Idaho Falls City Council candidates engage with voters at dual forums

News Team

EDITORS’ NOTE: An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that several City Council candidates chose not to attend a candidate forum. We have learned that these candidates were participating in a separate forum at The Celt, hosted by KID Newsradio.

We value accuracy and are grateful to the community members and candidates who brought this information to our attention.

UPDATED — October 23, 2025, 10:40 AM

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Candidates vying for seats on the Idaho Falls City Council split their focus Tuesday night, attending multiple public forums in an effort to connect with voters ahead of the November election.

In a forum hosted by Stand Up for Idaho, the sole City Council candidate in attendance, Jared Dominick, spoke candidly about Idaho Falls’ development trends.

“I’m just talking city only,” Dominick said. “You know what’s going on outside the city is different, but it is not an explosive population growth in Idaho Falls. But what is really growing is the explosion of apartment buildings.”

He attributed the surge to the city’s comprehensive plan, known as “Imagine IF,” which is being implemented by the current city council and mayor.

Candidates Convene at The Celt Pub

Meanwhile, 10 City Council hopefuls, including Mosy Moran, Teresa Dominick, Brandon Lee, etc., focused their efforts on a separate forum. This event was hosted by KID Newsradio and took place at the Celt Pub.

“Events like this highlight the growing enthusiasm for open, community-based dialogue in our city,” candidate for City Council Seat 2 Mosy Moran said in a message to Local News 8.

In a statement to Doug Toomer of Stand Up for Idaho, Lee explained why he chose to attend the other forum, stating, “I attended the [Stand Up for Idaho] mayoral forum and just felt that that type of environment was not what a local, nonpartisan event should be like.”

Local News 8 is reaching out to the candidates who participated in the Celt forum and will update this article with details of their discussions and platforms as soon as that information becomes available.

Click here to follow the original article.

New Sam Adams beer is illegal to buy in 15 states – because it’s so strong


WBZ

By Neal Riley

Click here for updates on this story

    BOSTON (WBZ) — Boston-based brewer Sam Adams has released a new beer that’s so strong it can’t be sold in 15 states, including New Hampshire.

Sam Adams calls its Utopias 2025 an “extreme” beer with a 30% alcohol by volume. Previous versions of Utopias have been between 24% and 28% ABV. Typically, a beer has an AVB of about 5%.

New Hampshire caps alcohol by volume in beers at 14%. Other states where the alcohol content in a Utopias beer exceeds legal limits include Vermont, North Carolina and Georgia and Oregon.

Sam Adams said reaching 30% ABV was a personal goal of founder and CEO Jim Koch, but more important was reaching getting the flavor right for a beverage that “blurs the line between beer and fine spirits.”

“This year’s release combines vintages aged up to 30 years, finished in Irish Whiskey, Amarone, White Port, Ruby Port, Carcavelos, Cognac, and Scotch casks, creating complex layers of caramel, oak, dried fruit, subtle smoke, and citrus,” Sam Adams said in a statement.

The suggested retail price is $240 for a 24.5-ounce bottle, and it can be found now at specialty liquor stores where it can legally be sold. Sam Adams says a “serving” of the beer should only be one or two ounces.

Reviews for previous versions of Utopias on the BeerAdvocate website are high, though some question whether the high price is worth it.

“The taste is super intense,” one reviewer commented. “So much going on, with a slight burn on the way down.”

“Drinks nicely for the ABV, but no doubt about it, this is a sipper,” another person wrote.

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.

New Sam Adams beer is illegal to buy in 15 states – because it’s so strong

By Neal Riley

Click here for updates on this story

    BOSTON (WBZ) — Boston-based brewer Sam Adams has released a new beer that’s so strong it can’t be sold in 15 states, including New Hampshire.

Sam Adams calls its Utopias 2025 an “extreme” beer with a 30% alcohol by volume. Previous versions of Utopias have been between 24% and 28% ABV. Typically, a beer has an AVB of about 5%.

New Hampshire caps alcohol by volume in beers at 14%. Other states where the alcohol content in a Utopias beer exceeds legal limits include Vermont, North Carolina and Georgia and Oregon.

Sam Adams said reaching 30% ABV was a personal goal of founder and CEO Jim Koch, but more important was reaching getting the flavor right for a beverage that “blurs the line between beer and fine spirits.”

