SoCal Edison Extends Power Shutoffs as Fire Risk Warnings Grow Along California Coast

John Palminteri

SANTA BARBARA COUNTY, Calif. – As of Tuesday morning, Some areas along the Central and South Coast have had their power shutoff warnings extended due to continued fire risk conditions, now expected to last through June 20 or 21. A current map on SoCal Edison’s website shows areas in black where power is already shut off, and orange zones under consideration for future shutoffs. One of the affected high-risk areas is San Marcos Pass, where many residents remain without power. Edison crews are actively stationed in neighborhoods, providing emergency kits and resources.

(ORIGINAL POST) The potential for weather conditions strong enough to bring down power lines into dry brush has residents on alert. Warnings were issued earlier this week by Southern California Edison, and some areas have already experienced power shutoffs.

Edison’s proactive steps include alerts for Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) areas, which are designated on a map posted online. The map shows neighborhoods where power could be cut and areas where it already has been.

Currently, some of the impacted areas include the western Gaviota Coast and lower San Marcos Pass.

Warnings have also been issued in locations not typically on the power alert list, including parts of Santa Barbara’s Westside, Lower Eastside, Upper State Street, and areas near Hendry’s Beach outside Hope Ranch.

So far, the weather through Tuesday morning in the warning zones has not brought region-wide high winds. A shifting weather pattern is bringing above-normal heat early in the week, followed by cooler but still pleasant temperatures later in the week.

Even without extreme heat, a strong wind gust and a broken, energized power line could ignite a wildfire. The Central Coast has already seen several small fire starts in recent weeks, although not all causes have been identified.

Edison has set up two community support locations — at the Louise Lowry Davis Center in Santa Barbara and the Residence Inn in the Goleta Valley — where residents can access emergency assistance. Available items include phone charging stations, solar lights, and basic emergency supplies.

Andrea Carnaghe, a local resident, held up a supply bag and said, “It has hand sanitizer and towelettes, things like that.” She also showed the solar-powered light included in the kit: “So in case of an emergency when the power goes out, you have a solar-powered light.”

In the upper Goleta Valley, some residents are more prepared. One homeowner, Steven Kreiner, has solar panels and Tesla batteries. “I have neighbors who can come over and stay nice and cool with our AC running,” he said.

Kreiner said they know when power has been shut off in their neighborhood off upper Patterson Avenue: “We know when it’s nighttime and only our lights are on, or from the notifications we get from the Office of Santa Barbara County.”

Homeowners in the area are collaborating to improve wildfire resiliency and are working toward becoming a Firewise Community, which could potentially reduce insurance costs.

Kreiner added, “The downside of not doing rolling outages is that the repair time — with people being down without notice — is much worse, especially if there’s a fire. Crews get overtaxed, and resources become stretched.”

Some areas, including the Painted Cave community, have been without power for more than 30 hours.

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Bear Prairie leaving Idaho Falls Power for new industry role

News Release

The following is a news release from Idaho Falls Power:

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Bear Prairie, who has served with distinction as the General Manager, and Assistant General Manager, at Idaho Falls Power and Fiber since 2010, has resigned to accept a new role within the utility industry.

“During his nearly 15-year tenure, Bear has made an indelible mark on our organization and community. His leadership, technical expertise, and commitment to public power have served to strengthen Falls Power and Fiber,” said Mayor Rebecca Casper. “He successfully led the implementation of the City’s Fiber Optic program as well as the construction of significant utility infrastructure —including a new substation and a natural gas generation peaking plant scheduled to go online later this year. We wish him well in his new endeavor and know he will excel there as well.”  

Assistant General Manager Stephen Boorman will serve as the interim general manager at Idaho Falls Power while a search is conducted for a new general manager. The national search is expected to take several months.

“Idaho Falls Power turns 125 this year and I am proud to have had the opportunity to be part of this rich history. I am going to miss working with this talented and dedicated team who are committed to reliable service and keeping our rates low,” said Bear Prairie, Idaho Falls Power General Manager.

Prairie’s leadership has strengthened Idaho Fall’s energy portfolio, which includes development of the Idaho Falls Peaking Plant. When completed, this plant will allow Idaho Falls Power to exercise more autonomy and control over energy prices to ensure reliable and affordable energy rates into the future.

Prairie’s vision was also critical to the development and construction of the citywide fiber network that enables high speed broadband at an affordable price for homes and businesses.

