Local nonprofit mentors vulnerable kids in the Coachella Valley

Gavin Nguyen

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – An Indio nonprofit is ensuring vulnerable Coachella Valley students are guided down the right path. 

Friends of the Children Coachella Valley is still in its first year of serving children and their families in the desert, but its nationwide parent organization, Friends of the Children has been operating for over 30 years.

The organization reports it tends to see higher rates of school success and high school graduation, as well as lower rates of teen pregnancy and children involved in the juvenile justice system.

The Coachella Valley chapter hosted an open house Wednesday morning. Local city leaders and nonprofits gathered at its Indio office for an introduction to the services they provide. Organizers also provided tours of the nonprofit’s clubhouse – a safe space where the children they support have access to Wi-Fi, technology, and other things that may be difficult to find at home.

Right now, Friends of the Children is designed to provide long-term support and mentorship for 24 valley kids. These kids and their families often face food and housing insecurity. They may also face retention or behavior challenges in the classroom.

Three full-time mentors provide one-on-one support and work ten-hour days, four days a week during the summers.

Despite less than a year of developing a relationship with the organization’s first cohort of 24 students, mentors – known as “friends” to the kids – have already created an inseparable bond.

“I have had parents tell me that they’re very grateful that I’m in their lives, that they see me as family,” said Marbella Oseguera, one of the three professional mentors staffed by Friends of the Children. “It is a long term commitment and some days are difficult, I’ll be honest. … I make clear to them that even when their days are challenging, I’m going to be here through it all.”

Before being selected to the mentorship program, kids are referred to the nonprofit by both Desert Sands and Coachella Valley Unified School Districts. According to the nonprofit, faculty identifies students who may need extra support. Staff will then go to the school to observe the children who have been referred.

“We watch the young people on the playground, maybe it’s in the lunchroom, in their classroom, meet with them, and then the final step is meeting with their parents. Because we’re committing to 12 years,” said Karrie Schaaf, the organization’s Executive Director.

Schaaf said their mission goes beyond just the students, too. The program is designed to provide long-term guidance and advocacy for the students’ families – their parents, grandparents, and caregivers.

“We also support the families… so the caregivers get our support in our advocacy. We’re their cheerleaders, just like the young people,” added Schaaf.

Now, the the nonprofit said it is looking to expand their team and services. A spokesperson with the organization said they are looking for additional funding to expand its coverage to the entirety of the Coachella Valley. They also plan to hire engagement coordinators to work with families in need to secure affordable housing and other services. 

Ben Guitron, city councilmember with Indio, said of the nonprofit’s mission, “If they’re there to help – [even] just guide them for resources or make that difference in that youth as they’re developing – it’s a blessing to all of us, because the future is our youth.”

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Stolen trailer and construction equipment recovered from abandoned El Paso County home

Celeste Springer

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — The Baca County Sheriff’s Office says more than $120,000 worth of stolen items were found in rural El Paso County.

According to the Baca County Sheriff’s Office, they received a string of reports about stolen items. On Aug. 10, 2025, the sheriff’s office says a 24 foot trailer was reported stolen. The next morning, a skid loader was reported stolen from a construction site. The day after that, they received a report of a stolen pickup, which they believe was also stolen on Aug. 10, the sheriff’s office says.

Baca County deputies followed leads, and eventually they traced the items to El Paso County. The Baca County Sheriff’s Office says the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office was able to see some of the stolen items from the roadway. The information allowed them to get a search warrant.

Photo: David Walker

The warrant was executed early on Wednesday, and the sheriff’s office says they were able to recover the items. However, they do not have any suspects behind bars, as the department says the property was abandoned.

If you have any information about these thefts, the sheriff’s office asks that you contact them at 719-523-4511.

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Scotts Valley celebrates financial milestone with new Town Center

Jeanette Bent

SCOTTS VALLEY, Calif. (KION-TV) — Scotts Valley Mayor Derek Timm opened the press conference Tuesday announcing the new Town Center with a story about a well-known four-star general asking where the city’s downtown location is.

“I went out driving today and I went looking for Scotts Valley,” he said the general told him. “Where is your city? I can’t find it.”

The general was referencing an issue that the City of Scotts Valley has been battling for close to 30 years: the lack of a downtown or community town center.

The city celebrating its long-awaited town center reaching a significant milestone after 19th District U.S. Representative Jimmy Panetta presented the council with a check for close to $1 million in federal funding.

“Obviously we’re proud that the federal government was able to play its part for such a meaningful and impactful project like a town center by providing close to a million dollars in federal investment to help this project,” said Panetta. “A project that’s really going to bring this community together.”

