Critchfield rejects budget committee’s request to plan for cuts

Ryan Suppe

Originally posted on IdahoEdNews.org on January 29, 2026

By: Ryan Suppe

BOISE, Idaho — One day after legislative budget-writers asked state superintendent Debbie Critchfield to plan for cuts to public schools, the first-term Republican delivered her response: No. 

“I will not be recommending further cuts to the public schools budget,” Critchfield wrote in a Thursday letter to the Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee’s co-chairs. “The public schools budget is more than numbers on a spreadsheet. It represents every one of our students, classrooms, teachers and communities.”

Her letter follows two memos this week from Sen. C. Scott Grow and Rep. Josh Tanner, the Eagle Republicans who head JFAC. Their memos asked state agency directors to deliver plans for budget cuts up to 2%, in addition to the 3% cuts that Gov. Brad Little made through an executive order last year. 

The first memo, sent to agency directors Monday, mirrored the governor’s executive order, which exempted K-12. But the second memo, delivered Wednesday, reversed the exemption. It added the $2.7 billion public school system and the Division of Medicaid to the list of agencies that should deliver plans to JFAC. 

Grow and Tanner asked Critchfield to send them “budget reduction plans” at 1% and 2% for the current fiscal year and next fiscal year, as the co-chairs consider “options to balance the statewide budget.”

“We’re just making sure we have all the cards actually laid out,” Tanner told Idaho Education News Thursday afternoon.

He did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday evening on Critchfield’s reply.

In her response, Critchfield wrote that the public school budget is already “in line with the state’s fiscal reality.” Heading into the session, the superintendent reduced her budget request by $50 million, pulling back a block grant proposal that would’ve addressed about half of the state’s special education funding gap. 

Critchfield’s budget also incorporated projected enrollment decreases, which would cut K-12 funding by $22 million this fiscal year and $42 million next fiscal year. Otherwise, the budget Critchfield delivered to lawmakers is flat — essentially a cut when factoring in inflation, she wrote. 

These revisions “fulfilled the assignment,” Critchfield told EdNews by phone Thursday. She also noted that she supports Little’s budget recommendations, which include cuts to virtual schools while keeping “classroom funding” whole

“Both of those things will get them to a balanced budget,” she said. “You can balance the budget without coming in mid-year and making cuts to public ed.”

Click here to read Critchfield’s response to JFAC.

Superintendent of Public Instruction Debbie Critchfield speaks at a Jan. 21 JFAC meeting. (Sean Dolan/EdNews)

A 2% cut to public schools would amount to $55.1 million. 

This would feel like “going backwards” after the state’s K-12 investments in recent years, Critchfield said. And it would be felt in classrooms, particularly in the middle of a budget year. 

About 87% of public school spending is tied to teacher contracts, Critchfield said, and operational costs are rising — costs of fuel, utilities, food, classroom materials and other necessities to operate a school. 

“I know that it may sound dramatic, but … in order to break contracts, you go and declare emergencies,” she said. “It really does have impacts all the way around.”

Other state agency directors have until noon Friday to deliver their plans to JFAC.

Critchfield’s refusal to comply doesn’t mean public schools are safe. The Legislature can still cut K-12 spending. 

But the governor could also stand in the way. Lori Wolff, Little’s budget chief, said Thursday that the Republican governor’s budget plan shows there’s “a way to balance this budget without touching K-12.”

“That’s the roadmap,” she added. 

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Are you looking to head up to the mountain this weekend? Here are some events at Mt. Bachelor in coming days

KTVZ – News Team

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — There are plenty of events happening this weekend at Mt. Bachelor to keep you busy!

On Saturday from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., you can ski or snowshoe candlelit trails under the stars to music by award-winning pianist, Paula Dreyer.

Enjoy hot drinks and specials at the nordic cafe, explore the trails, and soak in the fresh air in the great outdoors. Costumes, headlamps, and glow-in-the-dark attire are encouraged.

Guests can listen to the concert via wireless headphones on trails within a half mile radius, or acoustically in the lodge by the fire. 

Also happening Saturday–from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m., Outplay 365 and Full Season Passholders will enjoy exclusive early access to the slopes via Pine Marten chairlift, weather and conditions permitting. Check the Mountain Report for the latest updates on conditions and operations.

