Since the SLTribune refused, and yes I asked, to print all my answers, here is my response to the questions:
From: "Fred Cox" <fred@fredcox4utah.com>
To: "Jordan Miller" <jordanm@sltrib.com>
Cc: "Fred Cox" <fred@fredcox4utah.com>
Sent: Friday, May 24, 2024 2:59:37 PM
Subject: Re: SL Tribune Inquiry
See below:
Fred C Cox for Utah House District 30
Answers are too long, but you asked.
:)
From: "Jordan Miller" <jordanm@sltrib.com>
To: "Fred Cox" <fred@fredcox4utah.com>
Sent: Friday, May 17, 2024 4:24:14 PM
Subject: SL Tribune Inquiry
Hello,
I'm Jordan Miller and I'm a reporter with The Salt Lake Tribune. Hope you're doing well! 
I
 just wanted to reach out as myself and our staff are working on a voter
 guide for the upcoming elections. We're working to send out questions 
to candidates to share candidates' answers in an easy-to-digest Q&A 
format. The questions are attached below, and if needed, answers will be
 edited for grammar, clarity and length. The deadline for these Q&A 
answers will be noon on Thursday, May 23. Please let me know if you have
 any questions or concerns! 
Q&A:
Utah’s
 largest electricity provider has canceled plans to replace its 
coal-fired power plants with nuclear power and has walked back comments 
about investing in clean energy.
1. Should Utah, while it 
actively supports housing and business development, also be looking for 
more sustainable and less fossil fuel and carbon-dependent energy 
sources? (150 word max)
We need clean energy, clean 
air, clean water, clean land and energy independence. We also need to 
encourage energy efficiency and technologies such as ground source heat 
pumps. We may not agree with each other re: CO2 cap/trade, taxes, or our
 effects on climate. We do need more renewable energy. We have developed
 better and cleaner ways of using fossil and carbon-based energy 
sources. At this stage, we need all of them, but we need long term 
solutions.
2. Yes or no: Is climate change negatively impacting Utah?
Blame
 who you want, but Utah has had and continues to have issues with 
weather. We should be good stewards of the land. Again, we need clean 
air, water, and land. 
Water
Water
 scarcity continues to be a challenge for the state. Recent legislation 
has attempted to conserve water and get more to the Great Salt Lake and 
Colorado River.
3. Should Utah do more to subsidize homeowners
 to conserve water? Should laws require large users to pay more for 
water? What other steps should state government take to deal with water 
scarcity? (150 words max)
    No,
 Utah should Not do more to subsidize homeowners to conserve water. We 
have already passed laws that allow water districts to charge more for 
water at different rates.  Utah should encourage water saving and 
continue to stop regulations that require wasting water and allowing 
waterwise landscaping.
The
 other item is removing a regulation of the state to Retain a certain 
amount of rainwater during site plan storm water design for projects 
over an acre. This would cost almost nothing and may reduce the costs of
 construction. 
The
 state for at least many areas and for many years has required a certain
 amount of Detention, to act as a shock absorber to reduce flooding, but
 it has been recent, the last couple of years, that Retention has been 
required, even when the infrastructure is available to handle the storm 
water with reduced speed. This should change. 
 
4. Yes or no: Do you support building the Lake Powell Pipeline?
 If
 we do have water rights that we as Utah are not getting, yes, but only 
to a point. We should not be just tossing money at this. The concern is 
the cost of the project and if the water is really there. The water for 
Lake Powell seems to be over committed. The proposed designs are 
expensive. Are we really trying to get the water to Cedar City? 
Abortion
Triggered
 after the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, Utah’s current law bans 
nearly all abortions — except in instances of sexual crimes, when there 
is a fatal fetal abnormality or when the mother’s life is at risk. For 
now, that law is currently on hold in the courts and an 18-week ban is 
active in Utah.
5. More or fewer: Should Utah’s trigger law have more or fewer restrictions?
Abortion
 should be a legal option when pregnancy results from rape or incest, or
 a competent physician determines that the life or health of the mother 
is in serious jeopardy, or a competent physician determines that the 
fetus has severe defects that will not allow the baby to survive beyond 
birth. Doctors should not be worried that the state will go after them 
when dealing with a couple that wants to conceive through invitro or 
helping a mother going though miscarriage.  
Education funding
6.
 For or against: Are you voting for or against the constitutional 
amendment that removes the requirement that income taxes be used for 
education and social services?
I
 am against this change. The Legislature just wants to spend more money 
with fewer restrictions. Doing this change will have a tendency to cause
 school districts to raise property taxes to cover the demands. The 
legislature has on more than one occasion raised property taxes for 
education and we don't need more of this.
Thank you!
-- 
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 | Jordan Miller News Reporter
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