The School Buzz: Cañon City High School hosts TradeSTART event inspiring students to join military trades

Josh Helmuth

The Fremont Economic Development Corporation sponsored a surprise TradeSTART event at Cañon City High School September 11. The goal? Inspire an entire future workforce to enter into a military trade that could provide a long and fulfilling career.

The event was 90 minutes long and impacted roughly 1,000 students. During that time, they remembered those lost on 9-11, a ceremony led by the CCHS Jr. ROTC color guard, followed by a Flight For Life helicopter landing, Dreamwood Homes building a tiny house and interactive activities geared towards trades in the military.

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Crook County Fair Board, Crooked River Roundup clash over contract terms 

Tracee Tuesday

PRINEVILLE, Ore. {KTVZ} — The Crook County Fair Board held its regularly scheduled meeting Monday night in Prineville. 

One of the big topics on the agenda was the fair’s contract with the Crooked River Roundup (CRR).  The CRR Board says they’re not happy with their current short-term contract. Their deal with the fair for the 2025 rodeo and race season was set at $25,000.  Doug Smith, CRR’s Race Chair, argued that they bring in major revenue to the fairgrounds — pointing to investments like $500,000 spent on a jockey room — and say the contract doesn’t reflect their role.  Here’s what CRR’s Board of Directors want:  

a 20-year contract that addresses key concerns, that includes flexibility to renegotiate project costs 

Rent tied to profits rather than automatic increases 

Help from Crook County with possible grandstand upgrades.  

They’d also like the fairgrounds to share some of the grant funding it receives for facility improvements. 

The Fair Board, however, says it needs profits to maintain the fairgrounds itself — things like upgraded bathrooms — and insists that changes should be made only within the current contract. Smith says that’s exactly the problem, calling the deal too strict and inflexible.  While the Fair Board acknowledged the CRR is a significant revenue source, however, at this time, they are only prepared to review the current contract and go from there. 

The Fair Board also decided to continue the discussion during a special public meeting scheduled for October 1st at 5:30 PM.   KTVZ News will be there to bring you the outcome.

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El Centro father accused of leaving toddler unattended in vehicle removes GPS monitor

Karina Bazarte

EL CENTRO, Calif. (KYMA) – The father accused of leaving his toddler unattended in a vehicle resulting in the child’s death in El Centro is now allowed to remove his GPS monitor.

37-year old Jose Hernandez, who is out on bond, had his pre-trial appearance Monday morning.

The Imperial County District Attorney’s Office says the pre-trial will most likely continue next month due to negotiations and findings still being reviewed.

During the court hearing, the judge granted the suspect permission to remove his GPS monitor.

“She made a finding that he was being compliant with his terms of supervision. He does not see him as a flight risk and also a danger in the community. Those are the two real things the judge is looking for, flight risk or if he is going to hurt someone he made that determination and decided to take it off,” said George Marquez, Imperial County District Attorney.

Hernandez is currently facing charges of involuntary manslaughter and child abuse resulting in death.Marquez has also added a special allegation of causing great bodily injury.

Hernandez is scheduled to be back in court next month.

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Yuma neighbor shares what he saw the night a teen was shot

Eduardo Morales

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – A neighbor shares what he saw the night Yuma police responded to a shooting where a teen was shot in the head.

Friday night, the Yuma Police Department (YPD) responded to a home on 17th Avenue and 19th Street, near the East Main Canal.

“I came outside it was just full of probably about 13 cop cars,” said Mateo Gonzalez, a neighbor to where the shooting took place.

YPD describes what they found.

“When officers arrived, they located a 14-year-old juvenile with a gunshot wound to the head in the living room of the residence and started conducting life saving measures,” said Hayato Johnson, Public Information Officer.

The teen was taken to Onvida Health with life-threatening injuries and later flown to a Phoenix area hospital.

Police say there was also a 21-year-old sibling present.

One neighbor says he saw someone matching that description.