Happening Sunday from 10 a.m to 12 p.m, ski or ride down to the bottom of cloud chaser chairlift and enjoy an on-snow pop up event. There will be mimosas, non-alcoholic drinks, and a selection of light, elevated snacks!

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Coachella Valley High School students march to city hall to protest ICE activity

María García

THERMAL, Calif. (KESQ) – Students from Coachella Valley High School, along with students from other campuses, walked out of class and marched to Coachella City Hall on Friday morning.

The student-led demonstration was organized in protest of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) as part of a national day of action.

“I’m so thankful to have the chance to come and speak for the people who can’t, there’s some people who can’t go to work or get groceries,” said Stephanie Meza, student at Cahuilla Desert Academy.

Earlier this week, students at La Quinta High School announced plans for a similar protest, as school officials warned against walkouts and reminded families about attendance policies.

Superintendent Dr. Frances Esparza leading the march to city hall in order to ensure the safety of her students, with water and snacks and available.

“Our Director of Safety and security, along with, several leadership staff from the district office, gathered this week. We created plan safety and security plans to ensure that students had water. They had, first aid kits in case anybody had any issues with heat exhaustion,” Esparza said.

Supervisor Manuel Perez also voicing his support, calling their participation in the national day of action, a courageous step.

“The message is very simple, obviously they have a lot of courage. I believe, for deciding to take this role on, but let’s do it nonviolently,” Perez said.

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Driver killed in high-speed Cathedral City crash

Julia Castro

CATHEDRAL CITY, Cali. (KESQ) — Authorities have identified the driver killed in a two-vehicle crash Thursday night as Bryan Verduzco, 29, of Cathedral City, according to the Riverside County Sheriff-Coroner’s Office.

Police responded around 9:34 p.m. to the 35000 block of Cathedral Canyon Drive. Investigators determined both vehicles were traveling northbound when one was struck from behind by a second vehicle moving at a high rate of speed.

The impact caused the second vehicle to overturn. Verduzco, who police say was not wearing a seat belt, was pronounced dead at the scene. Two occupants in the first vehicle were not injured.

Authorities determined Verduzco was at fault for the collision. Cathedral City Police traffic investigators are handling the case.

The exact cause of the crash remains under investigation. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Cathedral City Police Department.

Stay with News Channel 3 for continuing updates.

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Good Vibes Only: Rising 12-year-old artist earns Grammy recognition

Rosemary Garcia

EL PASO, Texas (KVIA)— 12-year-old Arykah Brown has been recognized by the Recording Academy, the music industry’s highest honor.

The 7th grader at Spec. Rafael Hernando III Middle School is heavily involved in fine arts. She sings and plays piano and guitar.

She’s also a member of Sound Stage 9, which offers performance-based music education. During middle school, she was also involved in theater and choir.

“Since I was a baby, I’ve always loved music. It’s just like I’m really passionate about it,” she told ABC-7.

Arykah and her sister were invited to sing background vocals on the children’s album “Brillo, Brillo” by Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band. She learned the songs in just two days and recorded the musics tracks at an El Paso music studio. Arykah said the songs were fun and entertaining.

“So me and my sister did it, and we didn’t think much of it until, like, a couple months later,”

The album would go on and win Best Children’s Music Album at the 2025 GRAMMYs. Arykah was shocked when she learned the news.

“My mom was like, ‘You won a Grammy.’ I was like, ‘Oh.’ So, like, that’s how that happened. It was like really unexpected because I didn’t know it was like that big of a thing,” she said.

The preteen already has a manager, and she even has her own stage name, Chriz-Ti.

Arykah is proud of her official Grammy certificate she received. It currently sits in her family’s home entrance.

“I’m really proud of it because I know not a lot of people get the opportunities that I do as a 12-year-old, and that I’ve done it like this soon in life, and a lot of for a lot of artists, it’s like a lifelong goal.”

Arykah also thrives in the classroom. She’s a straight-A student and a member of the National Junior Honor Society.

Middle school math teacher at Hernando Middle, Ruby Cervantes, said Arykah occasionally sings to the class.

