Staying safe while riding UTVs around Yuma County

Adrik Vargas

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – As temperatures cool in Yuma, more utility terrain vehicles, or UTVs, are showing up on both the dunes and city roads. They are fun to drive, but police and experts say there are rules drivers need to know before heading out.

In Arizona, UTV’s must be registered, insured, and equipped with street-legal features like headlights, taillights, and reflectors. Drivers also need a valid license.

To ride an Off-Highway Vehicle (OHV) in Arizona, you must register your vehicle and display an OHV decal, which requires completing a free safety course on AZ MVD Now. If the vehicle does not have a windshield, safety glasses are also required.

Yuma Police Public Information Officer Lori Franklin says one of the biggest mistakes people make is skipping the seatbelt.

“Even if you’re going from point A to point B and it may be a mile or less than that, always put that seatbelt on,” Franklin said. “They can roll easily.”

Officers also remind drivers that UTVs on city streets are held to the same traffic laws as any other vehicle. That means following the speed limit, using turn signals, and keeping music low enough to hear what is happening around you.

Lee Larson with Liberty Motorsports says planning ahead makes all the difference.

“You want to be aware of your surroundings and the environment that you’re going to be in,” Larson said. “Any weather concerns, any special routing, any possible need for emergency communication. It’s always nice to think ahead.”

Larson also recommends proper gear, especially in the Sonoran Desert. That includes a helmet, eye protection, gloves, boots, and long pants.

With cooler weather arriving, more people will be taking their UTVs out for a spin.

Officers say the key is to enjoy the ride while remembering that driving a UTV on the street comes with the same responsibilities as driving any other vehicle.

Click here to follow the original article.

Imperial County declares economic emergency

Adrik Vargas

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA) – Imperial County leaders have declared a state of economic emergency after the Spreckels Sugar Plant in Brawley shut down. The closure has left hundreds of workers without jobs and farmers without a place to process their sugar beets.

The county already struggles with the highest unemployment rate in California, and losing this plant has made the situation even harder.

Supervisor Peggy Price said the emergency declaration is meant to bring attention and support to the area.

“Getting that support to create a pathway for us to continue producing beets here in our community,” she said.

County leaders are working with farmers, businesses, and lawmakers to find long-term solutions. Price explained that help could include assistance for displaced workers and funding to rebuild the industry.

Rebuilding sugar production will require investment.

“We need a sugar allotment, but we also need a plant to process the beets,” Price said.

Locals have shared their stress and concerns, and the county hopes this declaration sends a clear message to the state that Imperial County needs urgent support.

“They just want to know that we are here and that we’re going to fight for them. And that’s something that we are doing and will continue to do,” Price added.

The closure has sparked an economic emergency that touches the whole community. Families, farmers, and workers are all affected, and leaders say the fight to keep the industry alive is far from over.

Click here to follow the original article.

Walmart hosts The Wellness Event

Dillon Fuhrman

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – Walmart is hosting an event Saturday where they’re offering free health screenings, affordable immunizations and other health-focused activities.

According to a press release, The Wellness Event is taking place at nearly 4,600 Walmart Pharmacies across the country, including Arizona, from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

During the event, attendees will receive free health screenings, like blood pressure, glucose and BMI, along with free vision screenings “at select locations,” the press release says.

The event also offers a no-cost flu shot “among other affordable immunizations such as RSV, shingles, tetanus, HPV and more,” according to the press release.

Attendees can also learn about Walmart’s affordable low-cost generic prescription program, as well as talk to pharmacists about “medication therapy management, nutrition recommendations and tailored support for a personalized health journey,” the press release says.

Click here to follow the original article.

Desert Hot Springs landmarks featured in statewide historic tour

Shay Lawson

DESERT HOT SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ)  – Two Desert Hot Springs landmarks will open to the public Saturday as part of “Doors Open California,” a statewide celebration of historic sites.

From 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., visitors can tour Cabot’s Pueblo Museum and the Historic Rock House.

The city said the Cabot’s Pueblo Museum is the hand-built desert icon filled with art, artifacts and Cabot Yerxa’s inspiring legacy.

The Rock House, constructed in 1946, is a Riverside County historic landmark that now houses the local historical society.

The California Preservation Foundation’s annual event highlights more than 70 sites across the state each September.

A $20 ticket provides access to all participating locations during the weekend.

Click here to follow the original article.

Southside Fall Festival returns

News-Press NOW

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — One local staple is coming back, this time, with a Roaring 20s theme.

