‘Adopt A Classroom:’ Dora Erickson Elementary classrooms get a boost from Wackerli Subaru

Maile Sipraseuth

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Wackerli Subaru in Idaho Falls is continuing its partnership with Adopt a Classroom for the fifth year. This year, they have adopted 20 classrooms at Dora Erickson Elementary School as a part of the national Subaru loves learning initiative.

“Subaru and AdoptAClassroom.org have been doing this for a number of years. Now we’re looking at somewhere around 950,000 students that have been served. We’ve done this here for the last three years and have really enjoyed working with this school,” said Wackerli Subaru Love Promise Coordinator Chad Mahoney.

Teachers received boxes full of school supplies along with five hundred dollars to spend for their classroom. 

“It really helps because it’s hard for parents to get those extra things sometimes for basic things like Kleenex. Sometimes it’s so it’s nice to have that little extra to be able to help and not have to spend our own money like we would usually do,” said 5th grade teacher Michelle Kurn.

For more information, visit Adoptaclassroom.org.

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West Fork Fire near West Yellowstone grows to 300 acres

News Team

WEST YELLOWSTONE, Montana (KIFI) — The West Fork Fire, located northwest of West Yellowstone and Hebgen Lake, has grown to nearly 300 acres since it started on Tuesday, August 19. While it is not currently threatening Big Sky, crews with the Custer Gallatin National Forest are asking the public for cooperation as fire crews work to contain the blaze.

Courtesy: Custer Gallatin National Forest

The National Weather Service has issued a Red Flag Warning for Gallatin County, which remains in effect until 10 p.m. tonight. The warning, indicating high fire danger, comes as multiple resources have been deployed to assist with fire containment efforts.

Officials are urging the public to cooperate with fire crews to ensure their safety and the success of firefighting operations. Residents and visitors are asked to refrain from flying drones in the area, as “this will cause all firefighting aircraft to be grounded immediately.” The public is also advised to stay away from aviation working at Hebgen Lake.

While no evacuations have been ordered, Custer Gallatin National Forest is expected to issue closures for trails and roads within the fire area later today. Due to the ongoing fire and the Red Flag Warning, the public is advised to stay away from the Taylor Fork and Beaver Creek areas until further notice.

For alerts on the latest updates on closures and the fire’s impact, click HERE.

ORIGINAL:

WEST YELLOWSTONE, Montana (KIFI) — Fire crews in Montana are responding to an active vegetation fire northwest of West Yellowstone and Hebgen Lake. The fire has been dubbed the West Fork Fire and has grown to around 50 acres, according to Watch Duty.

Video sent in by Stephen Wilkinson shows a large column of smoke that is reportedly visible from the West Yellowstone Airport. The cause of the fire has not yet been determined.

This is a developing story. Local News 8 will provide additional updates as more information becomes available.

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Santa Barbara City Council Responds to Grand Jury E-Bike report

Tracy Lehr

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The Santa Barbara City Council responded to a Santa Barbara County Grand Jury’s 15 page report entitled “E-Bikes In Santa Barbara: What Will It Take to Make Them Safe?”

The report was issued in June and required a response within 90 days.

Councilmembers agreed with their staff recommendation to send a letter from Mayor Randy Rowse to the Santa Barbara County Grand Jury and Presiding Judge Patricia Kelly.

The Grand Jury took up the issue following social media posts about collisions and injuries the underscored complaints.

Most of the injuries tallies by the Grand Jury were the riders, but passengers and pedestrians have been hurt.

The numbers may be under-reported depending on whether officers are called to an accident.

The report stated the proliferation of e-bikes gave the issue a sense of urgency.

Santa Barbara city and council has paths for cyclists that now share the road with the faster moving e-bikes.

The reports recommended police focus on high-traffic areas that will achieve high visibility by Dec. 1.

The city council agreed that education, enforcement and community collaboration are essential to e-bike safety.

The city has already adopted an e-bike ordinance giving officers discretion while responding to unsafe behavior.

Officers recenty towed a so-called ‘pocket bike’ that was not street legal.

Following the Santa Barbara City Council meeting Mayor Rowse talking about enforcement.