The location in question is the vacant lot that sits next to the city’s popular Sky Park.

It was a former airport that closed in 1983 with no real plans for development until some recent financial progress was made with the project.

“You’re going to have a great little downtown retail core plus open spaces… a splash pad… all of these fun things that the community can enjoy,” said Scotts Valley Mayor Derek Timm.

The city also hoping that the development will house 300 new homes, 75 of which are designated to be “affordable housing.”

“You’re going to see not only market-rate housing and affordable housing, it’s all going to be together in that downtown area,” said Timm.

The project is expected to be between 20,000 to 40,000 square feet of retail and dining space, with an additional two community plazas for gatherings and events.

The city of Scotts Valley saying that they are currently shopping for a developer, but are excited to welcome the community to a groundbreaking ceremony once one is chosen.

People interested in weighing in on the future of Scotts Valley’s Town Center are encouraged to attend public meetings scheduled for the fall, stay up-to-date with council agenda items and visit ScottsValley.gov/TownCenter for updates.

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Fraud officials are reminding older adults to ‘not engage’ as scam cases rise

Kendall Flynn

PALM DESERT, Calif (KESQ) – Coachella Valley residents are continuously facing scams through phone calls, texts, emails and more. Now organizations are hoping to bring necessary education to the community to prevent money loss or other damages.

Assemblymember Greg Wallis partnered with the Desert Recreation District to host a Senior Scam Awareness Seminar at the Palm Desert Community Center. Resident told News Channel 3, it was helpful and they think there needs to be more scam awareness events.

The Department of Financial Protection and Innovation says anyone experiencing fraud should contact these sources:

DFPI at www.dfpi.ca.gov or call toll free 866-275-2677

File a complaint at www.dfpi.ca.gov/file-a-complaint

Report it to your local law enforcement

Report scams/fraud to Federal Trade Commission

www.reportfraud.ftc.gov

Cyber/Internet Crime – Federal Bureau of Investigation

www.ic3.gov

Stay with News Channel 3 to hear from residents on how scams have impacted them, and what officials are advising them to do.

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El Paseo construction reaches milestone, as crews work to complete project this fall

Tori King

PALM DESERT, Calif. (KESQ)– Construction along El Paseo continues, as the project reaches a new milestone. This week, both sides of the road are back open from the 74 to Portola.

The City of Palm Desert has most recently completed the third phase of the El Paseo Street Rehabilitation Project. This phase included improvements to the westbound lanes, north side of El Paseo between San Pablo Avenue and Portola Avenue.

Immediately following completion of the north side, crews shifted the traffic control to the eastbound lanes, south side of El Paseo, between San Pablo Avenue and Portola Avenue. Crews are now working on pavement removal and asphalt installation for this segment, with work scheduled to take place through August.

The final phase will begin in September. Intersections at Portola and San Pablo will be done at night in September, and mid-block crossings will be added after all of the paving is complete.

For updates on the project click here.

News Channel 3’s Tori King is speaking with the city about this final phase, see her coverage at 4, 5, and 6.

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End of shift for the Vietnam Huey helicopter based in Santa Barbara

John Palminteri

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. –  The very visible reminder of the Vietnam War in Santa Barbara, a Huey helicopter, is now gone after about 30 years.

The local Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA) Chapter 218 tried to find a permanent site for the helicopter, as is required to keep it, and not have it only on a trailer, but that was unsuccessful.   

The group looked at the Santa Barbara Airport, the Santa Maria Airport, Vandenberg Space Force Base and Pt. Mugu as locations. 

Now it is going to the Chico Air Museum in Northern California which has several military aircraft.  Officially it is a Bell Helicopter UH-1, but it is called a Huey.

The Big Red Crane Company from Carpinteria assisted in moving the chopper from its old trailer to another one where it was secured and sent on its way Wednesday morning.   

It had been stored at the Armory Yard near Santa Barbara High School.

The helicopter was well known in the area and when it was on display, the public could see it up close and even sit inside. It has been around since the 1990’s.

It is an Army helicopter and saw active duty in war zones.

Judy Roberson was on hand for the farewell ceremony. Her late husband Jerry made it happen to get the chopper here.

Roberson said, “it was really important for him to have as many people as possible recognize and have a feeling about what the guys went through.”

Peter Bie the Vietnam Veterans Chapter 218 President said, “it has allowed Vietnam Veterans to visit a very iconic piece of their war to sit on the side , sit in the drivers seat and reach up and touch it.”

It’s last public appearance was in May at an Armed Forces Appreciation Day in Santa Barbara.

