Wisconsin Elections Commission overrules ballot-counting decisions in Madison and Mequon
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The Wisconsin Elections Commission on Thursday overruled controversial ballot-counting decisions in Mequon and Madison, ordering the cities to revise final tallies in their Wisconsin Supreme Court election results.
Madison counted 23 late-arriving ballots that the commission voted should not have been included, while Mequon threw out five ballots the commission said should have been counted. The commission voted 6-0 to investigate both city clerks’ offices and ordered changes to the counts — voting 5-1 to require Madison and Dane County to exclude the 23 ballots and 6-0 to require Mequon and Ozaukee County to count the five.
The deadline for the state to certify the election is May 15, but some commissioners acknowledged the likelihood that lawsuits over the decisions could come before then.
In Madison, poll workers on Election Day counted 23 absentee ballots that arrived at four polling places after 8 p.m. Tuesday, despite a state law requiring that absentee ballots be “delivered to the polling place no later than 8 p.m.” in order to be tallied.
There was some debate ahead of the Madison vote because Commission Chair Ann Jacobs and Commissioner Mark Thomsen, both Democrats, said they felt uncomfortable disenfranchising the 23 voters. But Jacobs said she was following the law in ordering Madison to redo its count, adding that she hoped “those voters will perhaps appeal this decision.”
“We’re going to disenfranchise 23 people,” said Thomsen, the lone no vote. “I don’t think the law requires us to do that.”
Voting in favor, Don Millis, a Republican commissioner, said the commission is bound by state law not to count those ballots.
“There has to be some accountability,” he added, “for the failure to get these ballots to the polling places in a timely manner.”
Dane County Clerk Scott McDonell, a Democrat, told Votebeat that he’s considering suing over the agency’s order. McDonell previously voted to count the late-arriving ballots during the county’s canvass.
“It’s disappointing that the Wisconsin Election Commission’s directive is to reject ballots that were properly cast by voters,” Madison Clerk Lydia McComas said in a statement.
This marks the second significant error from the Madison clerk’s office in recent elections. In 2024, officials didn’t count 193 ballots that arrived at the city well ahead of Election Day, leading to investigations and a lawsuit.
Mequon redo comes amid confusion over clerk’s standard
The decision to investigate Mequon came after City Clerk Caroline Fochs decided not to count five ballots under an unusually strict standard for the witness address field on absentee ballot envelopes. Commissioners and staff found that decision to be an abuse of discretion.
For years, Fochs has used a standard contrary to the commission’s guidance, which is to consider a witness address valid if it includes a street name, number and municipality.
Instead, if a witness lists a municipality that shares a name with another elsewhere in the country and does not include a ZIP code or state — even though the absentee envelope doesn’t call for them — Fochs told Votebeat she does not count the ballot. If the municipality name is unique, she will count it without a ZIP code or state.
In this latest election, those municipalities were Baltimore, Fox Point, Verona and Houston.
“The idea that someone would Google to find out whether or not there’s multiple Veronas in the United States, but not Google the witness’s address to confirm where they were located just strikes me as an odd choice, and contrary to the applicable law,” Jacobs said.
A Votebeat review of Mequon ballots rejected since 2024 found that Fochs in some cases appeared to have misapplied her own standard — rejecting ballots from municipalities that didn’t share a name with any other city, like Chicago and Fox Point.
Fochs and her city attorney have defended the city’s standard as a proper use of discretion despite coming under fire for it. Fochs didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Speaking with Votebeat after the votes, Millis said that although mistakes happen from time to time, clerks need to understand that there can be consequences for errors “if you don’t follow the law and take reasonable efforts to make sure that all ballots are counted.”
Pointing out that he was a Republican commissioner, Millis said he also has a partisan interest in making sure votes in Mequon, a traditionally GOP city, are counted.
“We shouldn’t be doing things to make it difficult for anyone to vote, but here, from just even a partisan standpoint, on average, it’s hurting Republicans more than Democrats.”
Alexander Shur is a reporter for Votebeat based in Wisconsin. Contact Shur at ashur@votebeat.org.
The latest North Dakota Poll takes a closer look at how residents are responding to major national issues and reveals some notable divides across the state.
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In this episode of The Backstory, host Sabrina Halvorson talks with reporter Michael Standaert about the latest North Dakota Poll results, which examine presidential approval ratings along with opinions on issues such as the war in Iran, immigration, and the economy. The conversation highlights how responses break down across party lines, regions, and independent voters, groups that often signal shifts in broader public opinion.
“People were pointing out this kind of east-west divide and what it might mean going forward,” Standaert said. He noted that approval ratings differed sharply between Fargo-Cass County and western parts of the state.
The results show that while party affiliation remains a strong predictor of opinion, independent voters and regional differences continue to shape the political landscape. In particular, the contrast between eastern population centers and western communities offers insight into how demographic growth may influence future elections and policymaking.
The episode also underscores how statewide polling helps move beyond assumptions about North Dakota as a single group of voters, offering a clearer picture of how residents across different regions view national issues and leadership.
The Backstory is produced by the North Dakota News Cooperative, a nonprofit newsroom providing in-depth reporting to newspapers across the state. If you value this kind of journalism, consider making a donation to support our work.
The North Dakota News Cooperative is a nonprofit news organization providing reliable and independent reporting on issues and events that impact the lives of North Dakotans. The organization increases the public’s access to quality journalism and advances news literacy across the state.
More Wyoming counties and towns are signing agreements to perform federal immigration duties as the Trump administration and Congress spend billions to intensify immigration arrests, detentions and deportations nationwide.
The towns of Wheatland, Shoshoni, Pine Bluffs and Moorcroft all inked new pacts — known as 287(g) agreements — with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in April. They’ve signed onto what’s called the “Task Force Model,” which allows local law enforcement to carry out some immigration enforcement duties under ICE during routine policing. In 2025, the Trump administration revived the Task Force Model, which the Obama administration had phased out in 2012. Since its renewal, the approach has rapidly expanded nationwide.
ICE’s website touts the agreements with calls to action like “How Can I Convince My Chief or Sheriff to Participate in 287(g)?” While the partnerships come with financial rewards, immigration advocates warn local law enforcement risks losing community trust.
The agreements have sparked protests in Rock Springs and Cheyenne. Rock Springs resident Dana Ward, who helped organize an anti-ICE Sweetwater County protest last fall, said the Obama administration had discontinued the task force and hybrid agreements in 2012 with a memo explaining that other programs were more efficient. Those models also led to racial profiling, harmed community relations with law enforcement and triggered lawsuits alleging civil and human rights violations, Ward said. Critics contend that such agreements effectively make local law enforcement an arm of ICE.
Click to enlarge: This map shows law enforcement agencies participating in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s three 287(g) models: Jail Enforcement, Task Force and Warrant Service Officer. (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement)
Still, Wyoming sheriffs and police departments are signing on. While some view the agreements as unnecessary and a community disruptor, others see them as a useful tool or the best way to have a say in enforcing a federal priority.
“It was very important for the sheriff that we had a seat at the table,” said Jason Mower, spokesperson for the Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office, which has a partnership with ICE. “If this was going to be a federal priority, regardless of whether or not we were on board, what we didn’t want to have happen was the federal government to come into Sweetwater County, unannounced and unbeknownst to us, and basically do whatever they want without our oversight.”
Wyoming sheriffs have worked with ICE for decades. But more Equality State communities have reached agreements with the agency since President Donald Trump returned to office last year, bringing with him a high-profile push for immigration enforcement and deportations. Now, with last year’s passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Congress has allotted $75 billion through 2029 to ICE, making it the highest-funded U.S. law enforcement agency. Some of the federal funding is making its way to Wyoming sheriffs through their agreements to cooperate with ICE.
