Bonneville School District 93 opens new Transportation Center

Curtis Jackson

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) – Bonneville School District 93 celebrated the opening of its new Transportation Center. 

With the support of board members and the superintendent, the school district’s transportation director, Pam Cripps, cut the ribbon for the new bus maintenance building on Wednesday night. 

District leaders said the new facility will centralize their fleet maintenance and streamline operations, as well as enhance safety. 

Superintendent Scott Woolsenhulme said they have been working for a long time to get the new building. 

Funding for the new facility came from savings when building Black Canyon Middle School. 

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Show Us Your Garden: This week, a hot tub, a rockin’ garden and corn for daze

John Carroll

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — We had a wide range of gardens today that each have their own personality. First off, a garden consisting of a re-purposed hot tub and a quiet pond. A “rockin’ rock garden” complete with blue stones and colorful flowers, followed by a corn field that goes on for “daze” and may someday become a “maze.”

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The Palmer Ridge football team has plans for post season success

Rob Namnoum

MONUMENT, Colo. (KRDO) Palmer Ridge is coming off another strong season. They went 10-2 last season, but after their season ended with a playoff loss to Broomfield, the players are itching to get back out there.

“That’s my main motivator, I’d say. Like we all have the sour taste in our mouth. We come to practice every day like we’ve got a group chat, and that background of that group chat is that final score from last year that does not sit well with us,” says Palmer Ridge wide receiver, Michael Toth.

The Bears have a lot to work with, due to having most of their starters from a season ago back, “We’ve never had a team like this. Like even Coach Carter told us he’s never seen potential like this and he knows like, we’ve got a shot,” says Toth.

The players have been putting in the time to be great yet again, and they also found a new way to build team chemistry and get better.

“We’re big at Pickleball.”

“Pickleball?” asked KRDO13’s sports reporter, Danny Mata.

“Pickleball. That’s our thing. We all go play,” Palmer Ridge linebacker Brody Elliott told our crew at KRDO13.

“I mean, I feel like it’s that competitive aspect. I mean, football’s a little more contact. But, you know…we go pretty hard on the pickleball court. 

Palmer Ridge defensive end, Tyler Himebauch, adds, “Almost every single night. We just go out and play from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. We’re just going out to play pickleball and go eat dinner as a team. Just like growing the brotherhood through that little competitive aspect of pickleball.”

You’d be surprised how pickleball helps them become better.

“I’m a bit lighter on my feet, like I’m swinging my hands a little bit more, so maybe I can use that for getting around a lineman,” said long snapper Tyler Himebauch.

Wide receiver Toth added that Pickleball helps with the team’s communication, allowing them to click on the field.

You can find the football game schedule for Palmer Ridge here.

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2025 Back-to-School Shoppers Cite Higher Prices and Tariff Concerns

Tracy Lehr

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – Many school districts start classes well before Labor Day these days, and that means back-to-school shopping is already in full swing.

Many back-to-school essentials — including backpacks, pens, and notebooks — are imported, and some shoppers are concerned they will be picking up the tab if tariffs drive prices higher. For products made in China, Section 301 tariffs can add to the landed cost, which may be reflected in retail prices.

Business analysts say that’s one reason some families start shopping earlier than usual, hoping to beat tariff-influenced pricing before August. Those who waited are now taking advantage of seasonal sales at stores like Office Max.

One family found backpacks on sale and decided to act fast.“You know what, today I feel like they have good sales overall, but definitely I could see the impact of the tariffs because I have been here when it is not on sale and I feel like the prices are a little higher for sure,” said Edith Woolfolk. Her biggest purchase — a backpack — came alongside smaller items. “Erasers and mechanical pencils,” added her daughter Kalia. Another daughter, Sofia, said, “We start next week for school and I still needed a new backpack.” When asked what she chose, she replied, “I just got this blue backpack.”

Many stores now have printed supply lists for kindergarten, grade school, middle, and high school to guide shoppers. At the same time, high school and college students are focusing on clothing before classes begin. At Tilly’s, PacSun, and Brandy Melville, shoppers were browsing jeans, shirts, and shoes. “I got some jeans and two pairs of shirts and shoes,” said Kalea Gilbert.

Some students are waiting to complete their supply lists until after the first week. “I got some school supplies, but I mean later on I’ll get more notebooks and figure out whatever I need after I get my syllabuses and stuff like that and get more supplies along the way,” said Zack Martin.

