Utah

Utah Articles

Population overgrowth is pushing our planet to the point of ecological collapse, as Earth’s numbers continue to explode. Decreased infant death rate, lack of female sex education, and underutilized...
The world’s population is projected to grow by 17.3% from 2020 to 2040, according to the United Nations’ projection data. The United States population is projected to grow at a somewhat slower...
There were nearly 130 million households living in the United States in 2022, and of those, 37.1 million, or 28.6%, were one-person households — people living alone. If we consider the entire adult...
Despite warnings from law enforcement, health agencies, and educators, America still has a drinking problem. One in six American adults indulges in binge drinking on a single occasion, according to...
Americans paid over 14% more for electricity in 2022 than the prior year, which was double overall inflation, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Although inflation has been...
What’s better than a pumpkin spice latte and unlikely to go out of fashion? Autumn foliage. Nearly every state goes through a dramatic, multicolored transformation as temperatures drop in the fall....
The city with the lowest unemployment rate in April was Logan, Utah.
The state that grew the fastest from 2010 to 2020 on a percentage basis was Utah, which has risen from 30th to 34th by population.
Utah's population has risen by 17% in the past decade, the most of any state, while New York and Illinois were among those that lost residents.
A handful of cities in Utah and Idaho have employment rates less than what is considered full employment.
Unemployment in the United States will remain high for months, if not longer. Utah is fortunate to have a job market dominated by industries that are likely to continue to thrive.
The diner is a uniquely American institution. Historians trace its origins back to the horse-drawn lunch wagons that began appearing on the East Coast in the 1870s. These evolved into restaurants on...
The United States spends more per capita on health care than any other large developed country — and without a single-payer national health care system, much of that spending is shouldered directly...