“This year’s release combines vintages aged up to 30 years, finished in Irish Whiskey, Amarone, White Port, Ruby Port, Carcavelos, Cognac, and Scotch casks, creating complex layers of caramel, oak, dried fruit, subtle smoke, and citrus,” Sam Adams said in a statement.

The suggested retail price is $240 for a 24.5-ounce bottle, and it can be found now at specialty liquor stores where it can legally be sold. Sam Adams says a “serving” of the beer should only be one or two ounces.

Reviews for previous versions of Utopias on the BeerAdvocate website are high, though some question whether the high price is worth it.

“The taste is super intense,” one reviewer commented. “So much going on, with a slight burn on the way down.”

“Drinks nicely for the ABV, but no doubt about it, this is a sipper,” another person wrote.

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.

Family escapes boat fire, spends 2 nights on island before rescue

By Matt Schooley, Jordyn Jagolinzer

Click here for updates on this story

    CAPE COD, Massachusetts (WBZ) — A family swam to an island off the coast of Cape Cod and spent two nights there waiting for help after their boat caught fire early this week.

The U.S. Coast Guard said the family of three was rescued Wednesday morning after becoming stranded on Naushon Island. All three were seriously injured.

“Disasters at sea are often pretty terrifying, but to hear one especially like this, right here, we don’t really get that,” said Falmouth resident Eric Frost.

Coast Guard officials said the Sullivan family departed from Eel Pond near Falmouth, Massachusetts Friday on their boat named Third Wave. In a statement from the family, they said they had been asleep early Tuesday morning when the family’s dog started barking, alerting them to a fire. By that time, the boat was engulfed and while the family was able to escape, their dogs tragically died.

Though the boaters were expected to return Tuesday afternoon, they were overdue and a concerned family member reported them missing that night. A search for the boat began soon after, including Coast Guard members, the Falmouth Police Department, Falmouth harbormaster, and volunteers from Naushon Trust.

The Coast Guard received a mayday call from the family Wednesday morning. Nashuon Trust volunteers found the missing boaters and provided first aid.

A Coast Guard Air Station Cape Cod crew arrived to Naushon Island and airlifted members of the family to Cape Cod Hospital. The Sullivan family said in a statement that Cici Sullivan remains in the ICU in critical but stable condition and her husband Patrick was taken to Brigham and Women’s for treatment in their burn center. Their son, Tyler, suffered third-degree burns on his arm and smoke inhalation, but is in stable condition.

“The family would like to express our deepest gratitude to the U.S. Coast Guard and all emergency personnel who participated in the search and rescue efforts,” said the Sullivan family in a statement.

“It’s awful, I hope everyone turns out OK. It has been very windy lately,” said Mashpee resident Dennis Flaherty.

Located between Buzzards Bay and Vineyard Sound, Naushon Island is the largest of the Elizabeth Islands. It is centered between Pasque Island and Nonamesset Island.

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.

Frustration boils after Maryland mistakenly issued double payments to workers who took buyouts


WJZ

By Mike Hellgren

Click here for updates on this story

    MARYLAND (WJZ) — A software error caused 293 former state workers to receive twice their buyout payments, WJZ Investigates has learned.

Maryland officials are advising those who received the excess funds not to touch the extra money in their accounts, which will be taken back automatically.

The payments will be taken out of the accounts over the next several weeks, and the state promises to put the correct amounts into the accounts by November 19.

Maryland officials said they notified those impacted by email and by phone.

Maryland formally eliminated more than 500 positions in state government on Wednesday, most of them from a voluntary buyout program. The move helps Maryland’s struggling budget.

The state’s spending board approved the cuts without question during its meeting on Wednesday.

Gov. Wes Moore authorized the buyouts for 332 employees. Almost 900 workers applied for the Voluntary Separation Program.

Approximately 170 positions that were already vacant are also being eliminated to save the state tens of millions of dollars.

“None of these choices is easy,” Gov. Moore said at the Board of Public Works meeting. “I do want to ensure the public, including all of our public servants, that we will continue to protect our people.”

The position eliminations are expected to save the state $10.5 million during fiscal year 2026 and $22 million in general funds during fiscal year 2027.

The glitch in the Voluntary Separation Program (VSP) was revealed this week. WJZ Investigates found the state mistakenly double-paid 293 of those workers, and they are now working to take the money back.

That includes $40,000, instead of the agreed-upon $20,000 lump sum, plus double the $300 for each year of service.

One of those workers who asked to remain anonymous is outraged at how it was handled.

