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Tag: Wyoming

  • Keeler: CSU Rams coach Jay Norvell is becoming his own worst enemy in FoCo

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    FORT COLLINS — CSU ranks 99th nationally in passing (197.3 yards per game) and No. 1 in throwing stuff against the wall.

    Are the Rams a power run team? An Air Raid team? Pro style? Spread? Multiple? All of the above? None of the above?

    Jay Norvell, the head coach, needs to re-assign Jay Norvell, the offensive coordinator, before it’s too late. Close games are turning chaotic at Canvas Stadium — only not in a good way. The Rams are tied for 127th out of 136 FBS programs in penalties per game (8.7) and 121st in penalty yards (76.3).

    You wait too long to yank a cold hand (Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi) at quarterback against UTSA. You put in a hot hand (Jackson Brousseau), who slings you back into a tie game, 17-17, with 29 seconds left … only to take that tying point off the board and take said “hot hand” out of the contest.

    Then you ask your third-string QB, a runner by trade (Tahj Bullock) who hasn’t completed a throw all year, to come off the bench cold, sprint right and pass you to a victory?

    “That was one where I felt like that was our best chance to win, right there and right now,” Norvell explained Monday after watching film of CSU’s 17-16 home loss to the Roadrunners. “And so, I don’t regret it. I don’t. We needed to execute it better.”

    I don’t know, man.

    To be clear: CSU football is in a far, far better place than at this time four years ago. Daz Ball was a disaster from the jump.

    It was also, in hindsight, a hysterically low bar to clear. And instead of consolidating the fan base in Year 4, Norvell has become Fort Fun’s Rorschach test.

    True, his Rams are a two-point conversion away from being 2-1. A Bullock completion from rolling into a winnable home matchup against Washington State (2-2), coming off two Houdini escapes.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Renck & File: CSU’s Jay Norvell approaches stretch that will determine his future

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    When Jay Norvell talked about creating Canvas Chaos, this isn’t what he had in mind.

    The Rams are 1-1, but it feels worse after their escape against Northern Colorado. There are no Secret Santa gifts needed for Norvell at the office Christmas party after an all-time shocking reversal of a touchdown catch by the Bears.

    And whether it was or wasn’t a reception is not even the biggest issue surrounding the program. Norvell has a quarterback controversy. He called it a competition during the bye week practice. But that is never the case, especially when the three-year starter is losing his grip on the position.

    Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi sure looks like he peaked that chilly night in Boulder two years ago. He can’t help himself, falling into bad habits of throwing off balance, firing sidearm and into traffic. This is not the return Norvell expected on his investment. Not in BFN’s third season.

    Jackson Brousseau is getting first-team reps as Norvell mulls his choice. This decision should determine whether Norvell receives a contract extension. That’s because the Rams enter a seven-game stretch that will provide clarity on whether he should keep the job.

    CSU hosts five home games, including Sept. 20 against the University of Texas San Antonio on FS1. Washington State follows. These are not Cam Ward’s Cougars. The optics of this game remain important since CSU will be joining Wazzu in the revamped Pac 12 next season. Are the Rams competitive? Do they look the part?

    And Norvell knows after the latest white-knuckle scare that he better beat Wyoming. Nobody cares that the game is on the road. Waking up on Nov. 9 with a 6-3 record provides hope that Norvell made the right choice. The temperature is not dropping on this topic until Fowler-Nicolosi plays better or Norvell moves on from him.

    CSU’s athletic program is on a heater. The men’s basketball program, after a terrific March Madness run, was invited to the Maui Invitational in 2026 and recently signed guard Gregory “Pops” Dunson, the highest-ranked recruit since rankings became available in 2000. The volleyball team remains a force, and the women’s soccer team has entered the national polls at No. 25 for the first time in school history.

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    Troy Renck

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  • ICE arrests climb in Colorado this summer, but people detained are less likely to have criminal backgrounds

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    Federal immigration arrests in Colorado surged this summer as the Trump administration charged ahead with its plans to mass-deport undocumented immigrants.

    But as arrests have spiked, law enforcement agencies increasingly have detained people without any prior criminal convictions or charges, internal data show.

    Between June 11 and July 28, ICE arrested 828 people in Colorado, according to a Denver Post analysis of data obtained by the Deportation Data Project at the University of California, Berkeley. That amounted to more than 17 arrests per day, a more than 50% increase from the first five months of the Trump administration, through June 10, a period covered in a previous Post story. The rate from this summer was also more than five times higher than the daily arrest average from the same time period in 2024.

    Of those detained over the summer, only a third had prior criminal convictions noted in the records. Another 18% had pending charges, indicating that nearly half had been neither convicted nor charged with a crime and that their only violation was immigration-related.

    That, too, is a shift: In the earlier months of President Donald Trump’s second term, two-thirds of the 1,639 people arrested in Colorado had either been convicted of a crime (38%) or charged with one (29%).

    “That tracks with what we would have expected (and) what we’ve been hearing from community sources,” said Henry Sandman, the co-executive director of the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition. “The data and the reality disproves ICE’s talking points that they’re going after criminals. We’re seeing tactics increase. They’re trying to increase arrest numbers as high as possible, whatever the reason may be for detaining folks.”

    Steve Kotecki, a spokesman for Denver’s ICE field office, did not respond to a request for comment late last week.

    The data, obtained directly from ICE by the UC Berkeley researchers through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, offers the clearest look at immigration enforcement activities available, as ICE doesn’t post recent information onlineFor this analysis, The Post examined arrests that occurred in Colorado; arrests that were listed in the dataset as occurring in Wyoming but which took place in a Colorado city; and arrests lacking a listed state but which occurred in a Colorado town or county.

    The Post removed several apparent duplicate arrests and a similarly small number of arrests in the region that did not have a specific location listed. The analysis also included a handful of people who appeared to have been arrested twice in the span of several months.

    When listing a detainee’s criminal background, the data provides no details about the criminal charges or prior crimes. Illegally entering the country is typically treated as a civil matter upon first offense, but a subsequent entry is a felony criminal offense.

    More info about July operation

    The newly released data includes the same nine-day period in July during which ICE has said it arrested 243 immigrants without proper legal status “who are currently charged with or have been convicted of criminal offenses after illegally entering the United States.” The arrests, the agency said, all occurred in metro Denver.

    But the data published by the UC-Berkeley researchers does not fully match ICE’s public representations.

    During the same time frame, the agency arrested 232 people, according to the data. Most of those arrested during that time had never been convicted or charged with a crime, at least according to what’s in the records. Sixty-six people had a previous criminal conviction, and 34 more had pending charges.

    Kotecki did not respond to questions about the July operation.

    The Post previously reported that ICE falsely claimed that it had arrested a convicted murderer in Denver as part of the July operation. The man had actually been arrested at a state prison facility shortly after his scheduled release, state prison officials said last month.

    While ICE claimed the man had found “sanctuary” in the capital city — a shot taken at Denver’s immigration ordinances — The Post found that state prison officials had coordinated his transfer directly to ICE. He was then deported to Mexico, and information matching his description is reflected in the UC Berkeley data.

