Comments about ‘Seen as nature lovers’ paradise, Utah struggles with air quality’
What You May Have Missed
Most Popular
Across Site
In Utah
- Frances Monson, wife of LDS prophet, passes away
- Mia Love announces she's officially running...
- Fly a flag for Cody: Army confirms Utah man...
- XanGo co-founder accuses partners of...
- GOP delegates reject changes to nominating...
- Mitt Romney to live in Utah — at least...
- Airport TRAX ridership remains strong weeks...
- Hundreds of volunteers tackle service...
Most Commented
Across Site
In Utah
- Frances Monson, wife of LDS prophet,...
65 - Mitt Romney to live in Utah — at...
46 - Mia Love announces she's officially...
26 - GOP delegates reject changes to...
24 - Utah GOP convention agenda includes...
20 - Angry Orrin Hatch: IRS guilty of...
19 - Mormon missionary age announcement...
15 - Swallow headlines spark question:...
12



We don't need advice or analysis from the New York Times about anything west of the Hudson River. I am surprised they even know where Utah is, here in the middle of "fly-over country."
Our air quality problems are the result of God's geological creation of our state, with Salt Lake City being built in a bowl where inversions naturally form.
Yeah, we can all walk to work, live in damp caves and shut down all industry and not put pollutants into the air. Or you can take advantage of modern civilization, and suffer with occasional bad air days. Or some compromise position between the two.
DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments