Shelley School District proposes bond to build new high school

Noah Farley

SHELLEY, Idaho (KIFI) — Shelley Joint School District No. 60 is proposing a bond to build a new high school for the next general election.

If the public votes in favor, the Board of Trustees of Joint School District No. 60, Bingham and Bonneville Counties, State of Idaho (the “District”) will be authorized to issue bonds of up to $78,640,000 to:

Build, furnish, and equip a new high school

Build, furnish, and equip a new career technical education (CTE) building

Build a new auditorium

Renovate and improve other existing school facilities

Election Day is Tuesday, May 20.

More information about the ballot for the bond can be found here.

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Changes coming to Mormon Row in Grand Teton National Park

News Team

The following is a press release from Grand Teton National Park:

MOOSE, Wyo. (KIFI) — The National Park Service plans to improve and expand recreation opportunities at Mormon Row, one of the most photographed locations in Grand Teton National Park. This effort is part of ongoing preservation work designed to offer visitors a richer, more immersive experience at Mormon Row.

As part of the planning efforts, the park is working with Grand Teton National Park Foundation to create a safer, more accessible experience for visitors while preserving the area’s unique cultural heritage.

Proposed improvements:

Pedestrian and cycling-only area: A new pedestrian and cycling-only zone will be established in the historic district, enhancing visitors’ ability to experience the iconic views of Mormon Row and the Tetons. This change will provide a safer environment and minimize vehicle traffic.

 Expanded parking: A larger parking lot will be constructed at the southeast corner of Antelope Flats Road and Mormon Row to accommodate growing visitation while maintaining the integrity of the site. This will help manage traffic, provide parking for large vehicles, and improve access for all visitors.

Enhanced interpretation and signage: New interpretive and wayfinding signs will be installed to help visitors better understand the significance of Mormon Row. The site interpretation will provide a more thorough and accurate depiction of the community’s history and its connection to the broader history of Grand Teton National Park.

Vegetation restoration: Efforts will be made to restore native vegetation and improve the ecological health of the area, ensuring a more authentic landscape.

Improved facilities: Plans also include adding a Grand Teton Association building for visitor information and sales, as well as adding new restrooms and making walking paths easy to see and follow.

“We are excited to continue our partnership with the Grand Teton National Park Foundation to preserve and renew Mormon Row, a beloved site for park visitors,” said Grand Teton National Park Superintendent Chip Jenkins. “These improvements will create opportunities for visitors to connect with the history and landscape in a meaningful way.”

Some minor site improvements may begin in summer 2025, with the majority happening in 2026 or later. Updates on the project and further details will be shared with the public as the work progresses.

For more information, click HERE.

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Live fire drills preparing soon-to-be Santa Barbara County firefighters for real emergencies

Dave Alley

LOMPOC, Calif. – The Santa Barbara County Fire Department is holding a series of live fire drills this week during the final few days of a training program for a group of firefighter recruits.

On Thursday, recruits are completing a two-day training session at the Public Safety Training Complex on the Allan Hancock College Lompoc Valley Center.

The drills in Lompoc follows a one-day training session on Monday at the nearby Burton Mesa Training Center.

All of the training is part of the Santa Barbara County Fire Department’s Firefighter Recruit Academy, a rigorous 20-week course that teaches recruits required firefighting and life-saving skills.

The Firefighter Recruit Academy currently has 17 recruits, which are firefighters who have been hired by department, but must complete a required training program in order to officially begin work with the department.

Graduation for the recruits will take place later this month.

Following graduation ceremonies, the recruits will begin their new positions on probation status at various stations within the Santa Barbara County Fire Department.

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Robert Francis Prevost named first American Pope

News-Press NOW

VATICAN CITY (News-Press NOW) — Robert Francis Prevost is the first American pope in the 2,000-year history of the Catholic Church.

Prevost, from Chicago, Illinois, will take the name ‘Leo XIV’.

Prevost earned his bachelor’s in mathematics from Villanova University in Pennsylvania and went on to receive his diploma in theology from the Catholic Theological Union of Chicago.

He was later sent to Rome to study canon law at the Pontifical Saint Thomas Aquinas University and was ordained as a priest in June 1982. Later in his career, he taught canon law in the seminary in Trujillo, Peru.

While it is often said cardinal electors would always shy away from choosing a pope from the US due to America’s outsized global political influence, Prevost’s long experience in Peru may have mitigated those fears among the electors.

“He’s somebody that, even though he’s from the West, would be very attentive to the needs of a global church,†said Elise Allen, CNN’s Vatican analyst. “You’re talking about somebody who spent over half of his ecclesial career abroad as a missionary in Peru.â€

Allen added that he is seen as an apt leader in Vatican circles because “he’s able to accomplish things without necessarily being authoritarian about the way he did things.â€

“Prevost is somebody who is seen as an exceptional leader. From very young, he was appointed to leadership roles,†Allen said. “He’s seen as somebody who is calm and balanced, who is even-handed, and who is very clear on what he thinks needs to be done… but he’s not overly forceful in trying to make that happen.â€

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Bend man arraigned on murder indictment; July 30th date set for entry of plea

Barney Lerten

(Update: Adding new details)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — A 27-year-old Bend man accused of fatally stabbing another man last week was arraigned Friday on a second-degree murder indictment while police seek help from the public in the case.

Judicial Officer Dan Bunch set a July 30 plea-entry date for Phillip Matthew Howard Evans in the May 7th killing of Robert Glenn Haston, 54, also of Bend.

The indictment revealed no new details in the crime and no new information was shared during Friday’s arraignment, which Evans attended by video from the Deschutes County Jail, where he remains held without bail.

Earlier this week, the Bend Police Department asked the public for assistance in the case. Detectives are asking for witnesses who may have seen Evans between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. on Wednesday, May 7th, in the area between NE 2nd and 8th streets and NE Clay and Marshall avenues.  

If you saw Mr. Evans in this area at that time, you’re asked to contact nonemergency dispatch at 541-693-6911 and ask to speak to Detective Colton Henshaw. 

Earlier story:

A 27-year-old Bend man made his first court appearance on a second-degree murder charge Friday as authorities identified his alleged victim and revealed that he was stabbed to death.

Around 7:16 p.m. on Wednesday evening, Bend Police responded to the 100 block of NE Emerson Avenue after dispatchers received a report of a deceased person in the area, Bend PD Communications Manager Sheila Miller said.

Upon arrival, officers found the victim, initially described a middle-aged white man who had suffered a fatal injury. 

While detectives were investigating the man’s death, officers responded to a trespassing call in the 600 block of NE Irving Avenue, Miller said. The caller reported a man wearing a backpack running through his yard and behaving strangely.

Officers contacted the man, identified as Phillip Matthew Howard Evans, and took him into custody on suspicion of second-degree trespassing.

“Additional investigation revealed Evans as the suspect in the man’s death,” Miller said in a news release.  

Miller said Evans was arrested and taken to the Bend Police Department, then to the Deschutes County Jail on suspicion of second-degree murder, first-degree assault and unlawful use of a weapon.

Evans made his initial court appearance Friday on the initial formal charge of second-degree murder. Gunnels confirmed to KTVZ News that the victim, identified in the charging document as Robert Glenn Haston, 54, was fatally stabbed.

Evans is due back in court next Friday on an expected grand jury indictment.

Miller said Thursday that detectives were serving search warrants and an autopsy was planned that day.

Evans has a criminal history, including guilty pleas to felony attempt to commit first-degree rape and first- and second-degree sex abuse charges that brought a two-year prison term in 2020.

In February of this year, he pleaded guilty to second-degree criminal mischief and received a 10-day jail sentence, court records show.

It’s Bend’s second homicide of the year. Two people were arrested and face murder, robbery and other charges in the fatal shooting of a Bend man at the Holiday Motel in early January.

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Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost elected as new leader of Catholic Church, taking the name Pope Leo XIV

CNN Newsource

(CNN) — Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost of the United States has been elected the 267th pope and has stepped onto the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica as the new leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics.

He’s now known as Pope Leo XIV.

Prevost, 69, from Chicago, Illinois, is the first ever pope from the United States.

Cardinals took two days to select a new pontiff, matching the timeline from the previous two gatherings and suggesting that Prevost quickly impressed his peers during the secretive process.

Francis and Benedict XVI were both revealed in the evening of the conclave’s second day, while John Paul II, the longest-reigning pope of modern times, was selected on the third day in 1978.

‘An exceptional leader’

A leader with global experience, he spent much of his career as a missionary in South America and most recently led a powerful Vatican office for bishop appointments. He is expected to build on Pope Francis’ reforms.

He worked for a decade in Trujillo, Peru, and was later appointed bishop of Chiclayo, another Peruvian city, where he served from 2014 to 2023.

Prevost is a member of the Augustinian religious order – which he also led for more than a decade as their prior general, which has given him leadership experience of leading an order spread across the world.

Considered a highly capable and accomplished leader, Prevost most recently led the powerful Vatican office for new bishop appointments, the Dicastery for Bishops, assessing candidates and making recommendations to the late pope. He also served as the president of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America.

While it is often said cardinal electors would always shy away from choosing a pope from the US, due to America’s outsized global political influence, Prevost’s long experience in Peru may have mitigated those fears among the electors.

“He’s somebody that, even though he’s from the West, would be very attentive to the needs of a global church,” said Elise Allen, CNN’s Vatican analyst. “You’re talking about somebody who spent over half of his ecclesial career abroad as a missionary in Peru.”

Allen added that he is seen as an apt leader in Vatican circles because “he’s able to accomplish things without necessarily being authoritarian about the way he did things.”

“Prevost is somebody who is seen as an exceptional leader. From very young, he was appointed to leadership roles,” Allen said. “He’s seen as somebody who is calm and balanced, who is even-handed, and who is very clear on what he thinks needs to be done… but he’s not overly forceful in trying to make that happen.”

Prevost earned his bachelor’s in mathematics from Villanova University in Pennsylvania and went on receive his diploma in theology from the Catholic Theological Union of Chicago.

