Driver killed in semi-truck rollover on I-15 south of Pocatello

Seth Ratliff

UPDATED: 8:41 P.M.

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) — A semi-truck driver is dead following a single-vehicle rollover crash on I-15 south of Pocatello early Thursday afternoon.

According to Idaho State Police (ISP) Lieutenant Todd Orr, the accident happened at 1:10 p.m. near milepost 63, just south of the Portneuf exit and the North Old Highway 91 interchange.

For unknown reasons, the driver, a 63-year-old man from Layton, Utah, drove off the right shoulder, struck the hillside, overturned, before coming to rest atop of the guardrail.

He was wearing a seatbelt and succumbed to his injuries at the scene of the crash. The right lane of travel is still blocked currently.

While the rollover remains under investigation, the rightmost northbound lane is currently blocked as Idaho State Police and recovery vehicles work to clear the wreckage.

Drivers are being diverted into the left lane. Lt. Orr urges drivers to use caution if traveling through the area.

This is a developing story. Local News 8 provide additional updates as we learn new details.

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New rankings out: St. Charles still region’s largest private employer, grew workforce by nearly 7% in past year

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – Economic Development for Central Oregon released on Thursday the 2026 Central Oregon Largest Employers List, including breakouts of the top employers in each Central Oregon community.

The data, collected by EDCO annually for the past 25 years, is the most comprehensive major employer list in Central Oregon. EDCO’s regional list features the largest private employers, including for-profit and non-profit organizations, while community-level lists include public employers. 

This year, the top 50 private companies collectively employ 22,733 Central Oregonians, or roughly 20.9% of the region’s January 2026 annual average total non-farm employment of 108,800.

St. Charles Health System tops the list again, employing 5,538 people regionwide, a 6.75% increase since last year at the same time, according to an EDCO news release that continues in full below: 

The top five private traded-sector businesses, those that primarily sell their goods or services outside the local market and bring revenue into the region from national or international markets, include: 

BASX Solutions (Regional, OR) – An industry leader in manufacturing high-efficiency data center cooling solutions, cleanroom systems, custom HVAC systems, and modular solutions. The company recently completed a 36,000 square-foot weld shop in Redmond and opened an additional location in Sisters. 

Bright Wood Corporation (Regional, OR) – The largest independent manufacturer of window and patio door components and engineered dimension lumber in the U.S. The company was founded in Madras, Oregon in 1960. 

Les Schwab Headquarters & Tire Centers (Regional, OR) – Founded in 1952 as a single shop in Prineville, the company’s Prineville campus evolved into a longtime headquarters and operations hub, including large-scale warehousing and tire distribution facilities supporting regional logistics. 

Meta Platforms, Inc. (Prineville, OR) – One of the largest hyperscale data center campuses in the U.S., Meta’s Prineville site was its first wholly-owned data center (operational since 2011). The campus has expanded to nearly 4.6 million square feet, representing over $2 billion in investment. 

Epic Aircraft, LLC (Bend, OR) – Founded in 2004, Epic Aircraft is a leading designer and manufacturer of high-performance, all-composite, six-seat single-engine turboprop aircraft. Their flagship model, the Epic E1000, is known for its speed, range, payload, and luxurious features, catering primarily to business and private aviation markets.  

Of the top traded-sector businesses, Medline ReNewal experienced the most significant increase in new jobs, adding 73 positions, a 22.88% rise compared to last year. 

“Across Central Oregon, traded-sector companies continue to demonstrate the strength and momentum of our regional economy. These businesses bring new revenue into the region and their growth is a key reason we’re seeing Central Oregon outperform much of the state. At EDCO, we work with more than 400 companies each year and we consistently see how critical the traded sector is to driving investment, job creation and long-term economic resilience for our communities,” said Jon Stark, CEO of EDCO. 

When companies consider relocating to, starting or expanding in Central Oregon, EDCO serves as a key partner in navigating the region’s business environment, providing in-depth market intelligence and industry insights spanning traded-sector industries such as advanced manufacturing, technology and bioscience, as well as local-serving sectors like healthcare, education, retail, and construction. 

EDCO supports businesses at every stage by offering services including site selection assistance, connections to workforce and training resources, guidance on incentives and financing, and access to a strong network of regional partners. In addition, EDCO fosters entrepreneurship through mentorship, programming and resources designed to help scalable companies launch and grow in Central Oregon. 

