Lompoc Theatre Renovation Project Boosted By The Chumash Foundation

Jarrod Zinn

LOMPOC, Calif. (KEYT) – The historic Lompoc Theatre’s renovation project is moving at full speed, recently boosted by the Chumash Foundation.

Contractors are busy giving the building more than just a facelift, they’re giving it a new skeleton.

From the outside you can see fresh lumber on the roof, and inside the walls are being scaffolded up to code.

Local actors, musicians, directors and technicians are excited to make it their new home.

The theater building will be used for several kinds of events from plays and movies to concerts, comedy nights, business seminars, weddings, and more.

Project leaders say additional foundations have donated, and that the Chumash Foundation’s grants have been vital in setting the stage.

“They were the first to step up and support us in a major way,” says Mark Herrier, the Lompoc Theatre Project’s Executive Director. “They have literally been the foundation of this recent run up. And their commitment showed others.”

“It has been proven nationally that, you restore a local theater and the entire area comes back to life,” says Anne Ramsey, Lompoc Civic Theatre’s Treasurer.

The black box theatre, an 80-seat venue enclosed to the stage is expected to open early next year and run a season during the final phase of construction on the auditorium.

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West Idaho man sentenced to 25 Years for possession of AI-generated child porn

Seth Ratliff

CANYON COUNTY, Idaho (KIFI) — A Canyon County man will spend up to the next 25 years in prison following an investigation that uncovered over 100 files of child pornography on his phone, including several illicit photos generated by AI.

James Anthony Halma, 27, was sentenced on March 12 by District Court Judge Gabriel McCarthy. Halma was convicted on one felony count of Possession of AI-Generated CSAM and two felony counts of Sexual Exploitation of a Child.

Judge McCarthy ordered a three-year minimum “fixed” sentence before Halma is eligible for parole. Upon his eventual release, Halma will be required to register as a sex offender under Idaho law.

The Investigation

The case stems from the Idaho Internet Crimes Against Children task force. In October 2014, investigators acted on a “CyberTip” regarding a Kik account flagged for containing child pornography. Using digital forensics, investigators linked the account to Halma and obtained a search warrant for his residence and electronic devices.

The search revealed a massive horde of more than 100 files of child pornography on Halma’s phone. The illicit images depicted the sexual abuse of children ranging in age from 16 to as young as 3 years old. The collection included several illicit AI-generated images.

Attorney General Raúl Labrador praised the collaborative effort between state and local law enforcement in securing the conviction.

“Every arrest and conviction our team gets in these deeply disturbing cases helps make Idaho communities safer,” said Attorney General Labrador. “I’m proud of the continued work by our ICAC investigators, prosecutors, and local law enforcement partners across the state who help in our mission to protect Idaho families and hold these criminals accountable.”

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Woman seriously injured in Phelps County crash

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 59-year-old woman from Dixon, Missouri, was seriously injured in a single-vehicle crash Thursday on Route D in Phelps County, according to a crash report from the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

The report says the woman drove a 2002 Dodge Ram eastbound when it went off the right side of the road. The driver overcorrected and went off the left side of the road before hitting a ditch and overturning, the report says.

The woman was flown to University Hospital in Columbia. The report says she was not wearing a seatbelt at the time of the crash.

MSHP reports do not name those involved in crashes.

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Yuma Salvation Army sets up cooling center amid extreme heat

Lauren Duffel

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – One local nonprofit wants to make sure the Yuma community beating the heat during the heat wave.

The Salvation Army is setting up a cooling center at 445 S. Fourth Avenue, near the Fourth Ave. Junior High School, Friday and Saturday.

From 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., locals are encouraged to stop by and cool down.

There will also be water, snacks, cooling supplies, and referrals to community resources.

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After 10 years in a parking lot, Santa Maria’s ‘Downtown Fridays’ is getting a new location

Dave Alley

SANTA MARIA, Calif. (KEYT) – For the first time ever, Santa Maria’s weekly entertainment event “Downtown Fridays” is moving out onto a city street.

Set to begin its 11th year next week, Downtown Fridays has been held since its inception at the Santa Maria Town Center West shopping center parking lot, next to large building that was the former home of Mervyn’s and Fallas department stores.

Now, the event is shifting close by, about a block east to South McClelland Street, between East Cook Street and East Boone Street.

