Andy Peterson, who has been in the counseling field for over 25 years, is now switching careers to go work as the Director for CUES (Central Utah Education Services), replacing Jason Strait. Peterson has already applied for this position twice before actually getting the job. Peterson has wanted this job for over 12 years.
“So it's something that I thought about for a long time just because I like the idea of what CUES does,” Peterson said.
CUES is what's called a Rural Education Service Agency (RESA) that was created in 1969 by the legislature as a way to help small rural schools and school districts to have some of the resources that the urban schools were able to have because they had more resources and more money. Andy really connected with this idea.
"I've always loved small towns, small communities,” Peterson said. “And when I had to live in the city for a few years, I was so eager to leave the city and get back to rural life that this job, like, helps me to kind of connect with some of those schools.”
Dax Higgins, an instructional coach and a friend of Peterson, talked about his personality and how it will affect CUES for the better. He believes that Peterson will be a good fit for the organization.
“He would always just be pitching something,” Higgins said. “And I think even if 90% of those ideas don't come about, the 10% would be beneficial, greatly beneficial. And so just his personality of always thinking of new innovations will be a big positive aspect of what he can bring for CUES.”
Peterson will be greatly missed by many students and colleagues at NS.
“Bittersweet. You know, we're happy for them,” Higgins said. “We're glad that they're moving on with something that they want to do, but we'll always miss them. We'll miss their influence and their joy that they bring. And, you know, sometimes I could just pull Andy in and he would pitch me something new and I would tell him what's going on with me and we'd have a good conversation and then we'd go on our day uplifted a little bit more.”
This just goes to show what kind of person Andy is and how he uplifts students in his vibrant, some might say goofy attitude, including his daughter Nila, a senior who looks up to her dad and appreciates him as a father and a counselor.
“I was hungry one day and I went to go see what food he had. And so I opened his drawer, and it's just like, the most random things you can possibly think of. He had a whole can of just soup,”Nila said. “And I think that kind of sums him up as a person who's just not normal. He just, he's just a goofy guy and it's, I think it's what makes it him, him. And it's what we love about him, and I think it'll carry that over to CUES.”