“It’s sad for our government,” she said. “It’s sad for our state. It’s sad for the employees.”

In an email she received, the state blamed a “software error” and asked those who received the buyout payments to “please retain these funds. The entire amount (correct payment and overpayment) you received will be automatically debited from your account within the next 2 weeks. A new, correct payment will be transmitted to you on November 19th. Apologies for the inconvenience this may cause… .”

“I’m not giving them permission to go to my account and take out money,” the former worker told WJZ Investigates. “Yes, I know it’s not my money, but let’s talk about it. Don’t just send me an email and say, ‘Don’t touch any of that money. We’re taking it back sometime in two weeks when we decide.'”

She continued, “I was alarmed, scared, frustrated, and to think that they can now just go back into my account, really without my authorization, and take the money.”

In a statement to WJZ, Senior Advisor and Communications Director David Turner said once the overpayments went out, there was nothing they could immediately do.

“On October 20, the Department of Budget and Management discovered a file error that resulted in double payments to 293 VSP participants,” Turner wrote. “As the electronic payment process for all state employees was already in progress, there would have been considerable risk in modifying the payment file. Therefore, the state paid all state employees on schedule—providing notice to VSP participants that, due to a software error, the funds they received will be recalled and the correct amount reissued.”

Turner warned that Maryland will take action to get the overpayments back.

“If overpayments are not returned in full, the state may pursue recoupment via employee leave balance payouts, standard collection procedures, or, in the worst cases, tax refund intercepts to recover the funds,” Turner said.

The former worker who discovered the problem said it has shaken her trust in the state government.

“I didn’t go to you and say, ‘Hey, buy me out to fix your deficit.’ You offered that to me,” she said. “We’re publicizing that we want to help federal employees with employment. Well, you’re not paying the employees who have dedicated themselves to you already. I would’ve rather them just not give me anything and to say, ‘Hey, there’s a glitch, you’ll get paid in two weeks.'”

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.

Frustration boils after Maryland mistakenly issued double payments to workers who took buyouts

By Mike Hellgren

Click here for updates on this story

    MARYLAND (WJZ) — A software error caused 293 former state workers to receive twice their buyout payments, WJZ Investigates has learned.

Maryland officials are advising those who received the excess funds not to touch the extra money in their accounts, which will be taken back automatically.

The payments will be taken out of the accounts over the next several weeks, and the state promises to put the correct amounts into the accounts by November 19.

Maryland officials said they notified those impacted by email and by phone.

Maryland formally eliminated more than 500 positions in state government on Wednesday, most of them from a voluntary buyout program. The move helps Maryland’s struggling budget.

The state’s spending board approved the cuts without question during its meeting on Wednesday.

Gov. Wes Moore authorized the buyouts for 332 employees. Almost 900 workers applied for the Voluntary Separation Program.

Approximately 170 positions that were already vacant are also being eliminated to save the state tens of millions of dollars.

“None of these choices is easy,” Gov. Moore said at the Board of Public Works meeting. “I do want to ensure the public, including all of our public servants, that we will continue to protect our people.”

The position eliminations are expected to save the state $10.5 million during fiscal year 2026 and $22 million in general funds during fiscal year 2027.

The glitch in the Voluntary Separation Program (VSP) was revealed this week. WJZ Investigates found the state mistakenly double-paid 293 of those workers, and they are now working to take the money back.

That includes $40,000, instead of the agreed-upon $20,000 lump sum, plus double the $300 for each year of service.

One of those workers who asked to remain anonymous is outraged at how it was handled.

“It’s sad for our government,” she said. “It’s sad for our state. It’s sad for the employees.”

In an email she received, the state blamed a “software error” and asked those who received the buyout payments to “please retain these funds. The entire amount (correct payment and overpayment) you received will be automatically debited from your account within the next 2 weeks. A new, correct payment will be transmitted to you on November 19th. Apologies for the inconvenience this may cause… .”

“I’m not giving them permission to go to my account and take out money,” the former worker told WJZ Investigates. “Yes, I know it’s not my money, but let’s talk about it. Don’t just send me an email and say, ‘Don’t touch any of that money. We’re taking it back sometime in two weeks when we decide.'”

She continued, “I was alarmed, scared, frustrated, and to think that they can now just go back into my account, really without my authorization, and take the money.”

In a statement to WJZ, Senior Advisor and Communications Director David Turner said once the overpayments went out, there was nothing they could immediately do.