“We’ve actually been trying to move here for seven years because having an event on the street always trumps having it in a parking lot,” said Ed Carcarey, who created Downtown Fridays in 2016 and remains as the event coordinator. “I’ve always loved doing events on the street, so we’re pretty excited about being able to come out here on McClelland, and I think McClelland is a great backdrop to put an event.”

The new location will be about 200 yards long and run on the street between the Santa Maria Public Library to the site of the old Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) building, which closed last year.

After being located in a parking lot for 10 years, the street location will mark a dramatic change for the layout of the event that features a wide variety of food, entertainment and other vendors.

“It’s a better presentation,” said Carcarey. “People feel more comfortable out on the street than they do a parking lot. That’s why we’ve wanted to move to this street for seven years.”

For vendors, such as Miguelito’s BBQ owner Ariana Gonzalez, who has been part of the Downtown Fridays since it was created, they’re hoping the move will attract more visitors.

“I think it’s going to be a great move,” said Gonzalez. “It’s going be more like a street fair. It kind of reminds me of San Luis Obispo on Thursdays, Farmer’s Market. We kind of get that vibe over here on this side as well.”

Downtown Fridays will start its 2026 season next Friday, March 27 and will be held from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. each Friday for 27 straight weeks through Sept. 25.

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Parents frustrated after nearly eight hour wait in ER while their infant struggled to breathe

Mackenzie Stafford

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – A family is sharing their story of frustration with KRDO13 in hopes of making a change in the triage process or response for struggling children at the Children’s Hospital. The Fickas family detailed their account of a recent experience while waiting to be admitted to the emergency room.

Camille is 16 months old. Her mother, Sarah Fickas, says Camille, or Millie, was just recently diagnosed with sleep apnea after a sleep study. According to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, is a condition where breathing either diminishes or stops during sleep.

“So she had her oxygen prescribed for over a year and then got off in February, like mid-February, when her results came back,” said Sarah Fickas.

First ER visit

On March 6, Fickas took Camille to the ER after she said she had been vomiting.

“I just want to make sure she’s not dehydrated or anything. So we brought her in on Friday, and we waited for however long. She wasn’t bad at all that day. I was just wanting to check on her. So I wasn’t worried about waiting. When we went to a room, they were giving her a bag of fluids, and she fell asleep. And on their monitor, she was sitting around, like, 87 to 89. And they want kids, like, above 89, to be off oxygen. So they sent her home with a sleep oxygen order. So we came back home with oxygen again,” explained Fickas.

A sudden drop in oxygen levels

This is why she says that on March 7, they put Camille’s pulse oximeter, better known as a pulse ox, on her to monitor her blood oxygen saturation.

“About five minutes into her having the monitor on, the monitor red alerted, which is when it dips below 80 because they should still be on oxygen like 80 to 89, but it doesn’t red alert, you’re just supposed to like be monitoring periodically at that point. But when it goes into red alerts, that’s like a medical emergency. So she red-alerted awake at 78, which has never happened because she’s only ever needed oxygen at night,” said Fickas.

She says she turned off the alarm, but it went off again within minutes as Camille’s oxygen levels dropped to 75. They say they called the Children’s Hospital triage and were directed to call 911.

An ambulance arrived, and paramedics turned Camille’s oxygen up to a whole liter, four times what she was prescribed, said Fickas. However, due to cost concerns, Fickas said they declined an ambulance and drove Camille to the ER.

Second ER visit

“We got to children’s at 11:00. Exactly. And when I checked her in, I told them what happened, they triaged her while she was on oxygen, back to a quarter liter. We turned her down to her baseline so they could triage her. They gave her a hospital pulse ox. And we went to sit down in the waiting area, and it was packed. All the chairs were filled up. Most kids were, like, throwing up or having a cough. Similar to what it sounded like when she was coughing. She [Camille] was one of the littlest ones there,” recounted Fickas.

When they sat down, Fickas says Camille’s oxygen levels plummeted, and her chest started retracting while breathing.

“She was immediately in the low 80s, and she was horribly retracting, like, working so hard, harder than I’ve ever seen her work to breathe,” said Fickas.

Fickas ran back up to the front to tell hospital staff. She says they came out and bumped Camille’s oxygen up to half a liter, but Camille was still retracting.

“So I went and got them again, and somebody came and turned her up to a whole liter and then told me that that’s the highest they were willing to turn her up to in the waiting room,” Fickas said.

