5 years after kidney transplant, these 2 Eagles and Packers fans are back together

By Nikki DeMentri

Click here for updates on this story

    Pennsylvania (KYW) — For a set of Philadelphia Eagles and Green Bay Packers fans, Monday’s Week 10 matchup is bigger than a game. Organ donation originally brought these fans together, but it’s football that keeps this friendship going.

Jason and Jodi Stepongzi are diehard Eagles fans from Nazareth, while Bobbi and Willi Brenner are cheese heads from Rochester, Minnesota.

Jason Spepongzi and Bobbi Brenner, despite repping different shades of green, are forever linked,

“If people are thinking about donating,” Spepongzi said, “I live a normal life. Nothing’s changed, other than having an extended family.”

Spepongzi donated his kidney to Brenner, a total stranger, five years ago. It was a Facebook post two years before that, though, that inspired him to become a donor in the first place.

At the time, a young Eagles fan named Jaxson was looking for a kidney.

“I just read it, just felt the need to do something,” Spepongzi said. “I would want someone to help my kid.”

While Spepongzi wasn’t a match for the toddler, he was a match for Brenner. This kidney would be her fourth after years of dialysis. In July 2020, the transplant happened.

“When I finally met her, it was definitely emotional in the parking lot,” Spepongzi said.

Spepongzi shared a photo of the first time he met Brenner in person, about a year after that life-changing day.

“We first decided to get together,” Willi Brenner said. “We figured the Pro Football Hall of Fame was the halfway point between Rochester and Philadelphia. When we were leaving that one, I said to Jason and Jodi, the next time the Eagles come to Lambeau, we’re going to get tickets and that’s going to be the next time we get together face to face.”

While a kidney transplant brought them together, football keeps their friendship going.

As for Jaxson, he was able to receive a kidney on Christmas Day in 2020 from another donor. His dad says the now 9-year-old is doing well.

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.

Santa Barbara Dons celebrate top 150 athletes of all-time

Mike Klan

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – The top 150 Santa Barbara High School athletes of all-time were honored at the Santa Barbara Club hosted by the Dons Ye Old Gang and the school’s alumni association.

4-Time NFL Pro Bowl quarterback Randall Cunningham and 3-time Olympic Gold medal winning volleyball player Karch Kirlay were some of the bigger stars that attended the gala.

Cunningham graduated from Santa Barbara High in 1981 while Kiraly was a 1978 Dons graduate.

The following day Cunningham held a kids-only event at the very Santa Barbara downtown Boys & Girls Club that helped Randall develop important life skills while he was growing up.

He threw the football to kids and also signed autographs.

The 150 top athletes coincides with Santa Barbara High School celebrating 150 years of being opened, making it one of the oldest high schools in California.

Here is a complete list of the 150 Dons greatest athletes in school history.