    It’s unclear if all of ICE’s arrests are fully reflected in the data, making it difficult to verify ICE’s claims. The researchers’ data is imperfect, experts have told The Post. The records likely represent the merging of separate datasets before they were provided by the government, increasing the likelihood of mistakes or missing data.

    Some arrests in Colorado were listed as occurring in other states or had no state listed at all. Other arrests were duplicated entirely, and researchers have cautioned that ICE’s data at times has had inaccurate or missing information.

    The anonymized nature of the data, which lacks arrestees’ names but lists some biographical information, also can make it difficult to verify. When ICE announced the results of the July operation, it named eight of the people it had arrested. Court records and the UC Berkeley data appear to match up with as many as seven of them.

    The eighth, Blanca Ochoa Tello, was arrested on July 14 by ICE’s investigative branch in a drug-trafficking investigation, court filings show. But it’s unclear if she appears in the ICE data, as she was arrested in La Plata County and no woman arrested in that county was listed in the data.

    To verify ICE’s July operation claims, The Post examined arrest data in Colorado and Wyoming, which jointly form the Denver area of operations for the agency. The Post also searched for arrests in every other state to identify any arrests that may have occurred in a Colorado area but were errantly listed under other states.

    Federal agents detain a man as he exits a court hearing in immigration court at the Jacob K. Javitz Federal Building on July 30, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    Feds demand higher pace of arrests

    The overall surge in arrests this summer has come as the Trump administration seeks to dramatically increase detentions and, eventually, the pace of deportations. In early July, Congress approved tens of billions of dollars in new funding for ICE as part of the tax bill.

    Nationally, immigration authorities had their most arrest-heavy months this summer, according to data published by researchers at Syracuse University. Immigration officials arrested more than 36,700 people in June, its highest single-month total since June 2019, during Trump’s first term. More than 31,200 were arrested across the country in July.

    The Trump administration has also set out to increase its detention capacity to accommodate the mass-deportation plans.

    As of late July, ICE planned to triple its detention capacity in Colorado, according to documents obtained last month by the Washington Post. That plan includes opening as many as three new facilities and the expansion of Colorado’s sole existing facility in Aurora.

    As of last month, that detention center housed 1,176 people, according to data published by ICE.

    DHS officers watch from the parking lot as protesters gather at the entrance to the ICE Colorado Field Office on Aug. 30, 2025, in Centennial. (Photo By Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post)
    DHS officers watch from the parking lot as protesters gather at the entrance to the ICE Colorado Field Office on Aug. 30, 2025, in Centennial. (Photo By Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post)

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    Seth Klamann

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  • Warning issued in 3 states as tropical storm-force winds expected

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    Strong winds up to 60 mph prompted National Weather Service (NWS) meteorologists to issue a high wind warning for parts of Montana, North Dakota, and Wyoming on Thursday.

    Why It Matters

    Although not tropical in nature, the winds are equivalent to the strength of a tropical storm, which ranges between 39 and 73 mph. In most cases, sustained winds across the three states measured at 40 mph, with some gusts reaching 60 mph.

    The winds are strong enough to cause damage, power outages, and make travel difficult, prompting the warnings.

    NWS meteorologist Molly Gerhardt told Newsweek the high winds are accompanying a cold front moving into the area.

    What to Know

    In each case, the NWS offices issued the high wind warning in the morning hours. The warnings will remain in place through the evening.

    In Montana, northwest winds 35 to 45 mph with gusts up to 60 mph are expected for Sheridan County. The warning went into effect at 9 a.m. local time and will remain in place through 9 p.m.

    A stock image of a high winds caution sign.

    Phototreat/Getty

    “High winds may move loose debris, damage property, and cause power bumps,” the NWS office in Glasgow, Montana, said in the warning. “Travel could be difficult, especially for high profile vehicles.”

    In North Dakota, the alert warned of northwest winds to 40 mph with gusts to 60 mph. The warning is in place for Divide, Burke, Renville, Williams, Mountrail, Ward, and McLean counties and is in effect until 9 p.m. local time.

    In Wyoming, the high wind warning is in effect from 10 a.m. local time through 6 p.m. this evening. It affects northeast Johnson County, with the strongest winds expected to hit between noon and 4 p.m. Northwest winds were expected to be between 30 and 40 mph, with higher gusts.

    A wind advisory, in which winds could still be damaging but not as strong as those requiring a high wind warning, is in place across much of North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana.

    What People Are Saying

    A Bismarck, North Dakota, high wind warning said: “The high winds may damage roofs, small outbuildings and signs. Tree branches may be broken. Travel will be difficult, especially for high profile vehicles.”

    A Glasgow, Montana, high wind warning said: “Remain in the lower levels of your home during the windstorm, and avoid windows. Watch for falling debris and tree limbs. Use caution if you must drive.”

    A Riverton, Wyoming, high wind warning said: “Use caution if you must drive. Secure loose objects outdoors.”

    What Happens Next

    The high wind warnings will expire by Thursday night. People in the impacted areas should monitor local forecasts and follow the guidance from weather experts.

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  • Plane crashes in Wyoming mountains, killing girl and injuring 3 family members

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    A small plane crash in the mountains of northern Wyoming killed a 13-year-old girl and injured three relatives, authorities said Tuesday, adding a medical service helicopter spotted the wreckage.

    The crash occurred late Monday afternoon in the area of Big Mountain, an 8,200-foot peak in the Bighorn Mountains about 15 miles west of Sheridan.

    The medical helicopter spotted the downed aircraft after its crew was asked to fly over the area in Bighorn National Forest. Rescue teams set up a command post at a parking lot off a nearby highway, U.S. 14, the Sheridan County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement Tuesday.

    It said rescuers flown to the site found the girl dead and three seriously injured relatives — an 11-year-old boy, 53-year-old woman and 54-year-old man.

    The medical chopper and another helicopter from the Wyoming Army National Guard — along with an ambulance — took two survivors to a hospital Billings, Montana, and one to a hospital in Sheridan.

    The medical chopper crew flew the deceased girl to the command post and her body was transferred to the Sheridan County Coroner, the sheriff’s office said.

    As of Tuesday, authorities hadn’t released the victims’ identities or information about their flight, saying the crash was still being investigated. However, the Idaho Statesman reported the family was from Boise and identified the victim as Amelia Palmer. Her parents, Earl and Cindy Palmer, were in critical condition and her younger brother had minor injuries, the newspaper reported.

    A GoFundMe launched for the family had raised more than $25,000 as of Wednesday morning.

    Federal Aviation Administration investigators were headed to the location, according to the statement. The National Transportation Safety Board identified the crashed plane as a Piper PA-28-180.

    “The coordinated effort between all of the rescuers, EMS, medical teams, and aircraft personnel was exceptional,” Sheridan County Sheriff Levi Dominguez said in a statement. “This was, and still is, a very fluid scene. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims’ and their family.” 

