Father dies, son survives in Snake River boating accident

AMERICAN FALLS, Idaho (AP) — A father is dead but his son survived after their boat hit a rock in the Snake River.

The Idaho State Journal reports (http://bit.ly/2qsAQQP ) that the Power County Sheriff’s Office identified the deceased as 79-year-old Willard Cranney of Burley.

Authorities say Cranney and his son were operating their boat Saturday near the Pipeline boat launch when they struck the rock around 2 p.m.

The two were ejected from the boat upon impact with the rock. Nearby boaters got both men out of the water and tried to revive Cranney, but their efforts were not successful.

Authorities said Cranney’s son, whose name wasn’t released, survived without any injuries.

The Sheriff’s Office reported that neither Cranney nor his son was wearing a life jacket.

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Information from: Idaho State Journal, http://www.journalnet.com

Intoxicated swimmer rescued from reservoir

PINEVIEW RESERVOIR, Utah (AP) — Authorities say a man was rescued by a passing boater after he attempted to swim in a Utah reservoir while intoxicated.

KSL-TV reports that the man in his 20s went for a swim in Pineview Reservoir Saturday evening. When he didn’t come up for air, a nearby boater jumped in and pulled him out of the water.

Witnesses say the man wasn’t breathing and was turning blue.

Authorities say the man was given CPR and was soon able to walk around. He was taken to a local hospital.

Officials have not released the name of the swimmer, or his condition.

Foundation sets priorities for Grand Teton National Park

GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (AP) — Over the past 20 years, the Grand Teton National Park Foundation has raised more than $65 million for the site in Wyoming.

Foundation President Leslie Mattson told the Jackson Hole News & Guide that its next priorities include the cultural preservation of the Mormon Row area and improving public access to the Snake River.

The foundation was created in 1997 as the primary fundraising partner for the park.

The projects and initiatives it has funded have aimed to improve visitor services, preserve park resources and provide outreach to a variety of people. Grand Teton has nearly 5 million visitors a year.

The first major fundraising project for the foundation was the construction of the Craig Thomas Discovery and Visitor Center, which opened its first phase in 2007 and its auditorium in 2011.

“The visitor center really put us on the map in terms of having capacity to help the park,” Mattson told the newspaper. “Before there was a foundation I don’t think people knew they had the ability to help the park through philanthropy.”

After the visitor center, the next big fundraising goal was $14 million for the Jenny Lake Renewal project. The project is underway and includes the repair of trails and the addition of overlooks and interpretive exhibits.

Other highlights of the partnership include the addition of trails and bridges, conservation and research of native wildlife, and the purchase by private groups of 640 acres on Antelope Flats — one of the most important wildlife habitats in the region.

The foundation raised $23 million in private funds for the purchase, which was matched by $23 million from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund.

Hiker rescued from canyon in southern Idaho

TWIN FALLS, Idaho (AP) — Officials say a hiker has been rescued from the Snake River Canyon in south-central Idaho.

Twin Falls County Sheriff’s spokeswoman Lori Stewart says the man hiked into the canyon Tuesday but couldn’t get out.

Rescue crews entered the canyon near Twin Falls to reach the man at about 10 p.m. He wasn’t injured.

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Information from: KTVB-TV, http://www.ktvb.com/

South Idaho bicyclist killed in hit-and-run crash in Virginia

WARDELL, Va. (AP) — A bicyclist from Idaho was struck and killed by a truck that fled the scene in southwest Virginia.

Virginia State Police said in a news release that 54-year-old David Earl Christensen of Burley, Idaho, was cycling early Thursday when he was struck from behind.

Police say the striking vehicle drove away without stopping. Christensen was pronounced dead at the scene.

Troopers are looking for a Ford F250 or larger truck, manufactured between 2011 and 2016. It likely has damage to the front and passenger side.

Body found by hikers in Utah

OGDEN, Utah (AP) — Utah authorities have recovered a body found by hikers.

The body had been brought down the mountain Sunday night by Weber County Sheriff’s Office search and rescue crews.

Lt. Nate Hutchinson says the hikers did not have cellphone reception in the area, so they hiked down the mountain to call police.

The hikers had reported the body at about 3:40 p.m.

They led search and rescue crews to the body in an area above 29th Street, which had been near the Waterfall Canyon Trail.

Hutchinson did not have information on a cause of death or the body’s identity.

Idaho man who went to pick mushrooms found dead

COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho (AP) — A Coeur d’Alene man who was reported missing after heading into the woods to pick mushrooms has been found dead in a vehicle crash.

