Teton Pass reopens ahead of schedule following 14-hour cleanup

Seth Ratliff

UPDATE:

JACKSON, Wyo. (KIFI) — After a 14-hour cleanup, the Teton Pass along Wyoming Hwy. 22 is back open as of 5 PM today, December 22, the Wyoming Department of Transportation announced. WYDOT expressed its gratitude to the Idaho Transportation Department for their help clearing the pass, which originally was projected to take until 2 PM the following day.

WYDOT is directing travelers to drive cautiously and stay alert, as contract crews will work under traffic as roadside operations continue tomorrow.

For updates and alerts, click HERE.

ORIGINAL:

JACKSON, Wyo. (KIFI) — The Idaho Transportation Department is working to help crews in Wyoming in the massive task of cleaning the Teton Pass following Monday morning’s avalanche mitigation.

The pass remains blocked in both directions by a substantial wall of snow after WYDOT crews brought down a large, controlled avalanche at Glory Bowl during the mitigation work. WYDOT initially closed the pass at 3 AM on December 22 to begin the mitigation work. However, due to the sheer volume of debris, officials do not expect the road to reopen until Tuesday between noon and 2:00 PM.

Courtesy: ITD/WYDOT

Recognizing the scale of the cleanup, WYDOT reached out to the ITD foreman in Driggs early Monday afternoon for reinforcements. Idaho crews are now attacking the snowbank from the western side.

“In our usual ‘No Boundaries’ mindset, eastern Idaho is here to help through today, tonight, and until the task is done,” ITD posted to Facebook.

For updates and alerts on when the Teton Pass is open, click HERE.

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Idaho Falls Fire Department officially opens Fire Station 6 on North side

News Release

The following is a news release from the Idaho Falls Fire Department:

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — The Idaho Falls Fire Department (IFFD) formally marked the grand opening of Fire Station 6 today, with a ceremonial hose uncoupling at 2767 N. Spitfire St. The event signifies the completion of construction and the official opening of a new fire station on Idaho Falls’ north side, which will support emergency response in a rapidly growing area of the community.

“The opening of Fire Station 6 represents a critical investment in the safety and well-being of our growing community,” said Interim Fire Chief Paul Radford. “As development continues to the north, this station ensures our residents receive the rapid, professional, life-saving services they expect and deserve. Station 6 strengthens our operational readiness, reduces response times, and reflects our ongoing commitment to protecting lives and property.”

National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) standards call for emergency medical service response times of under four minutes and fire response times of under five minutes. The decision to construct Station 6 and its location were guided by these standards, along with analysis of IFFD dispatch call data and growth projections. The station is intended to address continued growth along North River Road, Sage Lakes, and toward the northern county line.

IFFD responded to more than 17,000 calls in 2025 and receives well over 1,000 additional calls for service per year, providing fire protection within the City of Idaho Falls and most of Bonneville County. The department also delivers emergency medical services to all of Bonneville County and portions of Jefferson and Bingham counties through service agreements.

While the facility is now officially open, Station 6 will not immediately respond to emergency calls. The department is in the process of staffing and expects Station 6 to be fully operational by Jan. 5, 2026, once dispatch and operational systems are implemented.

“This station represents a commitment to our residents,” said Idaho Falls Mayor Rebecca Casper. “Through thoughtful planning and strong leadership, we delivered a critical public safety facility that strengthens emergency response while being fiscally responsible. As Idaho Falls continues to grow, investments like this ensure our firefighters and paramedics can reach people quickly when it matters most—protecting lives, property, and the long-term well-being of our community.”

The City of Idaho Falls approved the purchase of the seven-acre property for Station 6 on July 28, 2022, for a total cost of $900,000. The land was purchased without using property tax dollars, funded by $658,000 in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds and $252,000 from the auction of the former Fire Prevention Building on 8th Street.

Construction of Station 6 was awarded to Big D Construction, with an original bid of $2,746,908.46, approved on November 26, 2024. Construction funding included approximately $1.4 million in ARPA funds, with the remaining balance funded through Wildland resources of approximately $900,000 and impact fees of approximately $600,000.

