Agritourism helping Utah farms stay afloat during tough times

CNN Newsource

Originally Published: 25 SEP 25 14:28 ET

By Amy Nay

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    CHESTER, Utah (KSTU) — Many families will venture out to find a pumpkin patch this fall, but what you may not realize is that the fun weekend activity may actually be going a long way toward helping save a local family farm.

In Chester, Sunder Creek Farms owners Brett and Jenna Madsen were busy getting ready on Wednesday for the weekend kickoff to their pumpkin patch.

“Farming here, especially here in Sanpete County, it’s tough. We’ve got limited water, limited resources. You know, we have good years. But the last few years have been pretty challenging financially,” said Brett.

Born and raised in the northern part of the county, Brett married into Sunder Creeks Farms nearly two decades ago.

“I am third generation. My grandpa was a dairy farmer in Lehi, and my dad continued, and they moved here to Chester, and I get to carry on with my 4, almost 5 boys,” said Jenna. “I am the fourth daughter of a dairy farmer, so I deserved to have 5 boys!”

The Madsens were featured on the History Channel’s “American Farmer” series in 2019.

“It was quite the experience,” Brett said, “Telling our story about agriculture and the challenges. And there are a lot of misconceptions. You know, the majority of food in the U.S. comes from small family farms like ours.”

Brett worked for Jenna’s dad on the farm while in high school. After they married and moved back from college, they eventually added the holiday activities to help keep them afloat.

“You can make a little money to make up for your losses,” explained Brett. “And at the end of the day, we were able to make our farm payments and make things happen because of the agri-tourism part of our farm.”

“It keeps us going,” Jenna added. “Gives you hope for the future and it’s fun!”

The farm offers a corn maze, fun for the kids, and plenty of homegrown pumpkins of all shapes and sizes.

Sunder Creek mainly produces alfalfa and hay, and since selling their turkey operations and dairy cattle, they now focus on feed and some beef cattle, and also host weddings and other special events.

“It’s not big, it’s not extravagant. It’s low-key, a slower pace, and you don’t have thousands of people,” said Jenna. “We’ve had a lot of people from the Wasatch Front come down and really enjoy coming to the pumpkin patch.”

While the farm is an hour-and-a-half drive from Salt Lake City, Jenna shared, “Our valley is so beautiful, it’s worth the drive.”

The Madsens say this year has been one of their hardest, hoping visitors coming to get a taste of the country this fall will help their bottom line and allow them to continue to do what they love for generations to come.

“It’s definitely a family farm, and we try to keep that feel on the pumpkin patch,” Jenna said.

“We’re living the dream and loving it,” Brett shared. “There’s still a lot of challenges. It’s hard every day, and we’ve got to think outside the box and thank goodness [Jenna’s] sharp enough to find ways to make money.”

Sunder Creek Farms kicks off their special pumpkin patch and fun family activities on Friday and will be open from noon to dark Fridays and Saturdays, and then mid-October, the gates will be open weekdays starting at 3 p.m.

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Feeling Stressed? Experts Warn America’s Political Turmoil is Taking a Toll on Mental Health

Patricia Martellotti

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – The non-stop stream of unsettling news is leaving many people feeling overwhelmed, and mental health experts say it’s taking a real toll on the community.

Suzanne Grimmesy with Santa Barbara County Behavioral Health says stress levels are rising, but support is available. “We want the community to know that it’s okay to feel stressed, and resources are available to help,” she explains.

For one couple from Los Angeles, the tension back home became too much. They decided to unplug and escape to Santa Barbara for a break. “We just needed to disconnect after everything going on. Coming here gives us peace of mind,” they say. Turning off their phones and spending time outdoors has helped them reset.

Grimmesy emphasizes that no one has to face stress alone. “Support is here, and there are many ways to reach out,” she says.

For the couple, the trip has been more than a getaway — it’s a reminder that sometimes the best way to handle stress is to step back, slow down, and breathe.

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Benton High School goes on precautionary soft lockdown

News-Press NOW

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — According to the St. Joseph Police Department, Benton High School went on a soft lockdown on Thursday due to a parental threat and not an active shooter situation.

The lockdown was lifted before 2 p.m. on Thursday, according to the St. Joseph School District. Students were able to resume normal activities and students and staff remain safe.