The 36th Annual Southside Fall Festival will take place on Friday, Sept. 19, through Sunday, Sept. 21 at 402 East Hyde Park Ave.

The weekend will feature local food, entertainment and vendors to kickstart the start of fall.

Additionally, the 36th Annual Southside Fall Festival parade will be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 20. The parade will begin at Green Hills Grocery and will continue on to King Hill Avenue to Missouri Avenue.

Click here to follow the original article.

Berkeley’s cash-for-RV program helps clear encampment, offers model for homeless solutions

By Ryan Yamamoto

Click here for updates on this story

    BERKELEY, California (KPIX) — A buyback program offering cash to people living in their RVs may become a model after the City of Berkeley effectively cleared out a homeless encampment this past January.

It was so successful that UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative began a study to understand what works and what doesn’t work when asking people to move from an encampment into a shelter.

For several years, Mike Jones had lived in his van at the notorious encampment on 2nd Street between Cedar and Page, until this past January, when he accepted an offer to get off the streets.

“The program chose me, I won’t say I chose the program, they came around, they had a plan, and I needed change,” said Jones.

The change came in the form of cash payment for his van, but also his own room at the Capri Motel on University Avenue, where, after several months working with outreach workers, he is now eligible to move into housing.

“I’m waiting for placement, now,” said Jones. “They helped me get my affairs in order, paperwork, Social Security Card, ID, and even my birth certificate.”

Jones is one of 56 residents, according to the UCSF study, who decided to sell their vehicle and move out of the 2nd Street encampment that the City of Berkeley had marked as a top concern.

“I think there is only one word to describe it, which was dangerous,” said Peter Radu, who serves as manager for the city of Berkeley’s Neighborhood Services. “Scattered needles, raw sewage, active rodent burrows, you name it.”

According to city documents, between August 2023 and July 2024, police were called to the encampment 369 times — 33.1% for high-priority calls. The fire department was called 81 times — 38 for fires and 43 for medical emergencies.

Instead of just clearing the encampment, the city of Berkeley, through the state’s Encampment Resolution Fund, offered cash for people’s RVs, $175 per linear foot, $5,250 for a 30-foot vehicle.

The deal came with a few conditions. Residents would receive 15% of the cash payment up front when they moved into the motel, and the rest of the cash once their vehicle was towed. And if they choose not to stay, they could keep the 15%, no questions asked.

“If folks are really attached to this RV as their last remaining asset, that asset is not liquid. What if we liquefy that asset for them in the in the form of a cash payment?” said Radu. “And we found that overwhelmingly, for 29 out of the 32 vehicles that we targeted, the answer to that was, yes.”

The motel room also provided residents, a sense of security and privacy, and a place to store their belongings.

“We had seen how the use of motels and other non-congregate spaces where people have the dignity of their own private room compels folks who are, you know, previously reluctant to engage with homeless shelters to accept our offer and to move inside,” said Radu.

Jones admits if he were offered a traditional shelter bed, he would have declined the offer.

“The rooms are beautiful, you get a shower, you got microwaves, fridge freezer in there,” said Jones.

The motel, which is operated by the nonprofit Dorothy Day House, also provides meals, additional storage, a bike parking lot and allows people to bring their pets. The real goal is to get residents out of the motel and through the lengthy process of permanent housing.

“We’ve had four to five different people that have moved into permanent housing,” said Dorothy Day House Program Director Roshone Atkins. “We’ve also had some people reunite with family, which is really important because a lot of times when you’re out, in an encampment, you’re disconnected from your children or your sisters and brothers. And so, they have had the opportunity to reconnect with family.”

Jones said the staff treat him and the other residents who moved from the encampment with respect.

“They don’t look at you in a down way in nothing,” he said. “They understand, you know, because it could be them one day. You just never know.”

The city is now looking to replicate the program by clearing a series of RV encampments in West Berkeley around Grayson St. and Dwight Way.

Currently, they are working to secure funding to master lease a 32-room motel, contract with Dorothy Day house, and pay for another RV buyback.

Please note: This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

College students become caregivers to peers with disabilities through program

By Meredith Bruckner

Click here for updates on this story

    MICHIGAN (WWJ) — A program launched by a Metro Detroit woman is having a life-changing impact on college students.

Community Living Centers employs students to care for other students with disabilities on their college campuses. Executive director Lisa Murrell launched the program 11 years ago.

“I was approached by a young man in a wheelchair, and he told me that he had just graduated from high school with honors,” said Murrell. “He had been accepted to the University of Michigan. He wanted to live on campus and go to games at the Big House like his dad did, and — would I help him?”

