Average Riverside County gas price drops for 40th time in 41 days

City News Service

RIVERSIDE (CNS) – The average price of a gallon of self-serve regular gasoline in Riverside County dropped today for the 40th time in 41 days, falling 2.6 cents to $5.261, its lowest amount since March 11.

The average price has dropped 79.4 cents over the past 41 days, including three-tenths of a cent Monday, according to figures from the AAA and Oil Price Information Service. It dropped 18 consecutive days, was unchanged June 8 and resumed decreasing the following day.

The average price is 12.5 cents less than one week ago and 66.3 cents lower than one month ago, but 84.9 cents more than one year ago. The national average price dropped for the 39th time in 40 days, falling 1.3 cents to $3.847, its lowest amount since March 18. It is 7.9 cents less than one week ago and 50.9 cents lower than one month ago, but 66.1 cents more than one year ago.

The national average price has dropped 71.7 cents over the past 40 days, including seven-tenths of a cent Monday. It decreased 33 consecutive days, rose two-tenths of a cent Wednesday and resumed decreasing Thursday.

“Average gasoline prices fell in 46 states over the last week,” Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, which provides real-time gas price information from more than 150,000 stations, said in a statement released Monday.

“The declines came despite a turbulent week, as fresh attacks were traded between the U.S. and Iran before both sides agreed to halt hostilities just in time Sunday, preventing what could have been a significant spike in oil prices.“For now, GasBuddy anticipates the national average will continue drifting lower this week, though the situation remains anything but predictable.”

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Calling All Film Lovers to the Ojai Art Center

Andie Lopez Bornet

VENTURA, Calif. – If you enjoy watching films of all kinds, especially in black and white, we have just the right spot.

The Ojai Art Center is calling all film lovers to see their film noir series featuring rare restored classics.

Curator and film historian, Steve Grumette joins the Morning News to talk about what film noir is and the upcoming dates.

To learn more about film noir and the upcoming events at the Ojai Art Center visit their website.

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Law enforcement outlines the ways residents should report illegal fireworks

Gavin Nguyen

RIVERSIDE COUNTY, Calif. (KESQ) – Ahead of the Fourth of July, law enforcement wants to be clear: not all live fireworks are an emergency.

The Riverside County Sheriff’s Office posted an announcement to residents of the county on Instagram and said reporting illegal fireworks should not involve calling 911.

“Every second counts when lives are on the line. Help us keep our 9-1-1 lines clear for emergencies.

Please do not call 9-1-1 to report fireworks, instead, use our online reporting form at riversidesheriff.org or call 800-950-2444.

Let’s all work together to keep our communities safe!”

Riverside County Sheriff’s Office

Online portal to report illegal fireworks on RSO’s website

We checked in with other local agencies, too.

The Palm Springs Police Department echoed RSO and cautioned residents to only call 911 for emergency situations. For reporting fireworks, they listed a non-emergency number: (760) 324-1441.

Tonight, we’re also hearing from other agencies like the Indio Police Department. They say they have the “Harmony Line,” which is used for illegal firework reports. You can call that number at (442) 300-3104. Dispatchers there assured the public that calling the Harmony Line will not delay response times; instead, they said it could even speed up how quickly your information is taken, since you won’t have to wait for available dispatchers.

We had an opportunity to see inside Indio Police Department’s dispatch center. They called it the biggest and best centers in the valley, staffed with the best dispatchers – but admitted even it could be overwhelmed by a flood of 911 calls reporting fireworks.

“It was pretty bad. We had a lot of calls,” said dispatcher Priscilla Avina. “We [did not have] enough lines to get a hold of all the critical calls. They were taking up the lines and it was hard to get to through it, through to every call.”

Dispatchers classify critical calls as ones that involve life-and-death emergencies, medical aids, and incidents that require a police response. Illegal fireworks, notably, do not fall under that category in most situations, especially if residents are reporting loud booms. Of course, it’s a different story when fireworks light fires.

Stephanie Monroy, who was selling safe & sane fireworks at the corner of Avenue 44 and Jackson Street in Indio to raise money for her church, had a close call a few years back.

“A couple of years ago, there was a neighbor of mine. They were doing [an] illegal fireworks show, and our house caught on fire,” she recounted.

“I just saw it land on my neighbor’s tree, and then it spread from their tree to our trees in our home. And thankfully, someone was driving around with some hoses, like water hoses. We were able to put it out because it does take a while for, you know, responders to arrive at the scene.”