Additional project costs include the purchase of a KG60 generator and transfer switch for backup power at a cost of $117,545, funded through the Fire Station capital improvement projects budget. The total cost of the Fire Station 6 project is approximately $3.7 million.

The station was designed using proven layouts from existing fire stations to ensure operational efficiency while controlling costs. When fully operational, it will house a Class 1 fire engine and an advanced life support (ALS) ambulance staffed with five personnel every day, allowing IFFD to deliver faster fire and medical response to City residents. The facility was also built with capacity for a wildland engine, a water tender, and a future second battalion chief ensuring we are positioned to meet both today’s needs and tomorrow’s challenges.

This milestone advances IFFD’s mission of Providing Professional Life Saving Services across Idaho Falls.

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BREAKING: Chiefs announce they will leave Arrowhead and relocate across the Kansas-Missouri border

Associated Press

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs announced Monday they will leave their longtime home at Arrowhead Stadium for a new, domed stadium that will be built across the Kansas-Missouri state line and be ready for the start of the 2031 season.

The announcement came shortly after a council of Kansas lawmakers voted unanimously inside a packed room at the state Capitol to allow for STAR bonds to be issued to cover up to 70% of the cost of the stadium and accompanying mixed-use district.

The bonds will be paid off with state sales and liquor tax revenues generated in a defined area around it.

“The location of Chiefs games will change,” Chiefs owner Clark Hunt said, “but some things won’t change. Our fans will still be the loudest in the NFL, our games will still be the best place in the world to tailgate, and our players and coaches will be ready to compete for championships, because on the field or off the field, we are big dreamers, and we’re ready for the next chapter.”

The Chiefs intend to build their new stadium in Kansas City, Kansas, near the Kansas Speedway and a retail and entertainment district known as The Legends. The area is also home to Children’s Mercy Park, the home of MLS club Sporting Kansas City.

The team will build a new practice facility, too, in the Kansas City suburb of Olathe, Kansas.

“Today’s announcement is truly historic. Actually, it’s a little surreal,” Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly said. “Today’s announcement will touch the lives of Kansans for generations to come. Today’s announcement is a total game-changer for our state.

“We have always been Chiefs fans,” Kelly said. “Now we are Chiefs family.”

The move by the Chiefs is a massive blow to Missouri lawmakers and Gov. Mike Kehoe, who had been working on their own funding package to prevent a third NFL franchise and the second in a decade from leaving its borders. The Rams left St. Louis for Los Angeles in part due to their inability to secure funding to help replace The Dome at America’s Center.

Kehoe had backed a special legislative session in June to authorize bonds covering up to 50% of the cost of new or renovated stadiums, plus up to $50 million of tax credits for each stadium and unspecified aid from local governments.

“For more than 50 years, we’ve had tremendous partnerships in Jefferson City, Jackson County and Kansas City, Missouri,” Hunt said. “That partnership is not over and we look forward to working together in the years ahead.”

The Chiefs originally planned an $800 million renovation of Arrowhead Stadium in a joint effort with the Royals, who are similarly planning to build a new facility to replace Kauffman Stadium. The facilities sit a couple of hundred yards across the parking lot from each other, and both teams have leases with Jackson County, Missouri, that expire in January 2031.

Last year, Jackson County voters soundly defeated a local sales tax extension which would have helped to pay for those renovations to the football stadium while helping to fund a new ballpark for the Royals in downtown Kansas City, Missouri.

The Royals were not discussed by Kansas lawmakers Monday, but momentum appears to be building behind their own move across the state line. An affiliate of the club already has purchased the mortgage on a tract of land in Overland Park, Kansas.

“While the Chiefs aren’t going far away and aren’t gone yet, today is a setback as a Kansas Citian, a former Chiefs season ticket-holder and lifelong Chiefs fan,” said Quinton Lucas, the mayor of Kansas City, Missouri. “Business decisions are a reality and we all understand that, but Arrowhead Stadium is more — it’s family, tradition and a part of Kansas City we will never leave.”

