Roger McDonough

Reporter

Roger McDonough was born and raised in Salt Lake City, but has lived in Argentina, Bolivia, Virginia, New Jersey and Southern California. He holds an MA in Public Policy and Development Management from Georgetown University, a parallel degree from the Universidad Nacional de San Martín (Argentina), and a BA in English from the University of Utah. He is a practiced freelance print and radio journalist and joins our news team after several years in the nonprofit world. Roger says he is drawn to public radio because he’s an auditory learner, and calls radio “the best medium in the world.”

Utah News
2:30 pm
Mon May 20, 2013

Group protests Ag-Gag bill outside Draper slaughterhouse

This Draper slaughterhouse and meat packing factory was the site of a weekend protest against Utah's Ag-gag bill.

More than 200 protestors gathered on Saturday to denounce Utah’s so-called “Ag-Gag” law. The law, which was signed by Governor Herbert in 2012, prohibits unauthorized filming or photography at agricultural facilities. This weekend’s protest was organized after charges were filed – and then dropped –  against a woman who filmed activities at a slaughterhouse in Draper.

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Utah News
1:03 pm
Mon May 13, 2013

Governor Herbert finds an alternative solution to new national healthcare mandates

A new agreement between the state of Utah and federal regulators means that Utah will have two health insurance marketplaces – one for individuals run by the federal government and one for small businesses run by the state through its existing “Avenue H” online health exchange.“We think other states might want to consider following the example we’re setting here and finding a fourth way, which we think for a variety of reasons provides a better option,” Gov. Herbert said. Listen to the full story here. 

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Utah News
11:16 am
Thu May 9, 2013

Community members speak out against highway proposal in Davis County

A coalition of environmental and community organizations are asking the Utah Department of Transportation to reevaluate their proposal for the West Davis Corridor, a 24-mile highway that would skirt the Great Salt Lake to the north of the Farmington Bay Wildlife Management Area.

Tim Wagner is from the Utah Sierra Club and said that a draft plan by the Utah Department of Transportation to build a 4-lane highway along the banks of the Great Salt Lake is misguided.

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Environment
2:33 pm
Fri April 5, 2013

New Acreage Available for Lease to Oil and Tar Companies

The Department of the interior has opened up new land for oil and gas companies to lease.

Late last month, the US Interior Department finalized a new set of rules pertaining to Oil Shale and Tar Sands development on federal lands.

A new ruling by the Department of the Interior means that 680,000 acres of BLM land in the west will be available for leasing for research and development of oil shale, and nearly 130,000 acres will be opened up for testing tar sands production in Utah.

Those numbers are much lower than first planned, when rules on oil shale and tar sands leases were crafted in the waning days of the Bush Administration.

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Environment
11:33 am
Fri March 29, 2013

Herbert Close to Decision on Snake Valley Water Pipeline

Governor Gary Herbert is close to making a decision on whether to sign an agreement that would authorize the construction of a pipeline from the Snake Valley in Utah’s West Desert to Las Vegas Nevada. But activists say signing the agreement could spell environmental doom.

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Politics
1:12 pm
Tue March 26, 2013

Gay Marriage Advocates Host Vigil in Salt Lake

Hundreds of civil rights advocates gathered at Salt Lake City’s library square on Monday night for a candlelight vigil and rally in advance of the US Supreme Court’s hearings on the issue of gay marriage this week. KCPW’s Roger McDonough reports.

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Politics
1:41 pm
Fri March 15, 2013

Eleventh Hour Bill Fixes Loophole: AG Now Cannot Investigate Himself

The legislature hurried to address a problem with Utah law that could have a bearing on ongoing investigations into alleged ethics violations by Utah Attorney General John Swallow.

Among the more than 200 bills considered by the Utah legislature on its final day was a newcomer. Senate Bill 289 sought to fix a problem with the law that gives the state Attorney General the power to investigate himself in cases of ethics violations.

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Utah News
3:53 pm
Tue March 5, 2013

A Bill That Would Put State Gun Laws Above Federal Laws Passed Out of Committee

A bill that would put state gun laws above federal laws passed out of committee on Monday, after key provisions were amended to soften the legislation's language.

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