CSUSB’s Palm Desert campus fundraiser for hospitality management students

City News Service

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (KESQ) – A fundraiser benefiting hospitality management student at Cal State San Bernardino’s Palm Desert campus will he held later this month at Agua Caliente Casino Resort and Spa in Rancho Mirage.   

“An Evening in Monte Carlo” masquerade ball will take place from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Oct. 29 at 32-250 Bob Hope Drive.   

The event will feature what is described as an elegant dinner, live entertainment and dancing.

All proceeds will go toward scholarships and educational opportunities.   

“An Evening in Monte Carlo is more than a celebration. It’s an investment in our students,” Joe Tormey, director of hospitality management program at the Palm Desert campus, said in a statement.

Anyone interested in purchasing tickets can go to www.csusb.edu/marketing/hospitality-management-program.

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Palm Springs discusses flood insurance discounts for residents within flood map

Kendall Flynn

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – The Coachella Valley is expecting rain to end the week, and with storms comes the potential for flooding in the desert.

Palm Springs is the only city in the Coachella Valley that participates in the National Flood Insurance Program/ Community Rating System (NFIP/CRS) which is a program implemented by the Federal Emergency Management Association (FEMA).

The program maintained Palm Springs association as a Community Rating of Class 6. This rating earns a 20% discount on flood insurance for its residents in Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHA). There is also an option for residents bordering those areas for a 5% Preferred Risk Police (PRP).

Stay with News Channel 3 to hear what this means for residents, and if it’s something locals have considered.

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Central Oregon holiday menus may be impacted as U.S. herd shrinks and costs rise

Claire Elmer

(Update: adding video, interview with local butcher)

REDMOND, Ore. (KTVZ) — As Central Oregonians gear up for holiday gatherings, many are facing tighter budgets. And as the cost of groceries — especially meat — continues to climb, many are forced to rethink what will be on the table this year.

Federal data shows beef prices have surged more than 50% since 2020. This year alone has seen a roughly 14% jump. The result is slimmer supplies and tougher choices for both consumers and local suppliers.

At Cinder Butte Meat Company in Redmond, owner Brian Johnson says the ripple effects of supply cuts across the Northwest are impacting his family-owned business.

“We have vendors and processors all over the Northwest that we rely on to give us our product. And their supply has been cut. Therefore, the prices have gone up,” Johnson explained to us Thursday. 

“We have regular customers expecting the regular products they’ve been buying for years — and suddenly they’re asking, ‘Where are they?’” he added. “We can’t supply them because our suppliers can’t get them. And when we do have them, of course, the price has gone up.”

Cuts that might have sold for $9 a pound last year are now closer to $14 — and that’s if stores can get them at all.

Industry experts point to several factors driving the surge. The U.S. cattle herd is now the smallest it’s been in more than 70 years, persistent drought has strained grazing lands, and higher costs for fuel and feed are squeezing ranchers. On top of that, tariffs have increased the price of some imports.

“We’ve had a number of people who just didn’t buy cattle this year because the prices to purchase or the availability wasn’t there at all,” Johnson said. “Increased costs in farming, ranching, fuel — everything. And I don’t know that there’s an end in sight. We’re not seeing costs go down at all.”

Despite rising expenses, Johnson says his shop remains committed to offering high-quality, locally sourced meats. That’s a big reason why his customers are sticking with him.

“We’ve never wanted to lower our standards and supply people with something inferior just to save a few dollars,” he said. “We’ve always kept our standards high, and that’s what we aim to do this holiday season as well.”

For those preparing holiday meals under these new price pressures, planning ahead is more important than ever. Johnson recommends placing meat orders early to ensure availability. You can also consider less expensive cuts or alternative proteins, and contact local butchers to compare prices.

Whether it’s beef for a centerpiece roast or more modest fare, Central Oregonians may need creativity and flexibility to keep traditions alive — without breaking the bank.

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Designer apartments, retail spaces coming to historic Felix Street building

Rebecca Evans

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A piece of Downtown St. Joseph’s history is getting a modern makeover.

The city’s first designer apartments and retail spaces are set to open soon at 716-718 Felix Street, across from Coleman Hawkins Park in Downtown.

Developed by Juniper Lane and Fox Creek Design LLC, the project is transforming a 150-year-old building into a blend of high-end residential living and retail opportunity. The redevelopment will preserve much of the building’s historic character, while adding modern design elements and upscale finishes.