“On October 20, the Department of Budget and Management discovered a file error that resulted in double payments to 293 VSP participants,” Turner wrote. “As the electronic payment process for all state employees was already in progress, there would have been considerable risk in modifying the payment file. Therefore, the state paid all state employees on schedule—providing notice to VSP participants that, due to a software error, the funds they received will be recalled and the correct amount reissued.”

Turner warned that Maryland will take action to get the overpayments back.

“If overpayments are not returned in full, the state may pursue recoupment via employee leave balance payouts, standard collection procedures, or, in the worst cases, tax refund intercepts to recover the funds,” Turner said.

The former worker who discovered the problem said it has shaken her trust in the state government.

“I didn’t go to you and say, ‘Hey, buy me out to fix your deficit.’ You offered that to me,” she said. “We’re publicizing that we want to help federal employees with employment. Well, you’re not paying the employees who have dedicated themselves to you already. I would’ve rather them just not give me anything and to say, ‘Hey, there’s a glitch, you’ll get paid in two weeks.'”

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.

Retired stockbroker teaching students financial literacy


KPIX

By Sharon Chin

Click here for updates on this story

    OAKLAND, California (KPIX) — A retired stockbroker is giving some elementary school students in Oakland a foundation in finance to break the cycle of poverty.

“They’re getting a foundation, a foundation and exposure for finance,” Val Chapman said.

The retired stockbroker wanted to help break the cycle of poverty among at-risk children. So, she founded Financial Literacy for Kid$ in 2020.

“They’re learning about managing their own money, saving for college, building their own businesses, and they’re having fun at it,” said Chapman,

She teaches four classes a week at Franklin Elementary School in Oakland. Fourth and fifth-graders like Maurice Young manage their own simulated portfolios and share their moneymakers.

“Trump Media,” said the fifth grader. “‘Because he’s going up $2.”

They’re also learning diversification. And, like fifth grader Praise Tamang, the right time to buy.

“I like to buy them while they’re down,” Tamang said. “I’ve made $200 in equity so far.”

Student Anuhea Lopez understands that if she starts young, she can grow a nice nest egg.

“You could have more money and live a better life,” said the 5th grader.

Teacher Benita Yeager said Chapman’s lessons are turning a profit in student learning.

“They’re broadening their horizons, and expanding their minds, and they really love it, which is the best part of it all,” Yeager said.

It’s evident Chapman loves it too.

“You can see the joy,” Yeager said. “This is her passion. This is what she wants to do.”

On this day, students pitched new product ideas to a guest speaker from ELF Beauty in Oakland. It’s the entrepreneurial arm of Financial Literacy for Kid$.

Students build their own startups and compete in Tiger Tank, their school’s version of Shark Tank. They pitch their products like homemade soap and jewelry.

“We have students who’ve hired other classmates to work with them. And they’re earning 30 to 40 dollars a week,” Chapman said. “That’s pretty impressive, and that also helps them build their math skills and research skills.

Some of the students have won regional prizes in the National Stock Market Game, where they manage a hypothetical $100,000 portfolio.

Financial Literacy for Kid$ is fiscally sponsored by the Oakland Public Education Fund. Chapman is seeking more corporate partnerships and grants, so she can bring the literacy lessons to all of the 4th and 5th graders in Oakland’s public schools.

She also teaches a weeklong tuition-based summer program on financial literacy. Chapman is seeing early returns on her investment, students are opening savings accounts, and there’s a ripple effect at home.

“Not only are students learning more about investing, but they’re also talking to their parents and families about saving and investing as well,” Chapman beamed.

So, for opening doors of economic opportunity through Financial Literacy for Kid$, this week’s CBS News Bay Area Icon Award goes to Val Chapman.

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.

Retired stockbroker teaching students financial literacy

By Sharon Chin

Click here for updates on this story

    OAKLAND, California (KPIX) — A retired stockbroker is giving some elementary school students in Oakland a foundation in finance to break the cycle of poverty.

“They’re getting a foundation, a foundation and exposure for finance,” Val Chapman said.

The retired stockbroker wanted to help break the cycle of poverty among at-risk children. So, she founded Financial Literacy for Kid$ in 2020.

“They’re learning about managing their own money, saving for college, building their own businesses, and they’re having fun at it,” said Chapman,

She teaches four classes a week at Franklin Elementary School in Oakland. Fourth and fifth-graders like Maurice Young manage their own simulated portfolios and share their moneymakers.