Currently, seven Wyoming counties, the Wyoming Highway Patrol and four towns have one or more 287(g) agreements with ICE, which allows local and state law enforcement to work with federal agencies to enforce immigration rules. Even when participating in the same type of agreement with ICE, local and state agencies have some discretion over how they implement those pacts. As a result, immigration enforcement across different counties in Wyoming is a diverse tapestry.
What is a 287(g) agreement?
The 287(g) program is named for Section 287(g) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. Put simply, the program, which became law in 1996, expands local and state law enforcement’s authority to undertake some immigration duties under ICE’s supervision. ICE has three 287(g) program models: Jail Enforcement, Task Force and Warrant Service Officer.
The Jail Enforcement Model gives officers authority to find and process people who are in the country without legal permission when they are already in a detention facility and facing criminal charges.
The Task Force Model enables officers to conduct some immigration enforcement during routine policing.
The Warrant Service Officer Model allows local officers to serve and execute administrative warrants on people who are in the country without legal permission and already in a local or state agency’s custody.
Under all three models, local and state law enforcement work alongside federal ICE officers. Some ICE agents live in Wyoming communities, though it’s unclear how many. The ICE Denver field office spokesperson, Steve Kotecki, said in an email that the agency doesn’t release personnel numbers because of “operational security.” ICE officers may also come from out of state to perform immigration enforcement.
Crook County
Crook County Sheriff Jeff Hodge sees his office’s formal ICE agreement, in effect since Jan. 7, as another law enforcement tool.
Crook County deputies aren’t seeking out immigrants lacking permanent legal status, Hodge said, but if deputies respond to an incident and encounter someone they suspect may be in the country illegally, deputies can follow through with a criminal inquiry under the 287(g) program. A deputy can ask about immigration status and transfer the suspect to ICE custody for deportation if they meet certain criteria.
“We’re focusing on criminals,” Hodge said. “You’re just not arresting every illegal out there.”
His deputies prioritized arresting criminals suspected of human trafficking, regardless of suspects’ immigration status, during one weekend operation this past winter with federal ICE agents, he said.
“They had indicators of human trafficking,” Hodge said. “That’s all I’ll say.”
Federal agents have collaborated with Crook County’s 287(g)-certified officers to crack down on noncitizen truck drivers traveling U.S. Highway 212, a 949-mile route with only about 20 miles in Crook County. The highway doesn’t have ports that require commercial vehicle inspections like interstate routes, Hodge said.
During the weekend operation, four ICE agents and deputies stopped 50 trucks and found 21 immigrant drivers lacking permanent legal status. The agents and deputies arrested four of them. Unlike the other 17, the four didn’t show they were trying to comply with U.S. immigration laws, such as renewing a work visa or applying for citizenship, Hodge said.
The operation was more ICE’s priority than his office’s, Hodge wrote in an email.
“Moving forward, policy is very pointed towards enforcing and arresting higher risk and criminal illegal immigrants,” Hodge wrote.
Crook County has two ICE agreements and is working on a third.
Crook County may get a significant sum of money for agreeing to work with ICE. Hodge’s department has received a $100,000 one-time stipend from the federal government and $15,000 per trained officer for IT and equipment every quarter. The $100,000 will pay for another patrol vehicle for deputies, he said. Nine Crook County deputies have been trained for ICE operations under the Task Force Model.
But payment has been delayed with the Department of Homeland Security’s record-breaking partial shutdown. Federal delays also have slowed Crook County from finalizing the Jail Enforcement Model agreement.
Natrona County
The Natrona County Sheriff’s Office, overseen by Sheriff John Harlin, entered into a Task Force Model agreement last May. WyoFile asked for interviews with Harlin regarding the 287(g) agreement but didn’t receive one.
The Natrona County Sheriff’s Office is currently the only sheriff’s office in Wyoming that participates exclusively in the Task Force agreement. That’s because there are ICE agents based in Casper who already perform the duties that fall under the other two models, according to Natrona County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Kiera Hett.
“It may benefit other sheriff’s offices who don’t have an ICE office in their jurisdiction to do so, but the ICE agents here in Casper conduct those duties,” Hett wrote in an email.
The Natrona County Sheriff’s Office doesn’t have a formal internal policy for implementing the Task Force Model, according to Hett.
Asked why Harlin had opted for the Task Force Model, Hett wrote that the agreement allows deputies “to further their roadside investigations during routine patrol and traffic stops.” In a 2025 interview, Harlin told Oil City News that deputies certified to do immigration enforcement under ICE also get access to federal databases that provide more resources to conduct investigations into crimes such as human trafficking.
It’s unclear whether ICE actively courted the Natrona County Sheriff’s Office to join the agreement, as the federal agency has with other Wyoming sheriffs’ offices. When asked, Hett said that the “agreement came through mutual discussion as part of our longstanding partnership with ICE.”
The Natrona County Sheriff’s Office has received stipends totaling $137,500 to date to cover IT and equipment costs, according to Hett. “This helps ensure that the Natrona County Sheriff’s Office does not incur additional expenses related to participation, ultimately preventing any financial burden on our local community,” she wrote in an email.
The entrance to the Natrona County jail in Casper. (Joshua Wolfson/WyoFile)
Though the office doesn’t participate in the Jail Enforcement or Warrant Service Officer agreements, the Natrona County Detention Center, which the sheriff’s office operates, holds ICE detainees — sometimes for long periods. The federal government reimburses the Natrona County Sheriff’s Office at a rate of $95 per day for immigration and other federal detainees under a U.S. Marshals Service intergovernmental agreement, Hett said.
Immigration detainees from other states are sometimes housed at the Natrona County Detention Center. In July, for example, ICE transported 44 people booked on immigration holds from the ICE detention center in Aurora, Colorado, to Natrona County, Oil City News reported.
Some of those detainees remained at the Natrona County Detention Center for several months. One person from Sudan, who stayed at the detention center for about six months, was released after a judge granted his habeas corpus petition, which places the burden of proof on the detaining agency to justify detention. By that time, the man had been held in various detention centers for about two years, according to court documents. Another person from Haiti remained in Natrona County for about eight months before being transferred to another facility.
Sweetwater County
The Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office has cooperated with ICE and other federal partners for the past two decades.
“We’ve always been a team player,” said Jason Mower, the office’s public affairs director, of longstanding relationships with federal partners.
Mower has worked for the Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office for 17 years. The department began holding federal detainees a few years before he was hired, he said. That arrangement, however, is not part of a 287(g) agreement.
Since 2006, the federal detainee housing reimbursement rate under that agreement was $61.57 per adult detainee per day, he said. The federal government bumped the rate to $120 per day for adults after a renegotiation in 2025.
Any county jail in Wyoming can house ICE detainees, but most are limited to 48 or 72 hours, Mower said. Sweetwater County has one of the few county correctional facilities in Wyoming certified to hold federal detainees, including ICE holds, for more than 72 hours.
Mower clarified that the holds are still temporary, however, and usually intended to keep detainees until ICE can take them to a different facility. Sweetwater County deputies have been transporting detainees from Teton County, where community members launched a petition objecting to extended holds without judicial warrants and transferring people to immigration custody after arrests for minor offenses.
Protesters hold signs during an “ICE Out” protest in March at the Teton County Jail and Sheriff’s Office. in Jackson About 50 demonstrators attended the peaceful protest intended to stop racial profiling and Teton County’s collaboration with ICE. A public petition was filed with the sheriff’s office and county commissioners demanding an end to 48-hour ICE detention holds, but the sheriff intends to maintain the current policy. (Charlie Nick/Jackson Hole News&Guide)
Sweetwater County also has a transportation contract with ICE for moving detainees between its jail and other locations. The contract reimburses wages and vehicle mileage for those transports.
In 2020, the Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office signed onto the Warrant Service Officer Model. Under that pact, the agency has two or three specially trained deputies at the detention center who are authorized to work with ICE on requests to hold immigrant detainees for up to 48 hours beyond the time they would ordinarily be released. This gives the Department of Homeland Security time to assume custody of detainees under federal immigration law.