Hunt has long said his preference was to renovate Arrowhead Stadium, which was beloved by his father and team founder, the late Lamar Hunt. It is considered one of the jewels of the NFL, alongside Lambeau Field in Green Bay, and is revered for its tailgating scene and home-field advantage; it currently holds the Guinness World Record for the loudest stadium roar.

This summer, Arrowhead Stadium will host six World Cup matches, including matches in the Round of 32 and quarterfinals.

Lamar Hunt established the Chiefs on August 14, 1959. The team was originally based in Dallas and known as the Texans, but Hunt was convinced by then-Kansas City Mayor H. Roe Bartle to relocate the team to Missouri with promises of tripling the team’s season-ticket sales and expanding the seating capacity of Municipal Stadium.

In 1972, the team moved into Arrowhead Stadium at the Truman Sports Complex just east of downtown Kansas City.

The stadium has undergone numerous renovations through the years, allowing it to stay relevant in a changing sports landscape. But there has been little economic development around the stadium, the facility itself is starting to show wear and tear, and there is a limit to the number of luxury suites and amenities that the franchise can utilize to help drive revenue.

While the Hunt family has long loved Arrowhead Stadium, it has warmed in recent years to the idea of a replacement.

Not only would it solve many of the shortcomings of the Chiefs’ longtime home, a new facility with a fixed or retractable roof would allow them to use it year-round. That would mean the potential for hosting more concerts and events, college football bowl games, the Final Four and perhaps one of Lamar Hunt’s long-held dreams: a Super Bowl.

“Chiefs fans on both sides of the state line can tell you that the success we’ve enjoyed together has elevated the profile of the entire region,” Clark Hunt said. “Sports are women into the fabric of this community. If you travel and go to New York or Los Angeles or Europe or South America, you don’t have to tell people which side of the state line you’re from. You tell them you’re from Kansas City, and there’s a pretty good chance their response might have something to do with the Chiefs.”

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Pocatello Sanitation announces holiday service schedule and tree recycling

News Release

The following is a news release from the City of Pocatello:

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) — The City of Pocatello Sanitation Services is preparing for one of its busiest times of the year as the Christmas and New Year’s holidays approach.

City offices will be closed Thursday, December 25, in observance of Christmas, and Thursday, January 1, in observance of New Year’s Day. As a result, garbage and recycling collection will be delayed one day for Thursday and Friday during both holiday weeks.

From December 25–26 and January 1–2, residents are asked to place their autocarts out for collection by 7 a.m. the day after their normal collection day. Thursday service will move to Friday, Friday to Saturday.

From December 26 through December 31, the department will offer a special holiday pickup for extra bags and boxes. Extra items should be placed in the same location as regular garbage. Christmas trees should not be placed with extra trash.

Christmas tree collection sites will be available from December 26 through January 11. Drop boxes will be removed the morning of January 12. Trees will be chipped and reused for City landscaping projects. Please remove all lights, ornaments, tinsel, wires, and other materials before disposal to avoid damage to wood-chipping equipment.

Christmas tree drop-off sites will be available from December 26 through January 11 at City Hall (911 N. 7th Ave.), Rainey Park (900 South Arthur Ave.), and near the entrance to Sister City Park on Pocatello Creek Road. Trees will be chipped and reused for City landscaping projects. All decorations must be removed prior to disposal.

For questions, contact the Sanitation Department at 208-234-6192.

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Backcountry skier hospitalized after Teton Pass avalanche

Maile Sipraseuth

WILSON, Wyo., (KIFI) — Emergency crews responded to a life-threatening avalanche on Teton Pass Saturday afternoon after a Jackson Hole skier was fully buried on the popular “Bear Claw” trail.

The slide was triggered around 2:15 p.m. Emergency responders and bystanders worked to find the man, who was completely buried by the avalanche. According to the Jackson Hole News & Guide, the man was rescued and rushed to St. John’s Health. As of Monday morning, his current medical status has not been released.

