West
California Christian school shooting wounds 2 boys, 5 and 6; suspected gunman dead
Two boys, ages 5 and 6, were wounded in a shooting at a private California Christian elementary school Wednesday, and the suspected gunman is dead.
Shots rang out at the Feather River Adventist School in Butte County just before 2 p.m., the Butte County Sheriff’s Office said. The school is located near Palermo, roughly 65 miles north of Sacramento, FOX 40 reported.
Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said the suspect, a man, arrived at the school’s campus to meet with the principal to discuss possibly enrolling a student.
Shortly after, the principal heard shots being fired, and school officials determined the boys were shot, Honea said.
MICHIGAN SCHOOL SHOOTER’S MOM WANTS HOUSE ARREST, BACKTRACKS ON REGRETS AS KILLER’S PARENTS FACE SENTENCING
A street view of Feather River School of Seventh-day Adventists, where two students were shot Wednesday in Palermo, Calif. (Google Maps)
The victims were taken to a hospital, one by helicopter. The suspected gunman, who was not identified, is believed to have died from a self-inflicted gunshot.
“This is horribly tragic. It is hard to come up with the words. We’re operating on adrenaline, doing the things that need to be done. … We worked hard to make sure that students are reunified with their parents,” Honea told reporters.
Students were taken to the Oroville Church of the Nazarene, where they will be reunited with their parents.
The suspect is believed to have been dropped off at the school by a gray 4-door sedan that may have been a ride-sharing vehicle, authorities said.
Honea said there was no indication the suspect had any contact with the school until Wednesday, and there didn’t appear to be a relationship between the gunman and the two victims or the school, according to the news outlet.
A spokesperson for the Butte County Sheriff’s Office said two students were shot and wounded Wednesday. (Butte County Sheriff’s Office)
The school serves children K-8 and had a 2022 enrollment of 33 students, according to the school’s website.
The school and the sheriff’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
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Wyoming
Audit spots some errors, but gives Wyoming Business Council passing grade
San Francisco, CA
Lettuce | SF Jazz | Music in San Francisco
A run of late-summer performances brings Lettuce to SFJAZZ, where the Boston-born sextet continues touring its latest album Cook inside Miner Auditorium. Known for expanding from Berklee students into a tightly synchronized funk collective, the band threads together psychedelic grooves, brass-led arrangements, and extended improvisational passages that often stretch their sets into long-form explorations rather than fixed song cycles. Each performance draws on decades of collaboration and individual side work across jazz, pop, and hip-hop, giving the music a layered, studio-to-stage fluidity that rarely settles into repetition. The SFJAZZ setting frames that approach with concert-hall clarity, allowing rhythm sections and horn interplay to unfold with precision even at peak intensity. Across the run, the focus stays on sustained groove and ensemble chemistry, where variation emerges gradually through solos and shifting textures rather than abrupt changes in direction.
Denver, CO
Out-of-order elevator at Denver Housing Authority property leaves disabled tenants looking for answers
Carlos Soto has an added 100 feet and two flights of stairs on every trip to his front door. He says he has to carry his walker every step.
“My whole routine has changed,” Soto said. “I try to not go down as much. If I need groceries or something, I try to hold off and not do it.”
Soto claims the elevator — just steps from his second-floor apartment — has been out of order for over three weeks.
▶️ WATCH: Soto shares the impacts of the out-of-order elevator with Denver7’s Alex Dowd
Out-of-order elevator at DHA property leaves disabled tenants looking for answers
Despite the difficulty, he walks the path three or four times every day.
“I have to take out my dog, so she can go potty and stuff,” he said. “I need to go to the store, get groceries, and I gotta go to work in the morning, and in the afternoon, I gotta come back up.”
Under the Americans with Disabilities Act, landlords must make reasonable accommodations for tenants with disabilities. Colorado’s Safe Housing for Residential Tenants law says owners and landlords have to repair uninhabitable issues within two weeks.
Sen. Tony Exum Sr. — one of the prime sponsors of the bill in 2024 — said a place is “considered uninhabitable when there’s conditions that are unhealthy or unsafe.”
That includes when a disabled tenant is unable to easily or safely access their apartment. However, the landlord must be aware of the issue first. Then, “the onus is on the landlord to make reasonable accommodations to to fix the problem,” Exum said.
KMGH
Are reasonable accommodations being made at Sol Apartments where Soto lives?
Denver7 reached out to Denver Housing Authority — which announced the Sun Valley apartment’s grand opening alongside its partners a little over a year ago — but they said they couldn’t accommodate the request for an interview or statement due to the Fourth of July holiday. They did offer to respond the following week.
DHA employees told Soto in an email that they were “working to resolve the elevator issues.”
The issue, Exum said, is common in apartments.
“There can be an extension [for landlords],” he said “For instance, if they’ve contacted a third party to do the repairs.”
Soto says the housing authority told him they had contacted a third party for repairs, but that they offered no repair timeline or alternative options.
“Maybe make [the building] more accommodating,” Soto said. “Plan A didn’t work, so let’s try Plan B now, and get me up here somehow.”
Under the Safe Housing for Residential Tenants law, landlords are able to move tenants to hotels or nearby properties until the issue is resolved.
Soto says until the elevator is working again, he’s forced to use the stairs or use the elevator and the sky bridge next door, adding even more time to his already long commute.
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