John Whittemore Track and Field 1918Keith Gledhill Tennis 1928Mike Dimas Football 1930Robert Eugene Lillard Baseball 1931Lou Tsoutsouvas Football 1933Harry McLaughlin Basketball 1936Bill Peters Football 1937Dario Castagnola Football 1938Thomas Kruger Tennis 1939Chuck Sylvester Football 1940Gene Mangini Baseball 1941Doug Spence Football 1941Peter Zucco Football 1941Eldon Ford Tennis 1943Alex Bravo Football 1949Eddie Mathews Baseball 1949Gene Bowman Football 1950Marshall Howe Football 1950Del Mora Football 1950Peter O’Garro Football 1950Marv Goux Football 1951Neill Wright Baseball 1952Gates Foss Track and Field 1953Payne Green Basketball 1953John Osborne Baseball 1953Bill “Gabe” Arellanes Baseball 1954Ernie Zampese Football 1954Al Geiberger Golf 1955Rino Filippin Baseball 1955Rodger Schmandt Baseball 1957Bill Oakley Baseball 1958Hayward Williams Football 1958Bob Looney Basketball 1959Rod Dowhower Football 1961Johnny Gilbert Track and Field 1961Gary Hart Football 1961Jim Murphy Football 1961Manuel Robledo Football 1962Jeff Jameson Baseball 1963Victor Bartolome Basketball 1966Joseph Charles Núñez Football 1966Dave Thompson Baseball 1967Grady Hurst Football 1968Bob “Bigman” Pointer Football 1968Sam Cunningham Football 1969Eddie Bowman Baseball 1970Booker Brown Football 1970Earl Pointer Football 1970Jamaal Wilkes Basketball 1970Don Ford Basketball 1971Alton Hayes Football 1971Alfonso Guzman Soccer 1972Russ Hafferkamp Water Polo 1972AC Cunningham Football 1973Philip Pipersburg Track and Field 1973Steve Dudley Football 1975Craig Gilbert Basketball 1975James Hunter Football 1976Vaune Kadlubek Water Polo 1976Jesse Orosco Baseball 1976Rudy Ybarra Soccer 1976Steve Crandell Basketball 1977Gus Guzman Soccer 1977Tony Gilbert Track and Field 1978John Hanley Volleyball 1978Karch Kiraly Volleyball 1978Cindy Schmandt Cross Country 1979Mike Falberg Tennis 1980Alison Hardy Tennis 1980Eric Sappenfield Cross Country 1980Mark Wooldridge Tennis 1980Mark Basham Tennis 1981Lynn Carpenter Cross Country 1981Baraza Thomas Cross Country 1981Randall Cunningham Football 1981Lisa Strand Volleyball 1981

Kelly Strand Volleyball 1981Tom Curren Surfing 1982Kim Mearig Surfing 1982Paul Nicholson Football 1982Sally Ostrander Tennis 1982Colleen Patton Tennis 1982Lola Trenwith Tennis 1982Karl Tucker Volleyball 1982Jason Gamble Football 1983Holly Ford Basketball 1984Pete Kwiatkowski Football 1984Lee Nelson Volleyball 1985Dina Trenwith Tennis 1985Tim Trigueiro Tennis 1985Brian Alderman Swimming 1986Kevin Bolden Football 1986Dante Robinson Football 1987Shannon Frowiss Basketball 1988Paul Johnson Basketball 1988Faha Banks Basketball 1989Paul Perkins Football 1989Stephanie Rempe Soccer 1989Janelle Thompson Basketball 1989Julie Whalen Volleyball 1989Simon Banks Football 1990David Fischer Volleyball 1990Kristen Knapp Basketball 1990Kerry Lawyer Track and Field 1990David Palmer Basketball 1990Poncho Renteria Football 1990Chris Sanchez Football 1990Matt Renshaw Volleyball 1992Alex Decret Tennis 1993Torlando Bolden Football 1994Lindsay Gassner Swimming 1994Linnea Mendoza Volleyball 1994Khalid Hurst Football 1995Brad Kittredge Water Polo 1995Carlos Morales Soccer 1995Mike Garrett Basketball 1996Pilar Montgomery Tennis 1996Phillip Pipersburg Jr. Track and Field 1996Ryan Spilborghs Baseball 1998Sarita Yardi Tennis 1998Greg Snyder Water Polo 1999Thalia Munro Water Polo 2000Matt Vasquez Baseball 2000Lisa Willett Basketball 2000Aaron López Soccer 2002Santiago Aguirre Basketball 2003Dylan Axelrod Baseball 2003Brian Snyder Water Polo 2003Taylor Rochestie Basketball 2004Tyler Wilson Water Polo 2004Kami Craig Water Polo 2005Cord Phelps Baseball 2005Carson Clark Volleyball 2007Kelly Easterday Water Polo 2007Kristen Dealy Volleyball 2008Roberto Nelson Basketball 2009John Uribe Football 2009Shane Lebow Golf 2010Jose “Tony” Alfaro Soccer 2011Bolden Brace Basketball 2016Kevin Gowdy Baseball 2016Amber Melgoza Basketball 2016Sawyer Rhodes Water Polo 2017Ben Roach Soccer 2018Will Rottman Volleyball 2019Bryce Warrecker Baseball 2020Pepper Marks Wrestler 2023Andreas Dybdahl Cross Country 2024Carter Battle Track and Field 2025Kai Mault Football 2025Luke Zuffelato Basketball 2025

The Top 150 selection process included an esteemed committee which included all of the athletic directors since 1990, coaches, local sports journalists and alumni.