To view the lists in their entirety, click on the link below:  

https://www.edcoinfo.com/about-the-area/major-employers

Data for the lists is self-reported and not audited and should only be used as an informational guideline. Businesses are asked to provide the total number of employees, not full-time equivalency, during their most recent pay period or, for companies with seasonal patterns of employment, their seasonal high. Numbers only include employees working in Central Oregon and contain contractors or interns if they are full-time and long-term. Some businesses chose not to participate in these lists and are therefore excluded.   

About Economic Development for Central Oregon  

Founded in 1981, EDCO is a non-profit organization supported by private and public members and stakeholders. Its mission is to strengthen communities by creating opportunities that generate new revenue and family-wage jobs. Guided by its vision to be the catalyst for economic prosperity for all, EDCO works to recruit new employers to Central Oregon, support entrepreneurs in starting new, scalable businesses, and help existing companies grow and expand. For more information, visit www.edcoinfo.com

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Redmond, other Oregon school leaders call for funding formula changes after federal poverty data leads to cuts

Oregon Capital Chronicle

By Alex Baumhardt, Oregon Capital Chronicle

SALEM, Ore. — The head of Salem-Keizer Public Schools spent nearly a year painstakingly holding meetings and restructuring staffing plans to close a $23 million budget deficit for the next school year.

By early February, Superintendent Andrea Castañeda shared the plans publicly with staff and media, describing it at a news conference as a “proactive measure for us, because we actually are in pretty solid financial condition, but we think it is important to get ahead of the pressures that are coming.”

She could not have anticipated the $5 million pressure coming just three weeks later.

On Feb. 20, she learned Salem-Keizer Public Schools was among many Oregon districts that would have their state school funding reduced, in large part because the Oregon Department of Education readjusts its formula for doling out money to districts based on annual releases of U.S. Census Bureau estimates on student poverty.

Those federal poverty estimates, using two-year-old data, are vastly different from the state’s own accounting of students in each district experiencing poverty. And because of federal shutdowns and delays at the bureau, schools didn’t get the data until months after they’d finalized their annual budgets.

In response, Castañeda and 10 other school superintendents from around the state – including Redmond’s Charan Cline – on Thursday reupped their calls to the State Board of Education in a letter and at its monthly meeting. They called on the board to change the school funding formula, and to remove or diminish the role of the federal poverty estimates, which they say continually lead to an undercount and underfunding for their schools.

The letter notes that the Redmond School District lost over $700,000 in anticipated revenue due to a poverty factor adjustment and was notified of the change in February 2026.

Relying on estimates

Oregon is unique in relying heavily on the Census Bureau’s Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates — an amalgamation of SNAP beneficiary data, tax data and poverty estimates based on them — that showed most recently, in 2024, the number of Salem-Keizer students experiencing poverty dropped nearly 27% from 2023 to 2024.

The federal estimate put Salem-Keizer’s overall proportion of students experiencing poverty at just 13% in 2024, down from 18% the year prior.

But the Oregon Department of Education’s own data shows that in 2023, 41% of students in the Salem-Keizer School District were experiencing poverty, and a year later in 2024, that had increased by 1 percentage point to 42% of students.

The state’s data directly matches each student registered in the district with Oregon Department of Human Services data about the food, housing or other assistance they receive from state and federal programs. Poverty is measured as living at 130% of the federal poverty level, or a family of four living on about $42,900 per year.

The federal data measures every kid in a district’s boundaries, even if they go to private school or are home-schooled, and poverty is measured at 100% of the federal poverty level — a family of four living on $33,000 annually.

Unexpected losses

At the same time Castañeda learned about her district’s cuts, Greater Albany Public Schools learned its poverty adjustment will leave it with $1.1 million less from the state school fund than expected.

The Woodburn and Hermiston School Districts will lose $800,000 each. In the Klamath County School District, the adjustment will cost schools $750,000.

Glen Szymoniak, superintendent of the Klamath County School District, said the district has never experienced swings as big as this year in the federal poverty estimate. He said it won’t just cut into his district’s allocation from the state, but also its federal allocation. The federal government uses the same Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates to dole out Title I funds to high poverty schools.

“$750,000 is a significant amount of money, and most of that goes into people to serve as tutors and paraprofessionals, people who can do small group activities like reading groups,” he said. “Hopefully we’ll have some attrition and we can repurpose some of those positions, but it’s highly likely we’ll have to let some people go.”

Mike Wiltfong, director of school finance at the Oregon Department of Education, said it’s hard to know what made the federal poverty estimates so anomalous for some districts in the most recent report. He speculated about student migration post-COVID, as well as possible survey or modeling changes.