Compared to last year, shoppers are paying noticeably more: a typical school supply list now costs about $5 more than it did in 2024, and prices for specific basics like binders have jumped from $1 to $1.50 in 2025 — an increase of 50 cents per item. Overall, school supply prices have surged 30 % over the past five years.

National retail data backs up what shoppers are seeing in stores. Coresight Research expects back-to-school shopping to be up more than 3.3 % this year. The National Retail Federation predicts Americans will spend more than $128 billion on back-to-school purchases across supplies, clothing, and electronics — making education good for business. Of that, the average household will spend about $144 on school supplies alone, with total K-12 spending per household approaching $858.

Analysts say families who shopped before August likely avoided some extra costs, especially on tariff-affected items.

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City of Bend hosting pre-construction open house for Butler Market and Wells Acres roundabout, key route project

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — The City Council recently approved the construction contract for the Butler Market & Wells Acres Roundabout & Butler Market Key Route Project. Construction is expected to begin in early-mid September.

To reduce traffic impacts, eastbound traffic on Butler Market Road will remain open throughout construction. Westbound Butler Market Road will be closed from Brinson Boulevard to Eighth Street.

The City of Bend will host a Preconstruction Open House 4:30-6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, August 19, at Hollinshead Barn, 1235 NE Jones Road. Community members are encouraged to drop in, meet the project team, ask questions, and learn what to expect during construction.

Improving the intersection of Butler Market and Wells Acres Roads has been a priority for the surrounding neighborhoods for many years. A new roundabout at this location will improve safety and efficiency for all modes of travel. The project includes sewer main installation, construction of a new roundabout and key route bicycle and pedestrian improvements.

Once complete, the project will deliver a long-desired improvement to intersection safety and time reliability, and provide safer, easier connections for pedestrians and bicyclists traveling between neighborhoods, schools, parks and businesses in the area.

Sign up to receive project email updates and download the construction detour map at bendoregon.gov/butler-wells.

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A new chapter for Central Oregon: SMART Reading accepting book donations to start a local Book Bank

KTVZ – News Team

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) —  Children’s literacy nonprofit SMART Reading is now open for donations of new and gently used children’s books on an ongoing basis.

The organization, which pairs volunteers with students for one-on-one reading sessions and gives participants two new books to keep each month, is in the early phases of opening a Book Bank in Central Oregon that will enhance the organization’s efforts to ensure local kids have books of their own. 

A 2020 study in the Journal of Global Health found that the likelihood of being on track in literacy almost doubled if at least one book was available in a student’s home.

“The Book Bank offers a sustainable way to increase book ownership and ensure that books kids have outgrown can find a new home with another child,” says SMART Reading Area Director Jennifer Zardinejad. All donated books will be sorted and cleaned with the help of volunteers before being given away to Central Oregon students. 

Thanks to community donations and book drives with local businesses, SMART was able to host its first schoolwide, free book fair this spring at Culver Elementary. Students took home over 1,000 refurbished books ahead of summer break – a period of time when students are at risk of losing important reading gains they made during the school year.

Donations of new or gently used children’s books are accepted at SMART Reading’s office Monday through Friday by appointment. To schedule a book drop off, call 541-797-7726. SMART Reading is located at 1029 NW 14th Street, Suite 101, Bend, OR 97703.

From now until Sunday, August 31, books can also be dropped off during business hours at the following two locations in Bend:

Play Theory Cafe, 2221 NE 3rd Street, Suite 200; and

Strictly Organic Coffee Co., 6 SW Bond Street (in the Box Factory). 

To see SMART’s book donation criteria or learn how to host a book drive at a business, school, or community organization, visit www.SMARTReading.org/central-area

About SMART Reading:

SMART Reading is a statewide children’s literacy nonprofit that serves kids in Oregon’s highest-need schools and communities with two ingredients critical for literacy and learning success: shared reading time and access to books. We mobilize volunteers to read with PreK through third-grade children, building confidence, literacy skills and a love of reading. Since 1992, we have paired over 158,000 volunteers to read with 334,000 children, and have put over 4.9 million books in the homes of the children we serve. Visit www.SMARTReading.org or call 541-797-7726 to learn more.

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Victor Manuel Ayala Sanchez arrested after hours-long SWAT standoff in Santa Maria

Andrew Gillies

SANTA MARIA, Calif. – After a four-hour standoff Wednesday in the cul-de-sac of East Sunset Avenue, deputies took 30-year-old Victor Manuel Ayala Sanchez into custody on multiple outstanding warrants.