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Pueblo City Council narrowly approves new safety plans as report shows highest fatal crash rate in the state

Celeste Springer

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) — The City of Pueblo is looking ahead to a new Comprehensive Safety Action Plan, which aims to enhance road safety. It comes as a city report reveals that Pueblo has the highest per capita rate of fatal crashes, and crashes in general, in the entire state of Colorado.

Source: City of Pueblo

The proposed plan includes more than 190 infrastructure and operational improvements, totaling a cost of over $112 million.

Projects range from minor (like adding guardrails to certain streets) to major construction work (like adding a roundabout to 13th Street and Santa Fe Avenue).

The city is also considering adjusting the timing of signals across 51 locations in town.

Source: City of Pueblo

The Comprehensive Safety Action Plan also outlines a “roundabout first policy,” where future construction would aim to use roundabouts instead of traffic signals or stop signs. According to Pueblo’s Comprehensive Safety Action Plan Report, roundabouts result in an 82% decrease in fatal or injury crashes compared to a two-way stop intersection. They also resulted in a 78% decrease in fatal or injury crashes compared to using a traffic signal.

But Andrew Hayes, Pueblo’s public works director, said that the number of future roundabouts would be limited by available funding.

Additionally, there’s the question of how long it will take to complete the list of projects, and where the money to pay for them will come from.

“There’s no fixed timeline associated with the recommendations in the plan,” Hayes explained. “What the plan does for us is it opens the door to federal funding opportunities and to state funding opportunities for safety grants. So, every year, we’ve been actually pretty successful in applying for and being awarded Highway Safety Improvement Program grants from CDOT.”

He mentioned that this is the first in-depth study of its kind for Pueblo, with Pueblo County and the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) participating as partners.

“Some of the intersections and corridors are in the city, some are in the county, and some are on highways in CDOT’s jurisdiction,” he said. “We also used real-time traffic data gathered from 15 intersections over a 24-hour period.”

A consultant conducted the $800,000 study, with the city paying a fourth and the rest covered by a federally-funded CDOT grant.

However, the plan met with mixed reactions at Monday night’s City Council meeting before narrowly passing by a 4-3 vote.

Councilwoman Regina Maestri was among the three members opposed.

“We usually do work sessions on comprehensive plans,” she explained. “We didn’t give it that opportunity. The people didn’t get the right opportunity to understand it. I’m told that it will be posted publicly, so people can see it that way. I’m not sure why it wasn’t presented in a work session first. That was their decision.”

Maestri said that the Council will be closely watching how funds for the plan are spent, because individual expenditures will require Council approval.

To read the full report, click here.

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Third grade hockey player raises money to get veterans’ kids on the ice


KCNC

By Tori Mason

Click here for updates on this story

    COLORADO (KCNC) — An 8-year-old Coloradan is turning his love for hockey into a way to help other kids get on the ice, especially the children of veterans.

Luke Grahame grew up in a hockey family. His grandmother worked for the Avalanche. His dad played professionally and won a Stanley Cup. His older brothers play, too.

Before he was old enough to lace up skates, he spent a lot of time in rinks watching his brothers’ practices. He’d play tag or throw tennis balls off the wall just to stay entertained. One day, frustrated, he told his mom, “I’m tired of just being a rink dude.” That’s when something clicked. Luke and his mom, Niki, turned that moment into a mission — and Rink Dude was born.

“We thought maybe we could print a hat that said Rink Dude just for him,” Niki said. “Then we thought, what if he sold a few and helped other kids who want to play hockey but can’t afford it?”

Hockey is one of the most expensive youth sports. Between gear, ice time and team fees, many families can’t afford to even start. Luke didn’t like the idea of kids missing out.

“It feels kind of sad,” he said. “Hockey is really fun. I want to help kids play.”