“There are a zillion ideas but ordinances don’t always solve a problem because you can say these are the rules, but if you don’t enforce them what have you done, so the enforcement piece is really important.” 

Rowse has witnessed the increase in e-bike riders locally.

“The e-bike thing really blew up out of almost nowhere, it went from as few to now everybody’s got them and they are faster than they are supposed to be, ans all that kind of stuff, so we are still wrestling with the problem for now,” said Rowse, “but we had to respond to the grand jury and at least say we are working on things which we are and working on methods of enforcement or citation or perhaps even confiscation.”

The mayor shared an anecdote saying he was almost struck by an e-bike during an interview about the issue with News Channel reporter John Palminteri, not far from city hall.

At the farmers market on Tuesday e-bike riders and cyclists appeared to be on their best behavior.

People could see them walking their e-bikes on the sidewalk and riding them in areas where pedestrians were not in their path.

The city said the police department will be strategically deploying officers and will be giving the council quarterly reports.

The city has already implemented or parcially implemented some of the Grand Jury suggestions.

In conclusion, the city thanked the Grand Jury and said it “remains committed to supporting the safe integration of e-bikes into our transportation system.”

The city plans to share reports with the Santa Barbara Fire and Police Commission and share submitted reports on its website at https://docs.santabarbaraca.gov

The Santa Barbara City Council’s response will be posted on the grand jury’s website at https://sbcgj.org

The Latest Breaking News, Weather Alerts, Sports and More Anytime On Our Mobile Apps. Keep Up With the Latest Articles by Signing Up for the News Channel 3-12 Newsletter.

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Summer draws to a close in Jefferson County

Maile Sipraseuth

 JEFFERSON COUNTY — With school starting back up in just a few days, many parents are taking the kids out of the house and into the water for one last splash before they dive into their studies.

With temperatures reaching 97 degrees, dozens of families gathered at the Jefferson County lake in Rigby and made sure to get every last drop out of summer.

“It is the hottest day this week. We’ve got school starting next week, so we’re just trying to squeeze in every little bit of summer that we can. It’s not windy here today, which is pretty rare. This is one of our favorite spots to come to in the summertime,” BreAnn Melicharek, a lake visitor said.

The Jefferson County Lake closes mid-October, so it’s not too late to enjoy the rest of the season. 

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Feline overload: More than 100 cats are up for adoption at the Humane Society of the Ochocos

Spencer Sacks

 BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — A recent large-scale cat rescue has left nearly 100 cats up for adoption in Prineville.

The Humane Society of the Ochocos stepped forward to care for the cats after their owner moved out of the state. 

These adorable feline friends are mostly barn and outdoor cats.

Volunteers originally thought there were only about 30, but after days of trapping, the number quickly surpassed 100.

Rosi Gray, a volunteer with the Humane Society, told our media partners at the Prineville Review:

“We have absorbed 100 cats. We’re working really hard to get them into barn homes. We always need ranches, farms, who need ‘cat workers,’ I call them, who take care of the mice population. We need homes for these cats.”

 While these cats are up for adoption at no charge, the shelter still bears the costs of spaying and neutering surgeries, vaccinations, and medical treatments. 

The Humane Society asks for donations to the shelter, and to consider adopting one or more of these wonderful cats.

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Trump’s proposal to end mail-in voting could disrupt Missouri elections, county clerk says

Erika McGuire

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

President Donald Trump announced Monday he wants to change the shape of elections in the United States and eliminate mail-in voting and voting machines.

In a post on Truth Social the president said he would “lead a movement” to get rid of mail-in ballots, and get rid of voting machines. Trump made claims in his post about the accuracy of mail-in ballots and accused the process of being suspect to voter fraud, which are part of the dialogue and conspiracies he has commonly reiterated since his 2020 election loss to Joe Biden.

Trump wrote he will sign an executive order ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, however that could face many legal challenges.

University of Missouri Political Science Professor Charles Zug said eliminating mail-in voting would be a long and complicated process, with only two possible options.

