Video shows lightning strike near Massachusetts family: “Sounded like a bomb was going off”

By Mike Sullivan

Click here for updates on this story

    SOUTHBORO, Massachusetts (WJZ) — A Southboro, Massachusetts family came within feet of being struck by lightning on Tuesday, and the entire incident was caught on camera.

Brad Robillard had just got home with his son and daughter. “It sounded like a bomb was going off,” Robillard said.

As he went to get his daughter out of the back seat of his pickup truck, an explosion happened right behind him.

“I had literally just told my son that the chances of getting struck by lightning are pretty slim,” said Robillard. “It was the hair raising on the back of your neck, then immediately right after, it went off.”

Robillard knew there was thunder and lightning in the area. He counted to “10 Mississippi” before getting out of the car. It’s common teaching to determine how close lightning is. You start the count after you hear thunder and then divide by 5. It gives a rough estimate of how many miles the last lightning strike was.

“I had counted to 10 before we got out of the car and I’m like yeah, it’s OK. I never thought it would be on top of us on the next one,” said Robillard.

In the video you can see an explosion happening right behind him, but he doesn’t believe that is the lightning strike. There is a tree in his backyard with a line of bark shaved off the side. He thinks the lightning struck the tree, ran into a metal fence in their backyard, and then climbed their home and exited from a soffit at the roof. There are burn marks at the soffit and scorch marks on parts of the fence.

“The path of least resistance, then that big explosion behind me,” said Robillard.

The surveillance footage of the incident made quick rounds on the internet, but Robillard is still trying to wrap his head around what happened.

“At the time it’s like, ‘Wow what is going on?’ Then we ran inside and the adrenaline wears off, that’s what you start thinking about,” said Robillard.

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.

First Native American astronaut touches down at Fort Hall

David Pace

FORT HALL, Idaho (KIFI) – The first Native American to travel in space, John B. Herrington, brought students and guests into his orbit Wednesday at the Shoshone-Bannock Hotel and Event Center.

The astronaut, with Idaho connections, blasted off aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavor to visit the International Space Station in November 2022.

“I went to the space station. I did three spacewalks and helped assemble the first truss on the left side of the space station,” Herrington said.

During the 13 day and 18 hour mission, Herrington performed three space walks for about 20 hours.

“I’m a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma. I was considered the first citizen of a recognized tribe to be a member of the Astronaut Corps and to fly in space,” he said.

Herrington graduated from Aviation Officer Candidate School in 1984 before joining the Astronaut Corps in April 1996.

“I used to sit in a cardboard box and dream I was going to the moon,” Herrington said. “But, you know, is that going to happen? I didn’t go to the moon. I was really envious of the people that just went to the moon. But I was very fortunate I got to do something I dreamed about as a kid.”

On Wednesday, Herrington shared his story and answered questions from Shoshone-Bannock students.

“It inspired me to know that like other natives can get that high up with their careers and do that much stuff, because I haven’t seen a lot of that,” said 13-year-old Chloe Thomas said.

“I probably will want to be an astronaut as well, to prove, like, anybody could really do anything – especially natives,” said 13-year-old Taetyn Taggart.

The first Native American astronaut, John Herrington, discusses his three space walks on the International Space Station at the Shoshone-Bannock Event Center.

The face-to-face encounter with an astronaut may prove a launching pad for Shoshone-Bannock students with big dreams.

“Believe in yourself. If there’s something you want to do, talk to somebody doing it,” Herrington said. “If you have a desire to be an astronaut, a desire to be an attorney or an engineer. Go talk to somebody, and certainly talk to somebody that’s from where you’re from. Make identification with people that you admire, that you understand. Maybe it’s a path you can go down some point in time.”

Shoshone-Bannock students stand side-by-side with NASA astronaut and fellow native John Herrington.

Click here to follow the original article.

Thornton fire contained, evacuation lifted after five buildings destroyed

Seth Ratliff

UPDATE:

THORNTON, Idaho (KIFI) — Madison Fire Department says the fire has now been contained, and residents at the Wind Willows RV Park are allowed to return at this time.

Firefighters continued working through the night, putting out hot spots around the property and nearby vegetation.

Surrounding roadways near the fire scene also remain closed as crews continue cleanup and monitoring efforts.

Officials say five buildings have now been ruled a complete loss.

Power restoration for the Thornton area is still expected around 5 p.m. Friday.