He started selling “Rink Dude” merch and sharing donation cards linked to nonprofits like Hockey Unlimited, which provide equipment, ice time, and support to young athletes. And last week alone, Luke raised more than $3,000.

This week, for Veterans Day, he’s focusing his giving even more to the United Heroes League. The UHL is a nonprofit that keeps military kids active by providing gear, camps, grants and special experiences.

“Our goal is $5,000 to raise for kids of veterans,” Luke said. “Veterans are heroes. They fight for our country. We wouldn’t have this country if we didn’t have them.”

His mom says the idea didn’t surprise her.

“It made me feel really proud,” she said. “He gets to feel the joy of helping others while doing something he loves. And it teaches the importance of giving back to the hockey community that’s given so much to us.”

Luke says the best part isn’t selling merch, it’s knowing another kid is stepping onto the ice because of him.

“It makes me feel good and kind of happy,” he said.

“I’m the youngest in my family, but I have a brand and they don’t,” he added proudly. “They still treat me like the little one, though. A lot.”

You can donate directly to United Heroes League, or visit the Rink Dude Instagram page @rinkdude for more information.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Third grade hockey player raises money to get veterans’ kids on the ice

By Tori Mason

Click here for updates on this story

    COLORADO (KCNC) — An 8-year-old Coloradan is turning his love for hockey into a way to help other kids get on the ice, especially the children of veterans.

Luke Grahame grew up in a hockey family. His grandmother worked for the Avalanche. His dad played professionally and won a Stanley Cup. His older brothers play, too.

Before he was old enough to lace up skates, he spent a lot of time in rinks watching his brothers’ practices. He’d play tag or throw tennis balls off the wall just to stay entertained. One day, frustrated, he told his mom, “I’m tired of just being a rink dude.” That’s when something clicked. Luke and his mom, Niki, turned that moment into a mission — and Rink Dude was born.

“We thought maybe we could print a hat that said Rink Dude just for him,” Niki said. “Then we thought, what if he sold a few and helped other kids who want to play hockey but can’t afford it?”

Hockey is one of the most expensive youth sports. Between gear, ice time and team fees, many families can’t afford to even start. Luke didn’t like the idea of kids missing out.

“It feels kind of sad,” he said. “Hockey is really fun. I want to help kids play.”

He started selling “Rink Dude” merch and sharing donation cards linked to nonprofits like Hockey Unlimited, which provide equipment, ice time, and support to young athletes. And last week alone, Luke raised more than $3,000.

This week, for Veterans Day, he’s focusing his giving even more to the United Heroes League. The UHL is a nonprofit that keeps military kids active by providing gear, camps, grants and special experiences.

“Our goal is $5,000 to raise for kids of veterans,” Luke said. “Veterans are heroes. They fight for our country. We wouldn’t have this country if we didn’t have them.”

His mom says the idea didn’t surprise her.

“It made me feel really proud,” she said. “He gets to feel the joy of helping others while doing something he loves. And it teaches the importance of giving back to the hockey community that’s given so much to us.”

Luke says the best part isn’t selling merch, it’s knowing another kid is stepping onto the ice because of him.

“It makes me feel good and kind of happy,” he said.

“I’m the youngest in my family, but I have a brand and they don’t,” he added proudly. “They still treat me like the little one, though. A lot.”

You can donate directly to United Heroes League, or visit the Rink Dude Instagram page @rinkdude for more information.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Veteran, who struggled with mental health, gifted free furnace

By John Lauritsen

Click here for updates on this story

    MOUNDS VIEW, Minnesota (WCCO) — On the eve of Veterans Day, a Mounds View, Minnesota, man is receiving a welcome gift.

“I was deployed over to Afghanistan, northeast Syria and then worked for the U.S. embassy in Dhaka, Bangladesh, during COVID,” Tanner Wilde said.

Wilde is proud of serving his country. He put his life on the line during his deployments, but when he returned home, a new battle was waiting for him.

“I contemplated and began to plan my own suicide because I was in an immense amount of pain after my third traumatic brain injury, which led to my discharge from the military,” Wilde said.

Mental health was a serious struggle until about two years ago, when, at the urging of his wife, Wilde got help and agreed to talk to someone.