Prairie also made key improvements to ensure Idaho Fall’s electric grid can withstand additional pressures. With the construction of the Sugarmill to Paine transmission line, completing major hydro upgrades and navigating the nuances of long-term energy contracts, the utility will benefit for years to come. 

“Prairie has been committed to this community and public power values which emphasize people over profits. Idaho Falls Power customers will see a low single digit rate increase for 2025 while investor-owned utilities in the area are looking at double digit rate increases,” said City Councilman Jim Freeman, a longtime liaison to Idaho Falls Power.

“Bear’s most impactful legacy is the IFP culture of excellence, safety, and accountability that he fostered, a culture that will allow IFP to continue to be a leader in the utility industry for many years to come,” said Stephen Boorman, Assistant General Manager.

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Imperial County Registrar of Voters to invite community input on Election Administration Plan

Dillon Fuhrman

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA, KECY) – The Imperial County Registrar of Voters is inviting members of the community to share their input on the County’s Election Administration Plan (EAP).

The current draft of the EAP is available for public view online or in-person at the Registrar of Voters’ office, located at 940 W. Main Street, Suite 206, in El Centro.

According to the County, this is to help “ensure the plan is inclusive, accessible, and responsive to the needs of Imperial County’s diverse electorate.”

The County will be holding three consultation meetings at the Board of Supervisors Chambers, located at 940 W. Main Street in El Cento, with three of the following members of the community:

People with disabilities: June 26, 2025 at 5:30 p.m.

Senior citizens: June 30, 2025 at 5:30 p.m.

Spanish-language community: July 2, 2025 at 5:30 p.m.

The meetings will also be held on Zoom. To know each meeting’s Zoom ID and password, read the press release below.

IC_PR_ConsultationMeetings_06.17.25Download

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FEMA authorizes federal funds to help with costs of fighting Alder Springs Fire

Barney Lerten

(Update: Adding video)

BOTHELL, Wash. (KTVZ) —  The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) authorized the use of federal funds to help with firefighting costs for the Alder Springs Fire burning in Jefferson County, Oregon. 

The state of Oregon’s request for a declaration under FEMA’s Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) program was approved by FEMA Region 10 Acting Administrator Vincent J. Maykovich on Monday, June 16, 2025, at 10:27 p.m. PT. He determined that the Alder Springs Fire threatened to cause such destruction as would constitute a major disaster.

This is the second FMAG declaration in 2025 to help fight Oregon wildfires. 

At the time of the state’s request, the wildfire threatened homes in and around the communities of Crooked River Ranch and Redmond.

FMAGs make funding available to pay up to 75 percent of a state’s eligible firefighting costs for fires that threaten to become major disasters. Eligible items can include expenses for field camps, equipment use, materials, supplies and mobilization and demobilization activities attributed to fighting the fire.

These grants do not provide assistance to individual home or business owners and do not cover other infrastructure damage caused by the fire, the agency said.

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Summer travel at Idaho Falls Regional Airport

Maggie Moore

Idaho Falls, IDAHO (KIFI) – With school out and sunshine, it’s time for summertime travel. But, this year the Idaho Falls Regional Airport will be a tight squeeze as it faces the second busiest summer travel season ever.

Growth is the theme at IDA as it prepares to expand to fit the growing travel needs. They’re adding new flights, updating parking systems, and starting the groundwork for a terminal expansion.

“This building is at capacity in just about every way you can imagine,” airport director Ian Turner said. “The most critical function of that is screening bags, and so that’s kind of item number one that we’re addressing. We also have interest from additional airlines to fly to Idaho Falls, and so those are top-level pieces of this expansion that we’re looking at.”

But expanding isn’t an overnight process, and in the meantime, travelers will need to adjust their plans to fit the airport’s current capacity.

Turner said that it’s essential to get to the airport 2 hours before your flight, even at smaller airports like Idaho Falls.

“It’s not the checkpoint at this point that’s going to be constrained, it’s bag screening,” Turner said. “When you check your bag at the ticket counter, you expect it to get to your destination. If you’re not allowing it enough time to get through that screening process you run that risk of having it show up after the fact, and nobody likes that.”

Other ways to make travel easier is by checking into your flight ahead of time online, having your REAL ID out and ready for TSA before you get to the podium, and pack light. The less bags you need to check, the easier it will be to get in and out of the airport.

“Growth that we’ve had is fantastic to address, but it takes some work. It it can’t all happen all at once. We’re we’re dealing with government processes that can take months, a year, two years, or more to put into place. So we just ask for people’s patience,” Turner said.

