Marshall Public Library Opens Annual Holiday Store

Hadley Bodell

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) – The Friends of the Marshall Public Library are excited to open their Holiday Store on the first floor of the Marshall Public Library in Pocatello. The store features discounted books, games, movies, stocking stuffers and more.

The Holiday Store is open throughout the month of December during the library’s winter hours: Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

All the proceeds go directly towards funding the Friends of the Marshall Public Library to help keep their programs and projects running. The store can help local people find meaningful gifts on a budget this holiday season. Items start as low as 25 cents and most are $5 or less. The store also has several antique collectible items at discounted prices.

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Deschutes County commissioners plan two January public hearings on proposed five-district map

KTVZ

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — The Deschutes County Board of Commissioners announced Tuesday it will host two public hearings in January to gather feedback on the five-commissioner district map recommended by the Deschutes Map Advisory Committee (DMAC).

Evening Hearing: Tuesday, Jan. 20, 6:00-8:00 p.m.

Daytime Hearing: Wednesday, Jan. 21, during the BOCC’s weekly meeting, starting at 9 a.m.

Both sessions will take place in the Barnes Sawyer Room of the Deschutes Services Building, 1300 NW Wall St, Bend. The public is invited to attend in person or online through the County’s website.

Background

In November 2024, voters approved Measure 9-173 to expand the BOCC from three to five members. In response, the Board met several times to consider moving from five at-large positions to five district-based positions. A majority of the Board voted to appoint a committee of seven community volunteers to draft a district map. Commissioners DeBone and Adair appointed two committee members each, while Commissioner Chang appointed three.

The DMAC held 11 work sessions starting in early September to draft a map with approximately equal populations in each district. Following Board-approved guidelines, the committee reviewed several draft maps using Deschutes County voter registration data, 2020 census data, race and ethnicity population data and building permit trends since 2022.

On Nov. 12, the DMAC voted 4-3 to recommend Map C to the BOCC. Following the public hearings, the Board will decide whether to send the map to voters during 2026.

For more information about the DMAC and the proposed map, visit dechutes.org/DMAC.

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Work Continues to Turn Local Landmark into Boutique Hotel

Tracy Lehr

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – Crews have been working until dark to convert the First Christian Church of Santa Barbara into a 37 room boutique hotel.

Years ago Adams Angels used to bag items for the unhoused at the Church on Monday.

Rev. Dr. Tim Burnette, who has a doctorate from the Claremont School of Theology, served as the Minister at the First Christian Church of Santa Barbara when the church building at 1915 Chapala sold.

Burnette lives right around the corner and can see the work on the roof.

He said the money made has allowed the congregation to move forward with other plans.

Some neighbors had hoped to see it turned into housing, but they aren’t complaining.

Robert Palmer said it will be pretty high tech.

“It is going to be one of those key card things, no on sight staff and we are actually hoping that there will be less noise because there is no place to hang out inside,” said Palmer.

Robert McDermott said the construction hasn’t been, too bad.

“Seems like there’s a lot of hotels but I live just down the street next to  these lovely people and it is nice to have the idea that if someone wants to come visit me they can stay right up the block,” said McDermott.

People parked nearby including William Konrad noticed the construction.

It’s opening date has been pushed back to February.

The work has gone to local businesses including the Santa Barbara Lighting Company.

A worker there said they are thrilled to part of a project especially one that involved a local landmark being turned into a hotel.

The official name and pricing for the hotel have yet to be announced.

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ISU President Wagner Hosts Holiday Open House

Hadley Bodell

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) – Dr. Robert Wagner hosted his faculty and staff today at the alumni center on the Idaho State University Pocatello campus to celebrate the successful fall semester.

The annual event is an opportunity for the staff to interact with colleagues from across the campus. All faculty and staff were welcome to attend, including professors from all ISU colleges and ISU services like the career center. Guests enjoyed a catered meal and desserts.

President Wagner bragged about the success ISU has seen this fall, telling Local News 8 that enrollment for both graduate and undergraduate students is the highest since 2011. He also mentioned the student performances and historic success by ISU athletic teams this semester. He says the faculty and staff are the ones who truly make the university shine.

“We all share the same mission in Idaho State University. That’s to serve our students, to serve the communities that we are in,” said Wagner. “And when we get together like this, we really sense and feel that shared purpose. It’s such a great time to be a Bengal, and there’s much that we can celebrate.”

The president will also be hosting holiday parties in the coming week at the ISU Idaho Falls campus and the Meridian campus.