“He’s been here for a while, really good kid, he wasn’t really talking much but he had blood on his neck and down his ear…I thought he was injured,” said Gonzalez.

This case remains under investigation.

If you have any information on the case, contact YPD or 78-CRIME to remain anonymous.

 

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Imperial County offers aid to displaced Spreckels employees

Adrik Vargas

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA) – County leaders have declared an economic emergency following the closure of the Spreckels Sugar Plant, one of the area’s largest employers, to help workers and families recover.

Eligible employees are gaining access to funding, training, and support services through the county’s workforce department.

“They are helping make available any funding, any assistance that would get us to a better place,” said Priscilla Lopez, Workforce Development Director.

The department is working with Spreckels Human Resources to identify employees who qualify for aid.

Lopez added, “We are also making available our dislocated worker training funds. If anybody wants to expand their career choices or come into our office to see what those choices are, we can help them with that.”

The Small Business Development Center is another resource for those looking to take a different direction.

“We provide trainings and one on one counseling. We have training specially around the area of startup. We have in-person trainings and we have virtual trainings, English and in Spanish,” said Viridiana Rosales-Trujillo, Center Manager.

“If there’s something that they have a talent for, and I know everyone here on Earth has a talent for something, to just explore that talent and connect that talent with maybe making it into a viable business,” Rosales-Trujillo added.

While immediate help is available, county officials note that recovery will take time.

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Ex-employee reveals safety concerns at hearing for deadly hyperbaric chamber explosion

By Darren Cunningham, WXYZ Web Team

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    TROY, Michigan (WXYZ) — A judge heard testimony on Monday in connection with an explosion at a medical facility that claimed the life of a little boy.

The explosion happened on Jan. 31 at The Oxford Center in Troy.

Five-year-old Thomas Cooper was receiving treatment in a hyperbaric chamber when it exploded, killing him.

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced the charges in March.

“This tragedy could have been prevented if proper safety protocols were followed,” Nessel said in a previous statement. “Instead, deliberate negligence and a blatant disregard for safety cost a child his life. I appreciate the investigatory efforts of the Troy Police Department. My office remains committed to seeking justice for Thomas and holding those responsible accountable.”

A judge heard testimony Monday to see if there is enough evidence to send the owner and three employees at the facility to trial.

The first and only witness to testify on day one of the preliminary hearing was a former employee who says taking a critical shortcut was the norm.

“My primary concern is that we were not putting grounding straps on the patients,” former employee Tiffany Hosey said.

Visibly anxious, Hosey testified that she warned former co-workers about what she felt was a safety risk months before the death of Thomas.

CEO Tamela Peterson, who’s charged with second-degree murder, watched the first day of the hearing in court.

The judge asked Hosey what Peterson said about not using grounding straps.

“She saw them as a strangulation risk for some of the kiddos,” Hosey said.

Jeff Mosteller and Gary Marken are also charged with second-degree murder. The prosecutor charged Aleta Moffitt, the operator of the hyperbaric chamber, with involuntary manslaughter and intentionally placing false information on a medical record.

Hosey says she raised concerns several times to Peterson and Mosteller that failing to use grounding straps, which go around the patients’ wrist while inside a chamber, was a fire hazard.

“I was told that I was uneducated and ill-informed,” Hosey said.

A defense attorney asked Hosey “who told you that?”

“Tammy told me that,” Hosey responded. “About a week later, I was let go.”

But the defense attorneys objected, saying Hosey worked at the Brighton location and not in Troy where the incident happened. They also said she left in April of 2024.

The defense suggested her testimony about the Troy location was speculative.

One attorney also questioned her efforts to report the facility.

“You were employed at the center for roughly 45 months, during which you allegedly had all these safety concerns. Did you report it to any outside agency?”

“Officially report? No,” Hosey said.

“So, you only took your concerns in house. Is that fair?” the defense asked.

“That’s true,” Hosey responded.

The Oxford Center released the following statement about the charges:

After cooperating with multiple investigations starting immediately after the tragic accident in January, we are disappointed to see charges filed.

