Media Mentions
3rd party reports and discussions of Gardner content and research.
Utah faces critical provider shortage amid nationwide mental health crisis
SALT LAKE CITY — While the country fights its mental health crisis, the Beehive State is poised to suffer in the skirmish, a new report says. Suicide has become the leading cause of death for young Utahns ages 10 to 24. Meanwhile, the demand for mental health providers in the state is growing at a pace that the current shortage can’t keep up with, according to the report released Wednesday by Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute in partnership with the Utah Hospital Association.
Here’s Why The Census Bureau May Be In Your Neighborhood Before The 2020 Count
Starting this month, tens of thousands of Census Bureau workers are knocking on doors across the country to make sure the bureau has a complete list of addresses of where people live in the U.S. Those addresses determine where the bureau will mail instructions and send the next major deployment of workers in 2020 for the constitutionally mandated head count of every resident, which is conducted by household. "If the Census Bureau does not even have the address, what they miss is not just one person. It's the entire household, so it's serious stuff," says Jim Chang, Arizona's state demographer, [...]
New report: Utah high-tech is a high-performance juggernaut
SALT LAKE CITY — Utah tech is killing it and showing no signs of slowing down anytime soon. That's the nutshell takeaway from a just-released report from the University of Utah's Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute. The expansive study is the result of a two-year effort that dug into the depth and breadth of the state's tech sector, parsing its micro- and macro-economic impacts, historical trends and how Utah compares to the rest of the country when viewed through the filter of high-tech industry performance and growth.
Home sales and values contiune to show signs of strength along Wasatch Front
(KUTV) — The demand for housing remains strong across the Wasatch front, but industry experts say the type of homes some Utahns are on the hunt for is changing. Figures from the Salt Lake Board of Realtors shows the average home in the four Wasatch Front counties increased by approximately $25,000 from Spring 2018 to Spring 2019. “I think we have a tale of two markets, we have dual markets across the Wasatch front,” said Alicia Holdaway, president-elect of the Salt Lake Board of Realtors.
In Fast-Growing Southwest Utah, One City Organizes to Protect the Night Sky
IVINS — Around 11:30 p.m. on a recent, cloudless Monday night, Tim Povlick was hard at work measuring the brightness of the sky. At the city limits of this canyon town less than 10 miles from St. George, the Milky Way gleamed above as Povlick craned his neck upward and pointed a sky quality meter — a handheld device that measures ambient light — towards the stars. The high-desert rolled westward towards the horizon. Beside him, with clipboard in hand and flashlight clenched between his teeth, stood Mike Scott.