In 2025, Sweetwater County added the Task Force Model, becoming the first local law enforcement agency in Wyoming to do so. When it became clear that illegal immigration would be a focus of the Trump administration, Mower said, it was important for the sheriff’s office to update and finalize its agreements with ICE.
“From our perspective, it made sense seeing the writing on the wall to formalize our agreement and cooperation, so that we kept a seat at the table,” Mower said.
Under the 287(g) Task Force Model, Sweetwater County received an initial $100,000 transportation stipend, restricted to transportation-related costs, plus an equipment stipend of $7,500 per task force officer.
“We are also eligible for a quarterly stipend of $15,000 per task force officer for equipment and IT support,” Mower explained. “In addition, wages and benefits are reimbursed at 100% for actual hours worked on ICE cases, and those personnel costs are billed separately every month.”
The transportation and equipment stipends have been placed in a designated fund for future use, Mower said.
While the Task Force Model gives the sheriff’s office more authority and money, Mower said Sweetwater County mostly continues to house detainees, as the agency has always done.
“I think by and large our direct involvement under the Task Force Model has been very limited,” Mower said.
He did admit, however, that there are generally more ICE arrests now.
“The notable difference is the number of individuals,” Mower said. “That has certainly increased.”
Laramie County
Like Sweetwater County, Laramie County Sheriff Brian Kozak was among the first Wyoming sheriffs to pursue all three 287(g) models and complete training after the Trump administration revived the Task Force Model.
Laramie County obtained its jail enforcement agreement in May 2025, with Task Force and Warrant Service model agreements following a month later. The first 23 certified officers were announced in October, and the number of deputies participating has increased to 27 since then.
Facing criticism for working with ICE and claims that officers are stopping drivers to confirm status without cause, Kozak has continued to reiterate the department’s strict policies regarding racial profiling and discrimination.
Task Force officers aren’t supposed to ask about an individual’s immigration status unless officers made “lawful contact” with the person after a lawful stop, detention or arrest based on reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, according to department policy. Stops for minor traffic violations, and the investigation of other individuals who are in the same vehicle, home or on the same job site qualify as “lawful contact,” should the officer have “reasonable suspicion.”
Each of Kozak’s deputies completed training in cultural diversity, profiling, naturalization process, document identification, visas and constitutional standards, Kozak said.
“I guarantee racial profiling will not be an issue,” Kozak wrote in an email. “I value the U.S. Constitution more than anything.”
The department has used the certification both during day-to-day enforcement duties and during large-scale targeted operations enforcing broader issues, such as trucking and transportation.
During those operations, deputies work with ICE to arrest commercial drivers and any passengers with them who have been determined to be in the U.S. without up-to-date or proper documentation.
Kozak frequently promotes these trucking operations on social media, giving them nicknames like “operation safe haul” and “truck around and find out,” a slogan which now adorns a trucker hat that Kozak shows off in his most recent video.
Laramie County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Aaron Veldheer, left, speaks with Laramie County Sheriff Brian Kozak during a commercial motor vehicle enforcement operation along State Highway 214 on Dec. 22, 2025, near Burns. The operation included the sheriff’s office, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Wyoming Highway Patrol. (Milo Gladstein/Wyoming Tribune Eagle)
In some cases, deputies have contacted ICE to come to the scene to pick up individuals. Although Laramie County was involved in the arrest, the offender never enters the county jail for the initial violation.
Laramie County is paid for its efforts. The federal government has paid the sheriff’s office $100,000 for vehicle reimbursement, $180,000 for an equipment stipend and $32,388.97 for salary reimbursement as of Feb. 28.
Kozak has repeatedly assured the public that partnering with ICE is not done to subsidize the income of his employees or make up for a lack of funding, but to “uphold the rule of law.”
“We are not housing criminal aliens to make money,” Kozak said while announcing in October the first 23 deputies to complete their 287(g) certification. “We are doing it for national security, public safety and upholding the rule of law.”
Kozak does not want the department to end up reliant on these contracts for operating expenses. Instead of subsidizing employee income or operating expenses, the reimbursement funds will go to programs that will benefit the community, Kozak has said. This year, ICE funds will pay for human trafficking education campaigns.
Ultimately, Kozak sees the contract as a benefit to the community, fitting well within existing duties and speeding along arrests when deputies do encounter people whose documentation they suspect is invalid.
Community advocates, however, have warned that the contracts have cost the department community trust, especially among the families and friends of those who have been picked up by ICE.
Birgitt Paul works with Friends of Immigrants Responding Ethically, a volunteer group associated with the Unitarian Universalist Church of Cheyenne and in partnership with Highlands Presbyterian Church.
Not everyone in Laramie County is aware of 287(g), according to Paul. That said, she and her peers are watching the mixed-status families learn first hand that they can’t trust law enforcement. This includes agencies — like the Cheyenne Police Department — that don’t have a direct agreement with ICE but will call local sheriffs that do when they suspect someone is undocumented, she said.
“It is important to me that we maintain that trust,” Paul said. “It is how we continue to help people as teachers and health workers, and I hear from people how sad they are and how untrusted (the) police are becoming and the sheriff are becoming.”
Paul said that even people who are actively in the process of updating papers, or receiving proper documentation through federal programs like Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, are scared to go out, scared to send their children to school and even scared to stay home.
On Tuesday evening, Paul was preparing to go sit with a mother who is waiting on DACA paperwork.
“She doesn’t want to drive in a car or be a passenger in a car, because without that paperwork, her kids don’t have a mother,” Paul said.
Paul’s group is working with several community members who have reported they’ve been pulled over for no apparent reason, and had loved ones detained because of it.
According to Laramie County Sheriff’s Office, there have been no such reported incidents.
“We are aware of concerns raised by activist groups about potential impacts on community trust,” Undersheriff Chance Walkama wrote in an email. “To date, LCSO has not received reports indicating decreased trust tied to 287(g). We continue to monitor community feedback, engage in outreach, and maintain transparency about our policies and how reimbursements are used to support community programs.”
Wyoming Highway Patrol
Gov. Mark Gordon announced the Wyoming Highway Patrol’s 287(g) Task Force contract in July.
Because WHP does not operate a jail or have jail or warrant service agreements, they can only complete task force operations in counties that have a corresponding agreement between ICE and the jail, according to Lt. Col. Karl Germain, the department’s operations commander.
“If the jail isn’t participating, we don’t have the resources to transport for ICE,” Germain said. “In that case, you would try to make arrangements with ICE, if they want to come pick this person up.”
“Making arrangements” can vary, depending on the individual, reason for contact and location. If the individual has committed an arrestable offense, Germain said that WHP would still arrest them on non-immigration related offenses and inform ICE so that ICE can come and take the individual. Troopers, like participating deputies, can also contact ICE and have federal agents pick up an individual.
WHP has approximately 12 troopers certified for the task force, but that could change as more counties decide to join 287(g).
“Now, it is a volunteer program,” Germain said. “We don’t force people to go through the 287(g) training, but that’s going to be dependent on if more counties come on board.”
Unlike many of the county agencies participating, WHP is not taking financial compensation for its work, though reimbursement is available, according to Germain.
“There’s money for overtime and money for equipment, but since we’re not doing anything that is a burden to the WHP, there isn’t a need to reimburse for anything,” Germain said.
The agency did not draft any policies specific to 287(g), though existing anti-discrimination policies and policies that mandate the adherence to the Fourth Amendment still apply to 287(g)-certified troopers, Germain said.
“All of those protections are organically already in place within law enforcement,” Germain said. “When you go through the 287(g) training, which I have been through, there is extensive emphasis put on discrimination, Fourth Amendment rights, developing reasonable suspicion, and what you can and can’t do on a traffic stop.”