The timing of these charges is surprising, as the typical protocol after a fire-related accident has not yet been completed. There are still outstanding questions about how this occurred. Yet, the Attorney General’s office proceeded to pursue charges without those answers.

Our highest priority every day is the safety and wellbeing of the children and families we serve, which continues during this process. Thomas’ family is being represented by Fieger Law.

James Harrington, managing partner at Fieger Law, told us in February that Thomas had received 35 treatments and the explosion happened during his 36th treatment.

“Under no circumstances should anything like this ever happen — ever,” Harrington previously told us. “When we met with the family, it was one of the most heartbreaking things I’ve ever seen.”

Thomas’ mother was also reportedly in the room and sustained some injuries to her arms.

Officials say the chamber contains 100% oxygen, which is five times the amount of oxygen in a normal room, and can be “extremely combustible.”

According to The Oxford Center website, the therapy is a “specialized form of medical treatment administered by delivering 100% pure oxygen to the body through increased atmospheric pressure greater than 1.3 ATA in an enclosed hard chamber.”

According to a GoFundMe page, Thomas loved life, running, and swimming, and he liked to draw and figure out how things worked. Thomas leaves behind his mom, dad, and younger brother.

The hearing resumes Tuesday morning.

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Office Depot employee no longer with company after refusing to print Charlie Kirk image

By Julie Dunmire

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    KALAMAZOO, Michigan (WXMI) — An Office Depot store near the Crossroads Mall in Portage is making national headlines after a video surfaced showing employees allegedly refusing to print a poster memorializing Charlie Kirk.

It’s a video seen across the country: employees at the Portage Office Depot appearing to call the image propaganda and refusing to print it.

James Asher, Chair of the Kalamazoo Young Republicans, placed the print order.

“They told us that they looked up who it was for, and that they just wouldn’t do it. And I thought that was unacceptable,” Asher said.

Asher described the poster.

“The picture literally just said the legendary Charlie Kirk 1993-2025, and it was a nice picture of Charlie, black and white, it wasn’t political propaganda. This was for a prayer vigil,” he said.

While he joked about the situation—

“I’ve lived in Kalamazoo my entire life, and I think they might be a Spirit Halloween in a couple weeks,” Asher said—he stressed the seriousness of the matter.

“So I want to ask you, because you can see these people in the video. Were you worried at all when you took that video, that their safety might be at risk for what was going on?” FOX 17 reporter Julie Dunmire asked.

“I just want to say, if this is how people show themselves on camera, imagine how they show themselves off camera. I think it goes back to the point that yeah, they may have had the right refuse me service, but people also have a right to know where they’re shopping. I think that goes to show that we have to be able to show the evil in the world, so that’s what I did. I pray for them. I hope they’re safe I don’t want any ill will to happen to them— so if anyone is thinking like that— I hope they would never do anything. These are humans that just showed a very unfortunate side of themselves,” Asher said.

In a statement posted on X, Office Depot said the employees involved are “no longer with the organization.”

Legal experts say the incident highlights changing workplace dynamics and the risks of viral moments.

“Is this caution more so prevalent now, more so now, amidst this world where everyone is talking about Charlie Kirk? Should people be conscientious of what they’re putting out on social media, and how they’re conducting themselves when it comes to employment?” Julie Dunmire asked.

“Without a doubt. Especially as we’ve become more polarized, when it comes to this political discussion.” said Cooley Law Professor Mark Dotson.

“You might not realize how sensitive your employer is to the politics, the optics of things, until a situation like this occurs,” Dotson said.

Asher says he paid $56 for a print he never received, but believes the incident may have sparked a broader conversation.

“I think it did go wild, because we’ve seen across the country, like you said, a lot of these situations. I think this is the first situation where we have it recorded, of someone being refused service for a Charlie Kirk poster,” Asher said.

Over the weekend, security measures were visible at the Office Depot store. On Monday, security was also observed at the store.

