Midwest
Nebraska five-year-old dies in hot SUV after police say he was left alone for 'extended period of time'
A Nebraska foster mother has been arrested following a hot-vehicle death involving a five-year-old child, who police say had been left unattended in an SUV for an “extended period of time.”
Juanita Pinon, 40, is facing a charge of child abuse by neglect, resulting in death, after the incident that allegedly unfolded in Omaha on Wednesday, according to the city’s police department.
“Omaha Police Officers were called to 3025 N 93rd Street at approximately 5:11 pm on Wednesday July 10, 2024, for an unresponsive child,” police said in a statement. “The 5-year-old child was located inside of a vehicle and transported to the hospital by medics where the child was pronounced deceased.
“At this time, it appears that the child was left unattended inside of a vehicle for an extended period of time,” police added.
MOTORCYCLIST DIES AT DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK, ANOTHER HOSPITALIZED AMID TRIPLE-DIGIT HEAT
Juanita Pinon has been charged with child abuse by neglect, resulting in death, following the incident on Wednesday, July 10. (Omaha Police Department)
The temperature in Omaha peaked at 86 degrees on Wednesday before the child was found, the Associated Press reported.
It was the tenth hot-car-death in the U.S. this year, according to data from Kids and Car Safety.
CHILD HOT CAR DEATH PUSHES PARENTS WHO LOST DAUGHTER TO SOUND ALARM ABOUT ‘PREVENTABLE TRAGEDY’
Omaha police investigate the death of a five-year-old found in a hot vehicle near 93rd and Binney Streets in Omaha, Nebraska, on Wednesday, July 10. (Chris Machian/Omaha World-Herald via AP)
The day before, in Marana, Arizona, just outside of Tucson, a two-year-old girl died after being left alone in a vehicle.
“Initial information revealed the father of the 2 year-old girl arrived home while she was asleep in the vehicle. The father left the vehicle on and running in the driveway, with the air conditioning on and child inside,” the Marana Police Department said.
“He then went inside the residence. The mother was not initially home, but shortly after she arrived, the child was discovered in the vehicle, which was no longer running and the air conditioning was off,” police added.
Police in Omaha say the child had been left in the car for an “extended period of time.” (Chris Machian/Omaha World-Herald via AP)
The high temperature in Marana on Tuesday was 111 degrees, according to Fox10 Phoenix.
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South Dakota
South Dakota Property Tax Refund Program: Do You Qualify?
AARP South Dakota works to help individuals 50-plus make sure their money lives as long as they do.
That is why we fight for measures to help provide financial security, like the South Dakota Property and Sales Tax Refund Program. Each year during the legislative session, we proudly advocate for funding to keep this program available for older adults with low income and people with disabilities.
2026 Program Eligibility:
- Be a South Dakota resident during all of 2025;
- Be 65 years old on or before January 1, 2025, or disabled at any time during 2025; and
- Live alone and have a yearly income of $17,215 or less OR live in a household whose members’ combined income is $23,265 or less.
Property taxes are the single most burdensome tax for low-income and older homeowners. Many of our state’s elderly citizens have lived in their homes for generations. As their property values have appreciated, so have their property taxes. Plus, older adults often live on fixed incomes and cannot afford the yearly increases in their property taxes while meeting their basic needs for food, medicine and utilities.
AARP South Dakota advocates for you – helping you take advantage of property tax refund programs that can save you money and help you stay in your home longer.
The deadline to apply for South Dakota’s program is July 1, 2026.
Resources:
Read the South Dakota Department of Revenue’s Frequently Asked Questions
Wisconsin
PAWS Chicago welcomes 25 beagles rescued from controversial Wisconsin research breeder
A better life is in sight for dozens of dogs.
PAWS Chicago welcomed 25 beagles from a massive rescue operation on Saturday.