“It’s so exciting. It’s exciting for her and her family. And just goes to show how hardworking she is and how self-driven she has to be at 12-years-old and go on to such a wonderful accomplishment,” she said.

She described Arykah as creative, brilliant, self-driven and humble.

“It’s so exciting. It’s exciting for her and her family, and just goes to show how hardworking she is and how self-driven she has to be at 12-years-old and go on to such a wonderful accomplishment,” she said.

Jesse Sepulveda, the principal of the middle school, said Arykah’s success can be largely attributed to her involvement with Socorro ISD’s Fine Arts Programs.

“She is going to be a big hit one day. We’re going to hear her name somewhere, and then we’re all going to remember that we had the opportunity to meet her,” he said.

Arykah said she enjoys performing and seeing the joy it brings others.

“I love being on stage, and I love performing. And a lot of times I’m performing with bands, whether it’s my band or other bands that they put together. I love that because then you can, like, look around, and you see like other people,like, enjoying it as much as you do, and you’re just surrounded by people who, like, have the same passions as you. And so it’s a great thing,” she said.

Arykah wants to pursue music after high school and become a touring artist. Until then, she’s focused on her academics and releasing new music of her own.

If you have a Good Vibes Only story idea, please e-mail rosemary.garcia@kvia.com.

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Columbia shooting charges allege suspect was part of group that fired on car with 3 people

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man suspected in a Columbia shooting that left two people injured was part of a group that opened fire on a vehicle carrying three people, according to court documents.

Ammanuel A. Minuye, 23, was arrested Thursday and charged with first-degree assault, armed criminal action and unlawful use of a weapon in the northeast Columbia shooting.

Officers were called at about 7 p.m. Thursday to the 4500 block of Alan Lane. Officers found a victim in the 3900 block of Clark Lane and another in the 1700 block of North Ballenger Lane, according to the Columbia Police Department. The victim on Clark Lane had minor injuries, but the Ballenger Lane victim’s wounds were life-threatening, CPD says.

One of the victims, according to a probable cause statement, was with Minuye when the group in the car fired back at them.

The statement says Minuye and two other people approached a car that was sitting on Alan Lane, and that one person in Minuye’s group opened fire, according to the people in the car. The people in the car fired back, hitting a person who was with Minuye, the statement says. That person was found with a gunshot wound on Ballenger Lane.

The people in the car drove to a nearby Casey’s, where police found one gunshot victim.

Minuye told police that only one other person was with him that night, but security video shows he was with two people, the statement says.

Both victims were stable at a local hospital Friday morning, police say. Minuye was in the Boone County Jail on no bond on Friday. Judge Jayne Pearman scheduled a bond hearing for Minuye on Feb. 5 and a preliminary hearing on March 17.

Ward 3 City Councilwoman Jacque Sample said the recent shootings in the area are deeply concerning.

“Any act of gun violence — whether it results in injury, loss of life, or simply the fear it creates — affects not only the individuals directly involved, but entire neighborhoods,” Sample told ABC 17 News in a statement.

Sample emphasized that public safety requires a collaborative approach involving law enforcement, community organizations, schools, families and local government. While declining to comment on the specifics of the ongoing investigation, she said city leaders must continue examining data-driven strategies, including:

How we are supporting proactive, community-based policing strategies.

Whether our data identifies patterns that allow for early intervention.

What prevention efforts — particularly those focused on youth engagement and conflict resolution — can be strengthened.

How environmental design, lighting, and neighborhood infrastructure may contribute to safety.

How we ensure residents know how to report concerns and access resources.

“Ward 3 deserves to feel safe. Every neighborhood in our city deserves to feel safe,” Sample said. “I remain committed to working with my fellow council members, our city staff, law enforcement, and community partners to examine practical steps that reduce violence and increase trust. I also encourage residents to stay engaged—attend meetings, share information, and remain active participants in strengthening our community. Safety is not partisan. It is not ideological. It is fundamental. And it must remain a priority.”

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We Hike offering free teen hiking program in 2026 to build connection

Nicole Ardila

The organization We Hike is aiming to take teens off of screens and up summits with their now free teen introduction to mountain hiking.

On Saturday, Jan. 31, they’re expecting at least 30 teens to participate in their first teen hike of the year.