Legislative choices tie education department’s hands

Calls to remove the use of the federal estimates have been ongoing since it was first incorporated in 2013 due to a legislative mandate, Wiltfong explained. In essence, lawmakers were working within a limited number of state school fund dollars and, rather than meeting the needs of every individual kid, preferred to know the ballpark estimate of students experiencing poverty and to send a proportion of existing dollars commensurate to that.

If the state started using its own data, which show significantly more poor students, the state school fund would need a lot more money, or many more schools would be splitting the same amount of money, he said.

“Much of our constraints now are with the Legislature, not necessarily what the Department of Education or what our staff are willing to do,” he said. “It’s more so that the Legislature is driving much of how we’re defining that (poverty) for the state school fund.”

In its most recent estimate, the U.S. Census Bureau put the estimated number of kids experiencing poverty in the Hermiston School District boundaries at 800.

“It doesn’t seem like that is actually reflective of our community,” said Tricia Mooney, superintendent of Hermiston Schools.

State data shows more than 2,000 students are experiencing poverty in the district.

“If the state has more accurate data that we use for other things, why aren’t we using those data sets?” she asked.

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Bend man arrested on charges he held a gun to someone’s chest during a fight in Cassity’s Bar parking lot

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Bend Police and the Central Oregon Emergency Response Team made a traffic stop Thursday and arrested a 25-year-old Bend man involved in a dispute at a southwest Bend bar’s parking lot, where he allegedly held a gun to someone’s chest.

Around 2 a.m. on Saturday, March 7, police responded to a report of a physical fight involving several bar patrons in the parking lot of Cassity’s Bar at 25 SW Century Drive, Bend Police Communications Manager Sheila Miller said. 

“During the altercation, one of the participants took out a handgun and pressed it to the victim’s chest for several seconds before leaving the scene,” Miller said in a news release.

Over the course of the investigation, officers identified 25-year-old Kenneth Noe Gonzalez as the suspect in the case, she said.  

Shortly before 9 a.m. Thursday, Bend Police and CERT members pulled over a silver Subaru Legacy at the corner of Butler Market Road and Florence Drive in northeast.

Gonzalez, the driver, was taken into custody without incident and taken to the Deschutes County Jail on suspicion of menacing and third-degree assault. Court records show he was being held without bail pending arraignment on Thursday.

CERT and Bend patrol officers also executed three search warrants related to the allegations – one on Gonzalez’s home, in the 63100 block of Deschutes Market Road, and two on his vehicles.  

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Income tax elimination bill goes back to the Missouri House after Senate amendment

Alison Patton

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

Missouri senators stayed late Wednesday to pass a new amendment to the income tax elimination plan and sent it back to the House just after midnight.

The Missouri Senate GOP posted on Facebook at 11:30 p.m. on Wednesday, letting people know House Joint Resolutions 173 and 174 were on the Senate floor, and another update just after 12:30 a.m. stating they had passed.

Senators approved the income tax elimination plan 18-11, with Republican Sens. Lincoln Hough, Mike Moon and Joe Nicola voting against the new amendment. The amendment would get rid of the automatic triggers in the House version, allowing the 2027 General Assembly the ability to impose triggers they see necessary.

Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe showed his support for the advancement of his top legislative priority on social media Thursday morning.

“Following its passage in the Missouri Senate last night, HJR 173/174 now returns to the House — moving us one step closer to putting the future of modernizing our tax code where it belongs: in the hands of Missouri voters,” Kehoe wrote on Facebook.

Nicola, of Grain Valley, spoke to reporters about his decision to vote against the bill.

“I didn’t like how the process was handled last night,” Nicola said. “I’d love to see taxes go away. As many taxes as we possibly can get it. I would love it. But I’m very concerned about this process and even the process of how the bill came to the floor.”

He said he felt like the process was rushed, and the bill could have gone on the Senate floor at any time, instead of voting and debating it after the public had left the Capitol for the day.

The version introduced and passed by the House would establish a loose framework for next year’s lawmakers to work under. One of those frameworks was the trigger system, which would slowly phase out the income tax while expanding the sales and use tax base.

Sen. Curtis Trent (R-Greene County) said his amendment wouldn’t get rid of the trigger system, but it would loosen the requirements for triggers.

“While it would still be great policy to eliminate the income tax 30 years from now or 50 years from now, much of the benefit that we’re going to derive from this policy economically would not occur on a time frame that would be meaningful to the public,” Trent said.

Senate Minority Leader Doug Beck (D-St. Louis County) said after Wednesday’s 12-hour-long session, Democrats didn’t debate much and relied heavily on their interactions with constituents, as it will ultimately be the voters’ decision.