“When you are in it, you’re riding it. But that doesn’t have to be the end of it,” Wilde said.

Recognizing all Wilde has overcome, Snelling Heating, Cooling and Electrical in St. Paul decided to give him a new furnace, for free.

“Just a small way we could recognize him for Veterans Day and try and honor him and his service,” said Elizabeth Krinkie, of Snelling.

Among those installing Wilde’s furnace is Frank Slavik, who just happens to be a veteran himself.

“Army infantry 1975 to 1977,” said Slavik. “It’s a pleasure. I really like to come out and help the veteran out.”

A new furnace means one less thing to worry about in Wilde’s life, allowing him to focus on his family and helping other veterans.

With his wife, his daughters and his service dog, Taz, by his side, Wilde wants to be there for those going through their own mental health battle and to help them rediscover the hope they’ve lost.

“I have found joy again. I have found a re-instilled purpose when the military was all I ever knew,” Wilde said.

If you or someone you know is in emotional distress, get help from the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988. Trained crisis counselors are available 24 hours a day to talk about anything.

In addition, help is available from the National Alliance on Mental Illness, or NAMI. Call the NAMI Helpline at 800-950-6264 or text “HelpLine” to 62640. There are more than 600 local NAMI organizations and affiliates across the country, many of which offer free support and education programs.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

These private schools are replacing teachers with AI


KTVT

By Lacey Beasley

Click here for updates on this story

    NORTH TEXAS (KTVT) — A revolutionary way of education is in North Texas, and most people don’t know about it. Two private schools are powered by artificial intelligence teachers.

It’s called Alpha School for grades K-8, and it’s the most expensive private school in Texas. One campus is in Plano, where the cost of enrollment is $50,000, and the other is in Fort Worth, where it’s $40,000.

Alpha School has locations nationwide. There are four campuses in Texas, with another campus set to open this year in Houston. Its flagship is in Austin, then there’s Plano, Fort Worth and Brownsville.

Alpha School leaders claim their model fixes faults in traditional education and the technology does things humans can’t.

“Alpha School is the future of education,” said Samantha DePalo. DePalo has been called a teacher for nearly 15 years, but at Alpha School, she goes by something else. She’s now called a guide and essentially supervises the students.

The Fort Worth campus is tucked in a small room of a rec center, and students are taught by AI teachers on their laptops.

“It’s not like an AI person on the other end,” said DePalo. “It is just these lessons and questions that are being generated exactly for them.”

Kate Johanns with the Association of Texas Professional Educators is skeptical of this AI model. ATPE is the largest community of public educators in Texas with 70,000 members.

“I think with an experience like that, it may work well in some instances, but I think the benefit of a good teacher is the ability to differentiate instruction,” said Johanns. “The other thing that I think AI might miss is the ability to form relationships with parents.”

DePalo is confident in Alpha School’s model and believes it’s the way of the future.

“You cannot teach every single student exactly what they need every moment, you just can’t as a human being,” said DePalo. “That’s better left, in my opinion, to the technology.”

Below is a Q&A with CBS News Texas lead education reporter Lacey Beasley, DePalo and Jacob Vandercook, a seventh grader who attends Alpha School.

DePalo: “I don’t have to teach out of a textbook or an online curriculum. I don’t have to teach to a test and say, ‘you must get these questions right.'”

Beasley: “Well, do you teach?”

DePalo: “At Alpha School? No, I don’t teach at all. Well, what I should say is what I’m designing are workshops.”

No teaching, but at Alpha School, leaders claimed students will learn twice as much in only two hours of core subject instructional time per day, taught by AI.

When students have a question, they do not raise their hands and ask the guides. Instead, students schedule online appointments with human teachers on their laptops and ask them the questions.

The other six hours of their school day are spent off technology.

Students participate in what they call ‘life skill workshops.’ It focuses on teaching things like perseverance and independence, which Alpha School leaders believe traditional education does not teach.

Vandercook: “This workshop was about balance. Balance in our lives, minds, school, work, food, anything.”