Germain emphasized that constitutional rights apply regardless of legal status.
Campbell County
Campbell County Sheriff Scott Matheny said his office gets $80 per night for every ICE detainee the jail holds. The jail sometimes holds detainees from neighboring Crook County, which is working on its own jail agreement with ICE.
Campbell County participates in ICE’s Warrant Service program. But Matheny said he doesn’t see a need for an added and more extensive agreement with ICE.
People carry signs on their way to stand along Highway 59 during the “No Kings” rally in Gillette in October 2025. (Jonathan Gallardo/Gillette News Record Photo)
“We don’t really have the population here,” Matheny said. “I think everything we have right now covers what we need.”
Uinta County
Last summer, Uinta County Sheriff Andy Kopp secured pay raises for his entire department based on revenue from ICE for holding immigrant detainees on a short-term basis at the Uinta County Detention Center.
But Uinta County’s agreement isn’t a 287(g) with ICE. It’s a separate agreement with the U.S. Marshals Service to hold an estimated 31 federal detainees: 25 men and six women.
Kopp negotiated a per diem increase from $66 to $120 per inmate last fall for that existing agreement at a time when his department was facing budget cuts due to the Wyoming Legislature’s property tax relief measures.
“If you took a 25% hit from your annual business and you wanted to make that up the quickest way possible … ICE just kind of hit us at the right time with the numbers they could [offer],” Kopp told the Uinta County Herald last month. “We knew we’d have that steady stream of revenue.”
Even with money from ICE, his office cut positions to afford the raises. Kopp has declined to sign onto any 287(g) agreements with ICE despite the potential financial benefits.
Uinta County Sheriff Andy Kopp, center in tan uniform, presents his plan to hold immigrants detained by the federal government as a way to generate revenue that will boost his agency’s budget and cover salary increases. (Amanda Manchester/Uinta County Herald)
Like Campbell County, Kopp doesn’t see a need for joining the program.
“We don’t have a criminal illegal immigrant issue,” Kopp said of Uinta County, describing a 287(g) contract as a “community disruptor.”
“But we’re still looking at other options,” Kopp said, suggesting he plans to take in more state and federal inmates, being held for crimes not related to immigration enforcement, once deportation efforts begin to dwindle.
The contract to house inmates for the state, however, remains at an outdated $65 per detainee, per day.
Carbon and Lincoln counties have had Warrant Service Officer agreements with ICE since June and November respectively. The towns of Wheatland, Shoshoni, Pine Bluffs and Moorcroft signed Task Force Model agreements with ICE in April.
Colorado lost more public lands jobs than any other state in 2025
As the worst snowpack in half a century kindles potential for a devastating wildfire season on Colorado’s 24 million federal acres, Colorado has lost more federal land management workers than any other state.
A new analysis of federal workforce data by two policy-watchdog groups — Prospect Partners and Hawk Eye Strategies, consulting firms made up of former government employees, including advisors in the Biden administration— shows that Colorado ranks at the top of states for public lands agency job cuts last year. Colorado lost 1,753 positions from agencies including the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management amounting to a 26% loss in the public lands workforce in 2025.
The Trump administration’s sweeping cuts of nearly 300,000 federal jobs by the Department of Government Efficiency included 6,000 public lands jobs at 10 federal agencies in six Western states.
“We are heading into a summer of heightened risk with unprecedented low federal capacity,” said Bernie Kluger, a coauthor of the analysis with Prospect Partners and a former senior consultant for the U.S. Department of Agriculture under the Biden administration, in a statement. “At a moment when federal agencies should be surging in capacity to protect Colorado communities from drought and fire, the Trump administration’s cuts instead eliminated the scientists who forecast the risk of these disasters.”
About 60 Forest Service jobs were cut from the 2.3 million-acre White River National Forest, the busiest forest in the country with more than 8 million annual visitors who stir an economic impact of more than $1.6 billion in Colorado’s high country communities.
A year later he still can’t make any sense of the cuts.
“There was no rhyme or reason that I could see. They did not have any kind of strategic approach to the downsizing. If they tell you differently, they are lying,” he said in an interview with The Colorado Sun. “It just seemed random. When you think of the type of visitation we get and the needs of our forests, it’s just disheartening to think about how fewer people are out there doing this critical work.”
More than a third of those job losses in Colorado last year were newly hired or probationary employees on the frontlines of the agencies, including workers in visitor services, field operations and emergency operations. Another third of the job losses came from the reassignment of Interior Department staff from regional offices to the department’s headquarters in Washington, D.C.
And now the Forest Service, as part of a “sweeping restructuring” will be moving its headquarters from D.C. to Salt Lake City in a move that will close all 10 of its regional offices across the country, including the Region 2 headquarters in Lakewood, where the Federal Center employs more than 6,000 workers in 28 federal agencies. The Forest Service also is consolidating all of its research centers into a single operation in Fort Collins.
“We need these foresters and oil and gas specialists on the ground here in Colorado,” Fitzwilliams said. “I really do worry about the work getting done. I’m not sure they have a plan. It’s like their war plan: ‘Let’s bomb these people and figure out what happens later.’”
Caught between floods, a housing crisis and funding denials, Barre’s North End recovery remains stalled
David White stands beside high-water marks from the July 2023 and 2024 floods on the vacant Salvation Army building in Barre’s North End on Wednesday, April 22, 2026. The building is around the corner from White’s house, which also faced flood damage. Photo by Emma Green/VTDigger
BARRE — When a flood swept through David White’s neighborhood in July 2023, the water went all the way up his front steps. It inundated the first floor of his house, where he has lived for about 15 years, leaving high-water marks that reached about two feet up the walls and a layer of putrid mud in its wake.
White lives in Barre’s North End, a low-lying residential and industrial neighborhood along the Stevens Branch and Route 302, roughly bounded by the Berlin Street bridge on one end and the Willey Street bridge on the other. The neighborhood saw intense flooding in the July 2023 and 2024storms. The July 2023 storm damaged over 200 homes in Barre, according to the city.
In the destruction, Gov. Phil Scott, who was born and raised in Barre, also saw an opportunity. An infusion of federal recovery funding could do more than just help Barre clean up from the floods. It could also be used to transform one of the city’s flood-prone neighborhoods, creating new housing to replace what was lost and making the surrounding communities more resilient when the next big storm came.
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That’s the vision he pitched to the Barre City Council in October 2023. He brought plans for the city’s North End: an ambitious proposal to tear down about 19 buildings in the part of the neighborhood that saw heavy flood damage, turn the area into a park and build more than 200 units of new housing around the edge of the flood zone.
“We’re trying to take advantage of an opportunity that’s before us, and make lemonade out of lemons,” Scott told the Barre City Council at the time.
At the same City Council meeting, Doug Farnham, the state’s chief recovery officer, identified the North End as “one of the major projects we’re going to have to undertake in the next couple of years.”
Two and a half years later, though, little of the governor’s vision — or any other vision — for the North End has come to fruition. A reluctance to approve buyouts, state denials for funding and stalled mitigation projects have left the neighborhood’s residents, many of whom have faced two floods in less than three years, with diminishing options. And amid an ongoing housing crisis, some residents can’t afford to leave.
The most recent setback came when the state’s Agency of Commerce and Community Development denied funding applications for two recovery projects in Barre’s North End. The denials were finalized and announced in late April.
“We just basically said, ‘Pause’”
For David White, the North End resident, 2023 wasn’t his first flood. In 2011, a few months before Tropical Storm Irene devastated many Vermont communities, intense flash flooding caused extensive damage to the city. White says his house faced damage, but he chose not to move away.
“I was a little naive, I guess,” he said. “I figured, ‘Well, I’m probably good for a bit.’”