He was later sent to Rome to study canon law at the Pontifical Saint Thomas Aquinas University and was ordained as a priest in June 1982. Later in his career, he taught canon law in the seminary in Trujillo, Peru.

In an interview with Vatican News shortly after he became the leader of the Dicastery for Bishops, Prevost said: “I still consider myself a missionary. My vocation, like that of every Christian, is to be a missionary, to proclaim the Gospel wherever one is.”

Asked about the contributions of three women who were made members of the Dicastery for Bishops, Prevost told Vatican News: “I think their appointment is more than just a gesture on the part of the Pope to say that there are now women here, too. There is a real, genuine, and meaningful participation that they offer at our meetings when we discuss the dossiers of candidates.”

He also addressed the responsibility of combating clerical abuse, saying: “There are places where good work has already been done for years and the rules are being put into practice. At the same time, I believe that there is still much to learn.”

This is a breaking story. More details soon…

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‘Ticket to Ride,’ new county foster program hopes to alleviate shelter overcrowding

Athena Jreij

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (KESQ) — The Riverside County Department of Animal Services is getting ready to launch a new foster program aimed at getting more animals into fur-ever homes.

‘Ticket to Ride,’ would provide a temporary home to animals in transition between shelters. It’s asking foster volunteers to house pets between 2 to 4 weeks prior to adoption, if needed.

“We have people from out-of-state wanting to adopt. They’re not actually being transported to other shelters. They’re going to adopters. But sometimes getting those transports together was a conundrum. How do we figure out what to do with the dog or cat or bird or fish, or whatever it is until that transport can be arranged. And that’s how the concept of Ticket to Ride came,” Mary Martin, RCDAS Director said.

It comes as the county has received widespread criticism from animal advocates that a strong foster program is lacking.

Erin Hyland, a local foster dog mom, says her community welcomes the program but is approaching it with cautious optimism.

“We have been asking for this. Prior to the county stepping in and trying new fostering programs, it has all been 100% on the rescues,” Hyland said.

She’s currently fostering Bear, an 18-month old dog that was turned over to her after someone lost housing.

Martin and Hyland say this program should attract more fosters, since pets are already set up to be adopted.

“What’s particularly interesting to a lot of fosters about this program is it has a beginning, a middle and an end,” Martin said.

Hyland says the work to alleviate shelter overcrowding goes beyond the county’s scope.

“A big challenge are these antiquated policies on weight and breed restrictions. That’s why so many dogs are entering in the shelter in the first place. It’s the same with 55 plus communities or some of the expanded care for their older citizens. Make more communities where they’re able to bring their pets with them as they transition into long term care,” Hyland said.

If you’re interested in participating with Ticket to Ride, email foster@rivco.org.

If you’re interested in adopting Bear, Hyland’s foster dog, email her at erin@readwithmevolunteer.org.

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West Nile Virus mosquitoes found in the Coachella Valley

Kendall Flynn

THOUSAND PALMS, Calif. (KESQ) – The Coachella Valley Mosquito and Vector Control District has detected and confirmed a West Nile Virus positive mosquito sample in the North Shore community.

This is the first time a positive sample has been collected in 2025. The positive sample was collected in a routine site collection near Vanderveer and Avenue 73.

CVMVCD says the West Nile Virus “is endemic to the Coachella Valley and is primarily spread by native Culex mosquitoes, which are most active during the summer, especially at dawn and dusk.”

They report, as of now no human cases of West Nile Virus have been reported in California this year.

The virus is the leading cause of mosquito-borne disease in the United States. Residents are encouraged to eliminate standing water around their homes, dump or drain potential breeding sources and use insect repellant when outdoors.

Stay with News Channel 3 to hear from The Coachella Valley Mosquito and Vector Control District on this discovery and what it means for the community.

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Persisterhood of St. Joseph to dedicate trees in memory of loved ones and social justice causes

Leah Rainwater

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Persisterhood of St. Joseph will dedicate eight newly-planted oak trees along St. Joseph’s Northwest Parkway at 10 a.m. on Saturday, May 10.

Persisterhood’s “tree guru”, Dr. Elizabeth Sawin, will lead the dedication of the new trees and a tree walk following, to point out trees planted in prior years.

Trees are dedicated in memory or honor of loved ones and/or social justice causes.

“We’ve planted 92 trees since 2017, thanks to Betty’s (Elizabeth’s) persistence and the generosity of community members,” said Jane Frick, Persisterhood, co-leader. “We want to make St. Joseph a greener place for generations to come and have pledged to reach out goal of 100 new trees along the parkway during 2025 when we hold our fall tree walk and dedication in October.”

In April, St. Joseph Persisterhood received a 2025 Sustainable Environment Award form the city’s Sustainable Environment Committee (SEAC) for its tree planting project.

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Hillyard Technical Center to host weekend plant sale

Leah Rainwater

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Hillyard Technical Center will host a plant sale to support the Future Farmers of America (FFA).

The sale will go from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, May 9 and starting at 7 a.m. on Saturday, May 10 and until plants are sold out.

The sale is cash only and will be in the back of Hillyard Technical Center’s building, located at 3434 Faraon St.

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