Beasley: “Would you rather be in school or on vacation?”

Vandercook: “I would rather be in school. Alpha is the best of the best.”

DePalo: “We have nine enrolled. We have a few more starting in January.”

Beasley: “Oh, nine? Single digit nine?”

DePalo: “Single digit nine right now.”

Beasley: “The classroom that we were in, is that the whole school?”

DePalo: “As of right now, yes.”

Beasley: “If there is such a high paywall, an education like this is not accessible to everyone. Why does it cost so much?”

DePalo: “A couple of reasons. Alpha School is a high-end private school. I will say as teachers, as guides, we are paid a very livable wage. Teachers start at $100,000.”

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

These private schools are replacing teachers with AI

By Lacey Beasley

Click here for updates on this story

    NORTH TEXAS (KTVT) — A revolutionary way of education is in North Texas, and most people don’t know about it. Two private schools are powered by artificial intelligence teachers.

It’s called Alpha School for grades K-8, and it’s the most expensive private school in Texas. One campus is in Plano, where the cost of enrollment is $50,000, and the other is in Fort Worth, where it’s $40,000.

Alpha School has locations nationwide. There are four campuses in Texas, with another campus set to open this year in Houston. Its flagship is in Austin, then there’s Plano, Fort Worth and Brownsville.

Alpha School leaders claim their model fixes faults in traditional education and the technology does things humans can’t.

“Alpha School is the future of education,” said Samantha DePalo. DePalo has been called a teacher for nearly 15 years, but at Alpha School, she goes by something else. She’s now called a guide and essentially supervises the students.

The Fort Worth campus is tucked in a small room of a rec center, and students are taught by AI teachers on their laptops.

“It’s not like an AI person on the other end,” said DePalo. “It is just these lessons and questions that are being generated exactly for them.”

Kate Johanns with the Association of Texas Professional Educators is skeptical of this AI model. ATPE is the largest community of public educators in Texas with 70,000 members.

“I think with an experience like that, it may work well in some instances, but I think the benefit of a good teacher is the ability to differentiate instruction,” said Johanns. “The other thing that I think AI might miss is the ability to form relationships with parents.”

DePalo is confident in Alpha School’s model and believes it’s the way of the future.

“You cannot teach every single student exactly what they need every moment, you just can’t as a human being,” said DePalo. “That’s better left, in my opinion, to the technology.”

Below is a Q&A with CBS News Texas lead education reporter Lacey Beasley, DePalo and Jacob Vandercook, a seventh grader who attends Alpha School.

DePalo: “I don’t have to teach out of a textbook or an online curriculum. I don’t have to teach to a test and say, ‘you must get these questions right.'”

Beasley: “Well, do you teach?”

DePalo: “At Alpha School? No, I don’t teach at all. Well, what I should say is what I’m designing are workshops.”

No teaching, but at Alpha School, leaders claimed students will learn twice as much in only two hours of core subject instructional time per day, taught by AI.

When students have a question, they do not raise their hands and ask the guides. Instead, students schedule online appointments with human teachers on their laptops and ask them the questions.

The other six hours of their school day are spent off technology.

Students participate in what they call ‘life skill workshops.’ It focuses on teaching things like perseverance and independence, which Alpha School leaders believe traditional education does not teach.

Vandercook: “This workshop was about balance. Balance in our lives, minds, school, work, food, anything.”

Beasley: “Would you rather be in school or on vacation?”

Vandercook: “I would rather be in school. Alpha is the best of the best.”

DePalo: “We have nine enrolled. We have a few more starting in January.”

Beasley: “Oh, nine? Single digit nine?”

DePalo: “Single digit nine right now.”

Beasley: “The classroom that we were in, is that the whole school?”

DePalo: “As of right now, yes.”

Beasley: “If there is such a high paywall, an education like this is not accessible to everyone. Why does it cost so much?”

DePalo: “A couple of reasons. Alpha School is a high-end private school. I will say as teachers, as guides, we are paid a very livable wage. Teachers start at $100,000.”