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Crook County official applauds Rep. Bentz, Congress for restoring vital Secure Rural Schools funding

KTVZ

(Update: Crook County official comments on bill’s passage)

PRINEVILLE, Ore. (KTVZ) — A Crook County official on Friday thanked Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ore., and his congressional colleagues for passing a key bill to restore stable federal funding for rural timber-dependent counties.

 “We want to thank Congressman Cliff Bentz for constantly fighting for rural Oregon,” Crook County Commissioner Seth Crawford said. “These Secure Rural School dollars that he worked so hard to reinstate are so important to our roads, schools, and public lands.”

The county official emphasized that the reauthorization will help sustain essential services, including education, transportation, and public safety — services heavily impacted by fluctuations in federal timber revenue. Crawford also said the renewed funding stream allows Crook County to plan more effectively for long-term community needs and infrastructure maintenance.

The bill, approved by the House on Tuesday by a 399-5 vote, provides back pay for the 2024 and 2025 federal fiscal years and reauthorizes Secure Rural School funding through FY 2026, Crawford said, ensuring critical funding stability as rural communities continue to navigate economic transition and infrastructure demands.

The legislation’s passage follows extensive national advocacy led by the National Association of Counties, county representatives from across the country, and bipartisan congressional supporters who underscored the importance of SRS to rural communities.

Crawford said the county “will continue working with federal partners and Oregon’s congressional delegation to ensure stable, predictable funding for rural counties and to support long-term economic resiliency throughout the region.”

Earlier story:

WASHINGTON, D.C. (KTVZ-Dec. 9) — The U.S. House on Tuesday approved on a 399-5 vote reauthorization of the Secure Rural Schools program, has which sent millions of dollars to rural areas with large amounts of tax-exempt federal forests but had lapsed over a year ago. Oregon’s only Republican in Congress, Rep. Cliff Bentz, voted in favor of the bill, which passed the Senate several months ago.

Senator Ron Wyden, D-Ore., issued a statement applauding House passage of his bipartisan legislation introduced with Senators Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., and James Risch, R-Idaho, to reauthorize the Secure Rural Schools (SRS) program and ensure rural, forested communities across Oregon and the country receive funding for roads, schools, law enforcement and other critical services.

Here’s the rest of that statement:

“The Secure Rural Schools program has been a lifeline for rural communities across Oregon since I originally authored the program back in 2000,” Wyden said.

“I’m relieved the House has finally done its job with the long-overdue passage of my bill to return the safety net for critical services to communities that need it the most. This is exactly why we need a permanent solution to get rural communities off the financial roller-coaster and ensure they have the resources they need to not only survive, but grow and thrive.”

“By passing our bipartisan bill, Congress has finally taken critical action to restore funding that is crucial to keeping schools and libraries open, maintaining roads, restoring watersheds, and ensuring there are police officers and firefighters to keep rural communities safe,” said Merkley.

“Extending the SRS program ensures Oregon communities and local governments can maintain access to these important lifelines and resources, and I look forward to President Trump swiftly signing our bill into law.”

Wyden first authored the SRS program in 2000. Funding for the program lapsed in September 2023, and counties have not received payments since early 2024. Wyden’s bill to reauthorize the program had previously passed the Senate in June, but stalled in the House, delaying crucial funding for rural schools, law enforcement, and infrastructure projects.

Last week, 83 bipartisan, bicameral members, led by Wyden and Crapo, called on House leadership to take up the reauthorization bill for final passage.

Congressman Bentz Supports House Passage of the Secure Rural Schools Reauthorization Act

WASHINGTON, D.C.– Today, Congressman Cliff Bentz (R-OR) voted YES on Senate Bill 356, the “Secure Rural Schools (SRS) Reauthorization Act,” which will bring some $50 million, for each of three years, to Oregon’s timber-dependent counties.  

Said Congressman Bentz: “In 1990, the Spotted Owl was listed under the Endangered Species Act as a threatened species. Almost immediately timber production from federal forests in the Western United States plummeted by 80%. The economic and societal cost to timber dependent states and their timber reliant counties was appalling. Demand for SNAP and Medicaid shot up, alcoholism and meth addiction became routine. County tax revenues were decimated.

“A belated but needed response was the Secure Rural Schools Act first passed in 2000, 10 years after the listing of the Owl. This law, and the funding it provides, was designed to partially offset the massive decline in federal timber revenue. It provides a modest amount of funding for critical services including infrastructure maintenance (roads), wildfire mitigation, conservation projects, search and rescue operations, fire prevention initiatives, and most importantly, money for children’s education.”