“This building has been vacant my whole life. We could use some more retail spaces just to bring people Downtown and get people shopping,” Jamie Donaldson, a developer, said.

Once complete, the space will feature eight luxury apartments on the upper floors and retail suites on the street level, bringing new energy and investment to the area of town.

Developers said the goal is to create a destination supporting both stylish, urban living and the growth of small businesses in the city’s historic core.

“It’s right on the square to get more traction…,” Donaldson said. “And also have some more housing available for people Downtown.”

Construction is well underway on the long-standing property. Retail spaces are currently being preleased and preleasing for the apartment spaces will begin in the spring.

The estimated cost for a unit is $1,975 a month. Leasing terms are flexible and a free rent promotion is offered with an early lease agreement. For more information or to apply call 816-617-8797.

The team hopes the mix of retail and residential will not only bring new life to Felix Street but also inspire others to invest in Downtown.

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Local law enforcement launches online sexual assault reporting tool

Carter Ostermiller

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The Buchanan County Sheriff’s Office’s new ‘Seek Then Speak‘ program has just been announced as a new online resource for sexual assault victims.

The program can be accessed through an application, which provides survivors with steps to seek help and create a report.

News-Press NOW reached out to the Buchanan County Sheriff’s Office to discuss the goal of the new program.

“If we can increase the reporting of sexual assault and, you know, the removal of suspects from the street, then obviously we’re making our community a safer place,” Sheriff Bill Puett said.

According to a Facebook post from the Buchanan County Sheriff’s Office, “SEEK helps survivors and supports people gathering information and exploring options, while SPEAK provides a way for survivors to begin the process of reporting to law enforcement by completing a self-guided interview and generating a report.”

More information about the app and program can be found at www.evawintl.org/seek-then-speak-resources/.

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Halloween enthusiast packs decorations into Pueblo Mall for second-annual haunted house

Bradley Davis

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) – It’s more than just a packed attic. He’s a horror collector from Pueblo, and for the second time, he’s packed his own stock into a 4500 square foot space in the Pueblo Mall to open “The Funhouse Haunted House.”

“Everyone here loves Halloween. They love haunted houses, and I think, most of all, we love to scare people,” said The Funhouse Haunted House founder Jared Perea.

Perea has been collecting all things horror for about 15 years. A couple of years ago, he decided to start buying up more props and costumes to fulfill his dream of opening his own haunted house.

Perea said he’s put thousands of dollars into building out the haunted house. In 2024, it was free and kid-friendly. Perea said he had to start charging this year to cover mall fees and other costs, like insurance. He said any money left over will go to his volunteer actors.

“We want to keep it cheap so you don’t have to spend a lot of money to come into the haunted house,” Perea said. “We don’t cut corners on anything. We go from there, and we try to make it the best experience for the cheapest cost.”

Perea said this year’s haunted house is intended to give guests a good scare, but they will temper the jump scares if guests with children ask.

The haunted house is $8 a ticket online and $25 for a family of four. It’s $12 at the door, but Perea said they will let guests buy online tickets while in line.

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Rare mountain lion sighting confirmed by MDC near St. Joseph

Cameron Montemayor

BUCHANAN COUNTY, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The Missouri Department of Conservation confirmed a rare sighting of a mountain lion this September in Northwest Missouri near St. Joseph, one of just four confirmed sightings in the last four years of the elusive and shy cat in the region.

Department officials confirmed to News-Press NOW the authenticity of trail camera footage of a mountain lion captured just before 10 p.m. on Sept. 22 in northeast Buchanan County.

“Mountain lion sightings are not very common in northwestern Missouri, but they do happen on rare occasions. Our last confirmed sighting in the region was in February, and there have only been about three in the northwest in the last four years,” said Erin Woodiel, media specialist with MDC’s Kansas City and Northwestern regions.

The owner of the trail camera told News-Press NOW the images were captured in Buchanan County, following earlier sightings of the large feline making its way through Andrew County, coming as close as Amazonia.

The camera was located just 15 miles northeast of St. Joseph — just west of Clarksdale, Missouri — when it captured footage of the mountain lion, also known as a cougar. Photos posted on Facebook earlier this week by another Northwest Missouri resident appear to show a mountain lion near Savannah on Sept. 19, a sighting unconfirmed by the department.