With the risks associated with illegal fireworks, Sgt. Abraham Plata, with the Indio Police Department, noted $2,000, $3,000, and $5,000 fines that residents lighting them could face.

His advice ahead of the holiday weekend: “We need somebody from the household to be the adult in the house, to tell others in the house not to light up illegal fireworks. Someone from every household needs to step up to the plate and not allow it. Or we need cooperation from the community to report it.”

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Two Yuma fire stations unveil Safe Haven Baby Boxes

Lauren Duffel

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – Safe Haven Baby Boxes and the City of Yuma are holding a ceremony Tuesday to unveil two new baby boxes.

The ceremony is taking place at Rural Metro Fire Stations #2 and #5, located at 10820 S. Hensley Blvd, and the boxes are for parents to safely surrender their infant.

The boxes are climate controlled and automatically notifies 911 when an infant is placed. Each location will be staffed 24/7.

In addition, the locations are said to be the 454th and 455th baby boxes in the nation, as well as the second and third in Arizona.

Monica Kelsey, Safe Haven Baby Boxes Founder, shared, “We are the only organization providing complete anonymity and we want these mothers to know we are there for them and their infant before and following a surrender.”

This comes after Baby Sonny was found abandoned in a trash can near a Yuma hotel on May 1, 2025.

To watch the livestream of the ceremony, see attached video. To learn more about the ceremony, read the press release below.

Yuma Rural Metro Fire Station #2 and #5.docx-2Download

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Bellwether turned red: Missouri’s shifting 200-year political history

Alison Patton

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ) 

While Americans celebrate 250 years of freedom in July, Missouri will reach 205 years of being a state in August. When Missouri became a state in 1821, it was at the center of a war between America and itself: the Civil War. 

“Missouri played an important role very early on in the country’s history,” said Charles Zug, a political science professor at the University of Missouri. 

That’s because the nation was trying to decide which states could have slaves, and one solution, known as the Missouri Compromise, was to make Missouri a slave state and Maine a free state. Lawmakers also decided to make any new state added from the Louisiana Purchase that was above the 36-30 line a free state, and states below a slave state. 

That was overturned over 30 years later with the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which left the decision up to the states whether they wanted slaves.

Although there were slave owners in Missouri, the state remained in the Union. 

“Missouri was sort of right at the heart of this slavery issue, which provoked and catalyzed and sort of crystallized broader problems of the Civil War and was very much at the center of that story,” Zug said. 

The Kansas-Nebraska Act kicked off the border war between Missouri and Kansas, where pro-Southern guerrillas from Missouri tried to prevent Kansas from becoming a free state. The conflict, known as Bleeding Kansas, started in the 1850s and lasted until the Civil War, and included the ransacking of Lawrence, Kansas.

Following the Civil War, the U.S. entered Reconstruction, which used federal resources to protect formerly enslaved people from aggression.

“[Reconstruction was] a series of national measures, congressional acts, coupled with aggressive presidential execution of those acts, basically protecting former enslaved people from re-enslavement, white violence [and] the [Ku Klux] Klan,” Zug said. 

Reconstruction ended in the late 1870s when federal troops were pulled out of Southern states, allowing state governments to implement Jim Crow laws that worked around the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments. Those amendments were added to protect African-Americans from discrimination and slavery. 

20th century changes

The civil rights movement started as a response to Jim Crow, and it gained the nation’s attention in the 1960s. But President Harry Truman, who was from Missouri, made some advancements toward equality in the 1940s when he desegregated the military. 

“He was seen as being someone who would essentially toe the line when it came to issues over holding or preventing civil rights from being enacted,” said Sean Rost, assistant director of research for the State Historical Society of Missouri. 

Truman was working with a Republican-controlled Congress and a fractured Democratic Party that didn’t fully back civil rights, Rost said. 

Zug said this move was a way to get more Black votes. 

Understanding Missouri politics is key to understanding the state’s history. 

For about 100 years, Missouri voted for nearly every presidential candidate who won, from 1904 to 2004 – the only exception being in 1956 when Missouri voted for Democrat Adlai Stevenson over Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower, a top World War II general from Kansas. 

For a long time, Missouri was a bellwether or swing state. 

“[The] Missouri popular vote went for the person that would go on to become president of the United States,” Zug explained. 

Rost said it’s hard to pinpoint why there is a shift in Missouri voters, but it boils down to tracking conservative values between the Democratic and Republican parties.

