ABC-7 at 4: El Paso Homeschool Association Announces 2026 Homeschool Conference

Nichole Gomez

El Paso, TX — The El Paso Homeschool Association (EPHA), announces its 10th Annual Homeschool Conference, taking place February 20–21, 2026, at Centro Vida Life Center (1335 Henry Brennan Dr., El Paso, TX 79936).

Keynote Speakers

The conference will feature keynote speakers John and Cathy Heckendorn, veteran homeschool parents and advocates. Cathy Heckendorn—who calls herself a “homeschool survivor”—brings a relatable, honest perspective, shaped by homeschooling all four of her children to graduation.

Workshop Tracks & Topics

The 2026 conference will offer multiple workshop tracks, allowing families to tailor their experience. Tracks include:

Special Needs

Homeschooling the Young Years

Homeschooling High School

Spanish-Language Track

Parenting

Faith & Vision

Practical Homeschooling

For conference details, registration, visit elpasohomeschool.org/2026-conference or email hello@elpasohomeschool.org.

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Engineer creates drinking water from air as water shortages worsen

By Justin Hobbs

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    PHOENIX (KNXV) — Arizona and the Southwest are facing a growing water crisis, shrinking rivers, rising demand, and new AI data centers putting added pressure on supplies.

One inventor thinks the solution might be right above our heads.

Former Army Ranger Captain Moses West has created atmospheric water generators that pull moisture from the air, cool it, and turn it into purified drinking water- producing thousands of gallons a day, even in dry climates like Arizona.

Meteorologist Justin Hobbs shows how the machines work, where they’re already making an impact, and why this innovation could change the way we think about water in the desert.

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.

Jury awards family of Wichita teen who died in custody $8.3M in excessive force lawsuit

By KAKE Staff

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    WICHITA, Kan. (KAKE) — A Sedgwick County jury has awarded $8.3 million to the family of a Wichita teenager who died in law enforcement custody in 2021.

A federal jury awarded the family of Cedric Lofton $8.3 million in a lawsuit against five detention center officers involved in the events that led to the 17-year-old’s death.

Lofton suffered a heart attack and died after five officers pinned him facedown on the floor for about 39 minutes.

The $8.3 million was awarded to Lofton’s brother, Marquan Teetz, for pain, suffering, emotional distress, loss of life and lost potential wages.

Teetz and several supporters who attended the trial daily exited the courthouse celebtrating what one called justice finally done.

“I’ve shared more days on this earth with my brother than anyone,” Teetz said outside of the courtroom Wednesday. “I feel like when you see me, you see him, you see him, you see me.

The jury ruled that only three of the officers used excessive force against Lofton that night and that four violated his civil rights. But it said all five failed to intervene to protect Lofton, and awarded his brother damages totaling $8.3 million.

“The facts are the facts,” Teetz said. “Cedric was murdered. Sat on him for 39 minutes. It’s what we all knew.”

The defendants and their attorneys declined to comment on the verdict.

Sedgwick County released a statement saying: Sedgwick County continues to follow its values in integrity and service to the people. We respect the judicial process and are reviewing the verdict, awaiting the finalization of court proceedings and discussing next steps.

The defendants can still appeal Wednesday’s verdict.

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Seaholm High School student creates nonprofit to help people in need of clothing

By Demetrios Sanders

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    BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (WXYZ) — A high school senior from Birmingham is making a significant impact in her community by helping others feel confident through her nonprofit organization.

Tessa Shane, a senior at Seaholm High School, founded The Donation Closet after stepping away from sports. Her journey began when she got involved with the New Jersey-based organization Hoodies for the Homeless in 2024.

“I started a Michigan chapter for that, and I was getting a lot of donations coming to my house, so I decided I needed a place to put everything,” Shane said.

That place became the basement of her family’s home.

“Figured nobody was really using it, and why not take the couch out and all the furniture, and buy some racks, and let’s make use of this,” said Jennifer Shane, Tessa’s mother.

The growth Shane saw with Hoodies for Homeless inspired her to create The Donation Closet in the summer of last year, where she coordinates clothing donation drives for people in need.

“People can drop donations off at my house, or they’ll drop it off at my high school,” Shane said. “I’ll go to my basement, and I’ll sort everything, and then I have different racks from like kids, women’s, men’s, and then like the different sizes.”

Since starting her nonprofit, Shane has collected around 10,000 garments, which she delivers to organizations around Metro Detroit for distribution. On Wednesday, she delivered donations to the Michigan Foster Care Closet in Ann Arbor, where children in foster care can shop for free.

