Students swap screens for stories. Dallas ISD book checkouts soar amid state’s first cellphone ban for public schools

By Lacey Beasley

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    DALLAS (KTVT) — Public school districts in Texas are almost one school year into the first statewide cellphone ban, and a North Texas school district is seeing positive impacts.

Dallas ISD officials said that, district-wide, they have seen a significant increase in library book checkouts, which they largely attribute to students no longer having cellphones with them during the school day.

“I started hearing, ‘Oh, I’m so bored. I can’t get on my phone after I do my work or during lunchtime,'” Hillcrest High School librarian Nina Canales said. “Once they lock into these stories, they don’t seem to care about their phones at all.”

From the first day of school to March 31, 2026, the district reported an increase of more than 200,000 additional books checked out compared to the previous year.

A look at the library checkouts for the previous year:

2025-2026 Total Circulation (1st day of school to March 31, 2026) – 1,084,837 2024-2025 Total circulation (1st day of school to March 31, 2025) – 872,430

Total library book checkout increase: 24.35%

At Dallas ISD’s Hillcrest High, students are following this trend.

Canales said there were roughly 500 books checked out in the first nine weeks of the 2024-2025 school year. This school year, that number spiked to about 1,800 books.

“That floored me,” Canales said. “I had to re-do the report again because I was like, ‘What, are you kidding me?'”

Students felt the impact too.

“Now that I’m busy with a bunch of work and college, I don’t find myself missing my phone that much, even at home,” said Yamilet Jimenez, 9th grader.

Passed by the Texas Legislature in 2025, HB 1481 bans public school students from using any personal communication devices, like cellphones, tablets or smart watches.

Lawmakers passed this bill with the goal of keeping students focused during the school day.

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.

Jaafar Jackson, members of Jackson 5 appear at special screening of “Michael” in Gary, Indiana

By Jermont Terry

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    GARY, Indiana (WBBM) — A little bit of Hollywood came to Gary, Indiana, on Monday night for a special screening of one of the most highly anticipated films of the year.

A free screening of the Michael Jackson biopic, simply titled “Michael,” brought out residents and the star of the film.

Outside West Side High, the line stretched far. Youngsters and the young at heart were there to represent at the screening of the motion picture biopic, capturing the life of the city’s biggest star.

“Growing up in Gary, I just wanted to come see what they was talking about with this movie. They’ve had so many MJ movies, so maybe this is different,” an attendee said.

This one is different.

Michael’s nephew, Jaafar Jackson, portrays his uncle in his acting debut.

“I really hope they feel the love and the artistry that he had,” Jaafar said.

The movie premiere brings a little bit of Hollywood to Gary. The star of the film and members of the Jackson 5 all walked the red carpet. For the Jackson brothers, it was a return home.

“It’s a pleasure to be back here. This is where it all started, you know, as little kids trying to follow their dream in life,” said Marlon Jackson.

“If you want to do something that’s positive driven and you remain steadfast in that, never quite,” said Jackie Jackson.

Having this premiere at the only high school in Gary was intentional, and city leaders hope youngsters growing up there can recognize that greatness comes from the city. Mayor Eddie Meltoon wants to build on the momentum.

“We’ve been building that relationship with the Jackson family. We have a few things in the cooker,” Melton said. “I’m not going to say what we’re working on, but I would say it’s something I believe the entire community is going to be proud of, especially around the timing of our convention center we’re getting ready to build.”

The Jacksons and Michael are undeniably the gems of Gary, and nephew Jaafar expressed the honor it was to be chosen for this epic role.

“It’s very … surreal. It’s an experience of a lifetime that I’ll never forget, and to be able to tell the story in a cinematic way like this and not only tell it but be here back in Gary, where it all started for them.”

And where the love for Michael and the Jacksons lives on.

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‘They took everything away’: Mom’s SNAP benefits canceled after losing child support

By Manuelita Beck

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    PHOENIX (KNXV) — A Benson mother says she was just following the rules when she reported a change in income: She told the state she was no longer getting child support because her ex-husband had lost his job.

