From Deseret News archives:

A county's catharsis

Corroon takes office, says scandals are a thing of the past

Published: Monday, Jan. 3, 2005 10:24 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Inauguration as catharsis.

That's what Salt Lake County's swearing-in ceremony Monday amounted to, in large part.

After several months of seemingly endless scandal and controversy, the change to a new administration and council marked a turning point — a chance to look beyond Guzzle-gate and Hire-gate and Sexual harassment-gate to a new beginning.

Several speakers, including new County Mayor Peter Corroon, outgoing acting mayor Alan Dayton, Auditor Sean Thomas, council members — heck, just about everybody — had a hard time containing their emotions.

"It's been a difficult year," Thomas said.

"We've gone through some really hard times," Councilman Michael Jensen said.

Dayton quoted from Johnny Cash's "Five Feet High and Rising," about a flood on the family farm, concluding that the song "describes what Salt Lake County has been going through."

Story continues below
With the frustration and turmoil stemming from the scandals — scandals that claimed former auditor Craig Sorensen, former Mayor Nancy Workman, mayor's counsel (and incoming state House Speaker) Greg Curtis and others — inexorably spilling out Monday, erstwhile presidential candidate Howard Dean, Corroon's first cousin, may have gotten more than he bargained for by attending the ceremony.

"What was interesting to me was the enormous emotion," Dean said afterward. "Obviously, Salt Lake County has been through a lot. . . . I didn't realize the terrible emotional trauma the county has been through."

Dean was one of many dignitaries in the audience, including Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson (and several other mayors), Congressman Rob Bishop, Scott Matheson Jr., former Gov. Cal Rampton and former city Mayor Ted Wilson.

With them and a few hundred others looking on in the overflowing County Council chambers, Corroon said scandals are a thing of the past.

"The citizens of Salt Lake County wanted a change at the top," he said. "They wanted a new direction and new priorities. They were ready to launch a new era with new faces and new politics."

Corroon said he would "restore trust and confidence" in county government by holding open meetings and putting the minutes on the Internet. He plans to open his own office to residents "on a regular basis, so I get their messages directly." He said he would be more visible in communities.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

New Salt Lake County Mayor Peter Corroon addresses audience Monday.

previousnext

Latest comments

Beck is extremely smart, he is selling books and is very popular on TV. All...

@Mick, the Federal Govt is run by corporations through contributions and...

RSL will play for MLS Cup tonight

Lets bond together and hope for a REAL celebration SUnday night, can hardly...

I was on the playground too and some teachers came out and called us all to...

BYU records with win

B.Y.U. has been a consistent a top 25 ranked winner under Max Hall. Hall has...

4A: Timpview wins 4th in 4 years

Did Timp win four in a row or 4 in 4 years?

Glenn Beck to enter politics?

You have a lot of growing up to do, It seems like you have not cxperienced...

The proposed ethics law puts roughly the same burden on a legislator that a...

BYU records with win

Hall ACTUALLY broke the all timme wins record vs WYO last week. I guess...

Sounds to me like Kraig Powell may be a candidate for resignation. So long,...

Advertisements