According to the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office, deputies tracked Sanchez to a home in the 1100 block of Sunset Avenue, near Tunnel Elementary School, and learned that several other people, including a child, were inside. All of the occupants were safely evacuated during the standoff, the Sheriff’s Office said.

The incident began just before noon when Sanchez barricaded himself inside the home. Nearby streets remained open during most of the operation, and the cul-de-sac was later reopened after the suspect was taken into custody. There were no reports of injuries.

Deputies issued multiple verbal commands and made several phone calls urging Sanchez to peacefully surrender before entering the home around 3:18 p.m., where they found him hiding in an attic area, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

Your News Channel was on the scene and observed multiple law enforcement vehicles and personnel, including a SWAT team staging in the cul-de-sac, a Bearcat armored vehicle, and a helicopter circling overhead. The command post was set up at the Santa Lucia District Ranger Station on Carlotti Drive, just a few blocks to the north. Several law enforcement agencies assisted in the operation.

“We are in the city of Santa Maria, but this is the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office handling this call,” said Raquel Zick, the agency’s public information officer. “Thankfully, the schools are in session right now, so we didn’t have to contend with that. It is a short cul-de-sac, so it’s not having a whole lot of impact on area residents.”

Sanchez was booked into the Northern Branch Jail on outstanding felony warrants, including brandishing a firearm, robbery, possession of a firearm by a prohibited person, gang enhancement, evading police, criminal threats, assault with a deadly weapon, and carjacking, as well as additional misdemeanor charges. The Sheriff’s Office also listed drug charges, weapons violations, and resisting arrest among his outstanding warrants. He remains in custody without bail.

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Indio Teen Center discusses rise in AI friendships

Shay Lawson

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ)  – Some teens aren’t texting friends, they’re chatting with Artificial Intelligence (AI) instead.

According to a new study by Common Sense Media, 72% of teens have used AI companions atleast once, and 52% qualify as regular users who interact with AI platforms multiple times a month.

Dr. Evita Limon-Rocha, a psychiatrist with Kaiser Permanente Riverside County, said leaning too much on technology can be risky.

“There’s lots of data related to too much screen time in general can disrupt sleep patterns,” Dr. Limon-Rocha said. “Technology can bring us information, but also with that wealth of information, we can be exposed to things that are really difficult.”

She said she encourages teens to build real human connections.

“That connection of someone hearing the highs, the wonderful things and also the difficult things is important,” Dr. Limon-Rocha said.

Connecting face to face is at the heart of what the Indio Teen Center does said Karla Martinez, the center’s community program assistant.

“We offer a lot of different programs here,” Martinez said. “We do culinary, sports, crafts and boxing every day.”

She said she has noticed teens engaging more with their phones.

“I definitely think it’s social media,” Martinez said. “Part of it is AI. AI is everywhere now.”

Even as teens turn to AI, she said the center offers plenty of real world opportunities, something one teen said she appreciates.

“I really like that they do so many activities,” Viviana Terriquez teen center attendee said.

The Indio Teen Center is a free city-run after school program open to current 8th -12th grade students. The founder said enrollment is now open and directs those interested to visit the website.

Stay with News Channel 3 to hear more from Terriquez about what it’s like growing up in a world with AI.

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Newsom announces California redistricting push, setting up a standoff with GOP-led opponents

CNN

Watch the announcement below:

Originally Published: 14 AUG 25 05:30 ETUpdated: 14 AUG 25 15:39 ETBy Arit John, CNN

(CNN) — Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled his plan to redraw the state’s congressional maps in response to a Republican-led effort in Texas Thursday, setting up a standoff against a coalition of opponents.

Joined by labor leaders and members of Congress, the governor argued Democrats must override the state’s independent redistricting commission to block President Donald Trump’s attempt to push through a GOP-friendly redrawing of US House maps in Texas and other conservative-led states.

“He doesn’t play by a different set of rules. He doesn’t believe in the rules,” Newsom said of the president. “We have got to recognize the cards that have been dealt, and we have got to meet fire with fire.”

Unlike Texas, where Gov. Greg Abbott plans to call another special session for Republicans to enact their maps as soon as enough Democrats return, Newsom and legislative leaders will need to put any new maps up for a statewide referendum in November. The legislature returns Monday to consider a measure that must pass both chambers with two-thirds of the vote to make the November ballot.

