Wyoming
Casper Helps Its Own – Multiple Good Samaritans Help Drivers Get Unstuck From the Snow

Casper was confronted with one more snow storm from Mom Nature this weekend, as each Sunday and Monday produced a number of inches of snow.
However, simply because the snow falls, that does not imply that the town can simply shut down. Folks have locations to be, in order that they scraped off their automobiles, turned on the defrost, and made the lengthy, lengthy journey to no matter vacation spot awaited them.
Inevitably, it took about twenty seconds till someone bought caught. After which one other individual bought caught. And one other. And one other. Some autos are made for the snow and a few should not. Generally, folks get caught within the parts.
In these circumstances, they need to depend on the kindness of strangers. Which is precisely what occurred to some Casper residents over the previous few days.
Derrick Lacey was driving on South McKinley road when his automotive bought caught in a ditch. It will have been straightforward for motorists to only cross him by and let him fend for himself. However they did not try this. Nicely, some did. However then, a household stopped to assist him out. After which, one other lady supplied her help as properly.
“Nicely after I went into the ditch I used to be very aggravated,” Lacey informed K2 Radio Information. “And with each passing car I slowly began to get somewhat extra aggravated resulting from being stranded. When this household stopped by asking if I used to be all proper or if I had a experience or wanted a experience, I felt relieved in a method. Once I informed them I wanted to get my car house and did not wish to go away my automotive stranded, the household informed me that they’d flip round and drive house to get a tow rope to drag me out.”
That household weren’t the one ones to cease and assist, both.
“As soon as they bought again and had been about to hook me up, one other girl handed by and supplied a shovel, then pulled ahead to warn different autos as I used to be being pulled out,” Lacey stated. “I truthfully felt completely happy and relieved {that a} great household and that candy lady taking their outing of their day to assist me. And if i may see them once more, I would thank them and provides them a hug. I would thank them for being beneficiant sufficient to take time to assist an entire stranger.”
It was a workforce effort and it meant quite a bit to Lacey. His wasn’t the one story to return out of the previous few days, both.
And there was this story, as properly.
These had been just some of the circumstances the place folks helped folks. And it confirmed how a lot Casper tries to care for its personal; even when it is chilly, even when it is windy. Even when persons are attempting to get house as rapidly as they’ll. These are all examples of what makes Casper nice and, when the mud settles, when the snow clears – these are the issues folks will keep in mind.
Winter Journey In Wyoming

Wyoming
USDA ends grant program that helped the Food Bank of Wyoming partner with local producers – KHOL 89.1 FM

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Back in 2023, the Food Bank of Wyoming received over half a million dollars of funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program (LFPA). The money helped buy food from small-scale Wyoming producers and distribute it to folks in need across the state.
But the agency recently announced that it’s sunsetting the program. No more funding will be available after the current two-year grant cycle ends in July this summer.
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According to Food Bank of Wyoming Executive Director Jill Stillwagon, the grant money has gone toward purchasing and distributing about 200,000 pounds of food from Wyoming ranchers and growers since 2023. That includes beef, beans, grains, oats and produce like cucumbers, carrots, onions and peppers.
“ We were hoping we’d have the opportunity to apply for the next round, which would’ve started probably in August,” said Stillwagon. “But since we’re no longer able to apply because the program has been terminated, we were definitely disappointed.”
At the end of 2024, the USDA announced that it would invest over a billion dollars into another round of funding for the LFPA program as well as Local Food for Schools programs.
But in a statement to the news outlet Politico, a USDA spokesperson confirmed that continued funding after the end of the current grant cycle “is no longer available and those agreements will be terminated following 60-day notification.”
Stillwagon said the termination of the grant comes at a time when the organization has seen an uptick in people experiencing food insecurity. The Evansville-based nonprofit got groceries to more than 55,000 people and distributed roughly 10 million meals this fiscal year. That’s a 25 percent increase from the number of meals distributed last year.
“ We’re seeing the highest level of food insecurity that we’ve seen in the last ten years,” said Stillwagon. “We know that food insecurity is not decreasing here in Wyoming. It’s only continuing to increase.”
According to Feeding America’s 2024 Map the Meal Gap study, one in seven adults and one in five children in Wyoming are food insecure.
Stillwagon said the grant’s termination also means a loss in revenue for the producers and growers that the Food Bank partnered with for the LFPA program.
“ Supporting local food programs isn’t just about hunger relief, it’s about keeping American farms strong and independent,” she said. “We’re encouraging people to purchase from a local producer or grower in their community, knowing that they still need people to purchase from them.”
Stillwagon said she’s hopeful that new programs will be created under the new administration that accomplish similar goals of addressing food insecurity and supporting local growers. But in the meantime, the Food Bank is talking with potential funders and community members to help fill in the gaps.
“ [This grant] has allowed us to do so many neat things and have an impact on not only growers and producers, but the people here in Wyoming,” said Stillwagon. “We’re continuing to advocate for programs and advocate for Wyoming people that are facing hunger to help raise those dollars to continue our mission.”
Looking forward, the Food Bank hopes to add stops to its FRESH Express Route in Albany, Carbon and Goshen Counties. That expansion will bring the program to every county in Wyoming, which delivers fresh produce throughout the state. The organization just delivered its millionth pound of produce using the route this month after launching in 2023.
Wyoming
Kemmerer balks at immigration jail as private prisons eye southwest Wyoming, again – WyoFile