Last week, more than a thousand dogs were rescued from Ridglan Farms in Blue Mounds, Wisconsin, after weeks of protests over their treatment of the dogs. Ridglan Farms agreed to sell 1,500 of the facility’s roughly 2,000 beagles, which were then transferred to rescue organizations across the country, including PAWS Chicago.
Celene Mielcarek, PAWS Chicago chief program officer, explained what’s next for the dogs as they begin their new lives.
“These beagles have lived their lives in isolation. They’ve lived their lives in cages inside. We’re going to make sure that they are healthy. They’re each going to get tucked in by a volunteer into warm bedding. They’re each going to get a yummy dinner tonight, and they’re going to start that new chapter of their life,” she said.
She says it will take some time for the beagles to get used to being dogs and understanding what it’s like to live in a home. To help with that, they will be sent to experienced foster homes that will help them understand human connection.
Once the beagles are ready, they’ll head to the PAWS Chicago Lincoln Park adoption center to meet their forever family.
Detroit, MI
Detroit school district to showcase student stars at Fox Theatre
Jaelen Reaves is well-prepared to study vocal music starting this fall at Oakland University.
And the reason why will be on display this week at Detroit’s Fox Theatre.
“An Evening of Fine Arts,” a free show taking place on Wednesday, May 6, is the Detroit Public Schools Community District’s 57th showcase of performing and visual arts. Some 760 students from 14 schools will take part in the presentation, which includes 27 stage performances and 26 works on display in the Fox’s Grand Lobby.
And for students such as Reaves, who attends the Detroit School of Arts, it’s a chance to take a step towards a career on a stage that’s hosted showbusiness legends they’ve looked up to.
“It’s like, wow, because I know people like Patti LaBelle and Chaka Khan and so many others have performed there,” says Reaves, 18, a vocal soprano who will perform with the DSA Lady Achievers and Concert Choir on Wednesday. “The fact that they sang on that stage and I’m about to sing on that stage is crazy. Just going to the Fox to see (a performance) is a privilege; for me to be performing on that stage is really an honor.
“The fact I have the opportunity to showcase my talent and what we represent here (at DSA). If I was in another school, I would never have had this opportunity. I definitely don’t take it for granted.”
Other performances during the night will come from the district’s harp and vocal ensemble, which recently celebrated its 100th anniversary and is the oldest such program in the country, and a selection of choirs, jazz bands, orchestras and theater programs.
“(The evening) spotlights the voices of our students in the highest visual and performing arts programs, district-wide,” says Andrew McGuire, deputy executive director of fine and performing arts for DPSCD. “When our students are stepping on the stage, they’re not only stepping into a legacy, they’re also stepping into the future as performers — as actors, as singers and all of that.”
The evening also demonstrates DCSPD’s continuing commitment to arts education at a time when many districts nationwide have severely limited or completely curtailed similar curriculum.
“We have a whole-child commitment,” McGuire explains, “which has meant the rebuilding and revitalization of fine and performing arts (education) district-wide. And DSA is not the only space where artists exist. All 106 schools have fine and performing arts, with most schools having two or more (programs) in them. It’s really exciting that in an age when there’s so much talk about pulling back, restricting and cutting, that’s not in our narrative at DPSCD. We’re proud of that.”
Reaves is certainly emblematic of the district’s effectiveness. Raised in an artistic family, as well as singing in church, she became interested in classical singing, but plans to study a broad array of styles at Oakland. “I just want to be a solo performer who has every single (style) under my belt,” she says. “I don’t want to just sing one type of genre. I would love to go around the world singing all types of things
“I know that singing, for me, is not a hobby. It’s something that’s in my blood. I can’t do anything but sing every day. So I want to make the best of it.”
The Detroit Public Schools Community District’s “An Evening of Fine Arts” takes place at 6 p.m. Wednesday, May 6, at the Fox Theatre, 2211 Woodward Ave., Detroit. Admission is free, but tickets are required. 313-471-7000 or 313Presents.com.
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