He cited the inequality in the American justice system, noting Hillary Clinton’s Justice Department emails as a good example of what he suggested is a double standard.

And though his self declared love of freedom and liberty is what created his self- imposed exile to Russia, a place that has very little freedom and liberty, Snowden remains steadfast in his justifications for leaking the documents. When asked by Fabrizio if he was going to vote by mail in the 2016 election, Snowden smirked and said, “I might go to the embassy.”

Snowden took no questions from the audience before he wheeled off the stage in his robot-machine.

The Wine Guy Fires Back

By City Watch, Eat & Drink
Following the release a one-page summary of an intensive review of the DABC by the governor’s office, former agency wine-buyer Brett Clifford had some things to say. And he said them directly to Mike Mower, Gov. Gary Herbert’s deputy chief of staff.

 

Clifford resigned from the DABC in 2012, after seeing top administrators forced out and wine and alcohol ordering put under a centralized system that emphasized sales of “value-priced” beverages over finer wines and liquors.

Clifford says these politically driven decisions were a disservice to a increasingly discriminating dining public, but also damaging to the states’ economic development, particularly in tourism and convention business.

Here is Clifford’s letter in full:

Bravo, Mike, to your crack team of efficiency experts led by Ms Cox!

After months of digging and thousands of dollars spent, you came to the same conclusions I and others have been telling you all along: the DABC is badly underfunded, short staffed, under payed and unsupported, while low on inventory and product selection to meet public demand. No mea culpa on the failed centralized order system but a simple acknowledgement that managers should be able to adjust their forced orders. Of course, the “devil is in the details” that are totally lacking in the one page cheerleading summary.

Looks like Kristin also doubled down on her multiple stores for one manager boondoggle, unfortunately. Absolutely no one in retail management would agree with her on that. It’s a mistake you will need to fix sooner than you think unless she is suddenly snapped up by the Harvard School of Business Management for innovative thinking.

I’m sincerely surprised your boss finally recognized he needed to intervene on the budget cuts, yet another obvious issue for some time. Trouble is, the effect won’t be felt until next fiscal year while more damage is done.

Good luck in your selection to replace Tom Zdunich. Hopefully you’ll find someone capable of taking over for Sal when his term expires next summer. And I’m relieved to see Francine isn’t on the selection committee like she was with those two!

Brett