Bishop Diego sweeps first Athlete of the Week awards at Santa Barbara Round Table luncheon

Mike Klan

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The Bishop Diego Cardinals soar into a new school year by sweeping Athlete of the Week honors at the Santa Barbara Athletic Round Table luncheon at Harry’s.

The Female Athlete of the Week is senior volleyball player Sophie Otte and the Male Athlete of the Week is senior quarterback Tua Rojas.

Otte led the Cardinals to a rare win over Santa Barbara High School and the Cardinals finished off the week by taking second place in the Silver Division in their own Cardinal Classic tournament.

The Cardinals beat the Dons for the first time since 1975 as Otte had 16 kills, three blocks and three digs in a four-set victory.

Rojas threw three touchdown passes and ran for another score in the Cardinals wild 42-40 season-opening win at Lancaster.

He completed 15-of-21 passes for 258 yards.

Click here to follow the original article.

Palm Springs International Airport hosting 5th Annual Job Fair

Cynthia White

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – Palm Springs International Airport (PSP) and its partners are getting ready for the Coachella Valley’s busy season.

PSP is hosting its 5th Annual Job Fair on Tuesday, August 26th, reviewing resumes and offering interviews and immediate hires for more than 200 positions in airline, concessions, security, parking, and more.

The event will run from 10:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. at the Palm Springs Convention Center, located at 277 N. Avenida Caballeros in Palm Springs.

More than a dozen airport employers will be there looking to fill jobs that include:

Transportation Security Officers

Ramp Agents

Customer Service Representatives

Retail and Sales Associates

Bartenders, Servers, and Hosts

Utility Workers

Taxi Drivers

and many other jobs

Employers looking for candidates suggest those seeking a position at PSP dress professionally, bring plenty of copies of resumes, and be ready to interview.

PSP Assistant Airport Director Victoria Carpenter says, “PSP is buzzing with opportunities, and we’re eager to fill many open positions this season. The airport is a unique and exciting place to work – we invite job seekers to learn more about how they can be part of the action.”

To learn more, visit flypsp.com/business/careers.

Click here to follow the original article.

Flooding hits Cathedral City mobile home park

Shay Lawson

CATHEDRAL CITY, Calif. (KESQ)  – Heavy rain turning into heavy worries for some residents at Canyon Mobile Home Community.

Residents told News Channel 3’s Shay Lawson their neighborhood has faced flooding before, and that the storm was a reminder of just how vulnerable their homes can be.

At 10 and 11 p.m. hear from neighbors now pushing for change.

Click here to follow the original article.

At Doherty high school it’s “We before Me”

Rob Namnoum

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — At Doherty High School. It’s We before Me.

“It’s a team first and individual second. And we’re working hard to establish that. I think we’re doing a good job with that. You won’t see anybody running around wearing number one for Doherty High School this year because the team is number one,” says Doherty head coach Mike Campbell.

Mike Campbell is the new head honcho this season for Doherty. And his players really love being coached up, “I like his coaching style, it’s old school. It’s not so soft,” says Doherty linebacker, Nate Bettencourt.

Gavin Gilbert adds, “It’s like drastically different, to be honest. We’re a lot more connected as a team. I feel like this year, because of the coaching staff and everybody so new, it’s a fresh start.”

It’s a fresh start with a lot of new faces, “Just trying to piece it all together and make it as comfortable as we can, for young players who are typically pretty uncomfortable on Friday night,” says Campbell. 

The senior class is doing their part to help out the younger players, “Coaches aren’t the only coaches. Seniors, they gotta give them a little bit of ice from time to time when coaches are talking to another player or something. We have a lot of experience. We could teach up the little guys to let them know what we know,” says Bettencourt.

The seniors also know that they only have a little time left at Doherty, and they want to leave the program in good hands.

“Even though we’re leaving this school…we want to remember it as a good school. We’re trying to leave them a great opportunity for if not this year, next year,” says Gilbert.

Click here to follow the original article.

Richland man hurt after crash on I-44

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 35-year-old man from Pulaski County was seriously hurt on Monday afternoon in a crash on Interstate 44.

Missouri State Highway Patrol said the crash happened at 2:19 p.m. on I-44 eastbound at mile marker 154.8 in Pulaski County.

The crash report states the driver, a 35-year-old man from Richland, was in a 2006 Chevrolet Impala when he went off the side of the road, went back on before going off the left side. The car hit a median cable barrier and flipped over.

The driver was taken to Mercy Springfield by helicopter with serious injuries.

It is unknown if the driver was wearing a seat belt, according to the report.

Click here to follow the original article.

First human case of screwworm adds to concerns over livestock and beef costs

Mitchell Kaminski

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ) 

The first reported case of a flesh-eating parasite in a human was confirmed by the U.S Department of Health and Human Services on Monday. 

The Maryland resident who was diagnosed has recovered from the infection. According to HHS, a person who traveled to El Salvador was diagnosed with New World screwworm, a species of parasitic flies that feed on live tissue. The fly gets its name from the way that maggots screw themselves into animal tissue with their sharp hooks. 