“When society enacts socially attractive laws that seemingly benefit the broader public but end up harming small communities, society must mitigate that harm. This is what the SRS bill does. It mitigates at least a part of the billions in damage done to small communities by the implementation of social goals such as, in this case, the Endangered Species Act. I thank my colleagues and Speaker Johnson for supporting this essential bill and the funding that my counties so desperately need,” Bentz concluded.

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Naomi Soto sworn-in as new mayor of Palm Springs

City News Service

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – Palm Springs City Councilmember Naomi Soto was officially sworn in as the city’s new mayor on Wednesday.  

Soto was sworn in during Wednesday’s City Council meeting.

Soto, a health-care executive, was elected in November 2024 to represent District 4. She will serve for one term in the rotating position, with Councilman David Ready serving as mayor pro tem, officials said.

Now former-mayor Ron deHarte delivered his final remarks as mayor and will continue to serve as council member for District 3.   

Councilmember David Ready was also be sworn in as Mayor Pro Tem. He is set to serve as the city’s mayor after Soto.

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ISP begins the “10 Counties of Christmas” drive in Eastern Idaho

Curtis Jackson

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI)—Idaho State Police is marking its ninth year of the “10 counties of Christmas.” It’s a charity drive to provide holiday meals across ten counties.

Troopers partner with local businesses to help families in need.

The program delivered 53 bags of food in its first year.

This year, they’re on track for 731.

“And all of us have come together to be able to put these meals together, that we go to our very remote areas here in our District six, and we cover ten counties and we deliver those meals for about the next two weeks,” said ISP District 6 Captain Chris Weadick.

Donations are easy. You can buy a meal kit at the ISP table at the front of Broulim’s in Idaho Falls. 

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Local farmer reacts to Trump Administration $12 billion farm aid package

Erika McGuire

HARRISBURG, Mo. (KMIZ)

Missouri farmers will soon receive a check from the Trump Administration, which announced a $12 billion aid package Monday to help American farmers struggling after tariffs on China were raised.

Troy Douglas, a 39-year farmer who operates 28 farms in Mid-Missouri, went viral in September after addressing Rep. Mark Alford (R-MO) about his concerns for the future of his business.

“It will help and I’m grateful for it, but it’s not going to heal all the wounds, our input costs are just so crazy,” he said.

Douglas grows corn, soybeans, and wheat, along with operating a sizable cattle business. He said the aid package is only a short-term fix.

“It’s a good short term solution, but it’s not going to make us whole, it’s a band-aid,” Douglas said. “Something that’s frustrating to local farmers is those payments aren’t going to go out until February. That’s three months basically and you know there’s some people that are struggling and need cash flow,”

The one-time payment will be delivered to farmers starting at the end of February, according to the Trump Administration. It will be capped at $155,000 per farm or person, and only entities that make less than $900,000 a year will be eligible for aid..

According to the Trump Administration, $11 billion will go toward row-crop farmers while another $1 billion will be for specialty crops like fruits and vegetables. The money will come from tariff revenue, according to the president.

While the one-time payment will help farmers, Douglas said the cap limits the impact.

“That limits a large farm, there’s ways to get around some of that payment limit. But I think it will really help the small guys,” Douglas said. “If you compare what the smaller farms like the thousand acre farm versus the 3,000 acre farms are getting, it’s not enough to make the big farmer whole, but anything will help,”

Douglas said he is unsure how much he will receive but believes it will help cover 2025 expenses and costs into next year.

“I don’t know anyone that’s going to turn the money down, We’d rather have good markets and not manipulated markets and do without the payments, but the payments are a bridge to maybe farm another year,” Douglas said.

Trade tensions with China have hit soybeans farmers like Douglas hard, largely due to reduced exports from the U.S.

Prior to 2018, Douglas says, China roughly bought 60% of all of the soybeans produced in the U.S. per year.

This year, China has purchased roughly 3% of soybeans produced in the U.S. this year.

The retaliatory tariffs have placed U.S soybean farmers at a 20% disadvantage compared to South American competitors. As a result, China has begun buying soybeans from Brazil, which shipped nearly 16 million tons of soybeans to China in March, its largest monthly volume ever.

Douglas also said he did not vote for President Trump in 2024 or back in 2018. He said he wants Trump to understand that American farmers are struggling and have been struggling since Trump’s first term.