Just after noon on Thursday, News-Press NOW received calls that Benton High School was on lockdown.

Captain Todd Derr with SJPD confirmed to News-Press NOW that a parent had called Benton High School and made threats of violence.

Capt. Derr said there was never a weapon involved, and this is not an active shooter situation.

In a released statement, the St. Joseph School District said, “Benton High School and Hyde Elementary School are currently in a No Entry lockdown due to suspicious activity reported near the buildings. This means no one is allowed to enter the schools at this time. The School Resource Officers are aware and on alert. Students and staff are safe inside the buildings. We will provide an update as soon as the situation changes.”

The above statement was also sent to the families of Benton and Hyde students.

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Cal Poly announces Carter Henderson as new athletic director

Dave Alley

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (KEYT) – Cal Poly has announced the appointment of Carter Henderson as the school’s new director of athletics.

Cal Poly President Jeffrey Armstrong made the announcement Thursday morning inside the Performing Arts Center on the Cal Poly campus.

Henderson will succeed Don Oberhelman, who announced his retirement in early June following 15 years in the position.

“I’m really proud to be a Mustang,” said Henderson. “I couldn’t be more excited about this, more grateful for the support and really excited to get going.”

A graduate from the University of Florida, Henderson arrives in San Luis Obispo after spending the past four years at Stanford University where he served in a number of different positions, including most recently, deputy athletics director for external relations

He also previously worked for the University of Washington and Jacksonville University.

During the press conference, Henderson pointed out his main objective as athletic director will be to excel in three specific categories.

“We will look in the community, we look in the classroom, and we’ll look at competition,” said Henderson. “We need to be outstanding citizens of the campus community and the Central Coast community, and the community of alumni and supporters of Cal Poly. If we can’t make people proud because of our citizenship in those communities, none of this is worth doing. In the classroom, at a place like Cal Poly that actually extends far beyond the classroom, that we need to think about the holistic educational experience. This is not about keeping people eligible and graduating them. This is about preparing people for the next stages of their life, and we need to be intentional about building plans there as we have. We need to continue that success. Finally, from a competition perspective, we’re here to win and we’re positioned to win. That is the third leg of the stool and it doesn’t matter how good we are at these other two, if we’re not competitive from a conference perspective and chasing national championships, we’re doing a disservice to all of our supporters and our student athletes in our program.”

Henderson will officially start his new job on Oct. 13, and he when does, he’ll take over leadership of a athletic department that features 19 teams, most who compete in the Big West Conference, along with football in the Big Sky Conference.

“Cal Poly is known for producing student-athletes who excel on the field and in the classroom. As we searched for a new athletic director to carry our momentum forward, it became clear that Carter’s background and experience would be a tremendous benefit to the university,” Armstrong said in a statement. “He has the vision and strategy and the deep experience with operations, communications and fundraising to help our student-athletes and our coaches reach even greater heights.”

As the landscape of college athletics undergoes is rapidly changing, Henderson will be tasked with guiding Cal Poly into the unknown future.

College sports is evolving seemingly on a daily basis, with shifting conference alignments, Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals, the transfer portal, new scholarships limits just a few of the myriad of significant changes that must be navigated both in the present and moving forward.

Oberhelman has been with the university since coming to San Luis Obispo in 2011 when he was appointed by Armstrong after a national search to replace then athletics director Alison Cone.

During this time, Cal Poly athletics experienced an era of unprecedented growth, and competitive and academic success.

The Mustangs have captured 54 team conference championships, including 51 in Cal Poly’s 16 Big West sponsored sports—more than any other Big West university in those sports over this span.

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Federal agencies are studying safety of abortion drug mifepristone, driving new concerns about limits on access

CNN Newsource

By Meg Tirrell, Deidre McPhillips, Jamie Gumbrecht, CNN

(CNN) — The US Food and Drug Administration is reviewing evidence about the safety and efficacy of one of the drugs used in medication abortion to investigate how it can be safely dispensed, US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary wrote in a new letter to 22 Republican attorneys general.

Kennedy and Makary said the FDA would conduct “its own review of the evidence, including real-world outcomes and evidence, relating to the safety and efficacy” of mifepristone.

“This Administration will ensure that women’s health is properly protected by thoroughly investigating the circumstances under which mifepristone can be safely dispensed,” they wrote in the letter, sent September 19.