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Rare rabbits, 60 chickens among the animals found living in horrendous conditions in home, police say

By Christine Sloan

Click here for updates on this story

    EDISON, New Jersey (WCBS) — Police rescued more than 100 animals from a home in Edison, New Jersey, on Sunday.

Investigators say dogs, rabbits, pigeons, birds, and more were being kept in horrifying conditions inside a home on Stony Road West, police said.

Bryan added officers were called to the now-condemned house, in which heavy equipment was seen outside, because one of the two men living here was having a medical issue.

“There’s an issue going on. It’s hoarding animals like this that got out of control. It doesn’t look like they were raising animals for profit or using the chickens for eggs,” Bryan said.

Police said one person was charged with third-degree animal cruelty, because animal carcasses were also found in the house.

The rabbits found at the house were like ones one would see at a pet expo.

“They’re English angoras, French angoras, Jersey woolies and lion heads,” Pasukinski said.

Officials said most of the bunnies are free roaming and may be pregnant.

Authorities said all of the chickens — many of them show chickens — are staying at a New Jersey farm.

Authorities said a veterinarian was to examine all of the animals, that they would be be groomed for free, and that some may be available for adoption.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Delta Air Lines marks 25 years of annual “Dream Flight” for Black students

By Nakell Williams

Click here for updates on this story

    ATLANTA (WUPA) — For 17-year-old Hayden Lynch, Friday’s “Dream Flight” wasn’t just a trip — it was the culmination of years of aspiration.

Inside a buzzing gate room at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, Hayden stood among more than 100 students, each wearing the same Delta-blue lanyard and the same look of awe.

“I can’t believe this is actually happening,” Hayden said, smiling as he clutched his boarding pass.

The “Dream Flight” — a partnership between Delta Air Lines and the Organization of Black Aerospace Professionals (OBAP) — gives students across the country a firsthand look at careers in aviation. This year, the milestone 25th flight took them to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

“When I met my first Black pilot, that’s when I realized I could do it too,” said Hayden’s mentor, Justin Mutawassim, now a Delta captain. “Now, I get to show these students — especially Hayden — that they can follow that same path.”

Before takeoff, Hayden’s mother, Lyvette Marsh, reflected on how it all began.

“I first realized my son had a passion for aviation when I bought him his first drone,” she said. “He learned to fly right away — and he’s been focused ever since.”

Minutes later, she watched from the terminal as Hayden boarded the aircraft — Delta Flight 2025 — greeted by cheers and applause from airline staff.

Firefighters at Hartsfield-Jackson marked the occasion with a water salute, a symbolic arc of celebration honoring 25 years of “Dream Flights” and the next generation of trailblazers taking off.

At the helm of the flight was Captain Dana Nelson, Delta’s first Black woman pilot, hired in 2001.

“When I was growing up, I didn’t see anyone who looked like me flying planes,” Nelson said. “Now, when these students see me, they know it’s possible. Representation makes all the difference.”

As the Boeing 757 lifted into the clouds, students pressed their faces to the windows — watching Atlanta shrink beneath them and their futures expand above.

From the jet bridge in Atlanta to the launch pads of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, the students’ journey bridged past and future. Their bus driver, affectionately known as Ms. Bev, pointed out landmarks — including the launch sites where history was made.

At the Space Center, students attended a panel discussion featuring Black aerospace professionals and NASA engineers who shared advice on navigating both airspace and life’s turbulence.

“It’s amazing — seeing people who’ve done it and who look like me,” Hayden said. “It makes me believe I can do it too.”

After lunch, students roamed exhibits of rockets, shuttles, and simulators — imagining the flights they might one day command.

“My dream is to become a Delta pilot one day — and inspire others just like they inspired me,” Hayden added.

For Hayden and thousands before him, “Dream Flight” represents far more than a field trip. It’s a launchpad for possibility — a reminder that sometimes the most powerful flight begins with believing you can soar.

Since its inception, Delta’s “Dream Flight” has introduced more than 4,000 students to the aviation industry — many of whom are now pilots, engineers, and mentors themselves.

And as this year’s flight touched down on Florida’s Space Coast, one thing was clear: the future of flight is in very good hands.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.