“The screwworm is a blue-green blowfly. It’s a bit bigger than a housefly,” Max Scott, a professor of Entomology and Plant Pathology at North Carolina State, told the Associated Press through ABC News. “It gets its common name, a screwworm, named after the maggot stage because it’s found in the sort of infested animals, and the screwworm looks like it’s sort of screwing itself into the flesh as they’re eating the animal.”

The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services told ABC 17 News that it has been in contact with the CDC, but that the health risk to the general public is “very low”. While there have not been any human cases reported in Missouri, the New World screwworm could have an impact on beef prices, which have already hit record highs.  

Countries across Central America and Mexico are grappling with a surge of livestock infections caused by the parasitic screwworm, which tends to be more prevalent in poor rural areas in South America. 

After a case of New World screwworm was confirmed about 370 miles south of the U.S.–Mexico border in July, U.S.  Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins ordered the closure of southern ports of entry to livestock trade. The northward detection came just two months after cases were reported less than 700 miles from the U.S. border, which had already prompted the shutdown of ports to Mexican cattle, bison, and horses in May. 

“[Mexico] supplies maybe about 5% of the animals that are used here for the domestic beef production.  So that’s a shock that maybe a lot of people in the market already see and they think about.” Wyatt Thompson, a University of Missouri Professor of Agriculture and Applied Economics, said.  “The questions are when those bans on live imports might stop, if at all and those live cattle keep coming across the border again, and maybe alleviate some of the supply pressures, given that we have low coverage right now.”  

Wesley Tucker, a livestock economist and field specialist at the University of Missouri, says ranchers protect their livestock from parasites with increased management and vigilance. Typically, that means inspecting animals for open wounds that could attract pests. If problems are found, Tucker says producers must act quickly to prevent the spread of infection.

“If screw worms were to migrate into the U.S., it would impact how ranchers perform normal animal husbandry practices, such as when to calve, when to give vaccinations or castrate animals. Each of these practices creates an open mound which could be a source of infection by the fly,” Tucker explained.

“Therefore, an outbreak here in the U.S. could have impacts on how producers raise cattle and would greatly increase the labor required.  Producers must increase their efforts for fly control to protect their animals.  With the age of the average rancher increasing it this could have impacts upon our industry and beef produced in the coming years.”

Missouri farmers are already feeling the squeeze due to drought, inflation, and shrinking cattle herds. This, mixed with a high demand for beef, has fueled high prices.  Thompson says that the outbreak in Mexico could reduce U.S exports, which also affects prices. 

“The absence of live cattle imports certainly does have upward price pressure,  and I think it might be built into the prices we see now, because that’s already happening to an extent,” Thompson explained. “[If] the border is reopened and imports resumed,  then you’d imagine some of the price pressure would be alleviated and maybe the price wouldn’t go as high as they might otherwise. But a lot of the story of the high prices is other things going on as well.” 

In Panama, livestock infections jumped from just 25 cases a year to more than 6,500 in 2023, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The parasite has now spread into seven other Central American countries, breaking through a barrier that had kept it locked in South America for decades.

The USDA says screwworm has not been found in U.S. livestock. The parasite was wiped out in the U.S in the 1960s, after scientists released sterilized male flies that mated with females but produced no offspring, eventually wiping out the population.

However, the USDA acknowledged in a press release that the spread in neighboring states is a “now only a threat to  our ranching community, but is also a threat to our food supply and our national security.” 

In an August 15th press release, the USDA outlined several new efforts. They include working with the Army Corps of Engineers to build a facility capable of producing up to 300 million sterile flies, which will operate alongside plants in Panama and Mexico. The plan also calls for mounted patrols and detector dogs to monitor wildlife crossings at the border, and up to $100 million in funding for new technology to speed up sterile fly production.

Earlier this month, the FDA also granted an Emergency Use Authorization for animal drugs to help treat or prevent screwworm infections.

Click here to follow the original article.

MU students call new Mizzou football ticket claim process ‘inconvenient’

Nia Hinson

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

While the Mizzou Tigers look to kick off the start of the 2025-26 season on Thursday against Central Arkansas, some students are still hoping for a ticket. Much of that stress is thanks to a new ticket claim process Mizzou Athletics rolled out this year, students say.

“I was just like sitting in class, checking the page and checking the page and waiting to get the tickets…it was not convenient at all,” University of Missouri Senior Ethan McGinnis said.

McGinnis is a student who considers himself fortunate enough to receive a ticket using the new process. Mizzou Athletics announced the new claims process in May. It allows current and incoming MU students to pay $200 for Zou passes, allowing them the opportunity to land tickets to all Mizzou regular-season events, including football and basketball.

It’s also a process that now requires students to wait in a digital queue to score a ticket.

“They told us you can get your ticket at 10:00, but I jumped in at like 9:35 and it’s already an hour wait, I don’t know why it opened before 10:00, but it wasn’t very cool,” McGinnis said.