“This is a place where they belong, and they come in our doors, and they know that. And they get to choose anything they want, and they don’t worry about price, and they get to find their favorite characters,” said Lynda Cooney, a board member at Michigan Foster Care Closet.

The organization serves between 120 and 150 youth each month, highlighting the critical need for donations.

“When people like Tessa come in and drop off large donations, it allows us to do what we do,” Cooney said.

The Donation Closet has helped around 18 other nonprofits and even families impacted by the LA wildfires. Shane hopes her work encourages others to give back to their communities.

“It fills. me up with happiness that I’m able to help other people,” Shane said. “I just think that everyone should do something and help the community.”

When she goes off to college, Shane plans to create another chapter of The Donation Closet in that area.

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. ­­­WXYZ verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

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A room to breathe: Project NICU transforms old lounge into calm space for families at MetroHealth

By Mike Holden

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    CLEVELAND (WEWS) — A nonprofit is working to help families across Northeast Ohio find comfort in their most challenging moments. Project NICU is dedicated to providing comprehensive support to families with children receiving care in the neonatal intensive care unit.

And now, the organization is taking it a step further — sponsoring and opening its first-ever respite room in Cleveland.

It’s all thanks to a blossoming partnership with MetroHealth System and the MetroHealth Foundation.

Project NICU’s Respite Room at MetroHealth aims to provide a peaceful space for parents navigating the emotional challenges of having a child in the neonatal intensive care unit. The new Respite Room is located steps away from Metro’s NICU.

Thanks to MetroHealth, Project NICU volunteers and workers work hand in hand with current NICU and hospital staff to transform an old lounge into a serene oasis for anyone who needs a moment to breathe.

“This space is a quiet space. It’s a space of support, resources and just a place to get away from the beeping and all of the stimulation of the NICU,” Meaghan Musarra, a Project NICU family advocate, said.

The Respite Room was years in the making. It features artwork created by graduates of the MetroHealth NICU. The space is designed to give families a place to rest, recharge and find comfort during one of their most vulnerable times.

“We’re hoping to drag them out of the NICU for a moment and give them a place to take a deep breath and calm down,” Musarra said.

Musarra knows first-hand the challenges NICU families face. Two of her three children were MetroHealth NICU babies. Her son James spent five hours there, while her daughter Maggie stayed for two weeks after being born at 33 weeks, weighing just four pounds.

“My secondborn — she was in the NICU. She was born at 33 weeks. She was a little 4-pounder. She did well, but she needed time to grow, learning how to feed and she had some infection risks as well. She spent a couple weeks, and I had a two-year-old at home at the time, so I felt that tug of being in the NICU and wanting to be at home,” Musarra said.

After discovering Project NICU online during the pandemic and finding support through their online community, Musarra made it her mission to help other NICU parents feel seen and understood.

“It just became a big place of support for me, and so knowing my time in the NICU and what I could have used then, it has been a big part of my healing process and my passion to make sure other families have what I could have used,” Musarra said.

MetroHealth became Project NICU’s first partner hospital, and the nursing staff has embraced the collaboration over the past couple of years.

“Having this organization come into our hospital has really been a godsend for them, for the families. All the support that it brings,” Connie Eggleston, nurse manager at MetroHealth NICU, said.

Emily Pringle, assistant nurse manager at MetroHealth NICU, said the partnership reflects the hospital’s commitment to comprehensive care.

“It becomes a place where smiles are certainly more common than tears,” Pringle said.

Project NICU will use the respite room regularly for current patients’ loved ones and hold monthly in-person support meetings there.

“Project NICU. That’s what they provide… TLC… Tender loving care. And we see that in the soft colors, the procurement of the artwork, the furniture,” Pringle said. “We will listen to you… We will comfort you. We will give you everything that we have.”

The nonprofit also distributes care packages for families, hosts baby showers and offers virtual support groups that can be accessed from the NICU bedside.

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.

‘They are beautiful’: New benches donated to memorial site in North Omaha

By Molly Hudson

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    OMAHA, Neb. (KMTV) — A North Omaha memorial site that honors victims of gun violence receives new benches after the previous ones were vandalized and destroyed in July 2025.

The Queen’s Legacy Mural site was vandalized for a third time in July 2025, destroying the benches. DeSantiago Masonry donated new benches made of retaining wall block on a concrete base, designed to last. The memorial honors over 80 women murdered in the community and provides families a place to reflect. BROADCAST TRANSCRIPT: A moment months in the making.

“They are beautiful, and they sent me a vision, and they executed it perfectly,” said Buffy Bush, founder of Families of the Stolen.