Bie said it is, “something that is so representative of a war that happened 50 years ago.”

Roberson brought some of her husband’s ashes to sprinkle inside the chopper before the side door was officially closed for the transport trip to Chico.

Bie said it served the area well while it was here. “Folks probably saw it in the 4th of July or the typical Veteran’s Day parades. And then we were at car shows. We were invited to come up to Santa Barbara City College.  It’s been up to the North County. I think we even took it down to Carpinteria a few times.”

Roberson also recalls it in parades, “up and down State Street.” It was a spectacular site with its size in the heart of the downtown business district which no longer has any parades on State Street.

On its journey at events, Roberson said, “there were a couple of guys that  recognized they were able to determine they were actually on that (chopper.)”

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Sex offender accused of having AI-generated child porn

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A registered sex offender has been charged with a felony after he allegedly kept child pornography on his cellphone that was generated by artificial intelligence.

Charles Hooton, 63, of Columbia, was charged with possessing child porn. He is being held at the Boone County Jail without bond. An initial court appearance was held Wednesday afternoon.

The probable cause statement says police were called on May 18 about a report of Hooton having child porn after a woman saw a number of images while using his cellphone.

Hooton spoke with police on July 24 and let them go through his phone, court documents say. He allegedly admitted to using an AI app to generate the explicit images, the statement says. Police wrote that more than 130 AI-generated images were found on Hooton’s phone.

“Any time you possess more than 20 images, it’s a felony that comes with a maximum punishment of 15 years in prison,” said Elizabeth Weaver, Boone County Assistant Prosecutor.

Weaver tells ABC 17 News while the pornographic material may be artificial, the people in the photos are real.

“The reality is each time artificial intelligence generates a new item of child sexual abuse media it is re- victimizing those who have been used and taken advantage of in order to create the original images,” Weaver said.

Hooton’s web history also included several websites that had “teen,” “boy” and other related phrases in the name, court documents say.

Court documents and the Missouri sex offender registry say Hooton was convicted of second-degree statutory sodomy 25 years ago.

The Executive Director for Missouri’s Network Against Child Abuse Jessica Seitz told ABC 17 News artificial intelligence is the latest hurdle in their fight.

“The use of AI through an app to create CSAM? We don’t have great data on that yet because, we’re just trying to catch up with how we’re tracking the use of technology,” Seitz said.

Seitz believes prevention is in education of both adults and children.

“The best they can do on the prevention side is to try to discourage from your images being out there in public as much as possible. You can’t be sure what those images, once they’re public, you can’t be sure what’s going to be done with them,” Seitz said.

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Oregon jobless rate reaches 5%, highest in four years; state lost 11,000 jobs in two months, nearly 25,000 in past year

Barney Lerten

(Update: State economist says highest rate in four years, chart)

SALEM, Ore. (KTVZ) — Oregon’s jobless rate rose to 5% in July, the highest in four years, as its seasonally adjusted nonfarm payroll employment declined by 2,700 jobs in July after a revised loss of 8,600 jobs in June, the Oregon Employment Department reported Wednesday.

State Economist David Cooke told KTVZ News the last time Oregon’s jobless rate was at 5% was in July of 2021, as it declined from the peak of 13.7% seen in April 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic’s economic impacts.

You can review the unemployment rate fluctuations at this chart.

Here’s Wednesday’s full report from the agency:

July’s losses were largest in financial activities (-2,700 jobs); professional and business services (-1,400); and health care and social assistance (-1,100). Gains were largest in construction (+2,900 jobs) and transportation, warehousing, and utilities (+800).

Construction employed 112,700 in July, rebounding from its relatively weak prior two months, but landing well below its average level of 117,500 jobs during the prior two years.

Professional and business services has been on a declining trend since early 2023. Accounting for 254,100 jobs in July, it is down 14,800 jobs, or 5.5%, since its peak employment in March 2023. Each of its three component industries dropped by a similar percentage during that period.

Newly revised numbers for this year show lower employment levels than previously estimated for most industries. Since July 2024, Oregon’s total nonfarm payroll employment dropped 24,600 jobs, or -1.2%. Manufacturing lost 9,400 jobs, or 5.0%.

Each of these industries cut between 3% and 4%: information, private education, wholesale trade, financial activities, and construction. In that time, only two major industries expanded: health care and social assistance (+9,800 jobs, or 3.2%) and leisure and hospitality (+2,000 jobs, or 1.0%).