McGinnis said he waited in the queue for roughly 1 hour and 45 minutes, all while having to constantly double-check the page from class to ensure he was still in line.

Others, like freshman Tahlula Habedank, say they had an even more difficult time securing a ticket.

“It was very stressful and it was lagging all the time and kicking you out,” Habedank said. “I think I waited almost two hours or 1 hour and 45 minutes and I got kicked out [of the digital queue] twice.”

In an email sent to ABC 17 News Monday evening, Mizzou Associate Athletics Director David Matter said the university was anticipating long waits in the digital queue due to the increased demand for tickets this year.

“We wish we could accommodate everyone who wants to see the Tigers in person this year, however, the number of seats in Memorial Stadium simply can’t meet the incredible interest we are seeing from students and fans,” Matter said.

Matter said students claimed all of the available allotted tickets within hours. Students who purchased a Zou Pass will have the same opportunity for the Sept. 6 rivalry game versus Kansas.

The university is utilizing the digital queue for the first time this season. Students say they had to claim tickets for basketball games, but never ran into issues landing a ticket to see a game at Memorial Stadium.

MU Junior Tyler Holder said his friend waited in the queue for roughly three hours, only to not land a ticket. While Holder was able to claim his after a nearly two-hour wait, his frustrations over the new system remain.

“I think that if you’re paying for tickets, you should probably get a ticket for no matter what. Especially the football games, it’s like so big here,” Holder said. “I think they definitely need to give it an update or figure something better out.”

Holder said he thinks much of the increased demand could be due to an influx of students, saying it’s become harder and harder as the years go on to score a ticket. Preliminary numbers released by the university on Monday show an uptick in first-year students, with 6,000 first-year students enrolled for the school year.

Mizzou will host Central Arkansas in a sold-out stadium at Faurot Field on Thursday. Kick-off is at 6:30 p.m.

Click here to follow the original article.

Woman seriously hurt after crash in Audrain County

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Two people were hurt after a crash in Audrian County on Monday.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report states the crash happened at 7:10 a.m. on Monday at Highway 54 and County Road 485.

The crash report states the crash involved three vehicles: a 2014 GMC Terrain, a 2015 Mercedes ML350 and a 2005 Dodge Caravan.

Troopers said an 89-year-old man from Martinsburg was driving when he hit the back of the GMC Terrain that was stopped for an uninvolved vehicle making a turn.

The man hit the 31-year-old woman from Vandalia and then continued and hit the back of the third vehicle, being driven by a 31-year-old from Vandalia.

The 34-year-old was taken to University Hospital with serious injuries. The 89-year-old man was taken to the VA Hospital in Columbia with minor injuries, according to the report.

All three people were wearing seat belts at the time of the crash.

Click here to follow the original article.

Sedalia police asking for public’s help after weekend theft

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Sedalia Police Department is asking for the public’s help after a contractor’s tool trailer was broken into over the weekend.

A release from the city states that tools were stolen from S&A Equipment & Builders at the North Central Sidewalk Project over the weekend.

The release states tools stolen included hand tools, a generator and other construction equipment.

“Every tool stolen represents another challenge to keeping this important project on track,” city staff said in the release. “We’re asking for the public’s help to recover these items and hold those responsible accountable.”

Along with the Sedalia Police Department, the Pettis County Crime Stoppers are asking for anyone with information to come forward.

Click here to follow the original article.

Blackfoot firefighters rescue person overcome by heat exhaustion while fighting brush fire

News Team

BLACKFOOT, Idaho (KIFI) — An unidentified individual was rescued by Blackfoot Fire Department crews on Saturday, August 23, after being found overcome by heat exhaustion near a brush fire.

Around 12:30 PM, crews were dispatched to the 1000 W area after reports of smoke and flames. Upon arrival, firefighters discovered a rapidly spreading brush fire that was threatening nearby trees, a stubble field, and a home.

As crews began to attack the blaze and call for additional resources, they found a person lying facedown in the brush, clearly “overcome by heat exhaustion, bordering on heat stroke.” Firefighters quickly redirected their hoselines to protect the individual and called an ambulance to the scene.

The ambulance crew was able to assist the person to their home, where they were assessed and able to cool off. Meanwhile, firefighters successfully contained the fire, preventing any further loss of property.

The Blackfoot Fire Department released a statement on Facebook expressing gratitude that the incident was mitigated successfully and that the individual is recovering well. They also issued a public reminder about the dangers of heat, urging residents to stay hydrated and take breaks when working outdoors.

“Pay attention to warning signs of heat exhaustion in yourselves and others,” states the post. “These signs include excessive sweating without replenishing fluids, dizziness and spotty vision, and in extreme cases, altered mental status and dry, flushed skin. If any of these symptoms occur, seek shade immediately and rehydrate while actively cooling!”

Blackfoot Fire officials also remind residents that a countywide burn ban is still in effect until September 28. No open burning is permitted during this time, with the exception of ringed campfires.

Click here to follow the original article.