But in 2023, severe flooding inundated that same house, where he lives with his mother, who is now in her 80s. White owns the house; he and his mother live in a first-floor apartment and his daughter and son-in-law live upstairs, while a tenant rents the back of the house. The apartment where White lives, along with the first floor of the tenant’s apartment, were both left uninhabitable, he said.
A view of Barre on July 12, 2023, after flooding. The Stevens Branch of the Winooski River is visible on the right side of the image. Photo courtesy of Vermont Agency of Transportation
It was over six months before White moved back into his apartment, he said. In the interim, he spent time in a friend’s camper and a state-funded hotel room, while his mom stayed with his sister.
White applied for a Federal Emergency Management Agency buyout after the 2023 storm. The program uses a mix of state and federal funds to purchase properties impacted by flooding on the condition that the site is permanently preserved as green space, undeveloped land with grass, trees or other natural features.
While buying flood-prone houses can offer financial relief to homeowners, and turning that land into green space can boost flood resilience, buyouts present a problem for Barre and other communities with limited space for development in parts of the city less prone to flooding.
Without the option to develop on the flood-prone land in the future, a buyout permanently removes housing stock and reduces the tax rolls –– losses that Barre has said it can’t afford. That can leave property owners caught in the middle, facing repeated floods without a viable option to leave.
Of 67 citywide applications for FEMA buyouts, the city has approved 27, or about 40%, according to City Manager Nicolas Storellicastro.
Of 18 applications in the North End, only one was approved, he said.
“We’ve been very, very, very, very careful about the buyouts we approve, because we just don’t have a lot of land to give away,” Storellicastro said in an interview.
White’s buyout application was among those the city denied.
In the North End in particular, the city was reluctant to approve buyouts on individual properties until it had a clearer plan for the neighborhood’s redevelopment, Storellicastro.
“Every buyout intake that came in from the North End, we just basically said, ‘Pause,’ because we know we want to rebuild housing there.”
“How many times do I have to rebuild?”
Although the city did not approve White’s buyout, it was interested in purchasing his property through a different funding source. In January 2025, Vermont received nearly $68 million in federal funding from the Department of Housing and Urban Development to support recovery from the 2023 floods.
That funding is more flexible than typical FEMA funding. That made it a unique opportunity for Barre to potentially purchase some North End properties without the restrictions of a FEMA buyout, meaning the city would be able to build there in the future.
It seemed like a solution to the tension around buyouts the city has faced since 2023: The funding could offer some relief to homeowners who wanted buyouts, without permanently compromising the city’s ability to develop housing.
“Here’s this one funding stream that’s a really good resource,” Storellicastro said of the HUD funds. “It does this thing that we can’t really get funded through FEMA.”
Among other North End projects, the city hoped to use the funds to buy White’s and a few other houses, with the intention to eventually tear them down and build new, flood-resilient housing on the lots, which sit near the edge of the flood zone. White was on board.
Along with that project, Storellicastro also hoped the city would receive HUD funds for another project in the neighborhood. That project would have seen the city buy some North End properties, for which the city had previously denied FEMA buyouts, and turn them into green space. The city would have also provided grants to some homeowners who want to elevate their homes.
Barre City Manager Nicolas Storellicastro, center, speaks as state lawmakers tour a neighborhood affected by 2023 flooding on February 9, 2024. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
But while other projects in Barre received over $11.8 million of the HUD funding, the North End projects missed out. They were passed over in the initial round of funding. In the second round, the results of which were announced April 24, the projects were denied again.
That’s left White with few remaining options. Facing the probability of future flooding, he’s decided to try to sell his home.
“It doesn’t leave me really any choice,” he said. “I’ve been through this three times. I’m too old to keep doing this, you know? How many times do I have to rebuild?”
“Square peg, round hole”
State officials said that a big part of why the North End projects didn’t get funded was because the projects don’t address one of state officials’ key recovery goals: creating new housing outside of the floodplain.
“It became clear that, in addition to the housing shortage that already exists, that these floods really exacerbate that,” said Nate Formalarie, deputy commissioner of the Vermont Department of Housing and Community Development, which helps administer the federal HUD funds.
“And that’s where we wanted to focus.”
While the department set aside some of the funds for mitigation, infrastructure and planning projects, the majority was dedicated to new housing creation.
Formalarie estimated that projects supported by the first round of HUD funding will create more than 200 units of new housing, some in Barre. Second-round projects have the potential to create up to 220 additional units of housing, he said. The new housing will help alleviate some of the pressure exacerbated by the approximately 250 buyouts in progress across the state, Formalarie said.
Kaycen Hedges tries to clear mud from Third Street in Barre on July 11, 2024, after overnight flooding. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
The North End project that would have turned some properties into permanent green space while funding elevations of other buildings was a poor fit for the program’s goals, Formalarie said. That’s because it focused more on protecting existing housing than on creating new housing out of harm’s way.
“I think it was a bit of a square peg, round hole,” said Patricia Moulton, who works in the state’s Office of Disaster Recovery. She said that despite the rejections, she thought all of the proposed North End projects would be good for the neighborhood.
“They are good resilience projects for the North End, for sure,” she added. “It would be great if we could find the right fit for funding to accomplish them.”
Formalarie said that for the project that would have purchased White’s and some of his neighbors’ houses to make way for future flood-resilient development, Barre’s application didn’t include clear plans for how the site would be redeveloped.
Storellicastro said he had been clear with the state that the city intended to develop new flood-resilient housing on those parcels, but that finding a developer to commit to the project before it was funded was nearly impossible.
“They couldn’t afford anything else in Vermont”
Formalarie and other state officials said they wanted to see a more unified, cohesive vision for the North End.
“It was a few buyouts here and there, and then elevating a few select properties and leaving others where they are,” Formalarie said. “So it wasn’t kind of a full-scale redevelopment or reenvisioning.”
That kind of comprehensive plan has been hard to create, though, according to Storellicastro, because the city has to contend with the wishes and needs of individual residents.
While some residents, like White, are interested in buyouts, others don’t want to leave, Storellicastro said. Some are hesitant to leave because of the lack of affordable housing in Vermont, he said.
That leaves them stuck between recurrent floods and an ongoing housing crisis.
“Even if they were to get a buyout, they couldn’t afford anything else in Vermont,” Storellicastro said. “So for most of them, it was just lack of options.”
Formalarie also said the amount of federal funding was far from what was needed to address recovery needs across the state.
For Storellicastro, the denial was hard news to deliver to a neighborhood that has seen repeated floods and little progress.
“When they express their frustration about feeling forgotten,” he said, “I can’t refute that. You know, I can’t point to anything that we can say like, ‘Look, this is a meaningful, significant thing we’ve done differently that’s going to change things the next time there’s a flood in your neighborhood.’ And by golly, it hasn’t been for lack of effort.”
“If the next flood comes … then what happens?”
The lack of funding leaves the future of the North End’s recovery unclear. Storellicastro hopes to seek other funding sources, such as federal flood mitigation money, for some of the projects, but those processes will be more competitive, he said.
State and city officials agree on at least one thing: This will not be the last time the neighborhood floods. Extreme precipitation has increased in the Northeast over the past half century, and the trend is expected to continue as the climate keeps changing.
Debris is trapped under the Berlin Street bridge in Barre after historic flooding in July 2023. Photo courtesy of City of Barre
A flood mitigation project that would benefit the neighborhood has also stalled. The Berlin Street bridge, which spans the Stevens Branch just a few blocks from White’s house, acted more like a dam during the 2023 floods, when debris caught underneath the bridge contributed to water rising upstream.
Storellicastro said that although the bridge has contributed to flooding in the North End, the City Council has yet to decide on a plan to address the issue due in part to concerns from community members in other parts of the city about longer travel times if the bridge is removed.
The lack of progress on both mitigation and recovery has left White feeling disheartened.
“I feel like the North End here has been abandoned,” he said.