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  • Minnesota man found dead after going missing while hiking in Wyoming nearly 1 month ago

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    A look into the search for a Minnesota man missing in Wyoming



    A look into the search for a Minnesota man missing in Wyoming

    02:36

    A Minnesota hiker who went missing earlier this month in Wyoming’s Bighorn Mountains has been found dead, officials say.

    Big Horn County Sheriff Ken Blackburn says Grant Gardner was found in the Coud Peak Wilderness on Tuesday.

    A professional climbing team from North Carolina summited Cloud Peak and descended on the northern route of the peak. While making a camp for the evening, the climbers noticed a “slight reflection a few hundred feet above them underneath a ledge,” according to the sheriff’s office. The team was confident it was a backpack.

    The team notified law enforcement about their finding and waited for teams to arrive at daylight.

    Once the SAR Team arrived, Gardner’s remains were located near the backpack. He was wearing clothing that “very closely matched the terrain he was climbing in,” authorities said.

    The sheriff’s office says the recovery of Gardner was difficult and dangerous, and he is being brought home to his family.

    The Big Horn County Coroner’s Office will determine the time, manner and cause of death for Gardner.

    “We believe Gardner succumbed to a tragic accident as we all have surmised,” Blackburn said.

    The search for Gardner began on Aug. 1 and was suspended last week.

    Gardner planned a three-day hike through the Misty Moon Lake area and summited Cloud Peak on July 29. He texted his wife at the summit to let her know he made it, but the climb was “more taxing than he expected,” according to the sheriff’s office.


    NOTE: The original airdate of the video attached to this article is Aug. 14, 2025.

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    Riley Moser

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  • Wyoming snowmobiler indicted for allegedly hitting wolf, tormenting wounded animal at bar before killing it

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    A Wyoming man who allegedly hit a wolf with a snowmobile, taped the wounded animal’s mouth shut and showed it off in a rural bar before killing it has been indicted on an animal cruelty charge by a grand jury nearly a year and a half after the incident.

    Cody Roberts last year paid a $250 fine for illegal possession of wildlife but avoided more serious charges as investigators struggled to find cooperative witnesses. Wyoming law gives wide leeway for people to kill wolves and other predators by a variety of means in the vast majority of the state.

    Even so, the 12-person grand jury found enough evidence over the past two weeks to support the charge of felony animal cruelty, Sublette County Attorney Clayton Melinkovich said in a statement Wednesday.

    Melinkovich had no further comment on the case. Roberts has not commented on the case and did not have a listed working number, nor an attorney on file in state District Court who might comment on his behalf.

    If convicted, Roberts faces up to two years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

    Widely circulated photos showed a man identified as Roberts posing with the wolf, its mouth bound with tape, on Feb. 29, 2024, in a bar near Daniel, a town of about 150 people about 50 miles south of Jackson.  One photo of the abused wolf was shared with CBS News Colorado.

    Video clips showed the same animal lying on a floor, alive but barely moving. One video allegedly showed the struggling wolf lying on the floor of the bar, its mouth covered in a black muzzle, the Cowboy State Daily reported. Another clip showed Roberts bending down to kiss animal on the snout. 

    The light punishment against Roberts led to calls for a Wyoming tourism boycott, to little apparent effect. Yellowstone National Park had its second-busiest year on record in 2024, up more than 5% from 2023.

    Grand juries in Wyoming are rare. The last one to get significant attention, in 2019, found that a sheriff’s deputy did not commit involuntary manslaughter by killing an unarmed man after a traffic stop.

    In a statement, Animal Wellness Action and the Center for a Humane Economy praised the indictment.

    “What Cody Roberts did to that wolf was an act of savagery,” the nonprofits’ president Wayne Pacelle said. “Now the next step is to win a conviction and to put this man in jail for his monstrous actions.”

    The Wyoming Legislature’s Travel, Recreation, Wildlife and Cultural Resources Committee discusses changes to how the state allows predators such as wolves to be killed with vehicles Monday, Sept. 30, 2024, in Cheyenne.

    Mead Gruver / AP


    Government-sponsored poisoning, trapping and bounty hunting all but wiped out wolves in the lower 48 states in the 19th and 20th centuries. Starting in the 1990s, a reintroduction program brought them back to Yellowstone and central Idaho, and their numbers have rebounded.

    Though wolves remain listed as a federally endangered or threatened species in most of the country, they have no such protection in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming, where they can be hunted and trapped.

    Exceptions include Yellowstone and neighboring Grand Teton National Park, where hunting is prohibited and the wild canines are a major attraction for millions of tourists. In 85% percent of Wyoming, wolves are classified as predators and can be freely killed by virtually any means.

    The so-called predator zone includes Sublette County, where the wolf was killed. Groups including the Humane Society argued that Wyoming’s animal cruelty law could nonetheless apply there.

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  • Video: Fed Chair Hints at Interest Rate Cuts, While Emphasizing Caution

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    new video loaded: Fed Chair Hints at Interest Rate Cuts, While Emphasizing Caution

    transcript

    transcript

    Fed Chair Hints at Interest Rate Cuts, While Emphasizing Caution

    Jerome H. Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve, signaled that interest rate cuts may be coming during his final speech as Fed chair on Friday at an annual conference hosted by the Reserve Bank of Kansas City in Jackson, Wyo.

    Labor market remains near maximum employment and inflation, though still somewhat elevated, has come down a great deal from its post-pandemic highs. At the same time, the balance of risks appears to be shifting. Our policy rate is now 100 basis points closer to neutral than it was a year ago, and the stability of the unemployment rate and other labor market measures allows us to proceed carefully as we consider changes to our policy stance.

    Recent episodes in U.S. & Politics

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    Meg Felling

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  • Stocks climb after Powell hints at potential rate cut at Jackson Hole

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    Stocks rose on Friday after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled a rate cut could be coming, during a speech at policy symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 936 points, or 2.1%, as of 11:56 a.m. EST on Friday, while the S&P 500 gained 102 points, or 1.6%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was up 1.9%.

    In a sigh-inducing sign of relief for investors, Fed Chair Powell said in his speech Friday that current risk conditions “may warrant adjusting our policy stance.” The central bank would continue to “proceed carefully” he said.

    “Our policy rate is now 100 basis points closer to neutral than it was a year ago, and the stability of the unemployment rate and other labor market measures allows us to proceed carefully as we consider changes to our policy stance,” Powell said.

    Despite mounting pressure from President Trump, the Fed has held off on cutting rates this year as it monitors the impact of Trump administration’s tariffs on inflation and the labor market. Powell’s speech on Friday, however, may be the strongest indication yet that policy changes could be afoot.

    “With Powell acknowledging that it may be time for the Fed to alter its restrictive policy, this could set up stocks for a short-term relief rally,” said Bret Kenwell, eToro investment analyst, in an email note on Friday.

    “When Fed chairs open the door for a rate cut, it’s quite difficult to close,” Ryan Sweet, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. “The August employment report or consumer price index are unlikely enough to change Powell’s opinion.”