Success is not a foregone conclusion, particularly in an off-year referendum that’s likely to have lower turnout than a midterm or presidential election. A patchwork coalition is already forming to oppose the effort at the ballot box.

It includes former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a longtime advocate of nonpartisan redistricting; Charles Munger Jr., the son of the late billionaire Berkshire Hathaway vice chairman; various state and federal California Republicans; and the League of Women Voters.

Opponents argue that they have a broad coalition that includes Democratic voters. More than 60% of voters in the state approved Proposition 20, the 2010 initiative that took control of congressional maps from the state legislature.

Munger, who spent $12.4 million to pass Proposition 20, said he will “vigorously defend the reforms he helped pass,” spokesperson Amy Thoma Tan said in a statement.

“His previous success in passing ballot measures in California means he knows exactly what is needed to be successful,” Thoma Tan said. “We will have the resources necessary to make our coalition heard.”

Common Cause reverses itself

But opponents have already lost one ally this time around.

Common Cause, one of the key good government groups backing redistricting reform, said Tuesday it would not “automatically condemn” mid-cycle redistricting efforts that meet certain criteria, a move that could lead to the organization holding its fire against the California countermeasure.

In a call with reporters Wednesday, Common Cause officials characterized the announcement as a “shift in our strategic posture,” not a move to abandon its long-term opposition to gerrymandering. The organization said it was too soon to say whether California will meet its six “fairness criteria,” which include that mid-cycle redistricting efforts should be targeted responses to gerrymandering in other states, have a set end date and involve some form of public participation.

“Governor Newsom will be held to the same standards and criteria as any other state who tries to engage,” Common Cause president Virginia Kase Solomón said Wednesday, adding that it would be “very hard to react” to California’s plan before it has been released.

The national group’s new stance comes after the state chapter said last month that Newsom was “wrong” on redistricting and urged him not to “pick a fight that honestly, his political party cannot and will not win.” National officials said the state organizations are now on board.

“Our California Common Cause team understands,” Kase Solomón said. “We had deep discussion around why we needed to make this decision. They were engaged in the decision. Their advisory board was engaged in the decision. And so we are all on the same page.”

The League of Women Voters, however, will continue to push back on the governor’s proposal. The group’s California chapter wrote Newsom and top Democratic leaders in the legislature Wednesday morning to “express our strong opposition” to the mid-cycle redistricting push. The group argued that even temporarily overriding the current maps would do long-term damage.

“We understand the urgency. Authoritarianism is not abstract; it is here, and it is dangerous. President Trump has created a constitutional crisis on multiple fronts – assaults to democracy that the League is at the vanguard of fighting,” wrote Dora Rose, the deputy director of the League of Women Voters of California. “But the way to fight is not to abandon one of California’s greatest democratic reforms.”

Schwarzenegger will be back

Democrats have framed their plan as a potential check on Texas, where Republicans have introduced new maps that could eliminate as many as five Democratic seats ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. That may be a winning argument in an off-year election in a blue state.

“The choice will be between Gavin Newsom and Donald Trump,” said Matt Rexroad, a Republican redistricting expert. “The odds of Republicans being able to win statewide is small.”

That doesn’t mean there won’t be an expensive effort to try. The Republican-led opposition in the state is likely to be well funded, thanks to a mix of national and in-state donors.

Schwarzenegger could also become a face of the coalition. The action star turned two-term California governor backed the ballot initiatives that placed the state’s congressional and legislative maps in the hands of the independent commission. Since leaving office in 2011, he’s campaigned on behalf of independent redistricting reforms in other states, including Michigan, Colorado and Ohio.

“Once he learned about gerrymandering when he was governor, he decided it was evil and he was going to fight it in California,” spokesperson Daniel Ketchell told CNN. “And once he was done being governor in California, he decided he was going to fight it all over the country, anytime he could.”

Another Republican threatens to sue

Steve Hilton, a Republican candidate in California’s 2026 governor’s race, has said he will challenge the measure in court if Democrats get it on the ballot. He argued the legislature doesn’t have accurate enough population data to draw new maps due to population shifts throughout the state after the pandemic.

“I think this whole thing is just a massive distraction from what we should be focusing on,” Hilton told CNN. “Nevertheless, I think it is unfair to the at least 40% Republican voters in California, and so I think it needs to be stopped.”

California’s Republican members of Congress will also likely play a bigger role in pushing back against the redistricting. Rep. Kevin Kiley, whose district covers a broad swath of central California along the state’s border with Nevada, introduced legislation last week to ban mid-cycle redistricting, including the effort underway in Texas.