The Kootenai County Sheriff’s Office said 54-year-old Mark Arnold was found Sunday morning on a forest road in Shoshone County near Kootenai County.

The office says searchers found his vehicle in the morning near Hemlock Mountain. It appears that the vehicle left the roadway and rolled over.

Arnold’s family reported him missing. He had not been seen since Thursday when headed out to pick mushrooms. Search crews from both counties had been out looking for him.

Group proposing retreat for kids with cancer to appeal

KETCHUM, Idaho (AP) — A nonprofit group says it plans to appeal after it was denied a permit to build a retreat for children with cancer in central Idaho.

The Idaho Mountain Express reports (http://bit.ly/2pzjq4p) that the Blaine County Planning and Zoning Commission in April denied a conditional-use permit to Camp Rainbow Gold.

The camp group’s director Elizabeth Lizberg says it has adjusted the application to accommodate concerns and plans to submit reasons for the appeal this week.

The nonprofit holds summer camps for children and families dealing with cancer at a private campsite in the Sawtooth Mountains. It is seeking to build a retreat on a 240-acre parcel in the unincorporated neighborhood of Triumph near the resort town of Ketchum. The proposed camp would include 29 structures.

The group has faced opposition from neighbors who say the location is unsuitable due to wildlife, traffic issues and other issues.

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Information from: Idaho Mountain Express, http://www.mtexpress.com

Wyoming tribes propose wolf-hunt buffer zone

JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A Native American advocacy group is asking Wyoming wildlife managers for a ban on killing wolves along a wide swath of land bordering Yellowstone National Park.

A request sent to the Wyoming Fish and Game Department seeks a temporary suspension of wolf hunting altogether and a 31-mile no-hunting “sacred resource protection safety zone” along the outskirts of the 2.2 million-acre park in northwest Wyoming.

Protect the Wolves Director Roger Dobson told the Jackson Hole News & Guide (http://bit.ly/2pHcH3P) that Wyoming’s insistence on allowing unregulated hunting of wolves outside areas where wolves are still protected was a motivation for approaching the state.

“It goes to show that Wyoming is not capable of managing their resources in the best interest of the public,” said Dobson, a member of the Pacific Northwest’s Cowlitz Indian Tribe. “They’re mandated under the Indian trust and public trust to manage our resources in the best interest of the public. It’s further mandated that they do not allow special-interest groups to suggest or affect policy change.”

Dobson’s contention is that Wyoming’s wolf management plan was a concession to the livestock lobby that stands to benefit, and thus an illegal betrayal of the public trust.

Protect the Wolves has no staff in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, but Dobson said it has “tribal endorsements” all over North America.

A March court decision once again turned wolves into a state-managed species, following a 2 1/2-year stint as a federally protected threatened species.

In Wyoming, wolves remain protected in Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. The state has a tightly regulated hunting season in the adjoining greater Yellowstone area. But elsewhere in Wyoming, where wolves aren’t nearly as numerous, wolves can be shot on sight and without limit.

Game and Fish has begun planning for a fall hunt in the managed portion of the state, called the “trophy game area.” The intent of the hunt is to cut the wolf population in the that area by 50 to 160 animals, close to the lowest level possible that ensures there will be legally adequate numbers of breeding pairs.

A meeting on the wolf-hunting regulations is scheduled for May 22.

It’s through the season-setting process that Dobson seeks to amend Wyoming’s wolf-hunting regulations. The request likely would require redrawing the lines on hunt units that have been in place for years.

If the effort fails, Dobson said he won’t rule out suing the state of Wyoming.

Renny MacKay, Game and Fish’s statewide spokesman, said that altering hunt units to create a no-hunting buffer along Yellowstone’s periphery may be difficult to achieve at this time.

“I think people could give us feedback on that,” MacKay said, “but I don’t know if that could be done at this point.”

The only Native American territory in Wyoming’s portion of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, the Wind River Indian Reservation, is more than 30 miles from the park boundary.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s 2017 census found nine wolves on the reservation, where the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribes have jurisdiction over the species.

There are about 400 wolves in Wyoming.

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Information from: Jackson Hole (Wyo.) News And Guide, http://www.jhnewsandguide.com

2 grizzlies captured and relocated in northwest Wyoming

CODY, Wyo. (AP) — Wyoming wildlife managers captured and relocated two sub-adult grizzly bears that were roaming near developed areas in the Cody region.

Both bears were captured along the South Fork of the Shoshone River in order to prevent any conflicts with residents.

One of caught on Tuesday and the other on Wednesday.

The bears were released in remote areas that are current bear habitat territory.