    The central bank is tasked with so-called dual mandate of maximum employment and minimal inflation — a tricky balance to strike as lowering interest rates can boost job growth while causing inflation to tick higher, and vice versa. 

    On Friday, Powell noted that job force growth has “slowed considerably” and that the “downside risks to employment are rising.” Job growth came in weaker than expected in July, with employers adding 73,000 jobs. The Labor Department also revised job growth sharply down for May and June.

    “Overall, while the labor market appears to be in balance, it is a curious kind of balance that results from a marked slowing in both the supply of and demand for workers,” he said.

    Inflation has remained in check this year, although it’s still above the Fed’s 2% target. Powell noted Friday that tariffs have begun to push up prices in certain categories. 

    The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the central bank’s 12-person interest rate-setting panel, is scheduled to meet next on Sept. 17. Interest rate traders now put the likelihood of a cut at 89%, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch Tool.

    In stock markets abroad, Germany’s DAX returned 0.4% after government data showed that its economy shrank by 0.3% in the second quarter compared with the previous three-month period.

    Indexes rose across much of Asia, with stocks climbing 1.4% in Shanghai and 0.9% in South Korea.

    contributed to this report.

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  • Powell signals Fed may cut rates soon even as inflation risks remain

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    JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. (AP) — Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Friday opened the door ever so slightly to lowering a key interest rate in the coming months but gave no hint on the timing of a move and suggested the central bank will proceed cautiously as it continues to evaluate the impact of tariffs and other policies on the economy.

    In a high-profile speech closely watched at the White House and on Wall Street, Powell said that there are risks of both rising unemployment and stubbornly higher inflation. Yet he suggested that with hiring sluggish, the job market could weaken further.

    “The shifting balance of risks may warrant adjusting our policy stance,” he said, a reference to his concerns about weaker job gains and a more direct sign that the Fed is considering a rate cut than he has made in previous comments.

    Still, Powell’s remarks suggest the Fed will proceed carefully in the coming months and will make its rate decisions based on how inflation and unemployment evolve. The Fed has three more meetings this year, including next month, in late October, and in December, and it’s not clear whether the Fed will cut at all those meetings.

    “The stability of the unemployment rate and other labor market measures allows us to proceed carefully as we consider changes to our policy stance,” Powell said. That suggests the Fed will continue to evaluate jobs and inflation data as it decides whether to cut rates.

    The stock market jumped in response to Powell’s remarks, with the broad S&P 500 index rising 1.5% in midday trading.

    “We see Powell’s remarks as consistent with our expectation of” a quarter-point cut to the Fed’s short-term rate at its Sept. 16-17 meeting, economists at Goldman Sachs wrote in a note to clients. The Fed’s rate currently stands at 4.3%.

    Powell spoke with the Fed under unprecedented public scrutiny from the White House, as President Donald Trump has repeatedly insulted Powell and has urged him to cut rates, arguing there is “no inflation” and saying that a cut would lower the government’s interest payments on its $37 trillion in debt.

    Trump also says a cut would boost the moribund housing market. A rate cut by the Fed often leads to lower borrowing costs for mortgages, car loans, and business borrowing, but it doesn’t always.

    While Powell spoke, Trump elevated his attacks, telling reporters in Washington, D.C. that he would fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook if she did not step down over allegations from an administration official that she committed mortgage fraud.

    If Cook is removed, that would give Trump an opportunity to put a loyalist on the Fed’s governing board. The Fed has long been considered independent from day-to-day politics. The president can’t fire a Fed governor over disagreements on interest rate policy, but he can do so “for cause,” which is generally seen as malfeasance or neglect of duty.

    Later Friday, Trump told reporters, referring to Powell, “We call him too late for a reason. He should have cut them a year ago. He’s too late.”

    Powell spoke at the Fed’s annual economic symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, a conference with about 100 academics, economists, and central bank officials from around the world. He was given a standing ovation before he spoke.

    Cook, who is also attending the conference, declined to comment on the president’s remarks.

    In his remarks, the Fed chair underscored that tariffs are lifting inflation and could push it higher in the coming months.

    “The effects of tariffs on consumer prices are now clearly visible. We expect those effects to accumulate over coming months, with high uncertainty about timing and amounts,” Powell said.

    Inflation has crept higher in recent months though it is down from a peak of 9.1% three years ago. Tariffs have not spurred inflation as much as some economists worried, but they are starting to lift the prices of heavily imported goods such as furniture, toys, and shoes.

    Consumer prices rose 2.7% in July from a year ago, above the Fed’s target of 2%. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices rose 3.1%.

    Powell added that higher prices from tariffs could cause a one-time shift to prices, rather than an ongoing bout of inflation. Other Fed officials have said that is the most likely outcome and as a result the central bank can cut rates to boost the job market.

    The Fed chair said it is largely up to the central bank to ensure that tariffs don’t lead to sustained inflation.

    “Come what may, we will not allow a one-time increase in the price level to become an ongoing inflation problem,” he said, suggesting deep rate cuts, as Trump has demanded, are unlikely.

    Regarding the job market, Powell noted that even as hiring has slowed sharply this year, the unemployment rate remains low. He added that with immigration falling sharply, fewer jobs are needed to keep unemployment in check.

    Yet with hiring sluggish, the risks of a sharper downturn, with rising layoffs, has risen, Powell said.

    Powell also suggested the Fed would continue to set its interest-rate policy free from political pressure.

    Fed officials “will make these decisions, based solely on their assessment of the data and its implications for the economic outlook and the balance of risks. We will never deviate from that approach.”

    Powell dedicated the second half of his speech to announcing changes to the Fed’s policy framework that was issued in August 2020. The framework, which has been blamed for delaying the Fed’s response to the pandemic inflation spike, provides guidelines on how the Fed would respond to changes in inflation and employment.

    In 2020, after a decade of low inflation and low interest rates following the financial crisis and Great Recession in 2008-2009, the Fed changed its framework to allow inflation to top its 2% target temporarily, so that inflation would average 2% over time.

    And after unemployment fell to a half-century low in 2018, without pushing up inflation, the 2020 framework said that the Fed would focus only on “shortfalls” in employment, rather than “deviations.” That meant it would cut rates if unemployment rose, but wouldn’t necessarily raise them if it fell.

    The Fed reviewed its framework this year and concluded that it was tied too closely to the pre-pandemic economy, which has since shifted. Inflation spiked to a four-decade high in 2022 and the Fed rapidly boosted interest rates afterward.

    “A key objective has been to make sure that our framework is suitable across a broad range of economic conditions,” Powell said.

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  • Stock futures tilt up ahead of Fed chief Jerome Powell’s Jackson Hole speech

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    U.S. stock futures inched higher Friday as investors await news out of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, where Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is set to speak later this morning.

    S&P 500 futures were up 15 points, or 0.2%, as of 8:55 a.m. EST, while Dow Jones Industrial Average futures added 140 points, or 0.3%. Tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite futures were up 0.2%.