“The issues that are concerns for rural Democrat conservative voters become more and more aligned with the Republican Party,” Rost said. “The story is not so much the Democratic Party losing those voters, but how did the Republican Party gain those voters is just as important.”

Former U.S. Sen. Kit Bond aided in the shift after taking over as Missouri’s governor in 1973 and ending a three-decade-long Democratic streak for that office.

Rost said he also influenced many young Republicans to get involved in government as well.

“Once you become a person in office, you can kind of make sure that other people behind you are kind of slowly getting involved in politics as well,” Rost said.

In recent years, Missouri has held strong as a red state, with Republicans holding a supermajority in the state legislature since 2012. The GOP has held all statewide elected offices since 2023.

“Democrats have a harder and harder time holding on to their share of political influence in the state,” Zug said.

While Democrats might have trouble getting into office and keeping it, Zug said Missourians have passed some liberal policies through ballot measures, like access to abortion, the legalization of recreational marijuana and right-to-work laws.

A measure on the August ballot will ask Missouri voters whether it should be harder to enact policy through referenda.

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Kayla Day battles but loses to Keys in three sets at Wimbledon

Mike Klan

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – Qualifier Kayla Day pushed veteran Madison Keys to three sets but the Santa Barbara native lost in the first round at Wimbledon 7-6, 4-6, 3-6.

The 26-year old Day was playing in the main draw at Wimbledon for the first time in her career and she showed well, fighting off three set points to eventually win the first set in a tie-breaker.

Day is now 1-2 lifetime against Keys in major tournaments with the win coming at the French Open while losing at the US Open and now Wimbledon.

Keys won the 2025 Australian Open and entered Wimbledon coming off her third Eastbourne title.

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Driver survives after truck rolls into Snake River in Wyoming

Curtis Jackson

ALPINE, Wyo. (KIFI) — A man escaped serious injuries after his truck rolled down an embankment and into the Snake River along U.S. Highway 89 on Monday.

According to the Wyoming Highway Patrol, the driver was heading south in a Ford F-250 when he lost control, crossed into oncoming traffic, struck a car hauler semi, and crashed through a guardrail. The truck then rolled two to three times down the embankment before landing in the river.

Courtesy: WHP

Officials say the driver was wearing a seatbelt, which likely saved his life. He managed to get out of the vehicle before emergency crews arrived and suffered only minor scrapes and bruises.

Courtesy: WHP

The crash occurred near mile marker 124 on U.S. 89, causing traffic delays.

The driver was cited for failing to maintain his lane.

Courtesy: WHP

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‘It’s pretty sad’: Utah’s largest fire likely destroyed iconic ‘Big Tree,’ ranger says

By Carter Williams

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    BEAVER (KSL) — A massive ponderosa pine tree that was a fixture of the Tushar Mountains and a tourism attraction near Beaver appears to have been a victim of the Cottonwood Fire.

“Big Tree” was impacted when the blaze cut through a subdivision last week, burning “probably 95% of the ground” by it, said Jared Whitmer, Beaver district ranger for Fishlake National Forest.

“Typically, you have to have the top third for it to live, so I’m not very hopeful that it will make it. It’s pretty sad. … I’m not expecting that to make it,” he said. Several residents reacted with a mournful sigh when he delivered the “not so good news” during a community meeting about the fire Monday evening.

The tree was measured at 123 feet tall and 5 feet in width in 2019, making it one of the largest ponderosa pines in the state, St. George News reported in 2022. Located near Mile Marker 11 of state Route 153, it was featured by both Beaver County and Utah tourism officials.

“Deep in the Tushars, you can find an unbelievable tree, that is rightly called the ‘Big Tree.’ This towering ponderosa pine will shock the whole family, and the trail to get there is a fun walk in the woods,” local tourism officials wrote.

It was also a popular field trip stop for elementary school students, Whitmer noted. He added that the fire wiped out over a half-dozen active timber sale sites, and some trees will likely be cut for safety when the area eventually reopens.

The region likely lost “40 to 50 years” of forest timbering, along with livestock, wildlife and recreational opportunities, Rep. Carl Albrecht, R-Richfield, said last week. Initial planning for post-fire rehabilitation is also underway amid monsoonal flooding risks, said Jamie Barnes, director of the Utah Division of Fire, Forestry and State Lands, and the state’s forester.

U.S. Forest Service leaders toured the site on Monday, as the Forest Service begins planning on a multiyear recovery and reforestation process that will begin whenever the fire is out, Whitmer said on Monday. That will include replanting many different species.