The letter is driving concern among abortion advocates that the federal government may put new limits on access to medication abortion, which has been more broadly available through telehealth in recent years.

Kennedy already told senators earlier this month that the FDA is collecting new data for a safety review of mifepristone and said “those studies are progressing and that they’re ongoing.” Kennedy claimed in the hearing that the Biden administration “twisted the data” on mifepristone to “bury one of the safety signals,” but didn’t provide additional details about what the safety issue could be.

“We’re getting data in all the time — new data that we’re reviewing,” Kennedy told the US Senate Committee on Finance.

The Republican attorneys general cited a report from the Ethics and Public Policy Center — which describes itself as “pushing back against the extreme progressive agenda while building a consensus for conservatives” — as evidence that mifepristone is risky and requires more oversight.

Kennedy and Makary said in their new response that the report indicates “potential dangers that may attend offering mifepristone without sufficient medical support or supervision.” But many experts consider the report to be “junk science,” and it has not been peer-reviewed or published in a medical journal.

Lack of transparency is a key concern, said Dr. Ushma Upadhyay, an associate professor in the department of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive science at the University of California, San Francisco, who put together a 10-point review of major flaws in the report. There’s very little information provided about the source of the data, she said.

The level of risk the report found to be associated with mifepristone is overstated, she said. Any visit to an emergency room was counted as a serious adverse event, including those visits that did not require any treatment; other research suggests that about half of abortion-related emergency department visits are for observation only.

The Society of Family Planning, a nonprofit organization focused on research related to abortion and contraception, has urged the FDA to dismiss the paper for its lack of scientific standards.

“In short, this paper is not a methodologically rigorous, evidence-based resource, and does not warrant consideration, particularly in scientific spaces,” the group wrote in a letter to Makary.

Mifepristone is commonly used along with another drug, misoprostol, for medication abortion in the United States. The FDA approved mifepristone in 2000, and it has long been shown to be safe and effective. It is cleared to end a pregnancy through 10 weeks of gestation.

Clinical studies and decades of use have established the drug’s safety and effectiveness. Since its approval in the US in 2000, there have been 5 deaths associated with mifepristone for every 1 million people who used it, according to the FDA. That means the death rate is 0.0005%. Mifepristone’s safety is on par with those of common over-the-counter pain relievers like ibuprofen and acetaminophen, studies show.

Major medical groups, including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, have repeatedly called for more mifepristone accessibility. During the Covid-19 pandemic, the Biden administration began allowing certified providers to prescribe the drug via telehealth and ship it by mail, which significantly expanded access, particularly in rural areas with few abortion clinics.

But anti-abortion advocates have claimed that the drug is not safe and that the FDA didn’t study it enough. Republican officials have repeatedly called for the government to rescind the telemedicine policy for mifepristone and restrict distribution to in-person visits only. The US Supreme Court declined in June 2024 to block the drug’s availability but left the door open for future regulatory changes, placing the spotlight back on federal agencies such as the FDA.

In 2024, there were more than 1 million abortions in the US for the second year in a row, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy organization focused on sexual and reproductive health that supports abortion rights.

Since the US Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision revoked the federal right to abortion in June 2022, 20 states have enacted bans or severely restricted access, and some have implemented new protections for abortion care. Expanded access to clinics that provide medication abortion through telehealth has contributed to the rise in abortions in the US, according to Guttmacher: About 14% of abortions in 2024 were provided by online-only clinics, up from 10% in 2023 – or an increase of about 40,000 abortions.

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™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

CNN’s Jacqueline Howard contributed to this report.

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County Tax Office seeing backlog in vehicle registrations

Heriberto Perez Lara

Editors note: We originally reported on air that the statement provided was from Chief Administrator Betsy C. Keller. However, the El Paso County has issued a correction, the statement was from El Paso County Commissioners Court, not Chief Administrator Keller.

EL PASO, Texas (KVIA) — The County’s Tax Collector’s Office has been experiencing a significant backlog of vehicle registration transactions since Texas House Bill 718 went into effect on July 1.

According to the County’s Tax Office, they currently have a backlog of approximately 5,400 vehicle registration transactions since the implementation of HB 718.

According to the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles, this bill was enacted to address concerns related to the fraudulent use of paper license tags.