    World shares were mixed, in response to a drop in Walmart stock Thursday and as investors eagerly hope for signs of a rate cut from the Fed.

    Traders will be eyeing Fed Chair Powell’s speech at the Jackson Hole economic forum to see if he hints at a potential rate cut at the central bank’s next meeting, which is scheduled for Sept. 17. The central leader is expected to speak at 10 a.m. at the event hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.

    While Powell will likely touch on economic trends on Friday, he’s expected to keep the question of a Fed rate cut close to his chest.

    So far this year, the 12-member Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) which Powell serves as the chairman of, has held off on a rate cut, maintaining a cautious approach as it continues to assess the impact of the Trump administration’s tariffs. That’s despite pressure from President Trump, who has repeatedly urged the central bank leader to lower rates.

    The Federal Reserve is tasked with keeping inflation in check while also maintaining maximum employment — a challenging mandate in light of the recent slowdown in job growth and signs that the president’s tariffs may be starting to drive up prices. The Consumer Price Index in July rose 2.7% on an annual basis, slightly cooler than economists’ forecasts, but still above the Fed’s 2% target.

    “What is critical in Fed Chair Powell’s speech today is how confident he is that inflation is moving down toward the Fed’s 2% inflation target,” Apollo Chief Economist Torsten Slok  said in a research note on Friday.

    contributed to this report.

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  • Wyoming man indicted for allegedly hitting wolf with snowmobile, bringing it to bar and killing it

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    By MEAD GRUVER

    CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — A Wyoming man who allegedly hit a wolf with a snowmobile, taped the wounded animal’s mouth shut and showed it off in a rural bar before killing it has been indicted on an animal cruelty charge by a grand jury nearly a year and a half after the incident.

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  • Pet Friendly Fun In Cody, Wyoming | GoPetFriendly

    Pet Friendly Fun In Cody, Wyoming | GoPetFriendly

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    ** ROAD TRIP TIP **

    If your route to or from Cody involves I-90, consider taking the scenic drive along Hwy 14A. It’s a winding road through the spectacular Bighorn Mountains, and the breathtaking views won’t disappoint.

    There is no shortage of pet friendly hiking trails in the Bighorn National Forest! So, make time to stretch your legs or enjoy a picnic. Just remember to keep dogs leashed for their protection. This is bear country, and precautions should be taken.

    READ MORE ⇒ Hiking Safety: Encountering Predators On The Trail

     

    Sniffing Around Pet Friendly Cody, Wy

    “Buffalo Bill” Cody and a group of investors he assembled established Cody in 1896. The grandeur of the scenery (for good reason), ranching potential, abundant fish and game, and the proximity to Yellowstone drew residents. And in 1902, the town was incorporated. That same year Buffalo Bill opened the Irma Hotel, named for his youngest daughter.

    To bolster the economy of the struggling new town Buffalo Bill persuaded his friend, President Teddy Roosevelt, to establish the Bureau of Reclamation and build the Shoshone Dam and Reservoir. Later renamed the Buffalo Bill Dam and Reservoir, the dam topped the list as the highest in the world at the time.

     

    Pet Friendly Perspective

    Cody is a true western town, steeped in the feeling of cowboys and pioneering. In fact, a 45-minute gunfight is staged all summer, Monday through Saturday evenings.

    Downtown Cody is a fun place to mosey about and window shop. And finding a place to get a bite is easy – there are several pet friendly restaurants.

     

    You’ll also find a pet friendly trolley tour – a rare treat! Give them an hour, and they’ll share the historical sites and vistas along the 22-mile route with you and your pooch.

    If you’d rather do some walking, the city parks are pet friendly and offer a variety of scenic trails. For the truly adventurous, there’s a local tour company that will let your pup help mind the store while you’re out white water rafting or spotting wild mustangs!

    Pet Friendly Accommodations and Restaurants

    GoPetFriendly.com has listings in Cody for several pet friendly hotels and campgrounds and a number of pet friendly restaurants and activities.

    Cody also makes a great basecamp to explore the surrounding area. You’ll find plenty to do here with the whole family!

    Brindle dog in carBrindle dog in car

     

    Pet Friendly Day Trips From Cody

    Expecting us to recommend a drive to Yellowstone? Nope! We found these trips to be just as spectacular, and a lot more fun for the dogs!

    Red Lodge – Beartooth Pass – Cooke City

    This drive showcases approximately 200 miles of the most stunning scenery you will ever see! And exploring the quaint towns along the way make it a challenge to keep moving.

    The ski resort of Red Lodge is especially charming, so plan to stretch your legs there. For a little more exercise, remember that all the trails in the Shoshone National Forest welcome pets! Over 335 species of wildlife, including the largest population of bighorn sheep and one of the few remaining grizzly bear populations in the lower 48 states, make their home in the Forest’s 2.4 million acres.

     

    Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area

    About 55 miles northeast of Cody you’ll find the Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area. Visiting here is like stepping back in time.

    Driving through only takes a couple of hours, but it would be easy to spend the whole day. Wildlife viewing is the primary source of entertainment – and we saw plenty! You can also tour old ranch sites, hike the pet friendly trails, or take a boat tour through the gorgeous canyon.

     

    Medicine Wheel

    Just 20-miles east of Bighorn Canyon you’ll find Medicine Wheel – one of the most inspiring places we’ve visited. At 9,642 feet above sea level, near the top of a mountain, you can feel the sacredness of the site. A hush falls over the visitors as they approach, and even Ty and Buster seemed to sense this was a place to practice a little decorum.

    Wyoming's Top Pet Friendly Attraction: Medicine Wheel | GoPetFriendly.com

    Measuring 80 feet across, it’s estimated that the stone structure was constructed between 1200 and 1700 AD. Of course, the exact date and builder are unknown. But observing the well-worn trail, it is clear the site has visited by many people during it’s long history.

    It’s possible you’ll even catch a glimpse of a pica — precious little critters that live at these high elevations. Be sure to keep your pups on leash so they don’t cause the local wildlife any stress.

     

    As you can see, pet friendly Cody, Wyoming makes a wonderful vacation destination. And since the pet policies at Yellowstone make it a challenge to enjoy the national park with your pets, don’t overlook Cody on your family trip!

    READ MORE ⇒ Tips For Visiting Yellowstone With Pets

    Dog friendly activities near Yellowstone National Park from the Pet Travel Experts at GoPetFriendly.comDog friendly activities near Yellowstone National Park from the Pet Travel Experts at GoPetFriendly.com

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  • Keeler: CU Buffs’ Deion Sanders, CSU Rams’ Jay Norvell both need Rocky Mountain Showdown win. After Nebraska, though? Coach Prime needs it more – The Cannabist

    Keeler: CU Buffs’ Deion Sanders, CSU Rams’ Jay Norvell both need Rocky Mountain Showdown win. After Nebraska, though? Coach Prime needs it more – The Cannabist

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    BOULDER — When the bully across the road gives you a wedgie on national TV, the neighbors start to worry. Get beat by little brother? The neighbors start to talk.