THORNTON, Idaho (KIFI) — The Madison County Fire Department is urgently evacuating the Wind Willow RV Park as crews battle a large, spreading structure fire at the old Thornton Merc near along Yellowstone Hwy. and the exit 328 (Thornton) off-ramp.

So far, five structures have been declared a total loss.

Power is also out in the general Thornton area. It is expected to return May 21st at 5 p.m.

Courtesy: Madison County Sheriff’s Office

Over 15 Madison County Sheriff’s deputies are on scene assisting firefighters. Residents near the area are being directed to follow evacuation instructions from law enforcement and fire personnel on scene.

Drivers should avoid the area and, if possible, use alternate routes to allow first responders to work safely.

The off ramp for Exit 328 on Highway 20 was closed, but is now open.

Temporary Shelter Established

A temporary shelter and resources have been established for any residents displaced by the evacuation. The shelter location is at the LDS Stake Center at 2041 W 5200 S, Rexburg.

According to an alert from the Madison Fire Department, Madison CERT members and chaplains will be on scene to assist with resources.

This is a developing news story. Local News 8 has a crew on the scene and will provide more updates as we learn additional information.

Click here to follow the original article.

El Paso firefighters receive free meals for National EMS Week

Gabrielle Lopez

EL PASO, Texas (KVIA) — To celebrate National Emergency Medical Services Week, the Hospitals of Providence delivered meals to firefighters in El Paso County. Wednesday, THOP stopped by Fire Station 18 in the Lower Valley.

Trey Megason, who received a meal and gift at the fire station, said they weren’t expecting to have a “good lunch” consisting of chicken wings.

“We work as a team throughout the sleepless nights,” Megason said. “It’s nice to the hospitals on our back.”

Tasha Hopper, THOP East Campus CEO, said former President Gerald Ford started EMS Week in 1974 to recognize the sacrifice first responders make to ensure the community’s safety.

National EMS Week takes place May 17-23 to thank EMS first responders for being the first at the scene of an emergency, THOP said.

“When everyone’s running away, they’re running to us,” Hopper said.

Click here to follow the original article.

Doctors say woman in El Paso ICE detention center urgently requires surgery that she is being denied

Texas Tribune

by Lomi Kriel, The Texas TribuneMay 20, 2026

The 911 call came two days after immigration agents detained the 23-year-old Guatemalan woman in Minnesota as she was driving her mother and two young siblings to their jobs cleaning houses.

“Excruciating pain,” the employee at the El Paso immigrant detention facility reported.

Emergency responders rushed Andrea Pedro Francisco to the hospital from Camp East Montana on Feb. 7 — just four days before she had been scheduled to receive surgery to remove an ovarian cyst about the size of a lime that had caused her months of intense abdominal pain.

Physicians discharged Pedro Francisco back to the Camp East Montana detention facility with written warnings that if she experienced certain symptoms, including pain in her back, hip, stomach or while urinating, that she should urgently obtain critical care.

Yet in the four months that followed, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials repeatedly denied Pedro Francisco surgery — or even outside medical opinion to confirm that she does not need it. Pedro Francisco has continued to suffer from excruciating pain, but has primarily been treated with over-the-counter medication such as Ibuprofen to manage her pain.

By contrast, eight OB-GYNs and an emergency physician who specializes in detainee care reviewed 200 pages of Pedro Fancisco’s medical records shared with The Texas Tribune and agreed that she is at “high risk” for a medical emergency and urgently requires surgery. The experts said that her treatment in ICE detention amounts to medical malpractice because it fails to provide the industry’s standard of care and contradicts what external doctors recommended.

Andrea Pedro Francisco, 23, has lived in Minnesota since 2019 and for years has suffered increasing abdominal pain. In January, doctors said she needs surgery for an overian cyst. Then ICE agents detained her.

If Pedro Francisco does not have that operation, experts warn that she could lose the ability to have children or suffer from other serious health complications. The doctors also said the cyst needs to be screened for cancer. Ovarian cancer, dubbed the “silent killer” because its symptoms can be hard to diagnose, is the fifth-leading cause of cancer among women, spurring more than 15,000 deaths annually.

“It is my medical opinion that Ms. Pedro Francisco will suffer irreparable harm if this treatment is not provided promptly,” wrote Dr. Louis Monnig, a Louisiana OB-GYN, in a legal petition demanding her release.

Leticia Zamarripa, a spokesperson for ICE, previously said in a statement that medical staff determined Pedro Francisco’s condition “does not make her a candidate for surgical intervention,” although they recommended a “periodic” ultrasound.