State officials can understand the feeling.
“I can only imagine how incredibly frustrated and disappointed these people are, and I appreciate that 100% because they’re in harm’s way,” Moulton, the recovery officer for central Vermont, said of the HUD funding denials.
“The biggest concern is, if the next flood comes and floods them again, then what happens?”
White hopes he won’t be around to find out. After the most recent funding denial, he’s decided that he’s on his own. He’s going to try to sell his house and get out, maybe to higher ground, or maybe out of state, where the housing is less expensive.
White expects finding a buyer to take time and knows he won’t get as much as he hoped for the house, given the neighborhood’s reputation for flooding. But he doesn’t see another choice.
“I don’t know what else I can do through my own power,” he said. “Staying here is not an option.”
And while selling may be the path forward for him, it’s not a solution for the neighborhood’s underlying vulnerability.
“Unfortunately, that doesn’t resolve the problem for the next guy,” White said. “I kind of feel sorry in a way, for anybody else, but I don’t know what else I can do. I can’t rely on my state. Can’t rely on my city officials. Because they’ve all failed miserably.”
Confusion emerges over new SD voter ID requirements
PIERRE, S.D. – County auditors in South Dakota are, in certain cases, deciding how to implement new voter ID rules on their own due to uncertainty over guidelines issued by the state’s secretary of state, as early and absentee voting for the primary election is well underway.
Senate Bill 175, passed in the 2026 legislative session, requires new voters to provide proof of citizenship as part of the registration process. The bill was enacted with an emergency clause, which allows the regulations to take effect for the upcoming primary ballot on June 2.
The secretary of state’s website outlines various documents first-time registrants can provide as a photocopy to show proof of citizenship, such as a passport or birth certificate. But confusion has emerged as to whether eligible South Dakota driver’s licenses, which identify a person’s citizenship status, can also be provided as a photocopy or have to be shown in person.
Since July of last year, as a result of Senate Bill 75 from the 2025 legislative session, driver’s licenses in South Dakota are now issued with an indication of a person’s U.S. citizenship status. The secretary of state’s website lists driver’s licenses as an acceptable form of proof but does not explicitly state whether they need to be physically shown at an auditor’s office or if a photocopy is sufficient.
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Amy Scott-Stoltz, president of the League of Women Voters of South Dakota, a nonpartisan advocacy group, said that county auditors in charge of voter registration are having difficulty ensuring a uniform system across the state.
“They’re trying to follow the secretary of state’s guidelines, but the vagueness has led to certain issues,” Scott-Stoltz told News Watch. “Do they need to present this stuff in person? Can they accept it by mail? Different auditors interpret that differently.”
Hughes County Finance Officer Thomas Oliva, who acts as that county’s auditor, said his office is requiring new voters to show the physical driver’s license.
“The main reasoning behind that is because it’s the back of the license. There’s no other identifying information on the back we can tie back to that person, so we felt it’s in the best interest to see the physical card,” Oliva told News Watch.
A copy of a valid South Dakota driver’s license indicating citizenship status (Photo: Alexander Rifaat/South Dakota News Watch)
Haakon County Auditor Stacy Pinney said she has not run into any issues yet with voter registration but also will require new applicants to physically show the driver’s license.
“I’m going to make it a policy in my office that I want to see the actual card. If I have to verify it, I want to see the real deal,” Pinney told News Watch.
Meanwhile, Harding County Auditor Kathy Glines said her office will accept a photocopy of the driver’s license.
“They would have to send a front and back,” Glines told News Watch.
“I hope they would call before sending it by mail,” she added, referring to the limited hours the office is open.
Need for clarity
In addition to questions over how to process new voter applications using driver’s licenses, Oliva said the secretary of state’s office has also created confusion in its communication with prospective voters who are missing the required citizenship documentation.
Oliva said voters who are deemed not to have provided proof of citizenship are sent a letter that indicates they are a “Federal Only” voter, which means, since the new voting law applies to South Dakota elections, they can only vote in statewide federal elections for U.S. president, U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives races.
A copy of voter registration system-generated letter to federal only voter (Photo: Hughes County Finance Office)
“I do not necessarily agree with this approach and believe the individual should instead be notified and marked as incomplete or invalid until the required documentation is received,” Oliva said. “While the letter does inform the voter of their status, it does not provide a clear explanation as to why they were designated as such.”
Oliva highlighted the letter generated by the voter registration system only indicates a person is ineligible due to situations such as the use of a commercial mail receiving agency, mail forwarding service or post office box without sufficient residential description.
“While that explanation is accurate in those scenarios, it does not address the separate issue of missing citizenship documentation, which can also result in Federal Only status. This omission may lead to confusion for voters,” Oliva said.
In order to provide more clarity, Oliva created a letter addressed for those deemed to be a Federal Only voter based on a lack of proof of citizenship outlining their options.
A copy of Federal Only voter registration letter (Photo: Hughes County Finance Office)
In a copy of the letter provided to News Watch, Oliva’s office specifies the new voter was classified as Federal Only due to the lack of citizenship documentation and provides examples of eligible forms of documents they can submit to change their status.
As early and absentee voting for the primary election gets underway, Scott-Stoltz hopes officials in Pierre can provide more certainty on the registration process for new voters.
“We’re hoping for more clarification from the secretary’s office before the primary and are looking forward to working with the election board,” she said.
The secretary of state’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment by News Watch.
Ballots delivered; no extra documentation needed to vote
After early and absentee balloting in some counties were delayed in part due to the short time frame the secretary of state’s office had in validating eligible candidates, primary voting does appear to be back on track across the state.
News Watch reached out to all 66 county auditors, with 30 so far confirming they have received their absentee primary ballots.
Oliva said the challenges so far have been manageable and that a key focus for his team will be to also emphasize to voters who are already registered that they do not need to present new documents.
What questions do you have about the June 2 primary election? Whether it’s about how to register and vote or interpret the results, we’re here to help you understand the 2026 primary election on June 2. Email me at alexander.rifaat@sdnewswatch.org or call/text 605-736-4396
“We have received questions and concerns from individuals who believe they must bring additional documentation to the polls in order to vote. This is not the case, and it is important to correct these misconceptions and provide clear, factual information,” Oliva said.
Oliva said it’s unfortunate not every county is executing the new voting requirements the same but concedes “it’s entirely up to that auditor’s office.”
As for Glines, she said her county is doing the best it can to abide by the secretary of state’s guidelines.
“We are all feeling our way through it,” Glines said.
Jackley releases explanation on Amendment J
Concerns over the new registration rules come as state Attorney General Marty Jackley issued a draft explanation on an upcoming ballot measure tied to the U.S. citizenship requirement for voting in elections.
Amendment J, which will be on the ballot this November, would amend the South Dakota Constitution to add people who are not U.S. citizens to the list of individuals disqualified from voting.
Proponents of the measure argue it will provide greater clarity as to who can vote since, while non-U.S. citizens are already barred from voting in federal elections and registering to vote in South Dakota, there is no language in the state constitution that explicitly prohibits them from voting in state or local races.
Under state law, the attorney general is required to issue a draft explanation of the measure, which essentially acts as a preview of how the question will appear on the ballot.
The public has until end of day on May 8 to submit written comment on the attorney general’s explanation. A final draft is due to the secretary of state’s office on May 19 for approval. The finalized explanation will then accompany the ballot question in the fall.
South Dakota News Watch is an independent nonprofit. Read, donate and subscribe for free at sdnewswatch.org. Contact politics and statehouse reporter Alexander Rifaat: 605-736-4396/alexander.rifaat@sdnewswatch.org.
Rural-Focused $42 Billion Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment Program Becomes Operational
After four years of planning, a change in presidential administration that revised program rules, and months of delays, most states have unlocked a portion of funding under a $42.45 billion rural broadband expansion program.
