Raw sewage leaked into Idaho lake

HAYDEN, Idaho (AP) — Officials in northern Idaho say thousands of gallons of raw sewage seeped into Hayden Lake.

KREM-TV (http://bit.ly/2oeHFms ) reports that the Hayden Lake Recreational Water and Sewer District was notified Wednesday of the sewage spill. The sewage seeped up from the ground due to a faulty sewer service connection.

District representatives estimate that 3,500 to 17,000 gallons of sewage was released into the lake.

The lake has since been disinfected with sodium hypochlorite and does not pose a known threat to the public.

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Information from: KREM-TV, http://www.krem.com

Champion cyclist Stephen Tilford struck by semi, dies

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A highway crash involving two semitrailers and a van near the Utah-Colorado border has killed two people, including champion cyclist Stephen Tilford.

Utah Highway Patrol Sgt. Todd Royce says the first semitrailer drifted off Interstate 70 Wednesday and then overcorrected before rolling onto its side and blocking all eastbound lanes. A Mercedes-Benz van struck the semitrailer and 57-year-old Tilford of Topeka, Kansas, exited the van. He had been standing next to the vehicle when he was hit and killed by a second semitrailer.

The Salt Lake Tribune reports the driver of the second semitrailer, 70-year-old Stanley Williams of Grand Junction, Colorado, also died in the crash.

Tilford won a U.S. National Mountain Bike championship, four National Cyclocross titles and several other championships throughout his career.

Officials predict low return of steelhead to Snake River

LEWISTON, Idaho (AP) — Fisheries managers are predicting this year’s return of steelhead to the Snake River and its tributaries will be the lowest in about two decades.

Officials say that about 60,000 steelhead are expected to return above Lower Granite Dam this summer, slightly more than in 1998.

Alan Byrne of the Idaho Department of Fish and Game tells the Lewiston Tribune (http://bit.ly/2nTpwIS) that low flows and hot water in 2015 appear to have reduced the survival of young fish heading to the ocean that year.

Officials predict that about 119,000 steelhead will return past Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River this year. That would be the lowest since about 115,000 steelhead returned in 1980.

Steelhead are a prized sport fish in the region.

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Information from: Lewiston Tribune, http://www.lmtribune.com

Scientists predict expansion of US grizzly bear habitat

JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — Grizzly bears continue to expand their range amid an ongoing effort to turn over management of the bears from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to the states of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho, a federal official said.

“We’ve seen an 11 percent change in increasing range in just a couple of years,” Frank van Manen, head scientist of the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team, said last week at a meeting in Jackson.

Since coming under the protection of the Endangered Species Act, grizzlies have steadily expanded their habitat outward from the population’s core in Yellowstone National Park.

The fringes of the grizzly range, van Manen said, are typically occupied by dispersing young boar bruins. Typically, he said, there’s a multiyear lag before female bears will fill in territories already settled by males.

“Given what we’ve seen in the Wind River Range (with male bears), I wouldn’t be surprised if females were close behind within a matter of five years,” van Manen said.

The Wind River Range is located in west-central Wyoming, southeast of Yellowstone.

Van Manen anticipated continued expansion into the Wyoming Range, a livestock-dense landscape where he said bear conflicts with livestock and humans are inevitable.

“Bears are simply entering a landscape where the potential for conflict is greater,” he said.

Twenty-seven percent of grizzly range within the region is now outside a “demographic monitoring area” where bear numbers are assessed annually.

The population of grizzlies within the monitoring area has fallen for two consecutive years, from about 750 animals to 690.

But van Manen noted that grizzly numbers outside the monitoring area are not counted and said he is confident the population is now at the highest point in decades.

“Since listing, there’s no doubt that we are now at a point that we have the largest population size,” he told the Jackson Hole News & Guide (http://bit.ly/2ojQzQN).

Center for Biological Diversity attorney Andrea Santarsiere said that she was concerned by the decline in grizzly numbers, and worried that hunting could soon occur near the Yellowstone and Grand Teton park boundaries if states gain management authority.

“We are made to believe that hunting and management are synonymous,” Santarsiere said. “I would say that they’re not. Agencies here are touting a recovered population, and we got where we are today without hunting.”

A final rule to delist the Yellowstone-area grizzly bear as a federally protected endangered species will be released as early as June, federal officials said at the meeting.

Idaho bighorns killed after contact with domestic sheep herd

BOISE (AP) — State officials on Thursday killed two bighorn sheep rams in central Idaho that came in contact with domestic sheep and might have carried deadly diseases back to the wild bighorn herd.