Kiley, who is one of five Republicans whom CNN reported Democrats are targeting, said he’s spoken to House Speaker Mike Johnson “several times” and has publicly called on him to allow a vote on his legislation when Congress returns from recess. “I’ve said that, as soon as we get back, I want to see a vote, and I’m willing to use whatever tools I can to make that happen,” Kiley said.

It’s unlikely Kiley’s measure will advance, given Trump’s insistence that Republican-led states should redraw their maps.

Kiley’s best ally may be the voters who formed the independent redistricting commission in the first place.

“It’s going to be imperative that voters get accurate information, because if they do, I am very confident voters will affirm their earlier decision that politics should not be part of the redistricting process,” Kiley said.

CNN’s David Adkins contributed to this report.

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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Monterey County provides update on Moss Landing battery storage fire cleanup

Briana Mathaw

MOSS LANDING, Calif. (KION-TV) — The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) gave an update on the Moss Landing battery storage fire Wednesday.

They say that they have been finished de-linking the batteries since mid-March and are now ensuring the battery stabilization and packaging them for treatment or recycling.

They said they are now focused on battery removal and hope that starts around September 22.

An EPA spokesperson said during the Monterey County press briefing, that they will be starting to remove the batteries with the least amount of damage first, then the batteries with the higher rates of charge a few months later, likely to start in February 2026.

The EPA is currently continuing to demolish the damaged area, especially those spots with asbestosis in the walls, according to the EPA. This damaged material, they say, is headed to a factory in Vacaville and may be seen by neighbors via four-to-five truck loads per day.

The batteries to be removed and destroyed or recycled, according to the EPA, will be send to a company in Nevada called American Battery Technology Company. This, they say, will be done through two truck loads per day to make sure safety remains the priority.

The EPA says they will also be monitoring rain run-off water to collect and determine if there are levels of contaminates, and what those might be.

They say for further updates, to check out their website at epa.gov/ca/moss-landing-vistra-battery-fire

Moss Landing Battery removal set for September

MOSS LANDING, Calif. (KION-TV) – Eight months after the battery fire at the Moss Landing Energy Storage Facility, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) says cleanup efforts are progressing, though the thousands of damaged lithium-ion batteries remain on site for now.

“No batteries have been removed from the site. As I mentioned earlier, we expect that work to start in September. So batteries have been delinked, which was an initial step to cut down on the risk of further incident.” Kazami Brockman said.

Brockman, the On-Scene Coordinator for EPA Region 9, confirmed that while the formal cleanup agreement with facility operator Vistra was finalized in July, actual battery removal has yet to begin. In the meantime, crews have started stabilizing and partially deconstructing the building to gain safe access to the damaged units.

“The community can expect to see and may have already observed construction personnel, vehicles and equipment, including cranes arriving at the site. Just control and perimeter and community air monitoring measures are in place during all of these activities.” Kazami Brockman said.

Once battery removal begins, officials say they will be neutralized onsite to make them safe for transportation.

“Once the batteries are removed from the building, they will be inspected, treated or de-energized onsite in preparation for offsite transport and disposal.” Kazami Brockman said.

“We’re proceeding and it was first fashioned to address the batteries at higher status charge, presenting a higher risk. Damaged batteries can be unstable. And an emergency response plan was developed by Vistra and reviewed and approved by EPA for this response.” Kazami Brockman said.

According to Vistra, there are currently no plans to bring the Moss 300 battery facility back online until the investigation is complete and cleanup is finished.

“There’s no plans for a restart of Moss 300 facility until, you know, well after cleanup and all those pieces. And then the other, there are other projects on site, I think, as many are aware.” David Yeager said.

Yeager, the Director of Project Development at Vistra, also clarified that other operations at the site are still active.

“We do have a natural gas fuel unit on site that is active and does make power. So there are occasions where you might see steam coming from that asset, but that is not tied to any battery project at all.” David Yeager said.

As for what will happen to the batteries, disposal and recycling plans have not yet been finalized.

“The disposal and recycling facilities have not been finalized. However, we will have a priority on recycling as much as possible. Recycling involves reclaiming materials and metals from the batteries for reuse. And that would be happening offsite. We would be treating batteries onsite to ensure that they are safe for transport.” Kazami Brockman said.

The EPA says the cleanup process is expected to take over a year due to the technical challenges and safety concerns involved. Battery removal is set to begin in September if all goes as scheduled.

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