Oregon’s unemployment rate was 5.0% in July and 4.9% in June, after rising gradually over the past year from 4.2% in July 2024. Oregon’s 5.0% unemployment rate was 1.4 percentage points higher than the recent low of 3.6% during spring 2023. The U.S. unemployment rate was 4.1% in June and 4.2% in July.

Next Press Releases

The Oregon Employment Department plans to release the July county and metropolitan area unemployment rates on Tuesday, Aug. 19, and the next statewide unemployment rate and employment survey data for August on Wednesday, Sept. 17.

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DHSS: Person diagnosed with ‘brain-eating’ infection may have been at Lake of the Ozarks

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services claims someone who contracted a rare brain infection may have been water skiing at the Lake of the Ozarks.

A Wednesday press release from the DHSS says a Missouri resident has a laboratory-confirmed infection of Naegleria fowleri, which is a microscopic single-celled free-living ameba that can cause an infection called primary amebic meningoencephalitis, also known as “brain-eating” infection. 

“You can think of it as a one-celled animal that lives, in this case, freshwater. As far as symptoms we’re really concerned about when that amoeba gets, all the way up the sinuses and into the brain,” Nathan Koffarnus, an Epidemiologist at DHSS, told ABC 17 News. “It gets pretty severe pretty quickly.”  

Fewer than 10 people in the United States contract it each year, the release says.

“In the United States, in the past 62 years, it’s averaged under three cases a year. So it’s so not common. But, this is the time of year that we are more concerned with warm weather, warm water, so we want people to take appropriate precautions if they’re using recreational freshwater,” Koffarnus said. 

The release does not say where in the state the patient is from. They are being treated in an intensive care unit, the release says.

“The source of the patient’s exposure is currently being investigated by public health officials. While not confirmed, preliminary information implies the patient may have been water skiing at the Lake of the Ozarks days prior to becoming ill,” the release says. “Recreational water users should assume that Naegleria fowleri is present in warm freshwater across the United States; however, infection remains very rare.”

While infections are rare, Naegleria fowleri infections only have a 5% survival rate, according to the National Library of Medicine. From 1962-2018, there were 381 reported cases across 33 countries. While the CDC does have recommended treatment, Koffarnus says that the lack of cases has made it difficult to treat. 

“One of the things that goes along with it being a less common illness, I’d say, is that there’s less opportunity to test some of those drug regimens. So there have been some people that have survived this,” Kaoffarnus said. “The hope is that as they get a chance to test out some of these experimental drugs and regimens, that maybe it’ll be more survivable in the future.” 

Naegleria fowleri can be found in any type of freshwater, but are more prominent in warm water. Temperatures above 86 degrees Fahrenheit create a favorable environment for the amoeba, with survival and infection being impossible during the winter. 

“We could probably find it in any freshwater source. It’s, you know, it’s naturally occurring. They do really like warm water, so they reproduce. There’s more of them present this time of year when the water is warm,” Koffarnus said. “Less common in, say, manmade sources. So if we were talking about a pool or a water park or something like that, they should really only be there if there’s a failure of the chlorination system.” 

Symptoms include severe headache, fever, nausea, vomiting, stiff neck, seizures, altered mental status, and hallucinations, with symptoms occurring one to nine days after exposure. 

“One of the problems is by the time we find out about this illness,  people are usually in a coma,” Koffarnus said. 

The release calls the infection a “rare occurrence,” but gives tips on how to avoid it, including:

Holding your nose shut, using nose clips, or keeping your head above water when taking part in activities in bodies of warm freshwater, especially if you jump or dive into the water.

Avoid putting your head under the water in hot springs and other untreated thermal waters.

Avoid water-related activities in warm freshwater during periods of high-water temperature.

Avoid digging in, or stirring up, the sediment while taking part in water-related activities in shallow, warm freshwater areas. Naegleria fowleri amebas are more likely to live in sediment at the bottom of lakes, ponds and rivers.

Another case was confirmed in the US last month in South Carolina. The release says between 1962-2024, 167 cases of PAM were reported around the country.

“Tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of people that, use Missouri Lakes, streams, rivers during the summer,” Koffarnus said. “Again, this is only the third ever known infection.”

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City of El Centro announces overnight road closure on Main Street

Dillon Fuhrman

EL CENTRO, Calif. (KYMA, KECY) – The City of El Centro says Main Street, between 11th and 12th Street, will be closed to all traffic.

According to a press release, the closure starts at 9:00 p.m. Thursday and will go until Friday at 5:00 a.m.

Courtesy: Google Maps

The City says it is “necessary to support construction” for their new Police Headquarters project.

If anyone has any questions, call the City of El Centro Engineering Division at (760) 337-5182.

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