ABC-7 reported this week that local auto dealers are struggling to get vehicle registration stickers for their customers due to the webDEALER backlog the County’s Tax Office is experiencing.

ABC-7 spoke with the Tax Collector’s Office; more updates in later newscasts.

Read the full news release corrected by the County of El Paso below:

NEWS RELEASE – EL PASO COUNTY COMMISSIONERS COURT STATEMENTDownload

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1 injured in crash that closed 2 lanes of Missouri River bridge

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A crash that caused a couple of lanes to close on Wednesday evening on the Missouri River bridge in Jefferson City led to one person having minor injuries, according to a crash report from the Jefferson City Police Department.

The report says three vehicles were heading northbound. The driver of a 2015 Nissan Frontier made a lane change and ended up hitting a 2024 Buick Encore, the report says. The Encore then hit the wall of the bridge, the report says.

Another vehicle – a 2024 Mitsubishi Mirage — was hit by debris that came off the trailer being towed by the Nissan, the report says. The Nissan had extensive damage, while the Buick had moderate damage and the Mitsubishi had minor damage, according to the report.

The driver of the Nissan — a 61-year-old woman from Columbia – had minor damage and was brought to an area hospital by ambulance. A Missouri Department of Transportation camera showed multiple first responders arriving in the area.

A RAVE alert was issued at 9:21 p.m. for the crash and traffic was back to normal by 10 p.m. Two lanes were closed during that period.

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Kick off Fire Prevention Week at the IFFD’s annual block party

News Team

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Tonight, the Idaho Falls Fire Department is inviting the public to its annual Fire Prevention Block Party from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. This free, family-friendly event will be held at Station 1, located at 343 E St., to kick off Fire Prevention Week.

The event aims to provide the community with essential fire safety education in a fun and engaging environment. This year’s theme is “Charge into Fire Safety: Lithium-Ion Batteries in Your Home,” which will be highlighted throughout the evening.

” (It) just gets us out with the community. Allows the community to come in and see our station. They can see all the different rigs we use INL partnered, central fires is here. Food basket chaplains are here. Red cross, forest service. All these people are here. Shows our support for the community, and we want them to see that,” Idaho Falls Fire Marshal Jim Newton said.

The block party will feature a variety of activities for all ages, including: free food provided by the Community Food Basket, fire engine tours, face painting, kids’ training challenges, and more!

For more information on the IFFD and upcoming events, click HERE.

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Update: Power restored to portions of downtown Idaho Falls

News Team

UPDATE:

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — As of 12:20 p.m., Idaho Falls Power crews have the power back up and running after an outage impacted parts of the downtown area.

The utility company expressed its appreciation to the local lineman for their quick response.

ORIGINAL:

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Idaho Falls Power crews are on the scene of a power outage affecting the downtown area, specifically near Capitol and A Street. The cause of the outage has not yet been released by the utility company.

In a Facebook post, Idaho Falls Power asked for patience from affected residents and businesses, stating, “Thank you for your patience as we work to restore power safely and as quickly as possible.”

Local News 8 will continue to monitor the situation and provide updates as more information becomes available from the power provider.

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Update: Fire that heavily damaged SW Redmond home caused by improper disposal of smoking materials

Barney Lerten

(Update: Investigators find cause of house fire)

REDMOND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Authorities have found the cause of a fire that heavily damaged a southwest Redmond home Wednesday night. Residents got out unhurt and firefighters stopped its spread to nearby trees and grass.

Redmond Fire & Rescue crews were sent around 9:20 p.m. to the reported fire in the 300 block of Southwest 35th Street, Fire Marshal/Public Information Officer Tom Mooney said.

Crews arrived to find flames erupting from the single-story home and spreading to the trees and grass, he said. They quickly deployed hand lines to put out the house fire and stop its spread into the wildland-urban interface.

As the fire was quickly brought under control, crews learned all occupants escaped without injuries. Mooney said a resident was displaced and is being assisted by family members.

Mooney said Thursday that the “cause of the fire was determined to be the improper disposal of smoking material, igniting nearby vegetation. The fire then spread to the wooden deck that was attached to the residence and then damaged the residence.” 

“Redmond Fire & Rescue would like to thank Cloverdale RFPD, Redmond Police and Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office for their assistance,” Mooney said in a news release.

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