It’s still unclear what sparked the fire, which has now burned almost 94,000 acres, but he said the fire did start approximately 5 miles into the canyon outside of Beaver. About 150 structures are believed to have been lost in the fire, fire officials also said in Monday’s meeting.

Another 130 structures are believed to have survived the fire, based on initial assessments. Gov. Spencer Cox said it will likely be one of the state’s costliest fires in terms of damage.

The fire is now 4% contained.

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.

Human chain formed to rescue Kansas deputy after patrol vehicle becomes submerged in floodwaters

By Kate Devine

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    WELLINGTON, Kan. (KAKE) — Sumner County officials are urging drivers to obey road closure signs after a deadly flooding incident over the weekend left one person dead and a sheriff’s patrol vehicle submerged.

Authorities said the incident happened Saturday afternoon along South Oliver Road near Wellington after two drivers went around road closure barricades and entered floodwaters.

According to the Sumner County Sheriff’s Office, one vehicle ended up in the east ditch, while another was swept into fast-moving water on the west side of the road.

The driver of the vehicle in the east ditch was able to get out without assistance.

Wellington Fire/EMS Lt. Bradley Robinson said crews were initially dispatched for two submerged vehicles.

“Saturday, the 27th, we were dispatched to the 600 block of South Oliver Road in Wellington for a vehicle submersion,” Robinson said. “While en route, we were advised that there were actually two vehicles submerged in the water. When we arrived, we saw one vehicle in the east ditch and one vehicle in the west ditch.”

While emergency crews were responding, a Sumner County Sheriff’s deputy’s patrol SUV hydroplaned into the floodwaters and became submerged.

“We actually were able to watch the sheriff’s deputy’s vehicle become completely submerged in the floodwater,” Robinson said. “It was definitely a bit of a shock.”

Undersheriff Mike Westmoreland said two deputies formed a human chain to rescue the deputy from the water before continuing to help with the original emergency.

“The two deputies that were with him formed a human chain and were able to get him out of the water,” Westmoreland said.

Emergency crews were unable to immediately search for the missing driver because of the dangerous conditions.

“The water was moving too fast, and it was too deep,” Robinson said. “We decided to suspend search efforts on Saturday.”

After water levels receded Sunday, crews resumed the search with help from the Kansas Highway Patrol.

Robinson said a helicopter located the victim about a quarter mile from where the vehicle entered the water.

Westmoreland said the tragedy was preventable.

“It’s always tragic. It was very preventable. It wouldn’t have happened if people obeyed the road closed signs,” he said.

Officials said both drivers had gone around road closure barricades before entering the flooded roadway.

Westmoreland urged drivers to avoid flooded roads, saying the extra time it takes to find another route is worth it.

“To the family and friends, we’re sorry for their loss,” he said. “To other drivers, just please pay attention to the road closed signs. It’s not worth it. That few extra minutes to find another route is what you need to do. You’re putting yourself in danger, and you’re putting the first responders.”

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Gasconade County man accused of killing man living in his garage, dumping body in river

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Gasconade County man was charged last week after investigators accused him of killing a man who had been living in his garage in 2018.

Daniel W. Russell was charged Thursday with first-degree murder, abandonment of a corpse and evidence tampering. The case had been sealed until this week.

The Gasconade County Sheriff’s Office said on Monday that Russell has been arrested in eastern Missouri in the death of Michael A. Graham of Georgia. Graham’s remains were found in a plastic barrel lodged next to a boat ramp at the river access in Gasconade in early 2019, a few months after he was reported missing. Investigators later confirmed the remains were those of Graham.

A probable cause statement says a witness told investigators that Russell enlisted their help to move a foul-smelling barrel from his garage in September 2018. Russell allegedly told the witness that he killed Graham and put him in the barrel with concrete.

Missouri State Highway Patrol divers found the barrel in April 2019, and a chunk of the concrete in the barrel matched concrete found in Russell’s garage, according to the statement.

The witness also allegedly told investigators that Russell’s wife said she had seen Graham dead, apparently struck in the head with an object.

Activity on Graham’s social media account stopped in May 2018, and changes emerged in spending patterns associated with his Social Security checks, the statement says. Investigators allegedly traced the spending back to Russell and his family.

The victim’s personal belongings were found during a search of Russell’s residence, according to the statement.

Russell denied having a part in Graham’s death when questioned, saying Graham had driven away and had not returned, according to the statement.

Russell’s arraignment is set for Wednesday morning.

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