Fickas said even at the full liter of oxygen, Camille’s chest was still retracting as she worked to breathe. Fickas tells KRDO13 she understands people need to be seen in order of urgency based on their condition. Despite this, Fickas said she felt that her daughter’s condition was life-threatening.

“I had like five or six parents that were there that same night reach out to me saying they were watching her and they like, couldn’t believe that they weren’t seeing her [Camille] helping her,” said Fickas.

Repeated pleas for help

Fickas said she repeatedly went to the front and pleaded to hospital staff, saying that her daughter is struggling, asking if she could be seen. Camille’s mother said they kept saying it’s based on who has the worst symptoms and that they don’t get to choose up front.

Fickas said she started to feel guilt for not taking her daughter to the ambulance. She says when she asked hospital staff, they said even if you brought her in the ambulance, you’d still have the same wait.

Finally seen after nearly eight hours

Fickas tells KRDO13 that after seven hours and fifty minutes, her daughter was taken back to be seen. She says the doctors were apologetic, telling her that Camille should never have waited this long in her condition.

“At that point, the doctor came in, and I’m not kidding. He looked at her for one second. He turned her from one liter to three liters and admitted her immediately, and ordered a chest X-ray, where we found out her right lung was partially collapsed and there was a lot of junk in both of her lungs. About 30 minutes after the X-ray, we were back in the room, and they started her on high flow oxygen therapy at ten liters in the waiting room,” said Fickas.

Camille’s mom says she was shocked that the medical professionals had to bump up Camille’s oxygen to ten liters to maintain her breathing. She said Camille was working so hard, but once she reached 10 liters, she started to look more comfortable.

“Well, about an hour into that, she started working hard again, and they turned her up to a 12,” recounted Fickas.

Fickas says after two hours, they weaned Camille back down to 10 liters.

From waiting room to possible ICU

“They told us if she couldn’t maintain a 10 for two hours, we had to admit her to the PICU, the pediatric ICU, instead of the normal hospital room that they had assigned to her when she got admitted,” recounted Fickas, “I want to know how we went from my daughter being told she’s fine over and over again in the waiting room to a possible ICU admissions within hours.”

She says that made it even more frustrating to hear from the doctors how serious her daughter’s condition was.

“I genuinely believe they’re responsible for her lung collapsing because of how long they made her sit there, retracting, working. Honestly, it just makes me so upset. I feel like they caused so much more damage than help,” said Fickas.

Hospital response

We brought all of their concerns to the Children’s Hospital multiple times and received this response:

Children’s Hospital Colorado is still in the middle of respiratory season and experiencing longer wait times than normal. Our triage process is to care for every patient and their family based on their individual and unique needs and get the sickest kids in as quickly as possible. Children’s Hospital Colorado recognizes the importance of having specialized pediatric guidance available to parents and families, and we strive to see all patients in a timely manner. While wait times can vary during respiratory season, our teams always work diligently to evaluate the urgency of every patient in need. The Children’s Hospital Colorado Patient Relations team is available to address families’ needs and experiences while in our care.

– Children’s Hospital Colorado

Although not for pediatrics specifically, UCHealth confirmed to KRDO13 that it is also experiencing longer wait times due to the respiratory season. CommonSpirit is working on a response. This article will be updated with what we hear back.

UCHealth is committed to providing the best care to every patient we serve.

Currently, our hospitals in southern Colorado are seeing an increase in emergency department visits due to seasonal respiratory infections. Wait times vary depending on the severity of injury or illness of each patient along with how many patients are waiting to be seen.

In addition to emergency departments, UCHealth has several in-person urgent care locations throughout the Pikes Peak region, along with virtual urgent care available in Pueblo and across the state. Patients can schedule same-day urgent care and virtual urgent care appointments through the UCHealth app.

More information about virtual urgent care can be found here: Anyone in Colorado can access Virtual Urgent Care – UCHealth Today

– A UCHealth spokesperson

A call for change

Despite this, Fickas’ frustrations continue.

“How do you have a one-year-old girl sitting in the waiting room for eight hours and then admit her immediately with respiratory failure?” Camille’s mom wondered.

Fickas says she understands the wait when your child does not need to be taken back immediately.

“We’ve been there, and we’ve waited a long time, and, like, I’ve known that it’s okay to wait a long time because I’m like, okay, my kid, there’s obviously worse kids in here than my kids right now. But then, like times, like this, I’m like, okay, she needs to be seen, like, right now,” said Fickas.