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Officials report ‘good progress’ on human-caused, 3,441-acre Alder Springs Fire; community meeting planned

Isabella Warren

CROOKED RIVER RANCH, Ore. (KTVZ) – Officials said Tuesday was a day of good progress on the lines of the day-old Alder Springs Fire, newly mapped at over 3,400 acres.

Officials also announced on the Alder Springs Fire Facebook page that a community meeting will be held Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. at the Terrebonne Community School, located at 1199 B Avenue, to provide the latest fire updates to the community.

Fire officials said late Tuesday: “Firefighters have made good progress today. Air resources provided water & retardant drops, stopping fire progress in many areas around the fire.

“Crews are actively working in the hard-to-access canyons, mopping up & securing perimeters,” they added.

According to the Northwest Coordination Center, the Alder Springs Fire has been determined to be “human-caused” and is estimated to be contained by July 1st.

As of Tuesday afternoon, more than 350 structures, including homes, have been threatened; while 140 firefighters are working to contain the fire.

Earlier story:

CROOKED RIVER RANCH, Ore. (KTVZ) — Firefighters and other resources from across the state were on scene or heading to Jefferson County on Tuesday to help regional crews battling the fast-moving Alder Springs Fire, which grew to 2,500 acres in a matter of hours Monday and prompted evacuations and warnings at Crooked River Ranch and Lake Billy Chinook.

A fire camp was set up at the Sisters Rodeo grounds, with the Oregon State Fire Marshal sending in crews and engines from Southern Oregon, the Willamette Valley and elsewhere to protect homes from the flames.

Officials advised the public Thursday afternoon that a large smoke plume on the south side of the blaze was from a firing operation crews were conducting to tie bulldozer lines to the main fire.

“This will bring the fire perimeter to a place that has been reinforced with fire retardant, where firefighters can secure the perimeter,” they added.

An Alder Springs Fire Facebook page has been created to share official information.

“OSFM Red Incident Management Team briefed this morning and is now in unified command with the Central Oregon Type 3 Team,” a posting there stated Tuesday morning. “Two structural task forces arrived last night, and six more arrived this morning and are currently in the Crooked River Ranch community for structure protection.

“Wildland firefighters are working hard on creating fire lines in an attempt to stop and slow down the fire’s progress,” the update said.

Evacuated Crooked River Ranch resident Susan Strange was among the many who are worried that such a large, early fire means a very troublesome summer ahead.

“I’m no expert, but that seems unusual,” Strange told us Monday evening.

Tuesday’s general map of the Alder Springs Fire; officials say they’ll have a more detailed map later

Here’s the full Tuesday morning update from Central Oregon fire officials:

Firefighters, dozers and engines worked into the night on the Alder Springs Fire burning in steep and rugged terrain on the Crooked River National Grassland, Prineville District BLM-managed lands, and private land protected by the Oregon Department of Forestry and Lower Bridge Rangeland Fire Protection Association (RFPA).

The Alder Springs Fire is estimated to be 2,500 acres and is 0% contained. 

Fire activity moderated with lower temperatures and higher relative humidities last night and crews staying engaged with structure protection through the night, with no damages to homes or outbuildings. Today, firefighters will be working to secure the perimeter where accessible and safe to engage. The highest priority will be accessing Carcass Canyon to prevent additional spotting to the east, across the Deschutes River. Firefighters will work, along with the support of aerial resources, to secure the fire east of the Deschutes River that is threatening Crooked River Ranch.

The Central Oregon Type 3 Incident Management Team has taken command of the fire alongside resources that have been engaged since yesterday to contain the blaze. The Oregon State Fire Marshal (OSFM) Red Team under the command of Ian Yocum has been mobilized and will join the two task forces of structure protection resources in place and the six more coming in today. They will be in unified command of the incident alongside the Central Oregon Type 3 team as of 9:00 a.m. today.

Weather conditions will be similar to yesterday, creating challenging conditions for firefighters with hot, dry weather with westerly winds pushing the fire towards values at risk. Crews, engines, dozers, skidgen and structure protection task forces will be actively working to suppress the fire and secure the perimeter with continued help from air tankers, helicopters and single-engine scoopers to cool hot spots and slow the spread of the fire from the air.

All evacuations issued by the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office and the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office remain in place today.

