Pocatello secures nearly $5 million federal grant to fight wildfires

Sam Ross

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) — The City of Pocatello has been awarded a $4.8 million grant from the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) to spearhead a five-year project aimed at dramatically reducing the Portneuf Valley’s significant wildfire risk.

The funding, officially $4,836,555, comes from the competitive Community Wildfire Defense Grant (CWDG) program and represents the largest of four projects funded in the entire Intermountain Region (Idaho, Nevada, and Utah), which collectively received nearly $9.5 million. The grants are intended to provide critical support to communities with limited resources but a high exposure to wildfire danger.

Over the next five years, Pocatello will use the federal grant to implement a comprehensive strategy focusing on fire mitigation and preparation.

“We are one of the higher-risk areas in Idaho,” explained Hannah Sanger, manager of the City of Pocatello Science and Environmental Division. “We have a lot of fuel around the city that will burn really hot and fast. We wanted to implement steps to reduce that risk.”

USDA Secretary Brooke L. Rollins emphasized the local impact of the federal investment.

“These grants are about putting resources in the hands of those that know their lands and communities best, so that they can better protect their families, businesses, infrastructure and the future of our shared landscape,” Rollins said. “Keeping forests healthy, resilient and productive doesn’t come from the top down, it comes from us standing alongside the people and communities we serve.”

USDA Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz stressed that collaborative effort is key to tackling modern fire conditions. “No single organization can tackle the severe fire conditions we face today. It is imperative that we work together to protect our forest and communities,” Schultz said. He added that for communities that already have plans in place, “these investments will enable immediate action to reduce wildfire risk.”

The funded proposals in Idaho, Nevada and Utah are as follows:

Recipient
Project Name
Grant Amount

City of Pocatello
Portneuf Valley Wildfire Risk Reduction and Education Project
$4,836,555

Glenbrook Homeowners Association (NV)
Glenbrook Community Defensible Space Projects
$2,979,732

Nevada Tahoe Conservation District
Upper Kingsbury Fire Adapted Community
$1,422,870

Utah Forestry, Fire and State Lands
Dammeron Valley Wildfire Fuels Mitigation & Community Education Program
$239,122

The Forest Service announced it will open a fourth funding opportunity for communities later this year. For more information, click HERE.

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Auxvasse man accused of dragging woman into car, breaking in door of home after she escaped

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man was charged in Audrain County after he allegedly dragged a woman from her home, pulled her into a vehicle and assaulted her on Sunday morning.

Lane Miles, 21, of Auxvasse, was charged with first-degree burglary, first-degree kidnapping, second-degree domestic assault and misdemeanor second-degree property damage. He is being held at the Audrain County Jail without bond. A mugshot was not immediately available. A confined docket hearing is scheduled for 10 a.m. Tuesday.

The probable cause statement says a witness saw Miles pull the victim out of a home in Mexico, Missouri, around 2 a.m. Sunday. Miles allegedly dragged the victim by her hair down the stairs of the home and pulled her into a car before leaving, the statement says.

The victim later knocked on the door of the home and was let back in before Miles kicked the door in and forced the woman, again, into the vehicle, the statement says.

The victim allegedly told law enforcement that Miles was not invited into the home, but arrived anyways and pulled her out by her ankles, the statement says. The victim was afraid of what Miles would do if she did not get in the vehicle, the statement says. Miles allegedly choked the victim while he drove the vehicle, but the victim was able to hit the “start/stop” button of the vehicle to turn it off, the statement says. She then began honking the horn of the vehicle and eventually got away the first time, the statement says. Miles then returned to the home and kicked the door in, according to court documents.

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LDS Church announces tribute broadcast and funeral services for President Nelson

News Team

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (KIFI) — The Leadership of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has announced a special global broadcast and public funeral services to honor Russell M. Nelson, the 17th President of the Church, who died at age 101.