She says by sharing this, she hopes there can be changes in triage to get patients in sooner. Fickas tells KRDO13 she feels as though had a doctor looked at her daughter, they would have immediately brought her daughter back.

After a few days in the hospital, Camille was sent home. She is still recovering from her partially collapsed lung and using oxygen at night, said Fickas.

The Fickas family has filed a grievance with the Children’s Hospital through patient advocates. While they haven’t decided anything yet, the Fickas family is also exploring their legal options.

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Governor Little signs mandatory “moment of silence” bill for Idaho schools

Seth Ratliff

BOISE, Idaho (KIFI) — Governor Brad Little has officially signed House Bill 623 into law, mandating that all Idaho public schools begin the instructional day with a 60-second moment of silence.

The legislation, sponsored by Rep. Bruce Skaug (R-Nampa), specifies that this time is intended for students and staff to “reflect, pray, or meditate.” Supporters argue that the pause provides a necessary moment for individuals to ground themselves before the academic day begins. However, the law prohibits teachers from instructing or influencing students on how to spend those 60 seconds.

While the bill enjoyed robust support in the House, it faced a much tighter climb in the Senate, where it narrowly passed with an 18-15 vote.

Critics of the bill have expressed concern that the quiet time could be used for organized prayer in a school setting, which they say violates the concept of separation of church and state.

Supporters, however, emphasize that the bill’s language is non-specific, giving students total autonomy in how they utilize the quiet minute.

Local schools have already responded that they are prepared to implement House Bill 623 at the start of the new school year in August.

RELATED: Local schools brace themselves for new mandatory moment of silence law

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Lithium car battery found to be the cause of fire at recycling center in Fulton

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Emergency crews in Fulton are asking residents to avoid the area around a commercial recycling center after a fire.

The business, David’s Recycling, is a local car recycling and scrap yard. It buys old cars and sells the steel and parts.

The City of Fulton shared on social media, alerting residents to a fire near W 7th Street and Airway Drive and W 7th Street and Route F around 11:30 a.m. Police said the smoke could reduce visibility for drivers.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol said in a social media post the fire involved 10-15 vehicles.

🚨Recycling Center Fire in Fulton🚨

Firefighters are battling a large fire involving 10-15 vehicles at a recycling center in Fulton.

Thick smoke is drifting across U.S. 54.Please be careful when traveling through the area. pic.twitter.com/0ihyXxvCXw

— MSHP Troop F (@MSHPTrooperF) March 20, 2026

Central Callaway Fire Chief Greg Luebbert told ABC 17 News that no one was hurt in the fire but an employee operating a piece of machinery came close to being hurt.

Blake David later identified himself as that operator and explained that a lithium car battery was the cause of the blaze.

“The hybrid hybrid situation is, you know, newer,” David said. “I pulled the, battery, the main battery out of the vehicle for the motor. When I went to smash it with the trackhoe it completely just blew up.”

Luebbert described fires started by lithium batteries as “runaway fires”.

“They spread very, very rapidly. This is at least a second extreme fire I’ve seen from lithium ion batteries,” Luebbert said.

David said he had to act quickly following the explosion, despite being in shock.

“Blew me completely out of the crane,” David said. “My first thought is we got a quarter million dollar piece of equipment we got to get out of this first.”

David said the business has been in his family for three generations. This is not the first time something like this has happened.

“We had a van come in and the battery was still in it, just a regular battery,” David said. “It caught on fire and it burned and burned.”

David said the situation has opened his eyes and the company will be implementing a new policy going forward.

“I’m going to have a sign up front ‘No hybrid batteries’ they have to be removed from the vehicles. That would prevent a lot of it,” David said.

According to David, the loss will add up to around $250,000 dollars, but he said the money isn’t what’s important to him right now.

“I’m just lucky you didn’t kill me or hurt me really bad,” David said.

He also commended the response by law enforcement, but described one challenge they faced with the area.

“The fire hydrants are clear up the road, probably a good half mile to three quarters of a mile. They had to run hoses all the way down here,” David said. “By the time they got the hoses down here and the water down here, it had spread to the big pile.”

David said the business will be back up and running like normal come Monday, David’s Recycling is typically closed on weekends.

He asked future customers to be mindful and open about the features and problems with their car to keep everyone involved in the process as safe as possible.

“When you’re bringing stuff to a scrap yard for an extra $2 or $3, don’t try to hide something a propane tank, this or that in a car, I’ll give you the $2, but that $2 can save my life,” David said.

