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False 'SWATTING' call prompts law enforcement response in Wyoming on Christmas

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False 'SWATTING' call prompts law enforcement response in Wyoming on Christmas


The Wyoming Police Department said a bogus 911 call resulted in multiple police agencies and sheriff departments responding to a home on Christmas Day.

Police say around 11:20 a.m. Monday, a Chisago County dispatcher took a call from a man claiming he was going to harm his mother before the sound of gunshots was heard on the call.

The caller then gave an address on Pioneer Road, where officers and deputies from Lakes Area, North Branch, Forest Lake, Chisago County and Washington County were sent.

Law enforcement then realized no one was in danger and no one at the home called the police.

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Authorities then confirmed the initial 911 call was a SWATTING call and are working to determine if anyone can be criminally charged for the fraudulent call.



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Wyoming

Landspout Spotted in Southeast Wyoming Amid Severe Storm Watch

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Landspout Spotted in Southeast Wyoming Amid Severe Storm Watch


A landspout was spotted in southeast Wyoming on Thursday, June 20, as severe weather moved across the region. This footage was captured by X user @Wx_Intercepts, who said they filmed it near Hawk Springs late Thursday afternoon. A severe thunderstorm watch was issued for parts of Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska and South Dakota until Thursday evening, according to the National Weather Service. Credit: @Wx_Intercepts via Storyful



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Wyoming Author Looks to 'Save College Football From Itself'

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Wyoming Author Looks to 'Save College Football From Itself'


LARAMIE — Is college football about the game or only money?

Though that question seems rhetorical, first-time author and Wyoming native, Jon Deryck, poses it anyway in his new book: Rekatsi: Saving College Football From Itself.

“Year upon year college football is dying at the hands of charlatans wanting to milk it for whatever it is worth,” Deryck said. “If it stays on its present course, casual football fans — and even college football diehards and the talking heads on ESPN — may find that the sport has lost its soul. College football in 2024, more than any other time in history, is driven by unadulterated greed.

“Greed, while always present in the past, is eating up the sport like a swarm of
locusts.”

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Deryck gathered more than a hundred years of data, analyzed all the moves being made, along with the dominoes that preceded. Beyond examining the failures of the past, Rekatsi offers up realistic solutions to save college football before it destroys itself.

This 180-page publication breaks it all down, from practice limits to officiating to transfer rules for coaches and players to officiating. Rekatsi touches on conference realignment, preserving regional rivalries, television revenue, Name, Imagine and Likeness (NIL), scheduling, postseason play and so much more.

Rekatsi can be found HERE on Amazon, in paperback or eBook.

Jon Deryck is a college football expert, rookie author and a blue-collar technical
tradesman. For more information, please email Jon at rekatsi1@gmail.com or on X @rekatsi.

Amazon review of the book Rekatsi:

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“I agree with the author that college football has to make some changes before it goes over the cliff. This huge money machine is riding the back of young athletes and the regulations vary by conference. I thought some of the author’s suggestions – like regulating sports hours – were great. Others would require so much oversight that they’re not really viable without massive systemic change. Overall an interesting read and some good stuff inside that should be taken seriously.

University of Wyoming’s Top 50 Football Players

The rules are simple: What was the player’s impact while in Laramie? That means NFL stats, draft status or any other accolade earned outside of UW is irrelevant when it comes to this list.

This isn’t a one-man job. This task called for a panel of experts. Joining 7220’s Cody Tucker are Robert GagliardiJared NewlandRyan Thorburn, and Kevin McKinney.

We all compiled our own list of 50 and let computer averages do the work. Think BCS — only we hope this catalog is fairer.

Don’t agree with a selection? Feel free to sound off on our Twitter: @7220sports – #Top50UWFB

Gallery Credit: 7220Sports.com

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– University of Wyoming’s Top 50 Football Players





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Opinion: Wyoming road failure reveals a housing crisis

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Opinion: Wyoming road failure reveals a housing crisis


Now that the funnel that allows Jackson to prosper has been blocked, we can see more clearly than ever that our current model — housing the rich in one town, workers in another — is not sustainable.