“ICE maintains longstanding practices to provide comprehensive medical care, including access to vaccines, medical, dental, and mental health services, as well as medical appointments and 24-hour emergency care,” Zamarripa wrote. “This is the best healthcare that many individuals have received in their lives.”

Late Tuesday night, an unnamed Department of Homeland Security spokesperson wrote in an email that Pedro Francisco had seen onsite medical staff seven times and been evaluated three times at a local behavioral health center, in addition to the ER visit.

The official, who declined to answer detailed questions, said that Pedro Francisco “refused pain medication at least twice and has not shown up to medical requests for examinations.”

As President Donald Trump has ramped up deportation efforts, Pedro Francisco is one of more than 60,000 people in ICE detention as the administration continues to pursue mass ICE warehouses in its push for expanded removals. Like her, the majority were arrested in the interior of the country and have no criminal convictions. At least 18 people have died in ICE custody this year, nearly a third of them in Texas. That record-breaking number is on pace to surpass the nearly three dozen deaths in 2025, which were the most ICE fatalities in more than two decades.

Experts say this is the result of the administration’s push to detain a far greater number of immigrants than some ICE facilities have capacity for while contracting with companies that either have problematic records or little experience in detention management. At the same time, many medical providers which work with ICE have been unpaid since the fall in a bureaucratic change made by the administration as it switched billing methods.

“Illness and death are the predictable consequences of keeping people in this system that has expanded so rapidly, using unproven contractors, without paying bills and firing staff tasked to oversee violations” at the Department of Homeland Security, said Scott Shuchart, an ICE official under former President Joe Biden and senior adviser during Trump’s first term to the department’s Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, which investigates abuses.

Efforts to obtain Pedro Francisco’s release or treatment outside of ICE have so far failed. A federal judge denied emergency petitions. ICE rejected her humanitarian parole, although another claim is pending. And unlike in Trump’s first term and previous administrations, when detained immigrants could be released on bond, this administration has fought that avenue in the courts. A ruling this spring by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which oversees Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi, ended that option for most immigrants.

Pedro Francisco’s cause has captured international attention with human rights groups such as Amnesty International calling for her release. Minnesota and Texas congressional representatives who have visited with her also appealed to ICE. Her next immigration court hearing is May 20. Her lawyers fear that the judge could order her deported without a full hearing using a procedural tool known as “pretermission,” which allows judges to deny asylum claims without hearing testimony.

Asra Syed, one of Pedro Francisco’s lawyers, said the administration is denying Pedro Francisco legal recourse while “every day Andrea and a chorus of people that are advocating on her behalf are screaming for basic medical care and it’s still being ignored.”

Gaslit

A few weeks before she was detained, Pedro Francisco went to the hospital in January where she told doctors that she had a history of an ovarian cyst. She described chronic pain “for a year or more” that had recently worsened, according to her medical records.

Physicians prescribed her strong painkillers such as morphine and oxycodone. Her surgery was scheduled for the following month, which would be thwarted by her ICE detention.

In multiple grainy video interviews with the Tribune from two ICE facilities over the past two months, Pedro Francisco appeared in standard-issued grey prison garb as she described her deteriorating condition.

When she tries to walk, she said, she struggles because the pain from her stomach shoots into her legs and back. It hurts when she urinates.

About a month after her emergency room visit, Pedro Francisco requested from ICE a bottom bunk bed due to her pain. According to her medical records, ICE officials denied the request.

Instead of ICE providing Pedro Francisco with surgery, available documentation appears to show that the agency may be treating her “for a condition she doesn’t have,” according to Dr. William Weber, who practices emergency medicine in Minnesota and helps lead the Medical Justice Alliance, a nonprofit focused on care in detention facilities.

Excerpt from a report documenting Pedro Francisco’s condition. Dr. Louis Monnig, a Louisiana OB-GYN at Ochsner Health, a nonprofit health system, wrote in a legal petition requesting Pedro Francisco’s release that she would suffer “irreparable harm” if she doesn’t soon obtain surgery for her cyst.

Weber and four other experts who reviewed Pedro Francisco’s records said that they suggest that ICE medical staff may have incorrectly diagnosed her with Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome, a common condition for women of reproductive age, that can lead to cysts that are not typically painful or dangerous.

Except her previous medical records don’t support that, Weber and other experts said. He added that it appeared that a male nurse practitioner in ICE provided that assessment without giving Pedro Francisco an ultrasound or the extensive examination a diagnosis for that condition requires.