“To make mail-in voting illegal, that could be legal through various procedures so the Congress could pass a law making it illegal, that’s perfectly within the Constitution,” Zug said. “Or all the state legislatures could pass laws,”

However, Zug said, because elections are run by state officials and not federal officials, there is no procedure for the president to eliminate mail-in voting and voting machines.

“The only way to try to get states to do stuff like this would be to order, like the Department of Justice, to prosecute states that don’t do it, ” Zug said, “That would immediately get opposed in courts because the president doesn’t have the authority to do that,”

Boone County Clerk Brianna Lennon said the president’s idea to end mail-in voting would have a negative outcome for the county. She said military members overseas and those who have a disability or illness would feel the effects the most.

“Those individuals would have a very tough time exercising their right to vote, so it would have a real impact on groups of voters disproportionately,” Lennon said. “Even though generally Missouri is not a wide open vote by mail state, the voting equipment would be incredibly disruptive to our elections,”

According to Lennon, in the November 2024 election, about 3,900 of the 30,000 absentees ballots cast were done so by mail. That included including about 360 military and overseas voters. The total turnout of the election was 68%.

In the November 2022 election, the first election with no-excuse in-person absentee voting was available, Lennon said of the 8,600 absentee votes that were cast, more than1,900 absentee voters voted by mail, including about 115 military and overseas voters. The total turnout for the election was 49%.

In the November 2024 election, Callaway County had 885 mail-in votes, according to Callaway County Clerk Rhonda Miller. For the November 2022 election Callaway County received 1,474 mail-in ballots, according to Miller.

Lennon said the elimination of both voting tools would be detrimental to the overall election process.

“I don’t know how we would get results on the same day. I don’t know how we would get results within the two-week certification period if we had to do hand counting,” Lennon said.

Lennon added, there are federal and state ballot questions and election workers are not just counting one ballot at a time, it overall comes down to counting the numbers of races.

“Not only is the counting itself something that is better to be streamlined through tabulators and then checked after, but the physical manpower that it would take to have people count all of those ballots, and be alert enough and awake enough and not exhausted at the end of working at a polling place in a 17-hour day would be extremely challenging,” Lennon said.

According to Lennon, Boone County uses 100 voting machines supplied by Election Systems and Software. She said each tabulator is tested before election day by a bipartisan team, which runs a stack of test ballots to confirm the results match exactly what is expected. This process ensures the machines count votes the way voters intended and that ballots are recorded accurately.

“Then we have Election Day, where we make sure that the bipartisan teams of election judges are making sure there’s no interference, that they are logging any sort of anomalies,” Lennon said. “If anything were to happen they bring those results back to our office on election night but even then, that is not the end of when we are verifying how the results are calculated.,”

Those results are called “unofficial results” and those results go through the certification process.

“We take a randomly drawn 5% of our precincts, and we have a bipartisan team that comes in and hand counts those ballots from those 5% precincts. Then they check those directly against what the tabulator said on Election Night,” Lennon said. “And if those don’t match then we would look at to why that didn’t match.”

Lennon said during her seven years of being the Boone County Clerk, those results have always matched.

When a voter requests an absentee ballot either in-person or by mail, Lennon says, the application is tied to that voter’s record. When a mail-in ballot goes out to a voter and the voter casts it, it is tracked.

“When we receive it, it is tied back to the voters record. It is batched and secured in a locked ballot box in our locked vault until they are processed and then county on election night,” Lennon said.

Mail-in and in-person absentee ballots are also processed through the tabulator.

Lennon said the tabulators are kept in a secure warehouse under lock and key. She added that bipartisan teams ensure the machines are not tampered with, using tamper-evident tape and plastic seals for extra protection.

Lennon said she has never seen evidence of fraud in Boone County elections.

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Friends of the Desert Mountains begin Rosa Fire recovery

Shay Lawson

PALM DESERT, Calif. (KESQ)  – Friends of the Desert Mountains (Friends) said recovery will take time after the Rosa Fire burned 422 acres of conserved land in upper Palm Canyon earlier this month.

“We have multiple acres of land up in the Pinyon area,” Friends’ Executive Director Tammy Martin said. “The key area that really affected us was the trail. The first part of the Palm Canyon trail up there.”

Now, she said the non-profit organization is beginning recovery efforts.