“Trump Media,” said the fifth grader. “‘Because he’s going up $2.”

They’re also learning diversification. And, like fifth grader Praise Tamang, the right time to buy.

“I like to buy them while they’re down,” Tamang said. “I’ve made $200 in equity so far.”

Student Anuhea Lopez understands that if she starts young, she can grow a nice nest egg.

“You could have more money and live a better life,” said the 5th grader.

Teacher Benita Yeager said Chapman’s lessons are turning a profit in student learning.

“They’re broadening their horizons, and expanding their minds, and they really love it, which is the best part of it all,” Yeager said.

It’s evident Chapman loves it too.

“You can see the joy,” Yeager said. “This is her passion. This is what she wants to do.”

On this day, students pitched new product ideas to a guest speaker from ELF Beauty in Oakland. It’s the entrepreneurial arm of Financial Literacy for Kid$.

Students build their own startups and compete in Tiger Tank, their school’s version of Shark Tank. They pitch their products like homemade soap and jewelry.

“We have students who’ve hired other classmates to work with them. And they’re earning 30 to 40 dollars a week,” Chapman said. “That’s pretty impressive, and that also helps them build their math skills and research skills.

Some of the students have won regional prizes in the National Stock Market Game, where they manage a hypothetical $100,000 portfolio.

Financial Literacy for Kid$ is fiscally sponsored by the Oakland Public Education Fund. Chapman is seeking more corporate partnerships and grants, so she can bring the literacy lessons to all of the 4th and 5th graders in Oakland’s public schools.

She also teaches a weeklong tuition-based summer program on financial literacy. Chapman is seeing early returns on her investment, students are opening savings accounts, and there’s a ripple effect at home.

“Not only are students learning more about investing, but they’re also talking to their parents and families about saving and investing as well,” Chapman beamed.

So, for opening doors of economic opportunity through Financial Literacy for Kid$, this week’s CBS News Bay Area Icon Award goes to Val Chapman.

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.

Group of bears spotted in trees of Encino neighborhood

By Dean Fioresi

Click here for updates on this story

    ENCINO, California (KCAL, KCBS) — A group of bears was spotted relaxing in the trees above a neighborhood in Encino on Wednesday afternoon, drawing a small crowd of onlookers.

The bears were first spotted at around noon near Ashley Oaks Drive, close to Balboa and Ventura boulevards. The family of bears, a mother and her three cubs, remained in the neighborhood for hours, with some neighbors telling CBS LA that they were lingering even at around 9 p.m.

Both the Los Angeles Police Department and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife were called to the scene after the bears were first spotted.

SkyCal was overhead as the four bears moved around in the trees later in the afternoon.

There were no reports of direct interaction with any of the residents in the area and DFW said that none of the bears needed to be tranquilized or removed from the area.

Wildlife officials said that they’ve been tracking the mother bear, known to them as Yellow 2291, for years. She was found roaming in Claremont in May last year. he’s been relocated to the Angeles National Forest several times in recent months, but somehow always made it back to the Santa Monica Mountains. They say that she welcomed her three bear cubs in March.

It is reportedly the first time that a bear was ever reported in the city of Encino, residents told CBS LA.

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.

Wheezy’s hosts Pink Party Takeover

Joaquin Hight

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – Wheezy’s Restaurant and Sports Bar in the Yuma foothills hosted the Bridget’s Gift Pink Party Takeover.

All profits from this event will go directly to Bridget’s Gift in support of breast cancer awareness.

Wheezy’s owner Elene MacAdam shares about the importance of people knowing about breast cancer.

“We also want to help bring awareness to breast cancer so people do their monthly checks. Because it doesn’t matter what age you are, breast cancer can come,” MacAdam expressed.

The event featured auctions and raffles.

Rural metro PIO Sarina Kissel shares why this feels personal to her.

“My grandmother was diagnosed this year with breast cancer, so, it hits a little bit different. I mean, I’m very passionate about anyone who has it. But when it’s in the family, it hits a little bit harder,” MacAdam shared.

Breast cancer patient and Wheezy’s co-owner Maria Steffanakos also shares her story.

“Breast cancer is near and dear to our hearts. I’m just now coming up on a three-year completion, and I’m back out into society, and what a better way than to sponsor and be apart of such a lovely foundation?” Steffanakos remarked.

From survivors to supporters, everyone involved with Bridget’s Gift this year is proud to be apart of such a good cause.

Click here to follow the original article.