In response, the Arizona agency that administers SNAP canceled benefits for her and her five children.

“Now I have nothing, because their answer was, ‘OK, you’re required by law to tell us when you have a dramatic change in your income.’ My dramatic change was to lose my income,” Kimberly Skolkin told ABC15. “They took everything away.”

Three months later, Skolkin and her children are still without benefits — benefits they qualified for when she was receiving child support.

“I kind of feel like maybe I shouldn’t have reported it, because we were OK with what we were getting and where we were at,” she said. “And instead of it being the same amount, pending an increase, they discontinued my benefits.”

Skolkin and her family are some of the 424,000 Arizonans who have lost their federal food assistance benefits since Congress overhauled the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program last year.

“This number is dishonest,” she said. “This is not what you voted for. This isn’t what I voted for.”

Enrollment in SNAP was fairly steady until Congress passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, a review of data from Arizona’s Department of Economic Security shows.

Enrollment began to slide in August, and the decline soon accelerated. Between September 2025 and February 2026, the number of people receiving benefits dropped by 43%.

Since January 2025, when nearly 1 million Arizonans were on SNAP, enrollment has fallen 47.5%.

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which President Donald Trump signed July 4, 2025, expands work requirements for SNAP and the tax law also requires states to dramatically lower their error rate, the amount of overpayments, underpayments and errors.

DES said it was required to immediately implement several of the changes mandated in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which President Donald Trump signed into law July 4, 2025.

The tax law, also known as H.R. 1, expanded work requirements for SNAP and required states to dramatically lower their error rate, the amount of overpayments, underpayments and miscalculations.

In early September, DES notified people who no longer qualified for an exemption from SNAP’s work requirements. The expanded requirements for able-bodied adults without dependents is responsible for about one-third of the spike in case closures, the agency told ABC15 in a statement.

Arizona’s drop is the largest in the nation, according to a recent report from the nonpartisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

“It is complex,” Gov. Katie Hobbs told reporters April 9. “I don’t think we have one reason that we’re seeing the drop. It’s all of the things.”

DES said it expects the state’s SNAP caseload to level off in the months ahead. And the agency also says other states will see similar drops in cases as they fully implement the federal changes.

Skolkin, the mother in Benson, said she supports SNAP reforms but says what she and other families are going through is not reform.

“I was not about single mothers waiting for months to get approvals when they’ve provided everything that they’ve been asked to provide,” she said. “I was not about firing workers while you’re trying to redo everything.”

DES, which administers SNAP, has been hard hit by federal funding cuts. The agency laid off employees last year, leading to long wait times for SNAP.

Hobbs allocated $7.5 million in temporary funding to DES in December to address long wait times.

“We are trying to do a lot more with a lot less,” she told reporters April 9.

Skolkin has been waiting since January for her benefits to resume after three interviews and submitting 30 documents.

“It’s almost become a part-time job to convince DES that they have everything that they need and to please just make a decision,” she said.

It’s not clear why Skolkin’s change in income led DES to cancel her family’s benefits.

DES is taking steps to lower SNAP’s error rate, but the agency said an overpayment or underpayment alone would not be grounds to close a case.

The agency has said changes related to its efforts to lower the error rate also contributed to the drop in cases, along with normal attrition.

“SNAP is a complex program, requiring extensive information and verification to ensure a family is eligible for assistance,” DES said in a statement. “There are nearly 50 different kinds of errors, which is a testament to the level of expertise we require of our teams and the amount of information that’s required of applicants.”

Arizona’s error rate in fiscal year 2024 was 8.84%. Beginning in fiscal year 2028, states with an error rate of above 6% will hit by penalties that could add up to hundreds of millions of dollars.

“While navigating the complexities of H.R. 1 and evolving federal requirements, our priority continues to be the accurate and timely delivery of benefits to eligible Arizonans,” DES said. “We will continue to refine our processes and leverage resources to reduce errors while maintaining a reliable system for the families we serve.”