Benches at the Queen’s Legacy Mural, near 24th and Sahler, which honors dozens of women and one man lost to gun violence in Omaha, give families a place to sit and reflect.

“This is a living mural because unfortunately, the violence doesn’t stop,” Bush said.

When vandalism hit this site for a third time in July, destroying the benches, the only choice was to remove them.

“They were broken beyond any kind of repair,” Bush said.

But a good neighbor quickly stepped in after seeing the vandalism on social media.

“My husband just kind of brought it to me, and was like ‘hey, what do you think we can do, how can we help,’ and I said ‘well, I think we can build them new benches,” said Brianne DeSantiago, co-owner of DeSantiago Masonry.

DeSantiago says these two new benches are made of retaining wall block on a concrete base.

“We just wanted to give them something that would last, something that they didn’t have to come and see broken,” DeSantiago said.

An addition to the site that Bush calls a blessing.

“It was a process, and they were so loving about it, and I can’t thank them enough,” Bush said.

DeSantiago Masonry says if anything happens to these benches, they are committed to maintaining them for years to come.

“This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.”

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Teens accused in downtown Macy’s burglary, drawing map to hide in store after it closed: Sheriff

By WLS Staff

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Two teenagers are accused of hiding in a downtown Chicago Macy’s store after it closed before stealing merchandise.

The two suspect have been charged with burglary, officials said.

The Cook County Sheriff’s Department says it happened Monday night at the Macy’s on State Street in the Loop.

Two people could be seen on surveillance video emerging from inside the store, stealing sunglasses, cologne and clothing before leaving, officials said.

The sheriff’s department says the pair had even drawn a map of the store.

No further information was available.

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.

Orange County Sheriff’s Department warns against distraction theft crimes involving ATMs

By KABC Staff

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    ORANGE COUNTY, Calif. (KABC) — The Orange County Sheriff’s Department is sounding the alarm on what they’re calling distraction theft crimes.

According to a post shared on the department’s Instagram, three Romanian nationals were arrested in a distraction theft crime operation involving several counties and at least a dozen victims across California.

Video shared by the sheriff’s department shows two suspects walking behind a man as he’s entering his PIN number at an ATM.

“As the victim gets ready to complete his transaction, one suspect drops money at the victim’s feet, causing the victim to bend down and pick it up,” read the department’s Instagram post. “While the victim was distracted, a second suspect swapped the victim’s ATM card with a fraudulent one.”

Authorities said the thefts happen fast and are not limited to ATM transactions. They said criminals may also try to steal PIN codes while people wait in line at grocery stores or other businesses.

The sheriff’s department urges people to stay vigilant and always cover the keypad when entering your PIN number.

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.

65 Years of Broadcasting: The Legacy of the KIFI Ski School

Seth Ratliff

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — In 1947, a new era of winter recreation began on the Snake River Plain. Born as an offshoot of the Idaho Falls Ski Club, the KIFI Ski School was the brainchild of two local visionaries: Dan Kelly, owner of the Pine Basin Ski Area, and Jim Brady, owner of KIFI Radio.

The archives at the Museum of Idaho capture the school’s beginnings. “Jim wanted to do something for the young people of Idaho Falls,” Kelly told the Post Register in the 1940s. “He said, ‘Let’s get ’em tired, so they can’t get in trouble at night.'”

For nearly 20 years, the school served as the region’s training ground. Volunteer instructors were led and certified by local legend Wes Deist, a member of the Intermountain Ski Hall of Fame who dedicated his life to teaching a generation of Idahoans how to carve through the snow.

Wes’s daughter, Holley DuPont, still remembers the height of the school’s growth. Meeting at the Konditorei Restaurant in the foothills of Sun Valley, she recalled the grassroots beginnings of the school. “They came out of the war, and they wanted it (skiing) to catch on,” Holley said. “They made their own skis, bought bear-trap bindings, and used bamboo poles.”

“Your dad taught me how to ski!”

Junior Racing Team. Courtesy: Kelley Deist.

What started with just 12 children soon exploded. By its peak, roughly 500 students were bused to Pine Basin in Swan Valley every weekend. Today, Wes Deist’s influence still echoes through the community. “I’ve heard it my whole life: ‘Your dad taught me how to ski!'” says his son, Kelley. To hear him tell it, from the late 40’s to the 60’s, everyone in town went to the KIFI Ski School.

For almost two decades, the massive effort relied entirely on the generosity of local volunteers.

“It did start out with yellow school buses, and then went to Greyhound,” Holley explained. “The Greyhounds were run by Andy Anderson, my dad’s buddy. He got certified to teach and provided the buses for free. It was all volunteer.”