We Hike says it’s taken them a couple of years but they finally created access for teens to the Franklin Mountains State Park without permit fees.

On the 3-mile hike introducing teens to mountain hiking, they’ll be discussing safety, leadership and connecting with the community.

We Hike President Lisa Enriquez shares how important this is for building lost social skills.

“I think that community connectedness is not the same as it was six, seven years ago,” she says. “We have youth who are not used to communicating, who are used to doing everything online, working in groups, giving that social connection, giving that environment, giving that nature and getting them out with what they’re using and how to expand and grow into those leadership and communicative programs.”

They’ll also be teaching teens about the desert, its flora and fauna, and about “Leave No Trace.”

It’ll give teens the chance to dig deeper into our ecosystem before temperatures get too warm later in the year.

“Our internet world today and with AI has really given us opportunities to stay behind closed doors,” says Enriquez. “Now is the time to learn, if you’re curious, come on out, put your jacket on. It is really not that cold, when you get out here it’s almost magical coming from the couch.”

Check in begins at 7:30 a.m. for quick introductions, giveaways and a safety course.

They recommend teens come layered up, with sneakers or hiking boots, and bring snacks and water.

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Gabby Petito wrongful death suit against Moab police heads to Utah Supreme Court

By Emily Ashcraft, KSL

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    SALT LAKE CITY (KSL) — The city of Moab said it feels “profound sympathy” for Gabby Petito’s family but its officers are not responsible for her death “some 400 miles away, and weeks after the couple left Moab.”

The city spoke out on Thursday as attorneys prepare for oral arguments in a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Petito’s family, which was dismissed in November 2024.

The Utah Supreme Court scheduled oral arguments in an appeal of that dismissal for March 4.

Police responded to a domestic violence call related to 22-year-old Petito and her fiancé Brian Laundrie on Aug. 12, 2021. The two were visiting Moab and other national parks during a road trip. This was just over a month before Laundrie arrived home alone, and Petito’s parents and many around the United States began searching for her.

Petito’s body was found in Wyoming’s Bridger-Teton National Forest. Laundrie went missing following the discovery, and his body was later found at a nature preserve in Florida near a notebook where he admitted to killing her.

The family filed a lawsuit against Moab, arguing that the police department was grossly negligent in its investigation, claiming it sympathized with Laundrie and did not follow the proper response for a domestic violence situation.

Moab’s statement said the city “stands behind” its police department and will continue to defend that the lawsuit should be dismissed throughout the appeal. It said Moab is a city of about 5,000 people that gets millions of tourists each year, and Petito and Laundrie were just two of those tourists.

“When Moab’s officers interacted with Ms. Petito, they did so with kindness, respect and empathy. The officers also separated Ms. Petito from Mr. Laundrie for the night. The following day, the couple voluntarily reunited and left Moab — like millions of other tourists before and since,” the statement said.

Parker & McConkie, the law firm representing Petito’s parents, said they “remain steadfast in their pursuit of justice for Gabby.”

Attorney Judson Burton said in the statement that the briefing underscores the case’s significance in Utah law, citing multiple local governments that have weighed in.

“We are confident that at oral argument, the justices will recognize that Utah’s Constitution protects every citizen’s right to hold even government entities accountable for the wrongful death of a loved one,” he said.

The statement included a quote from Petito’s family: “While we miss Gabby every day, the continued love and support we feel gives us strength. We look forward to this next important step, but regardless of the outcome, will remain determined to seek justice for her and to advocate for other victims and their families.”

In their brief, they said Moab’s claim that there is no judicial redress in this case despite the city’s negligence was not the view of those who settled Utah, “many of whom lost children and family to religious and political violence sanctioned by government actors.”

It claims that the wrongful death clause in the Utah Constitution means no one, “not even a municipality like Moab,” is immune when causing death through negligence.

It said a 1996 Utah case, Tiede v. State, that the government has relied on to claim it is immune deals with sovereign immunity rather than municipal liability and does not apply, but if the court finds it does, it should overturn that ruling.

The attorneys representing the Moab Police Department said the pioneer influence of Utah’s founding did not drive the wrongful death law and that the influence would not explain the outcome for the case requested by Petito’s parents.

According to their brief, no case from Utah or the Territory of Deseret (the name of the region before it was established as a state) allowed people to assert claims against a government entity for an improper police investigation.