“We’ve been working on this for a while, and at the end of the day, this was the governor’s priority, and at the end of the day, we didn’t have enough Republicans, anti-tax, Republicans to defeat this bill,” Beck said.

The amended bill will need to be reviewed and discussed by the House. If passed out of the legislature, voters will be asked in November if they want lawmakers to proceed with eliminating the state income tax.

House minority leader Ashley Aune (D-Kansas City) said Democrats on the other side of the building are fighting against the bill.

“I was surprised that I didn’t see more robust opposition or serious filibuster effort from the Senate Democrats,” Aune said. “I can’t imagine a scenario where I would ask my caucus to sit down on that. I would fight to the very end. We have been fighting. We’ve been screaming on this side of the building.”

Aune also said her caucus has been talking with voters.

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Former CPS middle school teacher gets bond again, no longer listed on jail roster

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A former West Middle School teacher who was arrested for a second time earlier this month is no longer listed on the Boone County Jail roster.

Zachary Hutchinson, of Columbia, is charged with felonies in two cases. In one case, he is charged with three counts of second-degree statutory sodomy, one count of child enticement, sexually exploiting a minor, misdemeanor giving porn to a minor, second-degree promoting child porn and 10 counts of child porn possession.

He was originally put on house arrest after he bonded out of jail on Feb. 4. In a second case filed earlier this month, he is charged with three counts of child porn possession. A court filing from Tuesday says Hutchinson was given a $50,000 bond. He must report to Adult Court Services upon his release, court filings show.

Court documents in previous reporting say Hutchinson engaged in sexual acts with a youth and shared explicit text messages and photos with the same victim.

Authorities have repeatedly said the victim in the case did not meet Hutchinson “as a result of his employment, nor did any known contact occur on school property.”

More child porn was eventually found on a different messaging app, court documents say.

A hearing is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Monday.

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Jefferson City man charged with rape, second man accused of being accessory

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Jefferson City man has been charged with first-degree rape in Cole County.

A warrant was requested on Wednesday for Tamiko Carter Jr., who was accused of raping a woman in her apartment while she slept on April11. He is not listed on the Cole County Jail roster.

A second man, Bruce Cannady, 32, of Jefferson City, was charged earlier this week with accessory to first-degree rape. He is being held at the Cole County Jail without bond. A hearing was held on Wednesday and Cannady was denied a public defender. A preliminary hearing in his case is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Thursday, May 7.

Bruce Cannady [Cole County Jail]

Court documents say the victim had friends over the night of the assault and allegedly fell asleep next to Cannady, but awoke to Carter raping her. Cannady was allegedly looking into the bedroom from a hallway and allowed the assault the occur, court documents allege. Carter ran after the victim yelled and tried to defend herself, the statement says.

Both men were allegedly seen on video running from the home and Cannady had called the victim through a social media application while she was speaking with police, one of the statements say. A sexual assault exam was conducted at an area hospital, the statement says.

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‘Everlasting hug’: Community creates quilt in memory of Kaylee Goncalves

KIVI Staff

Originally Published: 16 APR 26 14:54 ET

By Allie Triepke

Click here for updates on this story

    BOISE, Idaho (KIVI) — A handmade quilt created by contributors from across the country is now on display in the Treasure Valley, honoring the life of Kaylee Goncalves and offering comfort to her family.

The Kaylee Jade Dahlia Quilt, unveiled at The Quilt Crossing, was crafted by more than a dozen quilters and dahlia enthusiasts from Idaho and beyond. Each square was stitched with messages of remembrance, forming a one-of-a-kind tribute to Goncalves, one of four victims killed in the 2022 University of Idaho murders.

“You’re never gonna replace the void that has occurred in their life, but it can be brighter, and it’s a very loving kind of tribute,” said contributor Kristin Custer of Caldwell.

The quilt draws inspiration from the Kaylee Jade Dahlia, a newly bred flower with bright pink and purple tones named in Goncalves’ memory. Custer said the vibrant colors are meant to bring light during a dark time.

Quilters from states including Florida, Ohio, and Idaho contributed to the project, each creating pinwheel-style sections that were later assembled by Nampa quilter Jodi Frederick.

“It looks better up there than I thought it would. I’m really happy that it’s done,” Frederick said. “It’s a relief that I got it done on time.”

Vickie Holbrook, another contributor, said the quilt represents more than a creative project.

“What the quilt means to the family really is an everlasting hug and something that can help in dark times,” she said.