RELATED: Global faith leader and medical trailblazer Russell M. Nelson dies at age 101

Global Tribute Broadcast: A special devotional will take place on Wednesday, October 1, at 10 a.m. MDT.

Public Viewing: The public is invited to pay their respects on Monday, October 6, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. in the LDS Conference Center in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Public Funeral Services: The funeral will be held at the LDS Conference Center on Temple Square in Salt Lake City, Utah, on Tuesday, October 7, at 12 p.m. MDT.

These services will follow the Church’s 195th Semiannual General Conference, which is scheduled for the weekend of October 4–5, 2025. For more information on the funeral services or the public broadcast, click HERE.

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Teton County Sheriff’s Office seeks help identifying individuals in Driggs crash investigation

News Team

TETON COUNTY, Idaho (KIFI) — The Teton County Sheriff’s Office is actively seeking public assistance following an early morning vehicle crash that occurred in Driggs on Monday, September 29.

The incident took place at approximately 6:47 a.m.in front of the Marathon Gas station. Deputies responded to the scene and are working to identify everyone involved in the collision.

As part of their investigation, the Sheriff’s Office has released a security camera image captured at the gas station and is urging the public to help identify a person shown in the photo. The individual appears to be a man wearing a baseball cap.

The Teton County Sheriff’s Office shared the image on its Facebook page with a direct appeal: “If you know who this individual is, or if you are the individual shown, please call the Teton County Sheriff’s Office.”

Anyone with information regarding the identity of the individual in the photo or any details related to the crash is asked to contact the Teton County Sheriff’s Office at 208-776-8200.

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Your Broncos first responders: The power couple beind Pueblo’s Broncos Firehouse

Bradley Davis

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) – It’s more of a museum than a man cave, but with all the perks of the latter.

“It’s getting pretty filled up,” Broncos superfan Kevin Nunn said.

A big screen TV, a working locker room and a tricked-out Broncos golf cart that can hit 50 miles per hour. It’s the place to watch the Denver Broncos, and to admire the thousands of signed and one-of-a-kind Broncos memorabilia.

“Everyone says, ‘Are you done?’ You’re never done,” Kevin said.

Signed footballs, jerseys and playing cards. Game-worn gear, vintage orange crush player cans, and props from the stadium. Kevin and Sue Nunn work hard to fill their Broncos Firehouse with the unique.

“We don’t want stuff you can go to the store and buy. We want stuff that is authentic,” Kevin said.

“The older stuff’s fun,” Sue added.

The building used to be Pueblo Firehouse Engine 9 before the Nunn’s, both truckers, bought it from the city about 15 years ago for their semi trucks. They moved on from that idea after the purchase and set their sights on something a little more orange.

“What do we do with this building? What should we do with it? And then we decided, well, let’s just put all the Bronco stuff in there, take it out of the house, and bring it over here,” Kevin said.

If it were Disney telling Kevin and Sue’s story, they probably would have met at a Broncos game. Instead, the Broncos Firehouse didn’t get its start at Mile High, but on the side of the highway.

“Well, we actually met while I was a truck driver, and she was doing some deliveries, and I was walking home, and she picked me up,” Kevin said.

“Was your shared fandom something that you two bonded about when you first met, when she picked you up at the truck stop?” I asked the two.

“No, it was more about the trucks!” both said at the same time.

Their shared love for trucks quickly evolved into a family obsession with everything Broncos. They took KRDO13 around to do what they love most: share their collection with other fans.

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Police use Taser on man accused of assaulting woman, molesting child

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Court documents say Columbia police had to use a Taser on a man who is accused of a number of crimes.

Deon Brown, 53, of Columbia, was charged on Monday with three counts of third-degree domestic assault, one count of misdemeanor third-degree kidnaping, misdemeanor resisting arrest, one count of second-degree domestic assault, felony resisting arrest and third-degree child molestation.

He is being held at the Boone County Jail without bond. An initial court appearance was held on Monday.