    “I would say (CU Buffs coach) Deion Sanders needs (Saturday) more,” CBS analyst and former NFL lineman Ross Tucker, who’s in the booth for Saturday’s Rocky Mountain Showdown at Fort Collins, told me by phone earlier this week. “The reason why I say that is when things started to go south (in 2023), they really went south. (CU) did not show the ability to really handle and overcome adversity very well.

    “So based on how last year went, if you’re a CU fan or if you’re a Deion fan, you see back-to-back losses to Nebraska and to CSU, two of the four teams you beat last year, you’ve got to think about how well they’ll be able to keep the team together and in a good headspace for the rest of the season. … (It’s) not even, ‘Here we go again.’ It’s, ‘These are actually two of the teams we beat last year, so we’re going in the wrong direction.’”

    Read the rest of this story on TheKnow.DenverPost.com.

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  • As gray wolves divide conservationists and ranchers, a mediator tries to tame all sides

    As gray wolves divide conservationists and ranchers, a mediator tries to tame all sides

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    When Francine Madden heard about a Wyoming man who killed a gray wolf after injuring it with his snowmobile and showing it off at his local bar, she was disturbed, but not very surprised.  

    She’s seen a lot during her almost three decades working as a mediator for wildlife conflict. She’s resolved disputes over gorillas in Uganda and tigers in Bhutan, but for 50-odd years, the management of gray wolves has been an intractable American problem.

    Gray wolves
    An alpha male gray wolf (Canis lupus) confronts another wolf in Montana.

    Dennis Fast / VWPics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images


    Since 1973, the gray wolf has been on and off the federal government’s endangered species list. When the wolves are on the list, advocates say the protections help wolves’ place in the natural environment and allow them to roam the great American West as they did for hundreds of years — not be treated, as some say, “like vermin.” On the other side, some ranchers then say there are too many wolves and they have to bear the economic — and emotional — costs of lost livestock. 

    “I watch my animals die and get murdered,” Kathy McKay, owner of the 1,600-acre K-Diamond-K ranch in Washington state, told CBS News. She says she can’t sleep at night in fear for the lives of her animals, and she’s lost about 40 to wolves.

    When the wolves are off the endangered species list, as they are now in certain states in the lower 48, advocates say wolves are killed indiscriminately. Attorney and advocate Collette Adkins, carnivore conservation director at the Center for Biological Diversity, says wolf carcasses are “piling up” and there is a “cowboy mentality” around a species often not seen as worthy. 

    wolf-damage-1.jpg
    A cow and her calf on K-Diamond-K Guest Ranch in Washington state. Their owner says the animals were mauled by gray wolves.

    K-Diamond-K Guest Ranch


    Enter Madden. Hired as a mediator by the federal government in December, this is her second time wading into the morass, albeit on a much larger scale. She facilitated Washington state’s 18-person working group on the gray wolves in 2015, helping to come to some policy decisions around population management. 

    Almost a decade later, she and her firm Constructive Conflict are back, this time at the national level. But in some ways, the sides have become more entrenched. Madden says she’s speaking to Americans who “feel their way of life, or what they care about, is under very real threat.” Yet she remains confident she’ll have all sides at the table starting in 2025. 

    Sides drawn along partisan lines

    Thousands of gray wolves roamed America’s wilderness for centuries until hunters, ranchers and others nearly decimated the species. In 1973, the federal government listed them as endangered in the lower 48 states.  Fewer than 1,000 wolves roamed in the U.S. at that time, according to the International Wolf Center. 

    Protected from hunting, gray wolves began to proliferate, and some people grew concerned they were killing livestock and threatening tribal communities and lands. Soon the pushback began.

    Gray wolves
    Three gray wolves in Montana.

    Dennis Fast / VWPics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images


    Animals were killed, businesses were shut, and the sides — often drawn along partisan lines — dug in, each convinced they knew the right approach to managing gray wolves. For many, “wolves became a symbol of government overreach,” said Adkins. Recent action sowed even more division; as the population rebounded, the gray wolf was taken off the federal government’s endangered species list in 2020 and the management was shifted to the states. 

    Wolves began to die. One example: a third of Wisconsin’s gray wolf population was killed by hunters and poachers when protections were removed, researchers at the University of Wisconsin found in 2021.

    John Vucetich, a professor at Michigan Technological University, along with more than 100 other scientists, wrote to the Biden administration to reinstate protections. Lawsuits began, and on Feb. 10, 2022, gray wolves in the lower 48 states — with the exception of the Northern Rocky Mountain population — were added back to the list by a court order.  

    The news devastated McKay, who was born on the ranch her parents bought in 1961. 

    “I don’t know how people 300 miles away have so much control over our livelihood and the survival of our livestock,” said McKay. “Why do we even have to ask?” 

    420181788-10160954809684061-6647670479676610031-n-1.jpg
    Ranch owner Kathy McKay in Washington state with a cow on her land.

    K-Diamond-K Guest Ranch


    Differing viewpoints, ongoing divisions

    Working group members in Washington state couldn’t move any policy forward in the years before Madden arrived, she said, and they “couldn’t speak civilly or constructively to each other.” 

    “The costs of the conflict over wolves has been staggering,” she said, adding that no agency has truly been able to count the damage the economic costs — or societal costs — of the conflict.

    We weren’t that comfortable in the same room, with such differing viewpoints. Ranchers were carrying all of the burden, and there were environmentalists we felt didn’t have skin in the game,” said Washington rancher Molly Linville, a working group member whose husband’s family has worked 6,000 acres of land for more than 100 years.

    In the year after Madden started mediating the local conflict, “they were able to come up with a decision they all agreed upon,” she said. At the end of a three-year, $1.2 million state contract, she said, the working group hammered out a series of constructive policies to manage wolves in their state. 

    Madden brings the same optimism to the national dialogue. 

    She’s close to the end of the first year of a three-year, $3 million contract. Her group contracted three companies to work on this project; one, a film company, will document the conversations around gray wolves and share the film with the public. Her group has already started selecting the roughly 24 participants who will have ongoing conversations on how to come together around gray wolves.

    She traveled to Montana in June to meet with livestock producers and reservations and visit tribal nations. For the past year, she met with people from Wisconsin, Montana, California, Idaho, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Colorado, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Indiana. Madden acknowledges that “skepticism” abounds when she tells people her group’s approach to the conflict, but says many are open to talking as they feel that the “current vicious cycle of conflict in this country is harming people and wolves.” 

    She still believes in the power of Americans to listen to each other. 

    “There is a genuine hope that at a national scale, in this deeply divided society, we can come together for this conversation to take a step in the right direction for the long-term viability of communities, cultures and wildlife conservation,” said Madden.

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  • Colorado’s next wolves won’t come from Washington tribes, leaving state to search again for new source

    Colorado’s next wolves won’t come from Washington tribes, leaving state to search again for new source

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    The Washington tribes that agreed to provide wolves to Colorado’s reintroduction program have rescinded their offer, forcing state wildlife officials to seek a different source — a search that has proved difficult in the past.