“I’m concerned the nurse practitioner didn’t understand the difference between a single ovarian cyst and PMOS,“ he said. “These are very different conditions and misdiagnosing her could leave her with ineffective treatment.”

Based on her records, he said, “ICE never documented any rationale for diagnosing her with that, nor did they do any testing.”

Part of the treatment for PMOS was over-the-counter pain relievers, which Pedro Francisco said did nothing for her discomfort.

Dr. Lauren Thaxton, a Colorado gynecologist, said the treatment she is receiving in detention is “inconsistent” with what her gynecologist recommended. Thaxton added that her condition “should be surgically explored.” That Pedro Francisco’s pain has persisted over months necessitates an operation, Thaxton said.

Seven doctors reviewing Pedro Francisco’s medical records warned her ovaries are at risk of damage, which could affect her ability to have a baby.

Not operating soon means that Pedro Francisco’s ovary could become “nonfunctional within her body due to the lack of blood supply,” said Thaxton, echoing other experts. “This is not a reversible outcome.”

Dr. Kristyn Brandi, a New Jersey gynecologist, worries that her cyst could be cancerous.

“Removing it early would be important to stop the spread of disease,” Brandi said.

“It is inhumane for a patient having so much pain that she was scheduled for surgery to be held without treatment,” she added.

Monnig, the Louisiana doctor, wrote in Pedro Francisco’s humanitarian parole petition that if her cyst continues to remain untreated, it could rupture, killing one of her ovaries and causing complications such as sepsis and infertility, requiring greater surgical interventions that could result in “larger incisions, and pain, brain damage or death.”

Andrea Pedro Francisco.

Pedro Francisco said that it’s distressing to hear from attorneys and experts that the lack of medical care could imperil her ability to have children, whom she desperately wants.

“I love children, they are beautiful,” she said. “But I guess right now I first need to see what is going to happen to me.”

Ruby L. Powers, another of Pedro Francisco’s attorneys, said Pedro Francisco is being “gaslit” by ICE medical staff.

“What the ICE medical team is telling her simply doesn’t match up with what doctors in the outside world say,” Powers said. “This is barbaric treatment at best and deadly at worst.”

“Getting worse every day”

Pedro Francisco was born in the Guatemalan Western Highlands, the site of the Central American country’s worst civil war massacres. She and her mother said in interviews that as indigenous people, they suffered discrimination and poverty. Her mother was sexually assaulted. And Pedro Francisco’s relative was killed in what the family believes was a targeted gang-related attack. That spurred the mother to bring her then 16-year-old daughter to the U.S. in 2019, where they requested asylum at the border.

Trump’s first administration released them while their asylum cases proceeded in the backlogged civil immigration courts. They continued to Minnesota, where they had family and joined an evangelical church, found jobs, and set down roots. Pedro Francisco’s mother had two U.S. citizen children.

Pedro Francisco worked cleaning jobs with her mother and doted on her siblings. She played bass and sang for her church’s musical group.

Zoila Carrion Caceres, who knew Pedro Francisco from high school and played music with her in the church group, said she has “a way of making people laugh and feel comfortable.”

Carrion Caceres wrote in a declaration for Pedro Francisco’s humanitarian parole that she “not only brought leadership but also joy and a sense of unity.”

Another of Pedro Francisco’s friends, Laura Carrion, said that she served as a leader for the deacons, helping new members “in understanding the Bible.” To obtain that position, Carrion said, Pedro Francisco underwent “strict interviews and character evaluations with our Pastor.”

Pedro Francisco played bass and sang in her church’s musical group.Pedro Francisco played bass and sang in her church’s musical group.

Pedro Francisco had been suffering severe stomach pain for years, she and her family said, that escalated in recent months and prevented her from working. She said that she didn’t want to seek medical care because she worried about the cost. So her family and friends were relieved when she was scheduled for surgery, urged by Fairview Hospital staff in Minnesota, according to her records.

Then, this February, Pedro Francisco was driving with her mother and siblings when federal agents stopped them as part of Operation Metro Surge in Minnesota, an unprecedented immigration operation in that state that resulted in two U.S. citizen deaths and helped lead to the ouster of at least two top Homeland Security officials.

Neither Pedro Francisco nor her mother had a deportation order, according to her lawyers, since they had been released into the U.S. under Trump’s first administration. Later, the Biden administration dismissed their immigration cases in a judicial move known as prosecutorial discretion.