“There were dozens and dozens of people who were behind this. Not just my Dad, not just Mr. Brady,” adds Kelley.

One of those students was Susan Bills Moe. A local photograph from the late 60s shows a young Susan at about eight years old, looking tiny next to the Kelly’s great Dane. “It was completely staged!” Susan laughed. “I can’t remember how they got him to look down at the skis like he was feeling sorry for me.”

Beyond the School: The KIFI Ski Team

Left to right, sitting, Greg Poitevin, Kelley Deist, Robb Brady, Fred-Anderson, Bill Anderson, Joan Curtis, and Holley Deist. Second row, left to right, Bob Anderson, Jane Poitevin, Donna Anderson, Susan Curtis, Mary Ann Lambert, Barbara Griffith, and Susan Bills. Standing, Mike Mull, Mark Brown, Mike Me-Hugh, Steve Rogers, Bob Anderson, Susan Ten Eyek, Fae Jacobsen, and Mike Kelley. Coach Wes Deist, kneeling far left. Courtesy: Holly DuPont and Kelley Deist

The school wasn’t just for recreation; it was soon the training ground for serious athletes. Wes’s children, Holley and Kelley, were skiing before they reached grade school and eventually joined the KIFI Ski Team to compete in the Intermountain Ski Association.

Wes had a keen eye for talent. He recruited Susan Bills Moe to the racing team after seeing her potential on the mountain. “My mother had just died,” Susan recalled. “I thought he was doing it, (because) maybe my father had put him up to it, or he was doing it because he felt sorry for me. It never occurred to me that he thought I was a good!”

Susan and Jake Moe, Courtesy: Susan Moe

While Susan eventually moved away from competition, her life remained rooted in the sport. She went on to marry Jake Moe, the founder of Powder Magazine. Today, at 76, she has traded downhill runs for the peace of cross-country skiing.

“It has everything that I love,” said Susan. “One thing I love about cross-country is it’s not. It’s not just zooming down a mountain. You know, you really take in your surroundings. And it’s just so beautiful.”

COURTESY HOLLEY DEIST

Holley DuPont took the skills she learned at Pine Basin to the professional freestyle circuit in the 70s and 80s, becoming one of the first women ever to land a backflip on skis.

As Holley puts it: “If you knew how to ski, you had access to another world.”

The End of an Era

As the 1960s drew to a close, the landscape of Idaho skiing shifted. With the rise of larger commercial resorts, the KIFI Ski School eventually folded. In the 1970s, School District 93 purchased the Pine Basin Ski Lodge for $15,000 (worth roughly $125,000 today).

By the time the school closed its doors in the late 1960s, Wes Deist estimated that 34,000 students had passed through the program. As Post Register writer Paul Menser noted in 1991: “Ask any baby boomer who grew up in eastern Idaho where he or she learned to ski, and the answer is likely to be KIFI Ski School.”

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Signal upgrades at two Garden of the Gods Road intersections in Colorado Springs taking longer to complete than expected

Scott Harrison

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — A traffic signal project that began just before Thanksgiving was supposed to be finished by New Year’s Day, then by the end of January.

Many viewers have asked why work to upgrade signals on Garden of the Gods Road, at the Northpark Drive and Mark Dabling Boulevard intersections, isn’t done yet.

Winter weather is often to blame for construction delays, but we’ve had less snow and ice than usual.

Todd Frisbie, the city’s head traffic engineer, said that the reason for the project’s delay is common — crews digging underground and finding things they didn’t expect.

“As you get into it, it becomes more complicated,” he explained. “There are always things that you can’t anticipate. Utilities are marked and located, but they’re sometimes not in the exact place.”

Frisbie said that daily, crews have to carefully move existing underground utility lines to make room for the new signal infrastructure and avoid damaging the utility lines.

The new signals currently hang on wires, but will be placed on overhead masts that are supported by new bases called caissons.

“These caissons are anywhere from 18 to 21 feet deep, plus 36 to 42 inches in diameter,” he said. “So, it’s a big space, and you need a big area to get these in.”

One traffic lane in each direction is closed during construction, which Frisbie said should now be finished before the end of next March.

The Colorado Department of Transportation is covering most of the project’s nearly $2 million cost.

Meanwhile, more lane closures are required around the intersection of Circle Drive and Constitution Avenue, where crews will fill some concrete boring holes that were made during a recent fiber optic cable installation.

Those closures began on Wednesday evening and should end by mid-afternoon on Friday; the entrance to the Rock Island Trail in that area also will be closed during that time.

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