Court documents say police were called to a residence on Saturday and a standoff ensued after Brown would not come out of the home. Police called off the standoff and left, though it is not clear in court documents why that decision was made. Brown allegedly trapped one of the victims in a bathroom after assaulting them and threatened to kill them, the probable cause statement says.

In a second probable cause statement, police wrote that they went back to the residence as Brown was in a fight with one of the victims on the lawn of the home. There were three victims described in court documents, one being a child that he allegedly molested during the assaults. That victim also described sexual comments Brown allegedly made toward them in the past, the statement says.

Brown allegedly started walking back to the home when officers arrived, and officers told him they would use a stun gun if he did not comply, the statement says. An officer then deployed a Taser on Brown, court documents say.

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AI and Art: Santa Barbara at the Crossroads of Imagination and Innovation

Ryder Christ

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – Artificial intelligence is no longer just the realm of labs and start-ups. In Santa Barbara, it’s reshaping how artists, architects, and scientists think about creation itself. Not as a replacement for human imagination, but as an expansion of it.

A Tool for Artists and Scientists

Dr. JoAnn Kuchera-Morin, director of the AlloSphere Research Laboratory at UC Santa Barbara, said she sees AI as an essential interface rather than a creative substitute.

“Don’t use the AI to create for us, but use the AI as an interface to help us do things that typically are too tedious. It can really find patterns and information very quickly. So let’s use AI for what AI is. It’s not to make or create,” she said.

Inside the AlloSphere, which she calls a “concert hall for science,” Kuchera-Morin helps researchers step into their equations by turning vast datasets into sights and sounds. “One of the most important things that happens to me as an artist is I’m able to understand very complex data that I could never understand unless I saw it and heard it,” she explained.

Kuchera-Morin, who helped inspire the team behind Las Vegas’ $2 billion Sphere, sees computation as today’s creative instrument. “I believe that the computer is going to be intertwined with every aspect of life, from making beautiful art, to understanding very complex science,” she said.

Architecture That Adapts

For Iason Paterakis, a California-based architect-engineer and Ph.D. candidate in UCSB’s Media Arts and Technology program, the question is not whether AI belongs in creative spaces, but how.

“It’s not a replacement, it’s an augmentation of the workflow of creative people,” he explained.

In his work, projection mapping turns city buildings into responsive canvases that can shift with human emotion, history, or culture. “Projecting on a building, you can change the outcome of how the building is perceived. This is called transformable architecture,” Paterakis said.

Exploration, Not Shortcuts

Fellow Ph.D. student Nefeli Manoudaki said AI should be used as a partner in exploration rather than a shortcut.

“If you put it to do your homework, then you might be cheating. But if you use it to help you dream or explore further, then I don’t say it feels like cheating,” she said.

She emphasized Santa Barbara’s unique position in the global art-tech landscape: “In Santa Barbara we tend to integrate more of the science and the technology behind it. So we’re literally between San Francisco and L.A., it’s a very good verdict of all of the fields.”

Art Inside Google Quantum AI Lab

Forest Stearns, artist-in-residence at Google’s Quantum AI Lab in Goleta, has helped embed art into the very architecture of the facility, noting the many benefits of bringing art and technology together.

“If you get art, you get creativity, innovation, inspiration,” he said. “When you align art direction and make sure that the envelope really speaks to the team, you make giant epic pieces, really create a temple for the best creativity to happen.”

Stearns said Santa Barbara’s natural and academic environment fuels this creative-scientific fusion. “Luckily, Santa Barbara is absolutely just fruitful with nature, from the ocean to the mountains. There’s amazing industry that has happened there and amazing academics. We have a team of really amazing architects, scientists, and artists that work together, and it really flourishes because Santa Barbara has all of those elements that have come together,” he said.

On AI, Stearns remains pragmatic: “I see AI as a tool to use as a lever, but like most tools, if you rely upon your tools and not your human creativity, it doesn’t really help you grow. It doesn’t really help you innovate. So it’s up to us to be humans as we develop that AI,” he said.