Evacuations: Jefferson and Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office have issued the following evacuations: A Level 3 (GO) evacuation order for CR06, CR07, CRR8, CR10N, CR10S, CR11, CR12, CRPL2; a Level 2 (SET) evacuation warning for zones CR02M, CR02N, CR02NW, CR02SW and CR09, as well as Deschutes Campground at Cove Palisades, along the river and campground; and a Level 1 (READY) evacuation advisory for CR02E, CR02NE, CR02SE, CR03M, CR03N, Lake Billy Chinook Public Lands 3, RED-101, RED-91, RED-92 and SIS-016. For more information on evacuation notices, visit:Deschutes County Evacuation Map: https://tinyurl.com/DeschutesCountyEmergencyJefferson County Evacuation Map: https://tinyurl.com/JeffersonCountyEmergencyMap

A temporary evacuation point has been established at Highland Baptist Church: 3100 SW Highland Avenue, Redmond, OR. A large animal shelter has been established at the Deschutes County Fairgrounds at 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond, OR.

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ECH Yuma to host Teddy Bear Clinic this weekend

Dillon Fuhrman

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – Exceptional Community Hospital (ECH) in Yuma is hosting a free Teddy Bear Clinic this Saturday for local children and their families.

The purpose of the fun event is to help kids get over their fear of the doctor’s office.

Hospital nurses and doctors will administer vaccinations and perform medical checkups on the teddy bears.

The event is on Saturday at 9 a.m. and all you need to bring is your favorite teddy bear.

“This event, you’re going to see our team in action within our trauma areas, within our fast-track areas, and within our inpatient area. If your child was to come here they would get that same ultimate care and that same ouchless experience,” says Tony Neerpat, a Pharmacist at ECH.

In addition, the hospital will be hosting a free First Aid & CPR Clinic on Sunday at 10 a.m.

To reserve a spot, click here.

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ECH Yuma to host First Aid & CPR Training this weekend

Dillon Fuhrman

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – Exceptional Community Hospital (ECH) Yuma is hosting a First Aid & CPR Training event this weekend.

The event is taking place Sunday, June 22, at the Yuma Civic Center at 10:00 a.m., and it is to help people learn the following:

Emergency situations

Basic life support

CPR training/drowning

First aid training

Real-life demonstration

Courtesy: Exceptional Community Hospital Yuma

Greater Yuma Water Society and Greater Yuma Aqua Academy are the event’s participating community partners.

To register for the event, click here.

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Latest on the suspect arrested after allegedly shooting at YCSO helicopter

Manoah Tuiasosopo

YUMA COUNTY, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – There are new developments in the suspect who was arrested after allegedly shooting at a Yuma County Sheriff’s Office (YCSO) helicopter.

The shooting happened in the area of E. Calle Santa Clara last Friday, June 13, while YCSO deputies conducted routine patrols using their Bell 505 Helicopter.

During their patrol, YCSO says one of the deputies saw someone standing outside “pointing at the helicopter,” which then they heard “an impact to the aircraft and noticed debris inside the cabin due to damage.”

Following this, the deputies safely landed at a hangar a crew found a puncture in the cabin, confirming the aircraft was shot with a gun.

YCSO’s Criminal Investigations Bureau took over the investigation, leading to the suspect to be identified as a 51-year-old Dateland man.

The suspect was then arrested and booked into the Yuma County Detention Center on three counts of first-degree attempted murder. He is being held on a bond of $1 million.

While there were no injures reported, the investigation is still ongoing.

If anyone has information about the case, call YCSO at 928-783-4427 or 78-CRIME to remain anonymous, or visit YCSO’s website to submit an anonymous tip.

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More SCE customers qualify for bill discounts with expanded FERA income guidelines

Luis Avila

COACHELLA VALLEY, Calif. (KESQ) –  As temperatures rise more income-qualified customers are eligible for discounts on their electric bill.

The Family Electric Rate Assistance (FERA) program offers qualified customers 18% off their monthly bill and expanded guidelines now include households of one or two. Previously, the program was limited to three or more.

In 2024, more than 32,000 FERA-enrolled customers saved a combined total of nearly $15 million — an average savings of $450 a year.

The change, which became effective June 1, is expected to help grow that number to include more than 357,000 Southern California Edison customers.

FERA eligibility is based on household size and income. For a one or two person household, the salary range is $42,301 to $52,875. For families of three or more, that number starts at $53,301. Once enrolled, customers must recertify every two to six years.

SCE encourages customers to apply early and explore additional support options, including payment plans and energy-efficiency assistance.

Learn more about SCE’s programs to help residential customers manage their bills at sce.com/billhelp

Stay with News Channel 3 for more.

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