The private prison industry has again come knocking in southwestern Wyoming, pitching the for-profit detention of immigrants as a potential boon for the region’s transitioning economy.
But unlike during President Donald Trump’s first term, this time the corporations don’t seem to be finding a foothold.
Last week, a company called Sabot Consulting pitched the Kemmerer City Council, and a packed room of townspeople, on the construction of a 900-bed jail to hold immigrants detained by U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement.
Construction of the facility would have been paid for by the city through a bond issuance, two council members told WyoFile. Kemmerer would have owned the jail, and a third entity — an Alaskan Native corporation that is heavily invested in the private immigration detention business, including a controversial encampment in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba — would have staffed it through a contract with the federal government.
Sabot’s role was to work with the city, ICE and the Alaskan corporation, Akima, to bring the project to fruition. The jail would have brought both high-paying jobs and revenues to Kemmerer, Sabot cofounder Darren Chiappinelli told the city council.
But the proposal got a poor reception from the public, and the council has no plans to pursue it, the two council members told WyoFile.
“There’s no interest among council members or even the majority of our constituents to keep it on our plate,” Kemmerer Mayor Robert Bowen said, describing the community reaction as “overwhelmingly ‘no.’” Council member Bill Ellis also told WyoFile the city wasn’t interested.
“We said ‘We can’t do it, and we don’t want it,’” he said.
ICE has put out notice to private prison companies that it is seeking an 850-950 bed facility within a two-hour drive of the Salt Lake City airport, according to a Facebook stream of the presentation that a Sabot Consulting official made to the Kemmerer council.
Though the proposal came as President Trump does everything in his power to deport immigrants — both those here without documentation and increasingly those with it — the latest quest for large numbers of holding cells near Salt Lake City stretches back to former President Joe Biden’s administration.
Promoters of the project first contacted the city last May, well before November’s election swept Trump back into office, Kemmerer City Administrator Brian Muir told WyoFile.
Representatives for Sabot Consulting did not respond to messages from WyoFile seeking comment. It’s unclear if the company is pitching other Wyoming communities on the immigration jail idea. An elected official in nearby Uinta County, where Evanston saw years of divisive debate over for-profit prison companies’ proposals from 2017 into 2020, told WyoFile the county commission had recently received outreach from a company he believed was also Sabot.
But Uinta County Commissioner Mark Anderson said this time around, his board is also choosing not to pursue the idea.
The reluctance to engage with the private prison company comes even as Wyoming’s elected officials, including legislators and many county sheriffs, are moving the state in line with Trump’s deportation agenda.
Kemmerer is the county seat of Lincoln County, where voters, as they did statewide, backed Trump by a large margin. Nearly 83% of the 10,580 Lincoln County residents who cast a vote for president in November chose to send Trump, with his campaign promises of mass deportation, back to the White House. But ideological support for more detainments and deportations doesn’t make a large immigration jail an automatic fit for the coal town, which is in the midst of an ongoing economic transition, the council members said.
Trona mine expansions, carbon dioxide storage projects and a $4 billion innovative nuclear power project have been driving a construction boom in southwestern Wyoming. Kemmerer in particular is benefitting from the nuclear plant, a project of Microsoft-founding billionaire Bill Gates, as its coal industry continues to contract.
Gates visited Kemmerer in June for a groundbreaking ceremony on the project, which received its construction permit in January and is slated to be generating electricity in 2030.
Amid those developments, getting into the private prison industry isn’t needed in Kemmerer and could even be counterproductive, Bowen said.
“It’s not a bad thing,” Bowen said of Trump’s immigration initiatives, but the jail “is not the right fit for our community.”
He wondered if Gates would have pursued his energy project in Kemmerer if it was known as the host of a large immigration jail. Though the Trump administration is determined to deport growing numbers of people, Bowen also noted that tech billionaire Elon Musk and the DOGE initiative are gutting government contracts, raising questions about the federal government’s reliability as a business partner.
Since Kemmerer would have owned the facility, the city would have been responsible for making it pay for itself were a contract with ICE to change or dry up. He and Ellis both said they feared a day where the city was hunting for inmates of any kind to fill its big jail.
“The risk versus reward wasn’t really there for us,” Bowen said, “not in a community of our size.”
Evanston saw turmoil, then abandonment
During the first Trump administration, first one and then another large corporation pushed for an immigration jail in Evanston, a community of about 12,000 people about 50 minutes southwest of Kemmerer. Over three years, the idea drove local controversy, before the companies ultimately walked away from the idea. Management Training Corporation, a private prison company, first brought the idea to Evanston in summer 2017, proposing Uinta County use a county-owned property near Bear River State Park to build the jail.
At the time, ICE was seeking 500 beds in the area. In 2019, however, the agency doubled the size of its request, to 1,000 beds.
The proposal spurred contentious public hearings and drove a bitter divide in Evanston. Opponents accused Uinta County public officials of steamrolling them and operating in the shadows. Though the decision remained local, both the Wyoming Legislature and candidates during the bitter 2018 gubernatorial primary campaign debated the idea.