    The Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation said they would no longer provide the wolves after speaking with the Southern Ute Indian Tribe, which has reservation land in Colorado. The Washington tribes — which had been expected to be a major source for the next round of the reintroduction effort — withdrew their agreement in a June 6 letter to Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

    “It has come to our attention that necessary and meaningful consultation was not completed with the potentially impacted tribes,” wrote Jarred-Michael Erickson, chairman of the Colville business council, in the letter. “Out of respect for the sovereignty, cultures and memberships of Indian Tribes in Colorado and neighboring states, who may be impacted by this project, the Colville Tribes cannot assist with this project at this time.”

    Colorado voters in 2020 narrowly decided to reintroduce gray wolves and mandated that state wildlife officials do so by Dec. 31, 2023.

    The plan detailing how CPW will execute the reintroduction effort states that the agency should release a total of 30 to 50 wolves within the next few years, a target it plans to reach by relocating 10 to 15 wolves every winter.

    The controversial vote has caused deep frustration in Colorado’s ranching communities, where people say the wolves will negatively impact their businesses and ways of life. Support for the reintroduction primarily came from urban Front Range communities, while the rural areas where wolves would live opposed the measure.

    Since the first December releases, wolves have killed or injured at least 14 cattle and nine sheep — including 8 sheep killed or injured last weekend.

    Documents from the Colville Tribes’ business council show that the council discussed the issue on June 6 after learning Colorado officials “failed to consult” with the Southern Ute Tribe about the wolves.

    The Southern Ute Indian Tribe has concerns about the wolves potential impact on livestock, deer and elk herds and their use of the Brunot Area hunting rights reserved for tribal members, tribal leadership said Thursday in a statement. Tribal leaders said they would continue to work with Colorado Parks and Wildlife “to establish a framework for working together that enables the state to implement its reintroduction program while simultaneously recognizing the sovereign authority of the Tribe on tribal lands and the interest shared by the Tribe and the State in the Brunot Area.”

    So far, CPW’s monthly maps showing where the wolves have roamed have indicated activity in the central and northern mountains, far from the Southern Utes’ southwestern Colorado reservation. But plans call for the next round of releases to occur farther south.

    Colorado wildlife officials struggled last year to find a state or tribe willing to provide wolves for reintroduction here. The three states identified as ideal for sourcing wolves — Idaho, Montana and Wyoming — all rejected Colorado’s request for wolves.

    CPW spokesman Joey Livingston on Thursday declined to discuss source negotiations and said the agency would issue a statement when it finds a source.

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    Elise Schmelzer

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  • Federal Reserve is edging closer to cutting rates. The question will soon be, how fast?

    Federal Reserve is edging closer to cutting rates. The question will soon be, how fast?

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — Two years after launching an aggressive fight against inflation and one year after leaving its benchmark interest rate at a near-quarter-century high, the Federal Reserve is expected to signal this week that it will likely reduce borrowing costs as soon as September.

    A rate reduction this fall — the first since the pandemic — would amount to a momentous shift and a potential boost to the economy. Fed rate cuts, over time, typically lower borrowing costs for such things as mortgages, auto loans and credit cards.

    A single cut in the Fed’s key rate, now at roughly 5.3%, wouldn’t by itself make much difference to the economy. Financial markets widely expect it. Some borrowing costs have already dropped slightly in anticipation of the move. As a result, the main question for the central bank will be: How fast and how far will the policymakers ultimately cut rates?

    It’s a question of keen interest to both major presidential candidates, too. Any signal that the Fed will rapidly cut rates could boost the economy and potentially lift Vice President Kamala Harris’ election prospects. Former President Donald Trump has argued that the Fed shouldn’t cut rates until its next meeting, in November, which will come two days after the election.

    Futures markets have priced in a 64% likelihood that the Fed will cut rates three times this year, in September, November and December, according to CME FedWatch. As recently as last month, Fed officials had collectively forecast just one rate reduction in 2024 and four in 2025 and 2026, suggesting that they lean toward a more measured pace of cutting rates about once a quarter.

    How the economy fares in the coming months will likely determine how quickly the Fed acts. Should growth remain solid and employers keep hiring, the Fed would prefer to take its time and cut rates slowly as inflation continues to decline.

    “They want to be very gradual in how they pull back,” said Gennadiy Goldberg, head of US rates strategy at TD Securities. “But if the labor market actually looks like it’s slowing down,” Goldberg suggested, Fed officials might conclude that “they should be moving a little bit quicker than they otherwise would.”

    There are signs that the labor market is cooling, as the Fed has intended. Job growth has averaged a decent but unspectacular 177,000 a month for the past three months, down from a red-hot three-month average of 275,000 a year ago.

    It’s not yet clear whether that cooling reflects a return of the economy to a more sustainable, less inflationary, post-pandemic period of growth or whether the cooling will continue until the economy slides into a recession.

    “That’s the million-dollar question at this point,” Goldberg said.

    Chair Jerome Powell and other Fed officials have underscored that they’re paying nearly as much attention to the threat posed by a hiring slowdown as they are to inflation pressures. That shift in the Fed’s emphasis toward ensuring that the job market doesn’t weaken too much has likely boosted market expectations for a rate cut.

    “Elevated inflation is not the only risk we face,” Powell said in congressional testimony earlier this month, after the most recent jobs report showed the unemployment rate ticking up for a third straight month to a still-low 4.1%. Yet Powell also characterized the job market and growth at that time as “strong.”

    And on Thursday the government reported that the economy grew at a healthy 2.8% annual rate in the April-June quarter, though that figure followed a tepid 1.4% expansion in the first three months of the year.

    “The economy looks pretty solid at the moment,” said William English, an economist at the Yale School of Management and a former senior Fed staffer. “I don’t think there are real signs now that something bad is going to happen.”

    English, like many other observers, thinks Powell will provide a clearer picture of future rate moves at his annual speech in August during the Fed’s monetary policy conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. This week, though, the Fed may change the statement it issues after each meeting in ways that could hint that a rate cut is coming soon.

    For example, the statement it released after its June meeting had read, “In recent months, there has been modest further progress toward the (Fed’s) 2% inflation objective.” When it issues its new statement on Wednesday, the Fed could drop “modest” or alter it in some other way to underscore that additional progress on inflation has been achieved.

    In June, the Fed’s policymakers had forecast that year-over-year inflation would average 2.8% in the final three months of this year. On Friday, the government said that inflation has already fallen below that level, to 2.5% in June, according to the Fed’s preferred measure.

    If inflation remains below the Fed’s year-end target, that could justify cutting borrowing rates more than the single reduction the policymakers forecast in June.

    Still, even as price pressures cool, annual inflation may not fall much more this year — and could even rise a bit by the end of 2024. That’s because monthly inflation readings fell to very low levels in the second half of last year. So even low monthly figures in the coming months might not pull down year-over-year inflation.