Alexia Steinberg and Abraham Mansuroglu have been working together for a year and a half.

“I have someone with me 24/7,” said Mansuroglu. “I’d say in the morning, I have someone help me get out of bed, shower, brush teeth, go to the bathroom.”

“It’s never really awkward because Abe’s so funny,” said Steinberg, who hopes to become a physician assistant. “I know that hands-on care and working with people like Abe will help me become a successful caregiver one day.”

Aside from practical experience gained through caregiving, students on both sides of the program said they were grateful for the friendships they made while navigating college together.

“I remember while we were going through the hiring process, Lisa said, ‘You all live the same lives,'” said sophomore Mel Malczewski. “And that’s really stuck with me. Because, you know, since having student caregivers, I realized that everyone really is living the same lives here.”

“I’ve really enjoyed caring for other students,” said Gabriela Rodriguez, who works with Malczewski. “Mel is a couple years younger than me, and I wouldn’t have met them otherwise, so it’s been a really nice experience to meet a student and a friend.”

In total, the program serves 10 students who need 24/7 care at the University of Michigan, Michigan State University, Central Michigan University and Hope College.

The center employs more than 110 student caregivers to help the students with every aspect of their lives.

“It’s honestly been super nice to be a caregiver but also be a friend,” said Steinberg. “Abe and I text even not with our shifts. He really has become a friend and someone who I can just lean on and trust with anything.”

“All of high school, I had someone who was a lot older than me, and it was fine. They were helpful,” said Mansuroglu. “But at the same time, it was a little bit strange just going around with sometimes 60-year-olds and 70-year-olds … I feel like now it’s just different, whereas now I’m a friend with my caregivers and we hang out at the same time as them helping me, so I enjoy it.”

Murrell said the bonds the students and student caregivers create are lifelong.

“They end up being in each other’s weddings,” she said. “One of the young men is the godfather to several of his former staff members’ children. They’re family. We create families.”

To learn more about the program, visit the Community Living Centers website.

Please note: This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Man walking 307 miles to fund mental health, addiction programs

By Derek James

Click here for updates on this story

    MINNESOTA (WCCO) — This fall, Jason Lennox is walking 15 to 25 miles every day for three weeks: a 307-mile journey through Appalachia from Williamson, West Virginia, to Nashville, Tennessee.

His mission is to raise $307,000 to fund mental health and addiction programs.

“Three-hundred-and-seven-thousand people. That’s how many people we lost in our country alone last year to drugs, alcohol and suicide,” Lennox said.

Lennox will walk in memory of lives lost and lives still fighting. It’s a mission rooted in his own pain and survival.

“I think I was 12 years old when I started getting into alcohol, smoking cigarettes, then marijuana came, prescription pills after and some of the harder drugs,” Lennox said.

By his early 20s, he was running from the law, numbing the pain of mental illness and addiction until an overdose at a group home landed him in jail.

“I was convulsing, I was going through withdrawals, all the mental anguish, the depression, the anxiety. Those things all hit me, and it was the worst day of my life,” explained Lennox.

He went into treatment. A week into recovery, his grandmother, who once tried to intervene, died.

“I’m either running out of here and going back to the old life, which is going to not end well, or I’m going to do everything I can in the honor to try and to make up for these things that I’ve done and live this kind of life for my grandma,” Lennox said.

That was 15 years ago. Today, Lennox is a business owner, speaker and founder of The Recovery Road campaign.

It’s a mission he invites others to join him in.

“It’s going to require a bunch of people. We can get 307,000 miles and then a dollar for each mile to raise $307,000 to build programs within high-need, under-resourced areas,” Lennox said.

Lennox has a message for anyone who is struggling with addiction or mental health problems and is not receiving treatment.

“I always say just hang on for one more day. The difference between the end of a really bad journey and the beginning of a really good journey is 24 hours,” Lennox said.

Lennox’s walk for The Recovery Road begins on Sept. 29.

You can donate or pre-register to walk and log your miles online.

Please note: This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Man details being shot by police after 911 error sent them to wrong home

By Doug Myers, Briseida Holguin

Click here for updates on this story

    GRAND PRAIRIE, Texas (KTVT) — A Grand Prairie man says police shot him after he opened his garage door to what he believed were burglars — only to discover officers had mistakenly arrived at his home due to a 911 dispatch error.

“I never popped a round off. As soon as the door opened, I saw their badge. I threw the gun to the ground, got shot in the leg,” Thomas Simpson told CBS News Texas.