Local proponents of the private prison meanwhile suggested outside influences were keeping a possible boon from the economically struggling town. The American Civil Liberties Union of Wyoming threatened litigation to force state-level elected officials to weigh in, while local and statewide activists coalesced into a group called WyoSayNo to oppose the project.
In summer 2019, Management Training Corporation abruptly, and quietly, walked away from the idea it had pushed for two years. CoreCivic, another large and controversial, private prison corporation, stepped into the void, and pushed the project further, to the point of submitting environmental review documents to the federal government. The Uinta County Commission in January 2020 passed a resolution to sell CoreCivic the land it needed once the company had secured an ICE contract. But in April of that year, CoreCivic too walked away, without offering any detailed reason why.

Akima, the company Sabot’s representative cited as its partner on the proposal for Kemmerer, is another major player in the lucrative private prison industry. Akima is a subsidiary of the Nana Regional Corporation, one of 13 regional Alaskan Native corporations. Such companies pay dividends to indigenous Alaskans but are not staffed solely by Native Americans. Subsidiaries of the corporations like Akima are effective at securing government contracts as minority-owned businesses, according to a report in The Guardian.
Akima’s detention centers have been faulted by federal auditors and advocates for poor conditions and civil rights violations, The Guardian reported.
It was Uinta County and Evanston officials who first directed the latest bid for a southwestern Wyoming immigration jail to Kemmerer, city manager Muir told WyoFile.
During the previous effort in Evanston, the Uinta County Commission was staunchly supportive of the project, despite hard lessons from other communities that bet on private prisons and the often rancorous local opposition.
But the ultimate abandonment of the idea by two consecutive companies left a bad taste behind, commissioner Anderson told WyoFile. “All the public hearings, all of these promises of jobs and then these companies pulling out,” he said, “it’s just been so inconsistent that the appetite for it is just not there right now.”
Anderson had received a voicemail in recent months from one of the private prison companies, and though he did not have the message at hand when he spoke with WyoFile by phone Wednesday, he said he believed it to have been Sabot. But it didn’t really matter which company had reached out.
“I haven’t even returned the phone call,” he said.
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Wyoming
Don Day's Wyoming Weather Forecast: Monday, March 24, 2025