The attorneys said although the killing of Petito is “heartbreaking,” consequences of a lawsuit in Utah for a crime that occurred more than a month later and hundreds of miles away “would be widespread and counterproductive.”

It said a change of the law would also cause “immediate and uninsured budgetary impacts.”

Hunter Jackson’s parents join in Brooke and Jeromey Jackson, the parents of Hunter Jackson, a 3-year-old boy who was killed in a crash in Eagle Mountain along with his friend Odin Ratliff while playing in a horse corral, filed an amicus brief in support of the Petito family in the case. It said the outcome could impact a case they currently have going in the 3rd District Court.

They said they “stand behind” Gabby Petito’s parents in the legal debate, while grieving their son.

They claim in their lawsuit that the government built a road “dangerously close to neighboring property” and that it “let a repeat felon with a history of drug-fueled driving stay on the streets despite repeated parole violations.”

In their brief in the Petito case, they argued that sovereign immunity sprang from lawsuits against Southern states during the Civil War and does not have intellectual or moral basis.

“The doctrine does not express the sovereignty of the people. It expresses the arrogance of government that refuses to take responsibility for its wrongs and to provide redress,” their brief says.

Kent Cody Barlow was found guilty of the murder of Jackson and his friend in a 4th District Court trial last year and sentenced to prison. A separate wrongful death suit filed by Odin Ratliff’s parents against the Utah Board of Pardons and Parole and Wasatch Behavioral Health was dismissed previously and is also under appeal and will be heard by the Supreme Court.

The state of Utah also filed an amicus brief in support of Moab and “defending the constitutionality of the Utah Governmental Immunity Act.”

It argued that applying the act to this wrongful death lawsuit is not unconstitutional, as Petito’s parents claim, citing that when the Utah Constitution was adopted, “it was well settled” that a municipality was not accountable for its officers’ actions.

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

Front Street Animal Shelter pauses dog intake amid concerns of Strep Zoo

By Ron Edens

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KCRA) — The Front Street Animal Shelter in Sacramento is not taking in any new dogs due to concerns over a serious disease, with two confirmed cases of Strep Zoo detected at the shelter.

Strep Zoo is a highly contagious and potentially fatal bacterial disease that spreads quickly in crowded, high-stress environments like kennels.

The shelter is giving all dogs preventive antibiotics and giving the facility a deep cleaning.

The shelter is working with other locations to find placements for more dogs.

In a post on social media, the shelter also noted that adoptions and owner redemptions would continue.

The shelter said the pause would last between one and two weeks.

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

CDOT to build roundabout at US 24/Judge Orr Road intersection in Falcon area

Scott Harrison

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — Currently, the closest thing to a highway roundabout in southern Colorado was built several years ago, on an exit ramp at the junction of US 50 and Highway 115 in Fremont County.

But the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) is preparing to construct a traffic circle on a major highway.

Work will start in the fall of 2027 at the intersection of US 24 and Judge Orr Road — a route experiencing heavier traffic due to continued growth in the Falcon community.

The project will last for two years and cost between $10 million and $15 million.

CDOT said that the Colorado State Patrol (CSP) asked CDOT to take action because of the frequency of speeding and crashes at the intersection.

The roundabout construction requires that CDOT close the US 24 intersection at Blue Gill Drive, a mile-long neighborhood road slightly west of the roundabout location.

Blue Gill also connects to the highway farther south, and CDOT said that the east intersection will be moved to an undetermined location.

CDOT said that initially, crews will stripe the roundabout for one lane of traffic in each direction, but it will eventually have two lanes.

The alighnment of Judge Orr Road skews the intersection, CDOT said, making the roundabout design more challenging.

The agency said that the overall goal is not necessarily to slow traffic down, but to keep drivers safe.

Keith McCafferty, a former mayor of Ramah, in the northeastern corner of El Paso County, said that he doesn’t like the roundabout plan and would rather see less-expensive measures, such as adding turn lanes and passing lanes.

“I can’t see how the school buses, the semi trucks, and the construction vehicles are going to navigate a roundabout there,” he said.

CDOT has yet to decide if it will schedule a public meeting on the roundabout project.

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