Douglas added that he also wants the president to know that inflation is a chain reaction.

“He needs to understand inflation and it’s no matter what kind of business you’re in, it affects you from buying groceries to buying parts or fuel,” Douglas said. “He keeps talking about our energy cost went down, out farm diesel cost is $0.07 cheaper than it was a year ago, that’s not much of a correction on inflation,”

Douglas added that fertilizer costs are also higher than last year, putting additional pressure on farmers’ budgets.

“I think if the trade tensions stay the way they are, that there will be another payment to keep us, I mean somebody’s got to feed this world and feed this country and most people don’t understand our markets,” Douglas said.

To have a permanent solution, Douglas said he believes tariffs need to be removed.

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Third Annual Strike for Success Dodgeball Tournament returns

Danyelle Burke North

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – It’s time to come together and raise funds for our public schools. The upcoming Third Annual Strike for Success Dodgeball Tournament will benefit Woodard Junior High School.

“We need the full community support. We need people to donate for sponsorships, people that want to produce a five person team, and people who just want to donate for the cause. All of this money is 100% tax deductible. It’s going to be going through a 501(c)(3) nonprofit,” said Yuma Elementary School District One governing board member Jeff Stoner.

Stoner is partnering with “Gateway to the Heart” to sponsor the event. He also thanks Pilkington construction for donating a $5,000 check. All the money raised will go to the school’s band and dance teams plus library improvements.

“Our library had to be remodeled, and so it hasn’t been usable for the last three-four years, and so I want to be able to put that space back together for them so that they have a place for their love of reading,” said Woodard Junior High School principal Nicole Alonzo.

You can participate through sponsorships, buying concessions from the teams, and entering the tournament with a team of five.

“We have $250, $500, and $750 sponsorships. Now those are just sponsorships. If you want to join a team, and you only have $20, we’ll take your $20. This is a nonprofit donation. We want to be able to build up the teams, and somebody is going to go home with the championship trophy,” said Stoner.

The tournament is January 10 at the Woodard Junior High gym from 8:00 a.m. until the last team is standing. To register your team, donate, or for more info, contact Jeff Stoner through Facebook or cell phone at (928) 304-8825.

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SJSD Finance Committee reviews budget practices, emphasizes transparency  

Prajukta Ghosh

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (KQTV) —  The St. Joseph School District’s Finance Committee met Tuesday to take a closer look at the financial report Executive Finance Director Linda Quinley shared with the full School Board on Nov. 24. 

Quinley walked committee members through, not just the district’s financial documents, but also the budgeting process itself — how the district builds its budget, where funding comes from at the local, state and federal levels and what best practices they’re working to follow.  

Assistant Superintendent of Business and Operations, Robert Hedgecorth, said the meeting was really about transparency and making sure the community sees the work happening behind the scenes.  

“Give our board an update of where we’ve been in the past, where we’ve come and where she (Quinley) sees projects in the future, not only for our finances, but also how we can best give the board the best information possible,” Hedgecorth added.  

At the meeting, members weighed in on Quinley’s presentation — especially since most of them didn’t have the chance to ask or raise concerns during the Nov. 24 board meeting.  

Committee members pointed out areas where the district could improve and talked about ways to boost public confidence in the district’s financial direction. 

One of the biggest takeaways for Hedgecorth was Quinley’s emphasis on accuracy in budgeting.  

“Any time we give a budget to the board, we want to try to be as accurate as possible…She explained to the board what she thought an accurate budget looked like and what those thresholds were,” Hedgecorth added.  

As the district reaches its halfway point through the school year, Hedgecorth said they’re able to look more closely at financial projections, both for how this year may end and what next year’s budget could look like. 

Those projections include factoring in the upcoming school consolidation plan and estimating expenses for each location.  

“Looking at our school consolidation plan and seeing what our expenditures will be for those individual locations for next year and…already start the planning process for presenting our budget to the board for next year,” Hedgecorth said.   

According to Hedgecorth, families shouldn’t expect any personal financial impact from the district’s efforts to get fiscally healthier.  

He added that the district knows community members want to see their tax dollars used responsibly.  

“There weren’t any type of changes in school fees that might be coming down the line or anything like that. That was not that’s not how we’re looking to get fiscally healthy,” Hedgecorth said.  

Hedgecorth said it always helps to have more people in the room during financial meetings: board members, finance committee members, anyone involved — because the more voices they hear, the better the district can understand different perspectives.  

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