While the lead-up to implementing the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program has been long, state officials and industry analysts say it pales in comparison to the work required to turn plans into functioning networks.
States have six months to finalize contracts with participating internet service providers and complete required environmental and historic reviews, before construction can begin. Some expect projects to break ground as early as the second half of this year.
Still, major questions remain, including how more than half the program’s funding will be used.
What Happens to the $22 Billion in Remaining Funds?
Trimmed from states’ initial deployment plans, the U.S. Commerce Department has set aside roughly $22 billion for so-called “non-deployment” uses. Some lawmakers referred to the reserve as federal “savings.” But the Commerce Department and its National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), which oversees the program, have since signaled that states will be allowed to access the funds.
But the exact process remains unclear.
For example, NTIA is nearly two months past its self-imposed March 11 deadline to issue guidance on the funds.
Lawmakers pressed Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on the delay on April 22 and April 23, but he offered few specifics, saying only that guidance would come within two months, and that states would be able to pursue “new and exciting things” with the money.
In the meantime, uncertainty is already affecting participation. State broadband offices in Colorado and New Mexico report that some providers who initially expressed interest may ultimately default on preliminary awards.
Rising costs are one factor: fiber suppliers say prices have jumped as much as 40% in recent weeks. A limited pool of skilled labor is another constraint, an issue the program’s non-deployment funds were meant to address through workforce development efforts.
‘Most Complicated Broadband Grant Program Ever’
Program complexity is also playing a role. Industry experts have described BEAD as the “most complicated broadband grant program ever,” with the program’s former administrator admitting he may have gone too far with certain program requirements.
BEAD grants layer many costs onto broadband projects that an Internet Service Provider (ISP) building a rural project independently would not incur. These include the environmental and historical preservation studies which many state offices are now developing, buy America requirements that increase material costs, and certain penalties for non-performance.
For some providers, particularly those serving remote areas, the administrative burden may outweigh the benefits. If recent federal broadband efforts are any guide, those risks are not hypothetical.
A federal program unfolding beside BEAD, the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF), has seen more than one-third of providers default on awards. BEAD’s timeline is even more aggressive: While RDOF allows up to 10 years for full deployment, BEAD requires networks to be operational within four years of award.
That puts added pressure on internet service providers, which must navigate one of the biggest barriers to broadband construction before breaking ground: Permitting.
Upon accepting awards, providers have 30 days to certify that they will not take additional federal funds to complete BEAD-funded builds before they can begin to secure the necessary federal, state, and local permits required to initiate construction.
Permitting Legislation Impacting Broadband
As BEAD funding begins to flow, federal lawmakers are renewing efforts to speed that process. During the week of April 20, Congress considered three bills aimed at accelerating broadband permitting.
Two passed the House, targeting delays on federal lands, where projects are often held up the longest. However, a broader permitting omnibus bill, the American Broadband Deployment Act, was pulled from the agenda after strong opposition from local government groups.
Backed by industry groups representing major providers like AT&T and Verizon, the 100-page proposal combined language from what had been more than 20 separate bills, and was fiercely opposed by local governments.
The omnibus would create a shot clock from 60 to 150 days during which a state or local government must approve or deny a request for a permit to construct a wireless or wireline project. If the locality doesn’t respond in that time frame, the request is automatically assumed to be “deemed granted.”
The law would also restrict permitting fees to recover only actual costs, instead of the traditional standard of reasonable costs. Local governments argue that the restriction of using actual costs would mean they can’t charge enough to pay for the longer-term monitoring and management of granted rights-of-way. The local governments characterize the effort as a sweeping deregulatory push by an industry set to receive billions in federal funding.
Even under its revised framework, the Trump administration has maintained that BEAD will close the digital divide and characterized other federal broadband programs as “duplicative” and “wasteful.”
However, the program once billed as “Internet for All” is expected to reach fewer households and businesses under the revamped plan, and experts say closing the remaining gaps will require sustained investment.
This article was produced in collaboration with Broadband Breakfast,a news organization focused on broadband policy and infrastructure.
Billionaire’s Private Airline Prepares New Moloka‘i Route
Lānaʻi Air was formed to fly guests in style to Larry Ellison’s luxury resorts. Now the company wants to help close the gulf in access to off-island doctors for Moloka‘i residents amid a shortage of air travel options.
Santa Clara County looks to fund Latino ‘health promoters’
Latino community health workers in Santa Clara County, known as promotores de salud or “health promoters,” have for years knocked on doors that others couldn’t. Now the county needs them again — and has plans to make them a permanent part of the region’s public health system.
The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday voted unanimously to pursue options for funding a permanent system of culturally competent, one-on-one clinicians for the county’s most vulnerable Spanish speakers. Officials will look to three Medi-Cal providers in the region — the county’s own Family Health Plan, as well as private insurers Anthem and Kaiser Permanente — to help pay for it. Health officials say an expanded, full-scale army of promotores across East San Jose, South County and San Jose’s Cadillac-Winchester neighborhood would reduce hospital visits and prevent further strain on overflowing emergency departments.
It’s become especially urgent amid a tide of federal funding cuts threatening Northern California’s largest public hospital system.
“We are tapping on them once again to respond to this crisis,” District 1 Supervisor Sylvia Arenas said at the meeting.
Promotores have become an integral backbone of public health in Silicon Valley. They drove efforts to immunize Spanish speaking residents and prevent the spread of COVID during the pandemic. They also helped the county avoid federal funding losses by counting hard-to-reach households after President Donald Trump cut the decennial U.S. Census short in 2020.
Community health workers lined up to support a county effort for a permanent network of promotores in Santa Clara County. Photo by Brandon Pho.
But promotores are underpaid, and their work has historically lived at the whim of grant cycles — at the end of which trained workers leave and programs diminish in size. At the same time, each clinical worker providing care coordination, chronic disease management and patient navigation generates an estimated $278,000 in healthcare savings every year, according to the findings of an April county Public Health Department study.
Promotores’ services are billable under Medi-Cal, though many don’t get reimbursed because they aren’t registered as a national health provider as required to submit claims, or cannot meet the licensed clinical supervision requirement. The county is exploring the creation of a centralized agency or “hub” — possibly located at a county library or clinic — to coordinate billing and credentialing.
“I’m asking the board: give us support,” Heiny Gonzalez, another promotora with SOMOS Mayfair, said at the meeting.
A new sense of urgency underlines their work. A landmark, multiyear study on the systemic health threats to Latino residents published last year prompted county leaders to declare a public health crisis, after troubling surges in deaths by suicide and diabetes. The report also identified higher rates of opioid overdose deaths among Latinos in South County than any other region.
“We are providing these services to very devastated communities,” Monica Mahecha, a promotora with SOMOS Mayfair, said in public comments at the meeting.
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Promotores don’t just do clinical work. They also do community outreach, connecting residents with specific services available in their area. Sharon Luna, a neighborhood leader in the unincorporated South County community of San Martin, said promotores have had a noticeable effect on getting residents into healthy cooking, sports and academic tutoring.
“It is one of the most impressive programs I have seen in South County,” Luna said at the meeting.
The program cannot fund itself with those savings because not all of it directly benefits the county. Officials are looking toward a “blended” mix of funding from the county, grants and the region’s three managed care plans under the county, Anthem and Kaiser, with no single source exceeding 40% of the proposed system’s total budget.
“One of my recommendations is we urge the three Medi-Cal managed care plans in our county – Family Health Plan, Anthem and Kaiser – to … consider an appropriate level of investment, because those plans will have tangible savings in health costs avoided that will be bankable for them in a way that’s not true for county budget,” County Executive James Williams said at the meeting.
Williams added members of the Family Health Plan governing board — which the county moved to consolidate control over last year — have already voiced support for pitching in to fund the expansion of promotores.