But the agents detained Pedro Francisco, allowing her mother, who holds the same immigration status, to leave with the U.S. citizen children, presumably because the kids, aged 1 and 5, have no other caretakers, attorneys said.

Along with about 3,400 immigrants from Minnesota, ICE flew Pedro Francisco to Texas and imprisoned her at El Paso’s Camp East Montana, a troubled detention facility where at least three immigrants died in the weeks before she landed.

Pedro Francisco’s lawyer, Syed, filed a legal claim known as a habeas petition for her in February. Data shows that such filings, which argue that people are wrongfully detained, have surged under Trump’s second administration. The largest number of filings are coming from the Western District of Texas which has jurisdiction over Camp East Montana and the South Texas Family Residential Center, known as Dilley, that is the only facility in the U.S. to currently hold parents with their children.

Syed’s petition landed in front of U.S. District Court Judge Leon Schydlower, a Biden appointee. But as with many of such appeals before him, Schydlower waited months to issue a ruling and when he finally did, the denial appeared to be a “copy and paste,” according to more than half a dozen other Texas lawyers who voiced the same complaint for similar petitions that have appeared before him. Schydlower did not respond to requests for comment.

“Andrea’s case is why habeas corpus exists,” said Powers, her attorney. “ICE arrested her five days before that surgery. The Constitution doesn’t have an asterisk for immigrants. When the government takes someone’s freedom, it takes responsibility for their life. Right now, it’s failing.”

Syed filed a temporary restraining order. Schydlower denied that, too.

Camp East Montana, site of a migrant detention center on Fort Bliss in East El Paso, under construction in East El Paso on August 11, 2025.Camp East Montana, site of a migrant detention center on Fort Bliss in East El Paso on August 11, 2025.

Camp East Montana has been under blistering criticism, not only for the three deaths there over a span of six weeks but internal inspection reports citing dozens of violations. In March, the administration suddenly changed contractors. Pedro Francisco was abruptly moved to the El Paso Processing Center, a separate ICE facility. But the transfer did nothing to ease her pain.

“I feel like I’m getting worse every day,” Pedro Francisco said in an interview last week. “At night I don’t sleep well and in the day I don’t feel like the same person.”

For now, she holds out hope, although it is waning.

So does her mother, who said that the family relies on Pedro Francisco, financially and emotionally. Her daughter has no one in Guatemala and her removal, the mother said, would leave her American siblings “ruined.”

This article first appeared on The Texas Tribune.

Click here to follow the original article.

Explore the world’s first nuclear power plant at EBR-I Atomic Museum

Stephanie Lucas

ARCO, Idaho (KIFI) – The Experimental Breeder Reactor-I Atomic Museum will open for the 2026 season on Friday, May 22. Located 50 miles west of Idaho Falls on U.S. Highway 20, the museum is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Labor Day. Admission is free.

This year will mark the 75th anniversary of EBR-I’s historic first generation of usable electricity from nuclear energy at the National Reactor Testing Station, now known as Idaho National Laboratory.

A popular stop for travelers exploring eastern Idaho, EBR-I offers a unique opportunity to explore the world’s first nuclear power plant. The atomic museum provides a hands-on look at a pivotal moment in scientific history, making it an ideal addition to a summer road trip.

“I’m always surprised when I find out local people have never been to EBR-I. I used to take my kids every summer,” said Liza Raley, INL ambassador. “We’d drive out, spend a couple hours pushing buttons at the museum, get some lunch in Arco, and then explore Craters of the Moon and Hell’s Half Acre. It’s such a fun way to learn about INL and fill a summer day.”

The reactor operated until late 1963 and was decommissioned in 1964. It was designated a National Historic Landmark on Aug. 25, 1966, by President Lyndon B. Johnson and Glenn Seaborg, then chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission.

Some new features and special events coming up this season include:

America 250 posters featuring the theme “Moments That Made Us” will also be available for visitors during the 2026 season.

The museum will offer a penny press this year. Visitors are encouraged to bring loose pennies to create a souvenir keepsake.

On June 5, June 19, July 3, July 17, July 31, Aug. 14, and Aug. 28, architectural historian Libby Cook will be on-site from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. to answer questions. Cook will also lead a guided tour each of those days at noon on understanding EBR-I’s evolution and the decisions of the people who built it.

Visitors can enrich their EBR-I trip by watching the “I Explored the World’s First Nuclear Power Plant (and How It Works)” episode on the “Smarter Every Day” YouTube channel.

Visitors can download the free TravelStorys app and listen to an on-demand tour of INL on their drive across the desert.