Meanwhile, Skolkin is getting by for now, thanks to groceries dropped off by her adult children and food she had made and stored. But that storage will run out eventually, she said, and her family still needs fresh items like produce, butter and milk.

“I’m not too concerned about food right now. I am concerned about food in two months,” she said. “I have five children still at home.”

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.

Neighbor helps find missing woman, loses UTV to a fire after rescue effort

By Jordan Bontke

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    GOODYEAR, Arizona (KNXV) — A Goodyear neighbor helped locate a missing vulnerable woman, but his good deed cost him his off-road vehicle when it caught fire during the rescue.

Scott Stafford was driving his UTV on a Friday night when he noticed people with flashlights searching the Sedella neighborhood in Goodyear.

The pest control business owner stopped and learned the group was looking for a woman who had left an assisted living facility without her phone.

“My dad was diabetic, so I kind of knew what could happen,” Stafford said, noting that he was told that the woman had diabetes and a mental health condition.

Stafford voluntarily joined the search well after sundown. During a search that lasted several evening hours on April 10th, Stafford eventually found the woman sitting by a tree in an unpaved area of the neighborhood.

“I looked over the door, and I said, ‘Hey, are you lost?’ And she said, ‘Yeah,’ and then I said, ‘Guess what? I found you.’ And that’s when my adrenaline went out the window. Like I had drank 13 Red Bulls,” Stafford said.

Stafford helped get the woman to the authorities so she could return to her assisted living facility. While reporting on missing people over the years, investigators have told ABC15 the first 48 hours are the most important when someone goes missing, but this woman was found after about five hours.

Just as the woman was able to get to safety with authorities, Stafford turned back to his UTV to discover it had caught fire. It is unclear how the fire started, and he is working with his insurance company to determine coverage.

After Stafford shared the incident on social media, neighbors started a crowdfunding account to help him replace the destroyed UTV. Stafford said any leftover money will be used to provide free pest control services to someone in need.

“It’s free to be nice,” Stafford said.

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

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‘I was so scared,’ Teen attacked on way home from high school speaks out

By Lillian Donahue

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    PHOENIX (KNXV) — A Phoenix teen is recovering after an assault allegedly involving other high school students as she walked home from the light rail last week.

Phoenix police said they are investigating the incident, which happened near Camelback Road and 19th Avenue on April 8.

Ayane Mefford and her mother, Lucero Orozco, said Mefford rode home from Central High School on the light rail. She said she felt increasingly uncomfortable when multiple teenage boys began following her.

While leaving the Valley Metro stop, Mefford asked a friend to help walk her home.

“We were walking, I’m trying to calm my friend down, because I did see them and I’m like, ‘Just calm down, you know, to keep walking,’” Mefford said. “We’re telling them, ‘just go home’ you know, we don’t want nothing and that’s when everything started going downhill.”

Mefford said she felt a blow to her head before hitting the ground. The whole incident was caught on camera. Her friend ended up in the street.

“I was so scared,” Mefford said. “I was like, oh my God, like, just wanted to go home.”

Orozco said she ran to the area to find her daughter collapsed and seizing. Mefford was taken to the hospital.

“She does need physical therapy. She needs back injections from the trauma of what happened,” Orozco said.

Orozco posted her daughter’s story online. It has gained millions of views worldwide.

“We’re going to get justice. I made the video for awareness,” Orozco said. “It made it to Mexico, New Zealand, Venezuela. Because it’s happening everywhere, not just here, it’s happening everywhere.”

She said her top priority is helping her daughter settle into her “new normal” as she recovers from injuries to her neck and back.

For years, ABC15 has extensively covered teen violence issues across the Valley.

Orozco said she has a message for any teens engaging in violence.

“It’s not worth your future. It’s not worth it,” Orozco said. “There are other ways to handle things. Kids need to know that it’s not okay.”

The Phoenix Union High School District released a statement on Wednesday.