An initial assessment by the Bridger Teton Avalanche Center indicates the “crown,” the upper edge where the snow broke away, averaged about one foot thick. Due to these conditions, experts have categorized this as a D2 avalanche.

Local authorities are reminding backcountry users that even “small” slides can have devastating consequences and urge everyone to check the daily advisory at jhavalanche.org before heading out.

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Yuma native returns home to inspire others after following his dreams in L.A.

Madeline Murray

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – A Yuma native who followed his dreams in Los Angeles has returned home to inspire others.

“I went to Ronald Reagan Fundamental School for elementary, and then I went to Centennial for junior high, and then I went Cibiola for high school and I grew up here,” says Daniel Berilla, Film Producer and Casting Director for The Good Dark.

Originally from Yuma, Daniel Berilla graduated from Cibola High School in 2007 and later moved to Los Angeles.

He started out working as a busboy until finally making it as a film producer and casting director for an upcoming feature called “The Good Dark.”

“The Good Dark” stars Taryn Manning of “Orange Is the New Black” and Sherilyn Fenn and Ray Wise of “Twin Peaks.”

Berilla explained how surreal it feels to have his dreams come true and what it means to him after coming from a small town.

“When you leave a place like this, that is quite smaller…and you go somewhere bigger, and you experience the world and you explore the world, it’s amazing,” Berilla expressed. “You can also go back to this place where it just a little more smaller…and be like, ‘Oh my god! This is where I grew up, and this is where I was inspired by this.'”

Berilla has a message for local kids wanting to make their dreams come true.

“Just because you’re in a small town, doesn’t mean you don’t belong in a big city, don’t give up. I’ve been through a lot medically and what not, and I persevered, I pushed through, and I just never gave up,” says Berilla.

He shares how he succeeds and the moto he lives by each day.

“What am I going to do with today, you know I’m lucky enough, I am alive, and so, I have 24 more hours, lets see if I’m going to make it to tomorrow, and so that’s kind of how I live life,” Berilla remarked.

He hopes his journey inspires others to pursue their dreams no matter where you came from.

To learn more about “The Good Dark,” click here.

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Traffic stop leads to seizure of ghost guns, suspected explosives, and drugs in Yucca Valley

Jesus Reyes

YUCCA VALLEY, Calif. (KESQ) – A 47-year-old man was arrested after a traffic stop in Yucca Valley led to law enforcement seizing ghost guns, drugs, and suspected explosives.

The traffic stop happened on Dec. 17 near the intersection of Twentynine Palms Highway and Kickapoo Trail.

According to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, deputies determined that the driver, identified as James Gagnon, was out on bail for possession of a controlled substance while armed.

“During the investigation, Gagnon was found to be in possession of a “Ghost” firearm with an extended magazine, ammunition, an AR-15-style “Ghost” rifle, an electronic vehicle key-cloning device, and suspected methamphetamine,” reads a news release by the agency.

Based on the information obtained during the traffic stop, detectives and deputies continued their investigation into Gagnon. 

Investigators served a search warrant at Gagnon’s residence and located several rounds of ammunition, rifle magazines, suspected controlled substances, and suspected explosive materials. The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department Bomb and Arson Detail responded to the residence and recovered the suspected explosive materials.

Gagnon is currently being held at the West Valley Detention Center without bail.

He was officially charged Monday. His charges include Possession of Destructive Device in a Private Habitation, Felon/Addict/Etc Possess Firearm, Possess Controlled Substance While Armed With Loaded/Etc Firearm. Gagnon pleaded not guilty to all charges and is scheduled to return to court on Dec. 26.

Anyone with information related to this investigation is asked to contact Deputy R. Quiroz or Detective Tyler A. Bengard at the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, Morongo Basin Station, at (760) 366 4175. Those wishing to remain anonymous may contact We-Tip at 1-888-78-CRIME.

