CASPER, Wyo. — “Taken in Casper, Wyoming before the sun rose,” writes photographer Tashina Williams.
Do you have a photo that captures the beauty of Wyoming? Submit it by clicking here and filling out the form, and we may share it!
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (Wyoming Information Now) – The 153rd Airlift Wing had a busy morning, loading C-130s to make sure we’re prepared for this 12 months’s fireplace season.
As soon as once more, the Wyoming Air Nationwide Guard is gearing as much as struggle one other busy forest fireplace season.
On Wednesday, the Wyoming Air Nationwide Guard and the U.S. Forest Companies work collectively to maneuver MAFs or the Modular Airborne Hearth Preventing System items.
The Wyoming 153rd Airlift Wing was getting planes loaded to fly the items to Idaho.
Their annual coaching week is ready to assist qualify crews for a 12 months of fireplace combating.
”It’s a really complicated and dynamic setting, and your crew useful resource administration needs to be on level. We don’t simply choose anybody. Solely the very best get to return and do this and they’re much more fine-tuned to take care of a number of the rigors of the MAFs mission,” mentioned SSgt. Anders Howard, C-130 Loadmaster-153rd Airlift Wing.
Guardsmen will probably be simulating fireplace runs as they maneuver planes and tanks that maintain 3,000 gallons of water or fireplace retardant.
“Together with the rigging, I actually get pleasure from that, and it’s enjoyable to exit to the drop zone and watch all the pieces work out completely,“ mentioned SrA. Kara Jakubsen, Rigman-153rd Airlift Wing.
Solely 4 C-130 items in the whole Airforce do that firefighting mission.
The mission required planes to fly 150 toes off the bottom in smokey and mountainous environments.
” Because the sword and defend for Wyoming, we’re ready for something. Proper now we’re making ready particularly for forest fireplace season, so our MAFs mission is a vital mission it’s essential to us each member out her is part of it,” mentioned SMSgt. Rob Trubia, Superintendent of Public Affairs, 153rd Airlift Wing.
A fundamental crew consists of 6 folks to work the tools and aircraft.
This squadron should log in a minimal of 750 flight hours earlier than they’re thought-about for this mission.
”This is likely one of the coolest missions that we do. It’s probably the most gratifying missions that we do. Final 12 months me and my crew supported the second-largest wildfire in California state historical past. It’s an unimaginable feeling to have the ability to do this and signify the state of Wyoming whereas had been doing it,” mentioned Howard.
It’s an essential and harmful mission, and we’re wishing all of them the very best.
Copyright 2022 Wyoming Information Now. All rights reserved.
LARAMIE, Wyo. — The UND women’s basketball team went into Christmas break by committing a season-high 29 turnovers in a 73-41 loss at Wyoming on Saturday afternoon.
The Fighting Hawks, who were outscored 17-3 in the fourth quarter, dropped to 5-8 overall with two Division I wins.
UND ranks last in the Summit League in turnovers at 17.7 per game. The team is also last in the Summit in assists with 314.
Wyoming, which improved to 6-6, also beat South Dakota by 34 earlier this season.
UND was led by Grafton native Walker Demers, who finished with 13 points. No other Hawk ended with more than six points.
Grand Forks freshman point guard Jocelyn Schiller and sophomore Nevaeh Ferrara Horne both added six points.
Coming off a season-high 25 points against Mayville State, Kiera Pemberton was held to four points on just 2-for-3 shooting against Wyoming. She had six turnovers.
Pemberton, a sophomore from Langley, B.C., had scored in double figures in every other UND game this season.
The Hawks trailed by five after the first quarter and 13 at halftime.
UND cut the lead as close as 10 in the third quarter but trailed by 18 by the end of the frame.
UND was just 2-for-13 from 3-point range with Demers 0-for-4 and reserve Sydney Piekny 1-for-5.
Wyoming committed just 10 turnovers and had 17 assists. Three players finished in double figures, led by Tess Barnes with 16 points.
UND only shot four free throws — all by Demers, who was 3-for-4.
UND starts the post-Christmas schedule on the road, at Omaha on Jan. 2 and at Kansas City on Jan. 4.
The Hawks return home Jan. 9 against Oral Roberts and Jan. 11 against Denver.
Staff reports and local scoreboards from the Grand Forks Herald Sports desk.
CASPER, Wyo. — “Taken in Casper, Wyoming before the sun rose,” writes photographer Tashina Williams.
Do you have a photo that captures the beauty of Wyoming? Submit it by clicking here and filling out the form, and we may share it!
Elder abuse is a growing concern throughout the country. It costs Americans billions of dollars and unfortunately encompasses a wide range of abuses, including physical, psychological and/or sexual harm, in addition to other concerns like neglect and taking advantage of seniors financially.
A new study conducted by personal finance website, WalletHub, recently listed the “States with the Best Elder-Abuse Protections”, and the Cowboy State was ranked in the top 15.
Wyoming was ranked 11th overall on the study.
WalletHub broke down the methodology for the study stating:
To identify where elderly Americans are best protected, WalletHub compared the 50 states and the District of Columbia based on 16 key indicators of elder abuse protection in 3 overall categories. Our data set ranges from each state’s share of all elder abuse complaints to their laws concerning financial elder abuse.
A few of the key metrics illustrate why Wyoming scored so high (including the one that kept us from scoring even higher):
While overall Wyoming is doing considerably better than 80% of the country, there is definitely room for improvement. Considering some of the elderly horror stories that have made it to different news outlets around the state over the last couple of years, it’s nice to see us rising on this list.
Gallery Credit: DJ Nyke
Gallery Credit: DJ Nyke
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
Inside the launch — and future — of ChatGPT
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
Conservative group debuts major ad buy in key senators' states as 'soft appeal' for Hegseth, Gabbard, Patel
Freddie Freeman's World Series walk-off grand slam baseball sells at auction for $1.56 million
Meta’s Instagram boss: who posted something matters more in the AI age