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game in a news release says attempts to dart and put radio collars on the 5- and 6-year-old rams near Challis failed Wednesday afternoon and Thursday morning.

Samples taken from the sheep and their carcasses have been sent to a wildlife health lab for analysis.

Domestic sheep and goats carry diseases that can infect bighorn herds and cause die-offs.

Fish and Game’s 2010 Bighorn Sheep Management Plan directs the agency to remove bighorns that come in contact with domestic sheep to prevent diseases from reaching bighorn herds.

Bigfoot blamed for car crash in Idaho

MOSCOW, Idaho (AP) — A northern Idaho woman told police she crashed into a deer because she was distracted by a sasquatch in her rearview mirror.

The Moscow-Pullman Daily News reports that the 50-year-old Tensed woman was driving south on U.S. Highway 95 on Wednesday when she struck a deer near Potlatch.

The woman told Benewah County Sheriff’s officials that she saw a sasquatch chasing a deer on the side of the road while driving. She says she checked one of her mirrors to get a second look at the beast and when she looked up, the deer ran in front of her.

Sheriff’s officials marked the incident as a vehicle versus deer collision but did not report any evidence of Bigfoot.

Bigfoot blamed for car crash in Idaho

MOSCOW, Idaho (AP) — A northern Idaho woman told police she crashed into a deer because she was distracted by a sasquatch in her rearview mirror.

The Moscow-Pullman Daily News reports that the 50-year-old Tensed woman was driving south on U.S. Highway 95 on Wednesday when she struck a deer near Potlatch.

The woman told Benewah County Sheriff’s officials that she saw a sasquatch chasing a deer on the side of the road while driving. She says she checked one of her mirrors to get a second look at the beast and when she looked up, the deer ran in front of her.

Sheriff’s officials marked the incident as a vehicle versus deer collision but did not report any evidence of Bigfoot.

2 East Idaho cities to offer camping for Aug. 21 solar eclipse

Experts have named East Idaho, and the Upper Snake River Valley, one of the premier viewing locations for the August 21st Solar Eclipse. Experts say that over 500,000 visitors could flock to East Idaho to view the eclipse.

To help accommodate some of these visitors the Cities of Rexburg and Sugar City are providing designated camping areas.

The City of Rexburg has opened Eagle Park and a portion of Riverside Park for tent camping. Together there are over 220 camping areas available. Rates start at $55 a night for camping.

The City of Sugar City has designated their Business Park as well as a lot south of the City as RV camping. Sugar City rates start at $100 a night.

These camping areas will allow visitors to stay in town and allow them easy access to local businesses.

Says Rexburg Mayor Jerry Merrill, “We hope that visitors to our cities find our communities welcoming. We have a variety of local business that can cater to these tourists. We hope that they take advantage of them.”

For those interested in tent camping or RV spots, go to www.madisoneclispe.com for more information.

More than 1,200 Yellowstone bison killed this winter

(AP) — Operations to kill bison in Yellowstone National Park for slaughter have come to an end, with more than 1,200 bison culled this winter.

The Bozeman Daily Chronicle reports (http://bit.ly/2nfbL8A) the park released figures Wednesday showing 748 bison were consigned to slaughter this year. Another 453 were killed by hunters from Native American tribes and the state of Montana.

The total winter death toll marks the highest number of bison killed in the Yellowstone area since 2008. It also falls just short of the removal goal bison managers set in the fall.

Bison are taken from the area each year because of a management plan established in 2000 that calls for a population of 3,000 bison in the region. Park biologists estimate there are 5,500 bison there now.

Electrical problem kills 600,000 salmon in Idaho hatchery

LEWISTON, Idaho (AP) — About 600,000 young spring chinook salmon have died at a northern Idaho fish hatchery after an electrical problem stopped water from circulating.

The Nez Perce Tribe tells the Lewiston Tribune (http://bit.ly/2nD7oFy) that the fish died at the Kooskia National Fish Hatchery on Friday when an electrical circuit breaker tripped and a warning system to alert hatchery workers failed.

The salmon were a few weeks old and scheduled to be released next spring and return as adults in 2020.

The hatchery on the Clearwater River is owned by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service but operated by the Nez Perce Tribe.

The tribe says it’s working with other nearby hatcheries to replace the lost fish.

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Information from: Lewiston Tribune, http://www.lmtribune.com