(Wyoming Department of Transportation) Teton Pass after road collapse on June 12, 2024.

I live in Victor, Idaho — one of Jackson, Wyoming’s, bedroom communities. Every day, roughly 3,400 Idaho residents drive over Teton Pass to work in Jackson. Only about 11,000 of us live on this side of the pass — 2,000 in Victor — so commuters make up a significant portion of our population.

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Commuters include nurses, teachers, police, waiters, cooks, motel housekeepers, construction workers, landscapers, fishing and mountain guides, and salespeople. All are Jackson Hole’s economic lifeline.

On June 8, the highway over Teton Pass failed catastrophically, part of it collapsing into an impassable cliff of rubble. The failure made national news, and now you can spend hours on Facebook reading everyone’s opinions about what should be done. Calls for building a tunnel through the mountain are resurfacing, although the tunnel that was previously proposed would not have bypassed the section of road that failed.

The Teton Pass highway is vital to Jackson’s functioning as a tourist mecca. In good conditions, driving the 24 miles from Victor to Jackson over Teton Pass takes about 35 minutes. Now, a detour means that workers have to drive roughly 85 miles to get to their jobs, adding about two hours to the daily commute.

Jackson town councilor and economist Jonathan Schechter estimates the road closure is costing the local economy roughly $600,000 a day, and he says that’s a conservative figure. Using IRS numbers for mileage reimbursement, the cost for drivers is $88 a day, while the mean hourly wage in Jackson is $40. Not only has the commute become nearly four times longer, but workers also have to put in an extra two hours to cover the cost of that drive time.

Jackson residents have responded to the crisis with compassion and financial aid. Homeowners have opened their houses in Jackson, and many are allowing people to pitch tents in their yards. Businesses are offering parking lot space for RVs. Teton County, Wyoming, eased its temporary shelter regulations, and the daily commuter bus altered its schedule and waived its fees until June 30 to accommodate riders. The Teton Valley Community Foundation set up a fund that accepts donations for affected workers. I am sure there are many other services and resources as well.

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But camping in Jackson means you aren’t going home after work. It means you may not see your children, partner or friends for days on end. It means you need to get someone to feed your dog or check in on your cat, horses, gardens or plants. It means you cannot enjoy the natural world — why most of us live here — because you’re driving a car.

Most of us have a love-hate relationship with Teton Pass. There’s an Instagram page called TetonPassholes, dedicated to showing people doing stupid things on the road. Most of the time it’s video clips of truckers ignoring the winter trailer ban; sometimes it’s pictures of people driving recklessly. We snarl and complain, but we still drive the road because it gets us where we need to go.

The average list price for a single-family home in Jackson reached $7.6 million at the end of 2022, according to the Jackson Hole Report. In the first months of 2024, 56 homes were on the market, with only three listed for less than $2 million.

In Victor, Idaho, the median price for homes was $537,000, an asking price that’s not reasonable for most working people. Housing is in short supply in Victor, too.

For years, affordable housing has been a hot-button topic on both sides of the pass, as well as an hour south of Jackson in booming Star Valley. Now that the funnel that allows Jackson to prosper has been blocked, we can see more clearly than ever that our current model — housing the rich in one town, workers in another — is not sustainable.

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Wyoming Department of Transportation has indicated that it hopes to open a temporary bypass around the landslide in as little as two weeks. A long-term solution will undoubtedly take months, if not years.

In the meantime, I hope our community leaders take this as a wake-up call and address the absolute need for workforce housing. A temporary patch will not address the crisis that this road failure has dramatized.

(Writers on the Range) Molly Absolon

Molly Absolon is a contributor to Writers on the Range, writersontherange.org, an independent nonprofit spurring lively conversation about the West. She is a writer in Idaho.

The Salt Lake Tribune is committed to creating a space where Utahns can share ideas, perspectives and solutions that move our state forward. We rely on your insight to do this. Find out how to share your opinion here, and email us at voices@sltrib.com.

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