“I don’t think Kaiser and Anthem should be off the hook,” Williams said. “We need to put a little fire under them to step up to the plate as well. We know exactly the kind of concrete investment that needs to be made.”
Arenas said the county’s promotores have risked their lives for the community time and time again.
“What other crisis are we going to wait for to finally integrate a framework that is fiscally proven?” she said.
Contact Brandon Pho at brandon@sanjosespotlight.com or @brandonphooo on X.
The Columbia River Is Polluted. Are Fish Farms Making It Worse?
For generations, the Columbia River has been the lifeblood of the Pacific Northwest, sustaining salmon runs, driving local economies and supporting the culture and traditions of the Indigenous peoples who live there. “The region revolves around the health of the Columbia River but also the gifts that it provided,” Jeremy FiveCrows, a Nez Perce tribal member and communications director of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, tells Sentient.
Pollution from multiple sources, including hydroelectric dams, agricultural runoff from dairy farms and contamination from sites like the Hanford Nuclear Site, has long taken its toll on the river and its aquatic life. In two lawsuits, environmental groups allege that Pacific Seafood’s aquaculture operations are adding to the problem.
The environmental groups argue that facilities owned by Pacific Seafood, one of the largest seafood companies in the United States, have repeatedly discharged large volumes of untreated waste and chemicals like chlorine into the river.
On April 23, the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality issued $3.2 million in penalties for discharging fish waste, chlorine, oil and grease into the Pacific Ocean, the Columbia River and the Chetco River.
The lawsuits come alongside decades of ongoing restoration work. Tribal nations have been working to revive fish populations, particularly salmon, Pacific lamprey and white sturgeon. A coordinated network of hatcheries run by tribal, state and federal partners has become a critical tool, FiveCrows says, because they help sustain fish populations that the river can no longer support on its own.
Lawsuit Alleges Pollution Exceeds Permit Limits
In January, two environmental advocacy groups, the Center for Food Safety and the Northwest Environmental Defense Center, filed a lawsuit against a seafood processing facility owned by Pacific Seafood in Oregon, alleging repeated violations of the Clean Water Act, including that the facility exceeded permitted pollution limits.
A separate lawsuit filed in July 2025 targets Pacific Seafood-operated net-pen fish farms in Washington state, alleging chronic discharges of waste and unspecified chemicals used to treat diseases in fish from industrial aquaculture operations.
The Clean Water Act requires facilities like Pacific Seafood to obtain a permit, which sets limits on what facilities can discharge into bodies of water and mandates monitoring and reporting.
But according to the lawsuits, the company has repeatedly failed to do so. The company’s lack of reporting and monitoring has made it difficult to fully understand the extent of pollution entering the Columbia River, argues Kingsly McConnell, staff attorney at the Center for Food Safety.
The claims in the Clean Water Act lawsuits are “based on inaccurate data and are currently being disputed,” Amy Wentworth, Pacific Seafood’s senior director for environmental, health and safety, tells Sentient in an email. “The fact is no one cares more about protecting the marine environment than Pacific Seafood, because our business and the livelihoods of our team members depend on healthy and sustainable waterways now and in the future,” she adds.
The Oregon lawsuit focuses on Pacific Bio Products-Warrenton, a Pacific Seafood subsidiary that processes fish and shellfish waste — including shrimp and crab shells — into products used in aquaculture feed, livestock feed and pet food.
The complaint also alleges high levels of chlorine pollution, with monthly average discharges about 4,000% above the permit’s limit and daily maximum discharges reaching around 73,000% over. Chlorine is toxic to aquatic life and it can also react with natural organic material in water to create trihalomethanes, a harmful byproduct. High levels of trihalomethanes have been linked to elevated cancer risk, as well as liver, kidney and central nervous system damage, and increased risk of reproductive harms including miscarriage, stillbirth and birth defects.
State regulators have repeatedly cited and fined Pacific Seafood and its subsidiaries over the years. The Warrenton plant was recently cited by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality for exceeding chlorine limits and failing to submit required monitoring reports. In response, Wentworth says that the agency’s wastewater permits for seafood companies are “notoriously difficult — and in some cases — technologically impossible to comply with.”
“We support strong, science-based environmental regulations, but rules must be achievable, transparent and grounded in real engineering principles if Oregon wants its coastal economies to survive,” she adds.
The plaintiff residents are also members of the Center for Food Safety and the Northwest Environmental Defense Center. They say they live near, visit and regularly use the Columbia River and surrounding areas for boating, fishing, hiking, swimming and wildlife observation. And they allege that Pacific Seafood’s repeated violations have “diminished, adversely affected and suppressed” their uses of the river.
“NEDC members recreating on the Warrenton Waterfront Trail have noticed plumes of turbid water around the facility’s dock, and have complained about odors similar to ‘rotten crab’ or ‘rotten fish’ coming from the facility,” Jonah Sandford, executive director of the Northwest Environmental Defense Center, tells Sentient. The complaint also states that the chemical and foul odors have caused at least one member to “physically retch.”
State enforcement actions often are not strong enough to change behavior, Sandford argues. “Large facilities like Pacific Seafood can pay the fine, or tie these actions up in appeals and avoid making the fundamental changes needed to comply with the law.”
“Like Factory Farms That We Put in the Water”
The Washington lawsuit filed by the Center for Food Safety and Wild Fish Conservancy targets Pacific Seafood’s net-pen aquaculture operations in the Columbia River that raise rainbow trout marketed as steelhead. Net pens are large floating enclosures used to raise fish in open water. Fish are hatched in freshwater facilities, then transferred to these pens and raised to market size.
Environmental groups argue that the system concentrates large amounts of waste in the water, lowering oxygen levels, spreading disease and increasing the use of antibiotics in crowded conditions. Escapes from net pens, they add, can also introduce farmed fish into wild populations, potentially competing with native species. “They’re like factory farms that we put in the water,” McConnell says.
The case filed by the Center for Food Safety and Wild Fish Conservancy alleges the Pacific Seafood’s net-pen operations have repeatedly violated permit limits for pollutants such as dissolved oxygen since permits were reissued in April 2020. According to the complaint, the pens release untreated waste into the Columbia River, including fish feces, uneaten feed, fish carcasses and chemicals used to treat disease.
When regulators fall short, residents and advocacy groups can step in, McConnell and Sandford say. Under the Clean Water Act, citizens are allowed to file lawsuits to enforce pollution limits. Both the Washington and Oregon lawsuits are still ongoing.
How Climate Change and Industrial Dairies Drive Pollution
The river is still suffering the effects of rising water temperatures driven by climate change and other pressures that include mercury and PCB contamination, sewage discharge and runoff from large industrial dairies.
“There’s a chronic issue with nutrient loading in the river from agricultural runoff and sewage treatment,” Stuart Ellis, deputy manager of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, tells Sentient. He points to dairy operations in areas like Boardman in Oregon and Yakima in Washington that contribute high levels of nitrogen, and runoff from fertilizer on agricultural fields that pollutes groundwater in Morrow County, Oregon.
Warmer, nutrient-rich waters make it harder for salmon to migrate and create conditions that favor invasive species. Tribal fishers, who say they avoid overharvesting in their approach to fishing, experience the effects: algae can clog gill nets so quickly in summer and early fall that they must be cleaned daily, making it harder to catch fish. State governments have also warned people not to eat Pacific lamprey, a traditional tribal food, very often because of PCB and mercury contamination.
Despite the challenges, those working to protect the river say progress is still possible. Ellis points to “small victories,” such as dam removals and habitat restoration projects. He adds that seeing plants growing along restored streams and juvenile fish in the water “gives you hope that some of these things can actually start to make a difference.”
Ellis also says it will take decades before the full benefits of current restoration work are realized. “It takes a long time to heal an ecosystem,” Ellis says. “You can destroy one quite quickly, but it takes a real long time to put it back together.”