National Parks Passport holders can also bring their booklet to the museum to collect a stamp.

No reservations are necessary for the available guided and self-guided tours. Send questions to tours@inl.gov or call 208-526-0050.

Click here to follow the original article.

Fort Bliss holds expo for transitioning service members, veterans

Gabrielle Lopez

FORT BLISS, Texas (KVIA) — Some veterans and service members leaving the military got help navigating into the civilian world with confidence at the 1st Armored Division and Fort Bliss Annual Transition Expo Wednesday.

The 1st Armored Division said service members, their families explored workshops and met with employers who are hiring, including the El Paso Police Department and U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

“It’s just a great stepping off point for veterans to leave and to either stay in the local area,” Bernie Sprute, a transition services specialist, said. “We really want separating members to stay in the local area, but if they go on, that’s OK too. We want to set them up for success with the transition assistance program.”

Veterans also learned about available resources. Sprute said the military prepared veterans with skills easily transferable to the civilian world.

Click here to follow the original article.

It could all come down to a coin toss – Caribou County Commissioner Race

Kaelyn Blessinger

SODA SPRINGS, Idaho (KIFI) – Could a game of chance – the flip of a coin – determine the next County Commissioner of Caribou County?

According to the office of the Secretary of State, it can, but only after a tie is confirmed.

The county board has to meet first to “canvass,” when the county will recount and verify the votes. The official results won’t be known til May 28th.

If the tally remains even, there will be a coin flip. It is scheduled for May 29th.

“Yeah. So Vegas style. Right?” Caribou County Commissioner candidate, Tracy Davis, said. “You look back at some of the things and, you know, there have been other counties that have come down to a tie and the traditional coin flip conducted by the county clerk. So it is an uncertain feeling. But, you know, ultimately it is [uncertain]. We are going against a great guy. And either way, let’s flip the coin and let’s move forward.”

“I think [Caribou County] is going to have to do just like me. Wait and see,” Caribou County Commissioner candidate George Hulse said. “It’s going to be interesting. And, you know, you can’t change it now. So if you wanted to make a change, it wouldn’t be with this election. It would be with future elections.”

Coin flip or run-off election?

A coin flip determining the winner, of course, leaves the outcome to chance. Both Davis and Hulse were asked if they would prefer a runoff election instead.

“The only time I’ve ever seen anything decided by the flip of a coin that I thought was important? When I was in high school, I pole vaulted, and I tied with one of the other contestants,” relates Hulse. “It was decided by the flip of a coin who had first. I just thought, that’s quite a way to decide something like that or an election. But I don’t think that’s fair.”

“I think runoff elections are probably the more better bet,” says Davis. “I just feel like, you know, especially in a three-way race, it can change a lot of dynamics in the voting system.”

The election results remain to be seen, but once the winner is announced – whether by vote or chance – you can count on Local News 8 to deliver the results.

Click here to follow the original article.

I-10 West at Exit 0 in Anthony reopens after crash

Gabrielle Lopez

UPDATE (6:35 p.m.) — Police said all lanes reopened at 5:43 p.m.

ANTHONY, Texas (KVIA) — A crash closed all westbound lanes on I-10 after Travel Information Center, El Paso police said on X Wednesday.

The Texas Department of Transportation said a car rolled over at I-10 at Exit 0.

Police said there’s traffic backed up to the Vinton exit. They’re expecting the lanes to reopen within an hour.

Click here to follow the original article.

Cesar Chavez Elementary in Las Cruces to be renamed ‘Desert Bloom Elementary’

Gabrielle Lopez

LAS CRUCES, N.M. (KVIA) — Cesar Chavez Elementary School in Las Cruces will take a new name in July, Las Cruces Public Schools announced Wednesday. The district’s board of educated voted to rename the campus to Desert Bloom Elementary.

The board voted to remove Cesar Chavez’ name from the campus April 21 after sexual abuse allegations against the labor rights leader came out in March.

The school’s community considered other names like Desert Sky, Desert Sage, Organ Mountain and Mountain View Elementary, LCPS said.

Students, parents and staff favored Desert Bloom. LCPS said a popular theme in name preferences referenced the city’s desert landscape. Tito the Coyotito will stay the school’s mascot.

Starting Tuesday, the district said it will rebrand the school and update signs. The school will officially adopt the new name July 1.

In a previous meeting, the board said the most expensive change will be the school’s lettering, which is estimated to cost $10,100.

Click here to follow the original article.