Stearns added he would “love for AI to help me do my laundry and my dishes so I have more time to do artwork.”

A New Era of Art and Technology

Santa Barbara’s role as an art-tech incubator is underscored by its research university, its proximity to major cultural hubs, and the presence of Google’s Quantum AI campus. Together, these factors have positioned the region as a testing ground for how AI can expand rather than replace human imagination. As several of the researchers noted, we are entering a “super evolutionary era” where art, science, and technology can no longer be separated.

All of these voices will converge at Brave New Work: Art and Tech in the Hands of Artists, a three-day symposium and contemporary art exhibition running October 7–9, 2025, across Santa Barbara. The event will showcase installations, public projections, and discussions with internationally recognized artists and scientists exploring how AI, quantum computing, and emerging technologies are shaping a new era of art and human experience

AI Behind the Story

News Channel’s News Director, Ryder Christ, used AI throughout the reporting process to help curate this story. AI assisted with researching the voices interviewed, generating potential questions, transcribing the interviews, and identifying common themes among the participants. Christ also used AI to draft an outline of the broadcast script, which he then rewrote in his own style. He said the point was to demonstrate that AI can be used as a tool, just as the people interviewed in this story described.

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Yuma woman accused of murdering her brother to plead not guilty

Skylar Heisey

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – A Yuma woman accused of her murdering her brother appeared in court Monday.

21-year-old Danica Watts will plead not guilty in the death of her brother, 24-year-old Michael Patrick Reiter.

According to the Yuma County Sheriff’s Office, Watts murdered her brother with the help of her father earlier this month.

Watts will be back in court on October 30.

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Governor Kotek declares drought emergency in Jefferson County; eighth in Oregon so far this year

KTVZ

SALEM, Ore. (KTVZ)– Governor Tina Kotek announced Monday that she has declared a drought in Jefferson County through Executive Order 25-23 and directed state agencies to coordinate and prioritize assistance to the region.

A link to Executive Order 25-23 can be found here.

Here is the rest of Monday’s news release from the governor’s office:

According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, Jefferson County has been experiencing moderate drought since July 15, and severe drought from July 29 through September 2. Drought metrics like the standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index (SPEI) are also indicating long-term drought conditions have persisted in Jefferson County over the last five to 12 months.

Governor Kotek has declared a drought emergency in eight counties so far this calendar year. The earlier list includes Baker, Coos, Douglas, Lincoln, Morrow, Union and Wheeler counties. Background:

Drought is likely to have a significant economic impact on the farm, ranch, recreation, tourism and natural resources sectors, as well as an impact on drinking water, fish and wildlife, and important minimum flows for public instream uses and other natural resources dependent on adequate precipitation, stored water, and streamflow in these areas. Extreme conditions are expected to affect local growers and livestock, increase the potential for wildfire fire, shorten the growing season, and decrease water supplies.

The drought declaration by Governor Kotek unlocks a number of drought-related emergency tools, including assistance to local water users. Drought declarations also allow the Water Resources Department to expedite review processes and reduce fee schedules.

The Council received input from Oregon’s Water Supply Availability Committee on regional water supply conditions and Council members have conferred on this matter. The Council recommended that the Governor declare drought in Jefferson County for the 2025 calendar year, pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) 536.740.

As state and local officials coordinate with federal partners, conditions will be closely monitored by the state’s natural resource and public safety agencies, including the Oregon Water Resources Department (OWRD) and the Oregon Department of Emergency Management (OEM).

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University of Missouri president continues push for joint crime-reduction strategy with City of Columbia

Olivia Hayes

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

University of Missouri System President Mun Choi said Monday that crimes ranging from homeless trespassers on campus to gun violence in downtown Columbia have created a dangerous environment for citizens and students.

