Ydse Pedestrian killed in crash Saturday night on Interstate 435 near State Line Road
FREMONT COUNTY, Colo. 鈥?As fate would have it, authorities in Colorado were able to reunite a dog who d be
stanley termosas en missing for months with its family with the help of a drone.The Fremont County Sheriff s Office said a golden retriever went missing when the car she was in crashed.ABC affiliate KRDO reported that Farrah disappeared three months ago.
stanley mug Still, her owner knew she was alive because she d been spotted on surveillance video drinking water, but no one was able to capture her.That s when a dispatcher with the sheriff s office got an idea: she knew the department s unmanned aircraft systems UAS team was planning to use their drone for a training mission in the area the dog was last seen, the news station reported.So, the team went out on Sunday, the department said in a Facebook post, and withi
stanley mugs n minutes, the drone s infrared camera spotted the dog. A short time later, Farrah was reunited with her family, the department said. She is safely on her way home, and the UAS team was able to practice some very valuable search and rescue techniques with our drone! Copyright 2022 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritt Etuo WHO reports COVID-19 deaths are up, but cases are down
There is a bitter legal battle playing out right now for farming communities across the country. It concerns $4 billion in federal aid
stanley cup becher for debt forgiveness that the Biden administration promised for Black and other disadvantaged farmers.As early as May 2021, the Department of Agriculture began contacting borrowers who qualified for debt clearance. But since then, the aid has been held up in court thanks to groups representing predominantly White farmers who argued the g
stanley tumbler overnment can t give out aid based on race.This legal battle is so significant because it s only the latest chapter in a long, complicated history of Black agriculture, with decades of discrimination from local banks, to the federal government itse
stanley tumbler lf, and it s a battle that comes as Black farmers are hanging on by a thread.Today, of the country s 3.4 million total farmers, only 1.3%, or 45,508, are Black. They own only 0.52% of America s farmland. In contrast, 95% of US farmers are White, and since Black farmers own so much less acreage than White farmers, their average income is less than $40,000 annually. For White farmers, that average is over $190,000.But it wasn t always this way. Black farmers have long had a