Donny and Marie.
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Donny and Marie.
We are not LDS and certainly will not be converting, but we mesh with them just fine. I have some family who are LDS, 7 of whom (aunt/uncle and 5 kids) live in and around SLC. I don't intend on relying on them by any stretch in our social life, but they're good and honest people who would absolutely help us find the right place for us in their metro area. I am not concerned about being "welcomed" by everyone, and honestly don't want to be. They shouldn't pay us much attention because I won't pay them much either...
I am a Director-level IT guy, highly employable. I don't worry about finding a good job and have already sourced a couple in less than an hour's time through various channels. If religion plays a part in job opportunities, I'd probably exclude it from the top of my application-list anyway.
All I can contribute is some feedback from folks I know that used to live there, and some who moved back: check the air quality. Also, the point that davsel made *may* come into play, depending on the are in which you locate: according to some folks who moved here from UT, that happened to them.
If you are not part of the LDS church your career path out there will be significantly hobbled. I have never lived out there, but I have visited there many times and have quite a few friends out there. The LDS church situation is like a "Good Old Boys" club. The economic and employment wheels are heavily greased for LDS people, and as a non-LDS "outsider" you have a significant up hill battle.
There are some...un-named vocations right here in Colorado that are heavily LDS, and I've had some one in that vocation say directly to my face, "they won't make it in this town, they aren't LDS, I don't know what they were thinking".
When my co-worker and I left the place of employment, we looked at each other and both said, "are they supposed to say that out loud?!?!?!" That was on the Front Range, I can't imagine it isn't more pronounced near SLC.
Exactly. For some odd reason one of the first thing people say when we tell them we're moving to Idaho - "There's lots of Mormons there." My response is almost exactly what you wrote.
UT was on our short list of places to move to, though not necessarily SLC. We were looking further south. But we decided on ID instead. When I took the UT concealed handgun instructor course in SLC one of the instructors said, "Nothing gets through the legislature in this state without the approval of the gun lobby." I thought that was fantastic.
I do know that they stick together in regard to business. For a while I had an HP sales rep. from Park City and I asked her about business in the SLC area. She told me there really wasn't any since the CEO of Dell at the time, Kevin B. Rollins, was LDS.
I hope everything works out for you!