“What I’m hearing from individuals, whether that’s the business leaders or citizens, is that Columbia was not this way in the past,” Choi said. “There are people that say, ‘I’m not going to downtown, it’s just too dangerous,’ and that’s not the way it should be.”

Choi made the remarks at a news conference Monday morning after a Stephens College student died over the weekend from a shooting that also left two others hurt.

This is the third shooting incident during a MU Homecoming weekend in the last five years. In 2021, two people were shot, and in 2022, three people were shot, including an MU student.

“The leaders have to lead and acknowledge that there is an issue and find credible solutions. The Columbia Police Department is doing all they can. I have a lot of confidence in them and they must be supported,” Choi said.

Choi called on the City government to change its policies and practices that let people think they can commit crimes without consequences.

“There has to be severe repercussions so that criminals know that this region, the state of Missouri, takes its laws very seriously and that they will be held to account to the full extent of the law,” Choi said.

Choi said his call to action did not come from this weekend’s shooting, but a pattern of crimes that has continued to plague downtown Columbia.

“When parents send their students to a university, they want to know that they’re going to a university environment that is safe. We keep our campus very safe. We need to make sure that the downtown region and the rest of Columbia is safe as well,” Choi said.

Choi said University of Missouri Police Chief Brian Weimer would offer all available staff to patrol downtown on game days. Mayor Barbara Buffaloe wrote in an email to Choi over the weekend that CPD added eight officers to night patrols, a 20% increase in staffing since last summer.

“We’re going to maintain the safety on our campus and may require more overtime for our police officers who do an excellent job supporting the officers of CPD,” Choi said.

MUPD has responded to nine violent crimes on campus so far this year, and four victims were between the ages of 18 and 24, according to Missouri State Highway Patrol data. In 2024, MUPD responded to six violent crimes total. The data also shows that MUPD has arrested 10 people between the ages of 18 and 24 for violent crimes this year.

Choi said no new MUPD officers will be hired right now; instead, current officers will be reallocated until the department can hire and train new officers. Choi said he wants to keep the options for solutions open as preliminary discussions continue, but the need for a temporary solution is approaching as the Tigers’ next game on Oct. 11 nears.

“Whether it is changing the traffic pattern in the downtown during weekends, that is a possibility that we’re going to be exploring,” Choi said. “We’ll have a big game on Oct. 11, and we want to be able to prepare for that.”

Choi is working with Buffaloe to create a task force on crime that includes local and community leaders. He said that he and Weimer would be part of the task force. Choi said he had asked to meet with Buffaloe on Monday afternoon, but it’s not clear whether they did.

The last crime task force in the city was created over 10 years ago, in 2013. The task force researched for over a year before presenting its findings in 2014.

Those findings included four recommendations:

Make people aware of resources

Create safe spaces for youth

Create trust between law enforcement and the community

Hold high-risk offenders accountable

Choi said he has also shared his concerns with Gov. Mike Kehoe. Choi said Kehoe has promised him a meeting of local, university and business leaders to develop solutions.

In a statement to ABC 17 News, Kehoe’s office called public safety and cracking down on crime in Missouri communities his top priority.

“Governor Kehoe will continue to consider options to assist Columbia and communities across the state to address crime. A truly tragic and unnecessary act of violence took the life of a young woman with a bright future ahead of her,” the statement read.

Dr. Sandra Hamar, Senior Vice President and Provost for Columbia College, also shared her support for the Stephens College Community and Choi’s collaborative efforts in a statement.

“Students come to Columbia to learn, grow and build a future. They deserve to feel safe both on campus and throughout our City. We must come together as educators, students, parents, neighbors and leaders to create a safer environment for everyone,” the statement read. “We stand ready to support Stephens College President Dr. Shannon Lundeen as the Stephens community navigates this difficult time. We also support the efforts of University of Missouri President Dr. Mun Choi, who, along with many community leaders, is seeking meaningful change to ensure the safety of our City.”

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