Asher returned to the store on Monday, and printed off an image. He says he is thankful for Office Depot’s apology, and them printing off a poster for him.

This story was initially reported by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. WXMI’s editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

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Family’s 35-year dollhouse dream finds permanent home at Michigan museum after daughter’s tragic death

By Zachariah Wheaton

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    GRAND HAVEN, Michigan (WXMI) — A massive Victorian dollhouse with an emotional backstory has found its permanent home at the Midwest Miniatures Museum in Grand Haven, bringing closure to a family’s decades-long journey of love and loss.

The Juliana, named after Julia Poland, stands as more than just an intricate miniature display — it represents a daughter’s dream that her family refused to let die.

Julie grew up in Richmond, Virginia, where she and her sister would often commission their father, Jim, to build them dollhouses. The idea for this extravagant house came from Julie’s fascination with the Victorian age. She purchased the first pieces of wood for the project in 1989.

“I had built them smaller dollhouses before, but I had no idea that her plans were going to amount to this,” Jim Poland said.

With a design in mind and dimensions all mapped out, Julie reached out to her father for help with construction.

“I was the designated carpenter, so I cut the wood, did the routing that was necessary, and clamped boards together,” Jim Poland said. “She purchased all the wood, she purchased the windows, and she did the painting initially.”

But before they could finish, Julie tragically passed away in an automobile accident in 1995 while attending nursing school.

“We were building the house and everything. But then, when she died in an automobile accident in 1995 then it just sat there for 20 years,” Jim Poland said.

After decades of collecting dust, the family met artist Vicky Bickell, who vowed to finish what Julie started.

“I had all of Julie’s books and notes and drawings and clippings,” Bickell said. “Anything that I could find that was hers I would use in the house. So in the kitchen where she had a certain kind of table that was made to look like oak, everything in the kitchen would be oak.”

In total, it took nine years to finish and a couple of years just to find a museum with the space to hold it — something Julie’s mother and sister couldn’t help but chuckle at.

“I told her at first that she pictured the most complicated dollhouse she could,” Jerry Poland said.

Julie’s family made the trip to Michigan in September for a ribbon cutting and to see their Juliana in her final home, helping bring closure that’s long overdue.

“Coming in here and seeing the dollhouse is just gorgeous. She’s perfect,” Jerry Poland said.

“It certainly is one of a kind,” Jim Poland said.

“It definitely feels like it’s at its home and it’s at its place. It just couldn’t be a better home for it,” Jenny Poland said.

This story was initially reported by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. WXMI’s editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

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TempleLive closure leaves couple without wedding venue one month before wedding date

By Sydney Ferguson

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    WICHITA, Kansas (KAKE) — The TempleLive event venue in Wichita closed its doors recently, leaving the various weddings, concerts, shows and other events expected to take place there scrambling to figure out what’s next.

A couple originally from Wichita is one of many impacted by the closure. When Randy Nguyen and Makayla Williams started planning their wedding, they knew they wanted to get married here in their home town, even after moving across the country to North Carolina.

Together they decided TempleLive, housed in Downtown Wichita’s Scottish Rite Center, was the perfect place.

“It has like a historic feel to it. It’s got a nice stained [glass] window that’s really nice — a grand, like, stairs that we were planning to get married on,” said Nguyen.

The two had decided on a Victorian-style wedding that relied heavily on the building’s architecture. The plan was to enhance the interior with greenery and white flowers, and ultimately say “I do” in front of hundreds of friends and family.

The venue is big enough that Nguyen and Williams expected to have the wedding and reception all in the same place.

“That’s kind of what I envisioned, was just the entire day being in this venue, and now we don’t have that,” said Williams.

The soon-to-be newly weds learned just a month before their wedding that TempleLive is going out of business. This news and plans to attend a friend’s wedding brought them back to town this weekend to search for another venue.

“I reached out to the coordinator here that we had been working with, and even she had just found that out as well,” said Williams.

“Even though she’s out of a job now, she still went above and beyond and tried to help us out,” said Nguyen. “As far as like the owners, no word from him.”