“The Phoenix Union High School District is aware of the off-campus incident allegedly involving students from Central High School. The District will always prioritize the safety and wellbeing of our students and we are fully cooperating with the police investigation into what took place.”

The Valley Metro also saying they’re aware of the incident.

“…we are working with the Phoenix Police Department to support the investigation of an incident that escalated off Valley Metro property. Field Security Officers were deployed in the area at the time and continue to be deployed there.”

An online fundraiser has been created to help with Mefford’s recovery.

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

By Allie Triepke

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    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.

Man pleads guilty to slashing immigration agents’ tire during Home Depot raid, avoids jail time

By Jonathan Ayestas, Daniel Macht

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    SACRAMENTO, California (KCRA) — A Sacramento man pleaded guilty to slashing a U.S. Customs and Border Protection vehicle tire during an immigration raid at a Sacramento-area Home Depot last year.

Jose Manuel Castillo Jr. will avoid jail time as part of a plea agreement.

The U.S. Department of Justice accused Jose Manuel Castillo Jr. of depredation of government property.

On July 17, 2025, masked Border Patrol agents arrested several people at the Home Depot parking lot at 4641 Florin Road. During that operation, the DOJ said Castillo was seen walking toward the rear passenger side of a Border Patrol SUV. Nearby agents later heard a pop and hissing noise and spotted Castillo walking away from the vehicle.

Agents who saw the flattened tire ordered Castillo to stop and ran after him, DOJ said. After pinning him down and taking him into custody, agents found a folding pocketknife officials said was consistent with the width of the hole in the SUV’s tire.

Castillo’s wife, Andrea Castillo, shared video of agents chasing and tackling her husband down before taking him into one of their vans.

Immigrant advocacy group NorCal Resist said Castillo was a volunteer with the organization and was out documenting arrests.

Castillo was sentenced to probation and ordered to pay a $478.89 fine, $478.89 in restitution and a $25 special assessment.

The DOJ previously said that Castillo faced a maximum penalty of one year in prison a $100,000 fine.

“Mr. Castillo was frightened and shocked, as most Americans are, about masked men, dressed anonymously, armed with weapons of war, grabbing and kidnapping people in public based upon the color of their skin,” Castillo’s attorney Mark Reichel said in a statement. “A federal judge had recently ordered that these roving bands must cease their raids, but they defied the Order of the Federal Court. Mr. Castillo, as a private citizen, committed a low level vandalism of a tire. He has never before been accused of any wrongdoing, and is well known as a respected and law abiding man. He still is.”

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Man escapes waist-deep floodwater after rideshare gets stuck under bridge

By CBS 58 Newsroom

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    MILWAUKEE (WDJT) — A Milwaukee man trying to get to work late Wednesday, April 15 ended up wading out of floodwater after a rideshare vehicle got stuck under a bridge near Burleigh and 31st.

Corey Wedgeworth tells CBS 58 that he was headed to his third-shift job when the driver followed a navigation app route into the flooded underpass. Wedgeworth said he warned the driver not to head in that direction after seeing the water ahead, but the driver took that path anyway and became trapped.

Wedgeworth said he got out and made his way through waist-deep water before eventually returning home to change clothes and then heading to work.

He said his experience also left him thinking about Milwaukee families dealing with flooding across the city.

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Woman shares story behind viral video of mama bear wrangling cubs

By Itinease McMiller

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    ASHEVILLE, North Carolina (WLOS) — For the first time, we are hearing from the woman behind a now-viral video showing a mama bear doing something moms everywhere can relate to: trying to wrangle her cubs.

Kristina Rupp said she was driving home on Emma Road in Asheville when traffic suddenly came to a stop.

“I was actually annoyed because traffic was stopped. I thought it was a goose or something,” Rupp said.

But she quickly realized it was a mama bear trying to get one of her cubs out from underneath a car. Rupp grabbed her phone and began recording, capturing the bear’s determined effort to get all of her cubs safely across the road.

Like toddlers, the cubs certainly didn’t make it easy. Every time the mother pulled one to safety, another wandered right back toward danger.