“We are going to see about doing a restoration plan up there with many of our partners here in the Coachella Valley,” Martin said.

Stay with News Channel 3 for the organization’s message to the community at 10 and 11 p.m.

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Two arrested in connection with the murder of Cathedral City teen

Jesus Reyes

CATHEDRAL CITY, Calif. (KESQ) – Two men were arrested in connection with the shooting death of a 13-year-old last week in Cathedral City.

Police announced Tuesday that an 18-year-old and a 19-year-old were arrested on Monday. According to jail records, both suspects were arrested in San Diego. Both are currently being held on $1 million bail.

Both suspects are expected to appear in court in Indio on Thursday.

The shooting happened Wednesday night on Whispering Palms Trail and Mission Indian Trail. Police said a group of teens in that area had a confrontation with some people in a vehicle, and someone in the vehicle shot at the victim, identified as 13-year-old Alan Martinez, also known as Reuben.

Martinez was pronounced dead at the scene.

A vigil was held in his honor at the scene of the shooting.

A GoFundMe has been set up to help pay for funeral expenses.

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Driver alert: punctured water line disrupts traffic near Abbott and Harkins

Katie Nicora

SALINAS, Calif. (KION-TV) — The City of Salinas said that a water line was punctured at Abbott and Harkins roads that has been disrupting traffic in that area.

Although there are no current road closures, the city is asking drivers to be careful when traveling through the area.

We are working to learn the cause and when the issue will be resolved.

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Jefferson City Center of Hope hopes to take steps toward preventing, addressing homelessness

Nia Hinson

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

Jefferson City’s Center of Hope is expanding its services to help better address homelessness in the city.

The year-round homeless shelter– located on Jefferson Street– opened a new homeless resource center. The center now allows anyone to stop into the center and gain access to resources and support.

“Our caseworkers want to meet with people and see how we can help them,” Major Chris Clarke said. “If there’s anyone who is homeless or who’s facing homelessness, may be facing eviction, we’re here for them and we want to meet with them.”

Clarke said the city started noticing the increased need in services after the 2019 tornado and after the COVID-19 pandemic.

“There’s people who are just struggling and sometimes, there’s a lot of people who are just one paycheck away from being homeless,” Clarke said.

Walk-ins will be available 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday, according to a news release. Free meals will also be available to anyone in the community at 12:30 and 5:30 p.m.

The center has two case workers, one of which is Kathy Holliday. Holliday said she’s experienced first-hand the toll homelessness can take on a family.

“There’s a lot of children out in the community that are sleeping in cars, hotel rooms, couch surfing…they don’t know where their head’s going to lay that night,” Holliday said.

The center as is, has space for two families, but currently houses four due to the increased need in the community. Holliday said that lack of space becomes problematic for children who have to share bathrooms, especially when it comes to getting ready for school.

Currently, there are nine children in the shelter, meaning nine children share one bathroom. Holliday said there is the need to house a fifth family, but the lack of bathroom space wont allow for it.

That’s where an expansion could help.

The shelter currently operates as a 31-bed facility, but is looking to expand that to 62 beds. They plan to officially break ground on renovations in January, according to Clarke.

Part of the renovations include adding a new wing to the building, designing rooms specifically for families with children that would also give them their own bathrooms. The expansion will create 20 additional beds. Currently, about one third of their residents are children.

Holliday said the expansion could also lead to an increase in trust between residents staying at the shelter and case workers. That, in turn, can also help lead to residents’ goals being reached.

“We will just be able to give them a place to call home so they know where they’re coming to and then that makes it so much easier to do anything else,” Holliday said. “If we can give them the safety, then it helps to give them safety and surety, then it helps them be able to focus on what they need.”

The shelter also plans to add beds to the mens and women’s side of the center.

Scott Johnston, with the Housing the Community Jefferson City, said the need for expanding services is always critical.

“I think as long as we’re turning away people and people are looking for a place to stay at night, it’s really important for the community,” Johnston said.

Johnston told ABC 17 News in June, it is looking for property in Jefferson City to have a one-stop hub for homeless resources. He said on Tuesday they did not have any leads on a specific property.

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