    Fed officials, though, are expected to focus much more on the three-month and six-month annualized inflation averages in the coming months. The three-month average of the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, excluding the volatile food and energy categories, fell to just 2.3% in June.

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  • Three members of the Nelons died in a plane crash

    Three members of the Nelons died in a plane crash

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    Members of Grammy-nominated gospel group dead in plane crash

    Three members of the Nelons, a Gospel Music Association Hall of Fame quartet, were among seven people killed in a plane crash in Wyoming, according to a statement by a group member who was not aboard the aircraft.The Nelons co-founder, Kelly Nelon Clark, her husband Jason Clark, and their daughter, Amber Nelon Kistler, died in the crash Friday afternoon, according to a statement from daughter Autumn Nelon Streetman.”Thank you for the prayers that have been extended already to me, my husband, Jamie, and our soon-to-be-born baby boy, as well as Jason’s parents, Dan and Linda Clark,” Nelon Streetman said. “We appreciate your continued prayers, love and support as we navigate the coming days.” Also killed in the crash were Nelon Kistler’s husband, Nathan Kistler, family friend Melodi Hodges, and Larry and Melissa Haynie, according to Nelon Streetman.There were no survivors.The group was traveling to join the Gaither Homecoming Cruise to Alaska, according to a statement from Gaither Music Group, the sponsor of the cruise that features numerous gospel singers and groups.Gaither Music said Hodges was an assistant for the band. Larry Haynie was the pilot of the aircraft, and Melissa Haynie was his wife. The aircraft was identified as a single-engine turboprop Pilatus PC-12/47E.The crash occurred about 1 p.m. in Campbell County, Wyoming, north of Gillette and about 250 miles (402 kilometers) north of Cheyenne, according to a statement from Campbell County spokesperson Leslie Perkins.The National Transportation Safety Board spokesperson Keith Holloway said Saturday that a team of investigators is expected at the site later Saturday.”The aircraft is in a remote location and once they gain access, they will begin documenting the scene, examining the aircraft,” Holloway said. “The aircraft will then be recovered and taken to a secure facility for further evaluation.”A preliminary report on the crash is expected in about 30 days while a final report with the probable cause of the crash could take up to two years to complete, Holloway said.The Nelons were inducted into the Gospel Music Association Hall of Fame in 2016 and were winners of 10 GMA Dove Awards, including multiple song of the year and album of the year awards.

    Three members of the Nelons, a Gospel Music Association Hall of Fame quartet, were among seven people killed in a plane crash in Wyoming, according to a statement by a group member who was not aboard the aircraft.

    The Nelons co-founder, Kelly Nelon Clark, her husband Jason Clark, and their daughter, Amber Nelon Kistler, died in the crash Friday afternoon, according to a statement from daughter Autumn Nelon Streetman.

    “Thank you for the prayers that have been extended already to me, my husband, Jamie, and our soon-to-be-born baby boy, as well as Jason’s parents, Dan and Linda Clark,” Nelon Streetman said. “We appreciate your continued prayers, love and support as we navigate the coming days.”

    Also killed in the crash were Nelon Kistler’s husband, Nathan Kistler, family friend Melodi Hodges, and Larry and Melissa Haynie, according to Nelon Streetman.

    There were no survivors.

    The group was traveling to join the Gaither Homecoming Cruise to Alaska, according to a statement from Gaither Music Group, the sponsor of the cruise that features numerous gospel singers and groups.

    Gaither Music said Hodges was an assistant for the band. Larry Haynie was the pilot of the aircraft, and Melissa Haynie was his wife. The aircraft was identified as a single-engine turboprop Pilatus PC-12/47E.

    The crash occurred about 1 p.m. in Campbell County, Wyoming, north of Gillette and about 250 miles (402 kilometers) north of Cheyenne, according to a statement from Campbell County spokesperson Leslie Perkins.

    The National Transportation Safety Board spokesperson Keith Holloway said Saturday that a team of investigators is expected at the site later Saturday.

    “The aircraft is in a remote location and once they gain access, they will begin documenting the scene, examining the aircraft,” Holloway said. “The aircraft will then be recovered and taken to a secure facility for further evaluation.”

    A preliminary report on the crash is expected in about 30 days while a final report with the probable cause of the crash could take up to two years to complete, Holloway said.

    The Nelons were inducted into the Gospel Music Association Hall of Fame in 2016 and were winners of 10 GMA Dove Awards, including multiple song of the year and album of the year awards.

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  • Northern Wyoming plane crash causes fatalities, sparks wildfire

    Northern Wyoming plane crash causes fatalities, sparks wildfire

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    GILLETTE, Wyo. (AP) — A plane crash in a remote area of northeastern Wyoming caused an unspecified number of fatalities and sparked a wildfire, authorities said Friday.

    The plane crashed at about 1 p.m. north of the town of Gillette near the Wyoming state line, Campbell County officials said in a social media post. The number of fatalities was not immediately released.

    A distress signal was sent out by the plane before the crash, Campbell County Undersheriff Quentin Reynolds told the Gillette News Record. Callers later reported seeing smoke columns rising into the air near the suspected crash site, he said.

    The wildfire that resulted from the crash was being suppressed using aircraft, heavy equipment and engine crews, officials said.

    The National Transportation Safety Board was dispatching a team to investigate, local officials said.

    Federal investigators were not yet on the scene of the remote crash site as of Friday evening, NTSB spokesperson Keith Holloway said. More information was expected to be released Saturday.

    A spokesperson for Campbell County could not be reached immediately for further comment.

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  • Here’s where Colorado’s wolves roamed in July

    Here’s where Colorado’s wolves roamed in July

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    For the first time since they were reintroduced to the state in December, Colorado’s gray wolves have moved out of central Grand County, state wildlife officials said in their July report.

    In July, the 11 wolves and one pup stayed relatively in the same watershed areas as they did in May and June, traveling between Routt, Jackson, Larimer, Grand, Eagle and Summit counties, according to a new location map released Tuesday by Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

    CPW releases a map each month showing which watersheds the state’s collared wolves have traveled in, wildlife officials said. A wolf may or may not remain there now, and it may not have traversed every part of that watershed.

    A map released by Colorado Parks and Wildlife shows collared wolf activity detected by watershed in the mountains between June 25, 2024, and July 23, 2024. (Provided by Colorado Parks and Wildlife)

    The updated map shows wolf activity from June 25 through July 23 in watersheds from the Wyoming border to Interstate 70 and from west of Craig in Moffat County to west of Fort Collins in Larimer County.

    While the monthly maps from December to June have shown wolves using watersheds across Grand County to the border of Boulder County, the July map showcases a lack of data in the area, indicating that wolves didn’t visit the area at all during July.

    The collars record a GPS position every four hours and send the data to state biologists once four locations are recorded, CPW officials said. State officials do not share specific locations to protect the wolves and may “buffer” maps to protect wolves during certain times of year, such as mating season.

    Although July’s map highlighted watershed areas south of Interstate 70, CPW officials said no wolves had passed the major highway and the population was exploring land to the north.

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    Lauren Penington

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