“That’s what was so funny for me. I really empathized with her, and I wanted to help her. That was my instinct, I was like she needs a babysitter,” Rupp said, laughing.

The video has clearly struck a chord, especially with parents. As of April 16, the video has reached 7.3 million views on TikTok, 4.4 million views on Instagram, 4.4 million views on YouTube, and 950,00 views on Facebook. Across all of WLOS’s social media platforms, it has reached a combined 17 million views.

Even though Rupp doesn’t have children of her own, she said her experience as a nanny made the moment instantly relatable.

“They were so sweet. To see this mama bear have this really complex emotion of patience, and then losing it. It was so funny. And they were being so naughty,” she said.

Beyond the laughs, Rupp said the experience left her with a deeper takeaway.

“We’re so lucky they’re still here, as much as they are with us having boomed this area so much,” Rupp said. “And how important it is to keep some areas wild for the bears, for all these animals, so that they don’t end up on the road.”

The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission said encounters like this are becoming more common and is now expanding its “BearWise” program statewide, aimed at helping people safely coexist with bears.

For many viewers, the viral moment serves as both a heartwarming and important reminder that even in the wild, moms have their hands full.

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Arkansas lawmakers review $1 million AI plan to block illegal cellphone use in prisons

By Brett Rains

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    LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas (KHBS, KHOG) — Arkansas lawmakers are considering a $1 million proposal to implement artificial intelligence technology aimed at disabling illegal cellphones in two state prisons during the ongoing fiscal session in Little Rock.

The Department of Corrections is seeking approval to spend $1 million on a pilot program using AI technology to disable illegal cellphones inside the Varner and Cummins prison units. However, some lawmakers believe the department already has the authority to act and could use funds from its existing budget.

“This is a public safety crisis. You know, about one in every four prisoners has access to these illegal cellphones,” one representative said.

House Bill 1079, which appropriates $1 million over the next two years for the program, passed Tuesday’s Joint Budget Committee, but faced questions from lawmakers.

Rep. Dwight Tosh explained the technology’s capabilities. “It doesn’t just suppress the phone. It actually will terminate that inmate from being able to use that phone. And if any information that they sent out before, yeah, I think it’s about 20 minutes. By the time that that system picks it up, you’re able to terminate it. Any text messages or voice messages that are sent out during that 20 minutes can be retrieved,” Tosh said.

Lawmakers also debated the urgency of the issue. “Do you consider this to be like a high or medium or low priority as far as a safety issue?” one senator asked.

Dexter Payne, director of the Arkansas Division of Corrections, responded, “Senator, I personally feel like it’s a high priority.”

Sen. Jonathan Dismang questioned why the department had not acted sooner. “I mean, you may think it’s a high priority, but you’ve never proposed this to the board or anyone else to be able to implement inside your own appropriation and operations. They have the authority to do this today. This is trying to kickstart something that they’ve been unwilling to do up until this point,” Dismang said.

Payne acknowledged the delay, saying, “It’s something that we have wanted to do, we just didn’t have the proper funding to do so.”

Currently, cellphone jamming devices are not allowed in state prisons, but that could change in 2026. The Federal Communications Commission is taking public comments on proposed rule changes that would allow such technology.

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr addressed the issue during a visit to Arkansas last September. Lindsey Wallace, Arkansas secretary of corrections, highlighted the potential benefits of jamming technology. “That would really be the best approach, is if there is a cell phone in there for us to just be able to jam it. But we’ve never been able to do that before, and this is very expensive technology, especially if we were to roll it out to the entire department,” Wallace said.

Sen. Dave Wallace pointed to the scale of the problem in Georgia. “In the state of Georgia, they’ve already confiscated 10,000 illegal phones. The inmates are appealing to the FCC, and the FCC has backed the state up in every one of these 10,000 confiscation investigations,” Wallace said.

The bill passed the Joint Budget Committee with a recommendation for approval by the House and Senate. If the appropriation bill is approved, lawmakers would need to separately approve funding for the trial program.

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