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Living Healthy: Prostate artery embolization

KESQ News Team

COACHELLA VALLEY, Calif. (KESQ) – It’s time for this week’s Living Healthy segment. Today it’s a story for the guys in the room. Prostate artery embolization is a minimally invasive treatment that helps men suffering from an enlarged prostate.

The treatment uses a tiny catheter in the wrist or groin and blocks blood flow to shrink the prostate. This will relieve symptoms like frequent urinary, urination and nighttime urgency to use the restroom.

Dr. Sonny Bagla, interventional radiologist for the Urologic Institute, says untreated secondary complications are even worse.

“A prostate untreated, which is causing obstruction, can lead a man to get urinary tract infections, bladder stones. Ultimately, a man can end up with a catheter,” Bagla said.

After the procedure, Bagla says it takes about 4 to 12 weeks for the prostate to shrink, and most men simply notice a better quality of life after treatment.

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District 32’s search begins for new Representative following Wendy Horman’s resignation

News Team

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Following Representative Wendy Horman’s resignation from the Idaho House of Representatives, Legislative District 32 leadership is taking steps to fill her seat for the remainder of the legislative term. This formal selection process, scheduled for January 6, 2026, follows Horman’s recent announcement that she is stepping down to join the federal government as the Director of the Office of Child Care within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

In accordance with state law, the Republican precinct committee officers from District 32 will now nominate three qualified candidates to fill the vacancy. Those names will be forwarded to the Governor, who holds the final authority to appoint one individual to serve out the remainder of the legislative term.

The public nomination meeting is set to take place at 7:00 p.m. on Monday, January 6, 2026, at the Bonneville County Elections Office located on the second floor of 497 N. Capital Avenue in Idaho Falls. During this session, precinct committee officers will review applicants and vote on the final trio of nominees to be presented to the Governor’s office.

“This process is an important responsibility entrusted to the precinct committee officers under Idaho law,” said Chairwoman Maria Hatch. “We are committed to conducting a transparent and orderly nomination process that reflects the values of Legislative District 32 and ensures continued representation for our constituents.”

Qualified Republican residents of District 32 interested in the appointment are invited to submit their resumes and letters of interest to the party leadership at info@bonnevillegop.com. The deadline for applications is 5:00 p.m. on January 2, 2026, which provides the committee members time to review all materials prior to the public meeting. For more information, call 208-497-1211 or click HERE.

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Former YVHS star QB not expected to survive shooting injuries, suspect charged

Jesus Reyes

YUCCA VALLEY, Calif. (KESQ) – Michael Ramos Jr., former star Quarterback for Yucca Valley High School, is not expected to survive after being injured in a shooting Sunday night, authorities said Tuesday.

The shooting was reported at around 9:50 p.m. on the 57000 block of Chipmunk Trail.

According to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, the shooting was at a party. Ramos, 18, was involved in an argument with another man, identified as Nicholas Daniel Lee, 29, of Yucca Valley. Lee allegedly shot Ramos and fled the location.

Michael Ramos Jr.

Lee was found hiding in the area and arrested. He was charged on Wednesday with murder, attempted murder, among several other charges, according to court records. Lee remains in custody on $2 million bail.

Authorities said homicide detectives were provided with an update from the hospital on Ramos’ condition and learned Ramos is not expected to survive. According to a GoFundMe page set up to help Ramos’ family, the 18-year-old will be taken off life support later this week.

Lee remains in custody on $2 million bail.

Ramos graduated from Yucca Valley High School in 2025, setting various records in his time as QB and helping lead the school to their first CIF-SS title game since 1996.

A community vigil is scheduled to take place on Trojan Field at Yucca Valley High School on Friday at 11 a.m., weather permitting.

The suspect remains in custody on $2 million bail at the West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga. He is expected to appear in court on Wednesday.

The investigation remains ongoing. Anyone with information regarding this case is asked to contact the Homicide Detail at 909-890-4904.  Callers wishing to remain anonymous should contact We-Tip at 1-800-78-CRIME (27463) or go to wetip.com.

Stay with News Channel 3 for continuing updates.

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