This trail camera screenshot shows a mountain lion walking through a field west of Clarksdale, Missouri, just before 10 p.m. on Sept. 22, roughly 15 miles northeast of St. Joseph.

“Mountain lions don’t tend to linger in one spot for too long, and they have a fairly large range of movement, so it is much more likely that other sightings in the area would be of the same cat moving through as opposed to multiple individuals,” Woodiel said. “As with any wild animal sighting, we remind the public to Keep Wildlife Wild and to not approach or attempt to interact with or feed the animal. If it doesn’t feel threatened or cornered, it won’t bother the public and will continue on its way.” 

She said a majority of sightings statewide have been single male mountain lions likely grown up and traveling along the Missouri River corridor in search of their own territory. Genetic samples in the past from cougars found traveling through Missouri suggest many are coming from western states, according to the department’s website.

Measuring up to 8 feet long and weighing between 64 and 265 pounds, depending on whether it’s male or female, mountain lions are solitary animals and attacks on humans are rare. Missouri does not have an established breeding population, and no evidence has been recorded of reproduction.

“Mountain lions are naturally shy of people and seldom cause problems, even in states with thriving populations,” a page on MDC’s website reads. “The danger of a mountain lion attack is highly unlikely compared to many other familiar dangers we encounter every day. Fatal mountain lion attacks have averaged one every seven years since 1980.”

As of late 2024, the Missouri Department of Conservation had confirmed roughly 120 mountain lion sightings and reports since 1996. More than a dozen official sightings have occurred statewide in 2025.

Each year, MDC’s Large Carnivore Response Team investigates hundreds of mountain lion reports.

Of the thousands of reports received since 1994, less than 1% have yielded enough physical evidence to clearly confirm the presence of a mountain lion, although sightings have increased since 2006, in large part due to the popularity of trail cameras.

Woodiel said the public is encouraged to report sightings to a local conservation agent, particularly if physical evidence or photo/video evidence is available. Residents can also email the LCRT team at mountain.lion@mdc.mo.gov to contact the Response Team directly.

More information on mountain lions can be found on the department’s website at mdc.mo.gov/discover-nature/field-guide/mountain-lion.

State game agencies estimate mountain lion populations in the U.S. to be between 20,000 and 40,000.

This undated photo provided by the U.S. National Park Service shows a mountain lion photographed in the Santa Monica Mountain range in California.

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Seven businesses have signed Columbia Police ‘letters of enforcement’ since deadly downtown shooting

Alison Patton

EDITOR’S NOTE: AI was used to research the background for this story.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Seven businesses have signed up for Columbia Police to enforce trespassing and parking rules while they’re closed — four of them since Friday.

University of Missouri and Columbia City leaders are asking downtown businesses to sign a form that would allow the Columbia Police Department to issue trespassing warnings to unwanted people on private property.

Without a letter of enforcement, the business owner would have to be present for trespassers to be cited, Boone County Prosecutor Roger Johnson has told ABC 17 News.

The push to sign comes after a Stephens College student, Aiyanna Williams, was shot dead last month. Two other people were injured in the shooting.

The City of Columbia and MU leaders sent out an action plan to reduce crime the following week, which included the enforcement letter as one of 11 ways to reduce crime.

MU Chancellor Mun Choi walked through downtown last week to highlight the issue. Meanwhile, police have stepped up downtown patrols, with Columbia Police Chief Jill Schlude saying officers found 20 guns during traffic stops last weekend.

Check back for updates to this developing story.

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ABC-7 at 4:  Dead as a Dodo a mesmerizing musical coming to El Paso

Nichole Gomez

El Paso, TX (KVIA-TV) – “Dead as a Dodo,” a puppet music theater spectacle, is coming to El Paso. The show will take place at The Plaza Theatre on October 11th, giving El Paso an opportunity to experience a performance that has been praised worldwide.

https://www.ticketmaster.com/dead-as-a-dodo-el-paso-texas-10-11-2025/event/0C00630CA9901F31

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MoWest celebrates opening of Student Collaboration Center  

Praji Ghosh

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Missouri Western State University is gearing up to celebrate the opening of its new Student Collaboration Center.

The new space is dedicated to George S. Richmond, a longtime faculty member and administrator who made a lasting impact after moving to St. Joseph and joining MoWest.  

A ribbon-cutting will be held at 4 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 9, in Potter Hall on MoWest’s campus.

News-Press NOW will update the story.  

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