Organizers say the quilt is meant to symbolize a nationwide embrace of support for the Goncalves family, with contributors hoping it provides a sense of comfort and connection.

The quilt will remain on display at The Quilt Crossing before being presented to the Goncalves family on May 9.

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.

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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Idaho medical marijuana push reaches 100,000 signatures as lawmakers urge opposition

Par Kermani

BOISE, Idaho (KIFI) — Supporters of a medical marijuana initiative in Idaho say they have surpassed 100,000 signatures as they work to place the issue on the 2026 ballot, marking a major milestone in an effort that has gained traction in recent months.

Advocates with the Natural Medicine Alliance of Idaho say the initiative would provide patients with access to treatment options that are currently unavailable under state law.

“There is clear interest from Idahoans in having this issue considered, and the initiative process allows voters to review the proposal and decide for themselves,” said Amanda Watson, communications lead for the organization.

Supporters argue the proposal would give patients dealing with serious illnesses, more options to manage symptoms and improve quality of life.

“As a cancer survivor, this is about access,” said Rob Cronin, a chairperson with the organization. “This is about giving people another option to manage pain and improve their quality of life.”

The push comes after the legislature recently passed Senate Concurrent Resolution 127, urging residents to reject any effort to bring the Idaho Medical Cannabis Act to the ballot.

In the resolution, lawmakers cite concerns about public safety, public health and impacts to children and families, pointing to experiences in other states where marijuana has been legalized. Including increased cartel activity, increased health issues, and easier access to marijuana for recreational use.

“The Legislature has sent a strong and unifying message that it understands the danger that marijuana legalization is to Idaho families,” said Sen. Scott Grow in a statement included in the resolution.

Opponents of the initiative say the proposal itself raises additional concerns.

“I’ve done a lot of research on the impact marijuana has had in other states when it comes to crime, health and the economy, and I just don’t see how this would be beneficial to Idaho,” said Victor Miller, who opposes the measure. “This act is so broadly written that almost anyone could qualify.”

Miller and others also argue that Idaho already has access to certain federally approved medications containing THC, the psychoactive component in marijuana, for specific medical conditions.

The proposed initiative outlines qualifying conditions and establishes a system for patients to obtain medical cannabis cards, but critics say those criteria are too broad and could lead to widespread access beyond traditional medical use.

Supporters dispute those claims, saying the initiative is designed to create a regulated framework and that voters should ultimately decide the issue.

The effort now moves into the next phase, as supporters continue gathering signatures to meet the threshold required to qualify for the ballot.

If the initiative is certified, Idaho voters could decide the issue in the 2026 election. Local News 8 will continue following the story as it develops.

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Small brushfire in NE Bend brings a big message: Weed burners, debris burning are not allowed in the city

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Bend Fire & Rescue crews quickly stopped a small, wind-driven brushfire Thursday morning that they said was started by a resident’s weed burner – which they pointed out are illegal to use within the city limits, part of the city’s ban on debris burning.

Crews responded just after 10 a.m. to the reported fire along NE Studio Road, arriving to find a 40-foot strip of ornamental juniper bushes ablaze in front of a house, Deputy Fire Marshal Dan Derlacki said.

“The occupant was attempting to stop the fire with a garden hose, but the wind kept the fire going,” Derlacki said in a news release.

Fortunately, the first engine crew to arrive was able to quickly douse the flames, preventing the fire from spreading to the house or other juniper bushes.

No property damage was reported, except for the brush, and Studio Road was closed for a short time.

Derlacki said the fire was caused by the home’s occupant using a weed burner to clear material from his driveway.

While weed burners are allowed in rural areas outside of Bend, while burning is open, they are not allowed in the city limits, as they are considered debris burning, Derlacki said. A city ordinance bans all debris burning within the city limits.

Derlacki said the occupant was given a warning, since this was a first offense. 

Beyond that, Derlacki said, “This is a good reminder of why debris burning will be closed down a month early this year (on April 30), compared to last year. Even with the rain and snow over the past week, vegetation is still very dry and can easily ignite and spread.”

“If you are finishing up burning this spring, we ask that you be extremely careful while doing it,” he added. “Ensure all preparations are done before burning such as having water on hand, clearing combustibles away from the burn and having tools ready to go.”

“You can call the burn information line before burning outside the city limits to ensure it is open that day as well, because if we see that winds are too strong, we can shut it down on a daily basis,” the fire official said, noting that all debris burning will be closed throughout Central Oregon at the end of the day on Thursday, April 30.

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