An ABC 17 News photographer on the scene was stopped near Elaine Drive and W 7th Street in Fulton.

One resident told ABC 17 News she heard an explosion around 10:50 a.m. that shook her house. She reported hearing lots of sirens.

The resident shared photos showing parts of cars and other items on fire.

Black smoke was seen coming from the recycling center.

This is a developing story.

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Man dies after being hit by a vehicle in Imperial

Jessamyn Dodd

IMPERIAL, Calif. (KYMA) – The Imperial Police Department (IPD) says a man died after he was hit by a vehicle early Thursday morning.

IPD says it happened on the southbound lanes of State Route (SR) 86, north of Aten Road, after 12:30 a.m. Thursday.

Upon arrival, IPD says officers found an unresponsive man, identified as 41-year-old Ruben Camargo, in a “dirt ditch west of the roadway.”

IPD says officers immediately performed life-saving measures, and says the Imperial County Fire Department took over after they arrived.

Camargo was then taken to El Centro Regional Medical Center, according to IPD, but was then airlifted to UC San Diego Hillcrest Medical Center, where he later died.

IPD says Carmargo was traveling southbound on SR 86 when he was hit by a GMC Sierra, and says the driver of the GMC remained on scene and is cooperating with the investigation.

While impairment did not factor in the crash, the investigation is ongoing. If anyone has information regarding the crash, call IPD at (760) 355-4327.

For Immediate Release_ Imperial Police Responds to Vehicle Versus PedestrianDownload

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Pocatello couple charged with felony child abuse after violent incident at East Idaho Aquarium

Seth Ratliff

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho — A Pocatello couple is facing multiple felony charges after a disturbing incident where they allegedly beat a 7-year-old girl while on a trip to Idaho Falls’ East Idaho Aquarium.

Zachary and Megan Olpin have both been charged with Felony Injury to a Child and Misdemeanor Injury to a Child. Megan Olpin faces an additional charge of Felony Aggravated Battery.

The charges stem from an incident on February 8, 2026. Idaho Falls Police responded to the East Idaho Aquarium after witnesses and staff reported a child being mistreated.

While the father, Zachary, initially brushed off the girl’s injuries as accidental, investigators and court documents say security footage and witness cell phone video tell a far more violent story.

According to the probable cause affidavit, Megan Olpin, the girl’s stepmother, was captured on video hitting the 7-year-old in the face with a shoe and dragging her through the facility. Afterwards, Zachary Olpin was captured carrying his daughter off the property while hitting the back of her head against a wall and an electrical box.

Investigation and Medical Findings

Police later located the child at her grandmother’s home in Pocatello. The grandmother expressed deep concern for the girl’s safety, leading officers to document multiple bruises and marks on the child’s body.

A Medical evaluation at Portneuf Medical Center confirmed that the child did not suffer broken bones or a concussion. However, the physical evidence was consistent with the reported abuse, according to court documents.

Following the medical evaluation, the officers developed a “safety plan,” and the girl was placed in the care of her grandmother.

New Evidence and Confessions

During the investigation, the officers spoke with the girl’s parents at their home. Zachary initially told police his daughter’s head hitting the wall and the electrical box was an accident. But the stepmother reportedly admitted to hitting the 7-year-old with a shoe and also a set of keys in the car.

The case intensified the following day when investigators obtained improved security footage. The affidavit states the new video revealed a “more prolonged and severe assault than initially seen.”

The improved footage allegedly showed Megan striking the girl multiple times with a shoe and her hand, before knocking her to the ground. The video also captured Zachary pushing the girl down by her mouth before using his shoulder to “drive her head” into a metal electrical box three separate times.

During a re-interview on February 12, both parents were confronted with the clearer video. Zachary admitted he was “out of line” and wrote a letter of apology stating, “I hit you” and “I pushed you into things,” states the affidavit.

On February 18, the child was interviewed at the Upper Valley Child Advocacy Center. She told specialists that Megan “bonked” her with a shoe and that Zachary “kept bonking me on stuff because he was mad at me.”

The couple posted bond on March 12 and was released from jail. They are scheduled to appear in court for preliminary hearings on March 24, 2026.

If the couple is convicted of the Felony Injury to a Child charges, they each face a maximum sentence of up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $50,000. Additionally, Megan Olpin faces a separate maximum sentence of 15 years in prison and an additional $50,000 fine for the felony aggravated battery charge, bringing her potential total prison time to 25 years.

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