Simpson said the incident happened around 1:30 a.m. Friday. He was awakened by his dogs barking and, fearing a break-in, grabbed his firearm and opened the garage door. He said he raised the weapon in self-defense but dropped it immediately upon recognizing police badges. That’s when he said officers opened fire, striking him in the leg.

“They did not identify themselves or anything,” he said. “They never said Grand Prairie Police Department. But I recognized from the light, the shine off the badge when the garage door got to a certain point, and that’s why I dropped my pistol.”

Grand Prairie police later confirmed that officers were responding to a disturbance call but were mistakenly sent to the wrong address due to a computer-aided dispatch system error.

The family said police fired a total of eight rounds — some of which struck the garage and interior walls — even after Simpson was on the ground. His teenage son and nephew, who were also armed, were standing behind him at the time.

All five family members were detained for about four hours, according to the family, including the children, who were handcuffed and placed in police vehicles.

“Even my children, 13-year-old and 16-year-old, had to sit in the back of a cop car in handcuffs for three hours,” Simpson said.

Simpson said police offered no explanation or apology afterward. He was taken to the hospital and later released. He said he plans to take legal action.

“We’re gonna talk to lawyers and go after everybody responsible for it,” he said. “They need to pay. They need to learn there’s consequences to their actions.”

The family was in the process of moving out of the rental home when the shooting occurred. They said one of the bullets ruptured a water pipe, flooding the house with three inches of water. Fortunately, most of their belongings had already been moved out.

Simpson expressed frustration with how the situation was handled.

“Hopefully, they’ll follow their police procedures in the future, because from what it appears, a lot of the actual procedures were (expletive) in my opinion,” he said.

CBS News Texas has reached out to the Grand Prairie Police Department multiple times for further comment but has not received a response. The incident remains under investigation.

Please note: This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Teacher walking every block in Brooklyn finds forgotten history along the way

By Hannah Kliger

Click here for updates on this story

    NEW YORK (WCBS) — Public school math teacher Christopher Burke has a unique goal: to walk every single block of Brooklyn.

Along the way, he’s uncovering hidden pieces of the borough’s history.

“I was a sub, so I was working at different schools. So I started walking home from different schools and I started mapping it out,” he recalled on a recent walk.

Burke, who grew up in Park Slope, began this ambitious journey in 2019 as a personal challenge and a way to connect more deeply with the place he calls home.

“There are a lot of memorials all over Brooklyn that I never knew about,” he told CBS News New York’s Hannah Kliger.

Meticulously tracking his progress on his phone, Burke estimates he’s covered almost the entire western half of the borough, and is more than halfway through.

He often posts updates on Instagram and Reddit, where reactions are mixed. Some offer encouragement, while others doubt his commitment.

“I get a lot of feedback, some of it positive, some of it, you know, jokes,” Burke said.

Along his walks, Burke photographs traces of the past: old trolley tracks, memorable statues, and historic architecture.

“A lot of things are changing, you know. I’ve been to Coney Island recently. It’s all construction,” he said.

But some places stand out to him because of how much they’ve stayed the same.

“This is Ten Eyck Street,” he said. “It’s a Dutch name. It actually means ‘of the Oak’ and the Ten Eyck family actually came over to New Amsterdam in the 1630s. So almost 400 years ago, they were like one of the founding families of New York.”

One recent discovery brought Burke to a monument in Williamsburg dedicated to a nearly forgotten piece of history.

“This monument was erected by the Lithuanians of Greater New York back in 1957,” he said, pointing to the square at the intersection of Hewes Street and Union Avenue. “That one surprised me only because Lithuanians is not one of the ethnic groups I think of – I know we have all of them, it’s just not one of the ones that pops out at you.”

The monument honors pilots Steponas Darius and Stasys Girėnas, who attempted a record-breaking transatlantic flight from Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn to Lithuania in 1933 before tragically crashing to their death.

“There are several monuments like this all over the United States of America, dedicated to them,” said Augustinas Zemaitis, a Lithuanian researcher and author of a book documenting Lithuanian heritage sites in the U.S.

His work is an effort to preserve and share this history.

“Indeed, Williamsburg was once the center of that community and many Lithuanians immigrated very long ago, late 19th century and the early 20th century,” Zemaitis said.

For Burke, these discoveries are what his project is really about.

“It’s a goal. It’s not a mission,” he said, laughing. “If I do it, great. If I don’t, I’m getting a lot of exercise and I’m seeing a lot of Brooklyn.”

Burke says it’s not just about mapping the borough, but about truly seeing it, one block at a time.

Please note: This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.