Mostly to partly sunny in much of Wyoming on Monday with clouds, chance for rain and snow in a few areas. Breezy. Highs from the low 40s to the upper 60s. Lows from the mid 20s to the low 40s.
Central:
Casper: Mostly sunny and windy today with a high near 61 and wind gusts as high as 43 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 41 and wind gusts as high as 32 mph.
Lander: Mostly sunny and breezy today with a high near 58 and wind gusts as high as 26 mph. Partly cloudy overnight with a low near 37 and wind gusts as high as 21 mph.
Shoshoni: Mostly sunny and breezy today with a high near 64 and wind gusts as high as 37 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 34 and wind gusts as high as 34 mph.
Southwest:
Evanston: Mostly sunny today with a high near 58 and mostly clear overnight with a low near 28.
Rock Springs: Mostly sunny and breezy today with a high near 55 and wind gusts as high as 32 mph. Mostly clear and breezy overnight with a low near 34 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph.
Cokeville: Partly sunny today with a high near 43 and partly cloudy overnight with a low near 27.
Western Wyoming:
Pinedale: Mostly cloudy today with a high near 42 and mostly cloudy overnight with a low near 27.
Afton: Slight chance of rain before 9 a.m., mostly cloudy today with a high near 41 and partly cloudy overnight with a low near 31.
La Barge: Mostly sunny and breezy today with a high near 49 and wind gusts as high as 24 mph. Partly cloudy overnight with a low near 30 and wind gusts as high as 20 mph.
Northwest:
Dubois: Mostly sunny and windy today with a high near 48 and wind gusts as high as 44 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 37 and wind gusts as high as 34 mph.
Jackson: Partly sunny today with a high near 46 and mostly cloudy overnight with a low near 33.
Old Faithful in Yellowstone National Park: Chance of snow then rain, mostly cloudy today with a high near 44 and wind gusts as high as 20 mph. Partly cloudy overnight with a low near 29.
Bighorn Basin:
Thermopolis: Mostly sunny and breezy today with a high near 64 and wind gusts as high as 32 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 37 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph.
Cody: Partly sunny and windy today with a high near 57 and wind gusts as high as 41 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 41 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph.
Powell: Partly sunny and breezy today with a high near 62 and wind gusts as high as 21 mph. Partly cloudy overnight with a low near 38.
North Central:
Buffalo: Partly sunny and breezy today with a high near 54 and wind gusts as high as 25 mph. Mostly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 42 and wind gusts as high as 24 mph.
Sheridan: Slight chance of rain, mostly cloudy today with a high near 60 and wind gusts as high as 38 mph. Mostly cloudy overnight with a low near 37 and wind from 17-22 mph.
Clearmont: Slight chance of rain after 3 p.m., otherwise partly sunny today with a high near 57 and morning wind from 16-26 mph. Mostly cloudy overnight with a low near 37 and wind from 18-23 mph.
Northeast:
Gillette: Slight chance of rain, mostly cloudy and breezy today with a high near 54 and wind gusts as high as 31 mph. Mostly cloudy overnight with a low near 41 and wind gusts as high as 28 mph.
Newcastle: Chance of snow then rain, mostly cloudy and breezy today with a high near 51 and wind gusts as high as 34 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 40 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph.
Sundance: Chance of snow then rain, mostly cloudy today with a high near 48 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph. Mostly cloudy overnight with a slight chance of rain before 9 p.m., a low near 37 and wind gusts as high as 25 mph.
Eastern Plains:
Torrington: Mostly sunny and breezy today with a high near 68 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 37 and wind from 15-20 mph.
Douglas: Mostly sunny and windy today with a high near 65 and wind gusts as high as 45 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 36 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph.
Guernsey: Mostly sunny and breezy today with a high near 68 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 37 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph.
Southeast:
Cheyenne: High wind watch until 3 p.m. today. Sunny and windy today with a high near 62 and wind gusts as high as 45 mph. Mostly clear and breezy overnight with a low near 37 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph.
Laramie: Mostly sunny and windy today with a high near 56 and wind gusts as high as 40 mph. Mostly clear and blustery overnight with a low near 31 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph.
Pine Bluffs: Mostly sunny and windy today with a high near 67 and wind gusts as high as 45 mph. Partly cloudy and breezy overnight with a low near 37 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph.
South Central:
Rawlins: Mostly sunny and windy today with a high near 58 and wind gusts as high as 45 mph. Mostly clear and breezy overnight with a low near 34 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph.
Saratoga: Partly sunny and breezy today with a high near 57 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph. Partly cloudy and blustery overnight with a low near 31 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph.
Wamsutter: Mostly sunny and windy today with a high near 54 and wind gusts as high as 38 mph. Mostly clear and blustery overnight with a low near 31 and wind gusts as high as 31 mph.
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