Williams learned of the closure from a vendor who read it in the Wichita Business Journal. In the article, Lance Beaty, Founder and CEO of Beaty Capital Group which owns the TempleLive brand, cites financial issues for the closure.

Nguyen and Williams say there’s been no response from Beaty, despite booking the venue over a year and a half ago in February of 2024.

The two have been forced to start over just a month before their October 11th wedding date.

“October is the busiest wedding month, and Wichita is completely booked up, and we also have over 300 guests, so that also makes it really hard,” said Williams.

Despite the setbacks, the couple says they’re just hoping to get their $2000 deposit back and avoid postponing the wedding.

“We kind of, like, know now that we’re not going to get the wedding that we had in mind this whole time, but yeah, we’re just trying to make the best of it,” said Nguyen.

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Firefighter’s social media posts following death of Charlie Kirk spark debate

By Lily O’Brien

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    SEDGWICK COUNTY, Kansas (KAKE) — Following the death of conservative political activist Charlie Kirk, a Sedgwick County firefighter posted on social media about his distaste for Kirk.

The firefighter posted on Facebook, quoting someone’s description of Kirk and saying “Rest in P***,” also saying Kirk became “a statistic he advocated for,” in reference to Kirk’s prior comments on the Second Amendment.

Another post reshares a photo of the moment Kirk was shot, appearing to mock the often-used line of “thoughts and prayers” as “tots and pears.”

At issue: whether the firefighter, as a public-serving employee, is protected in expressing his personal or political opinions on a personal Facebook page.

“Freedom of Speech does have consequences,” said one comment.

“I don’t think you should lose his job because of a social media post. If that were the case, half of Wichita would be unemployed,” read another, on a different post.

Most of the public comments about the firefighter’s post say someone working in public safety should not make fun of death and violence or be politically divisive, given their service to everyone, no matter one’s political beliefs.

“It sucks that your taxes are being used to employ a person who publicly celebrates the assassination of anybody, let alone a non-violent husband and father,” said a post, sharing the incident.

“I think his stance raises serious concerns about how he would perform on calls. If he saw any indication someone has a view other than his, do you honestly think he could put that aside in an emergency?” asked a commenter.

“Of course, you’ve got the First Amendment up here,” said Dr. Russell Arben Fox, a professor of political science at Friends University. “But you might have all sorts of department policies down here.”

In the Sedgwick County employee’s code of ethics, employees are guided to “show regard for the diversity, needs, feelings, opinions, and beliefs of all people,” which is why some are calling for the firefighter to be fired.

“His freedom of speech is to be protected, but that does not safeguard him from the consequences of his actions on the public’s confidence in him as a public servant,” read another comment.

The discussion around his posts comes after a series of people, including college professors, have suspended or lost their jobs across the nation for comments relating to Kirk and his death.

“Are they held to a higher standard in some kind of constitutional sense? They can’t be, because we’re all equal citizens,” said Fox. “In practice, are they? Yeah. That’s because the institutions they work for choose to set those things up.”

The Sedgwick County Fire Fighters Local 216 union distanced itself from the post, making this statement:

“To all those we serve, Local 2612 firefighters are held to the highest standard and want to assure the public that we are here to answer the call no matter what, where and when. Local 2612 does not condone behavior that mocks or glorifies political violence or any violence for that matter. The actions of one or even a few, do not represent the organization as a whole. We want those we serve to know, you should always feel safe to call 911 if and when needed.”

Sedgwick County Commissioner Ryan Baty took to social media himself, calling the comments disgusting, cold-hearted, and very unfortunate.

He said the Fire Chief and County Manager would update Commissioners on the matter on Monday.

Segdwick County released the following statement:

“Sedgwick County Government is aware of recent remarks made on social media regarding current national events. The views expressed do not necessarily represent Sedgwick County Government. We remain dedicated to providing a healthy, safe and welcoming community.

This is a personnel matter and no further information will be disclosed.”

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