USA TODAY US Edition

STATE-BY-STATE

- Compiled from staff and wire reports.

Editor’s Note: This is an abbreviate­d State-By-State page. The full version will return.

News from across the USA

ALABAMA Birmingham: Alabama’s largest city is opening a film office in hopes of luring movie makers, Al.com reports.

ALASKA Fairbanks: Alaska’s Northern Lights Dairy is closing, at least for the summer. The Fair

banks Daily News-Miner reports that the owners are struggling to find employees.

ARIZONA Tucson: The Arizona Daily

Star reports that the University of Arizona has begun returning some 2,300 dog tags to Vietnam veterans.

ARKANSAS Little

Rock: The Arkansas Arts Center is preparing to receive bond funding to overhaul its Little Rock museum, The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reports.

CALIFORNIA Antioch: The Coast Guard has suspended a search for a man who jumped off a boat near Antioch Bridge to get a hat, The

San Francisco Chronicle reports.

COLORADO Fountain: Residents of this Colorado city are being asked to conserve water. The

Gazette reports toxic chemicals in the Widefield aquifer.

CONNECTICU­T Hartford: The state’s 2000 Safe Haven law is getting attention after a newborn was found abandoned but alive behind a Danbury grocery store.

DELAWARE Wilmington: A Supreme Court ruling on patent lawsuits could create a surge of cases in Delaware, The Wilming

ton News Journal reports.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Authoritie­s say a noose was found hanging from a tree outside the city’s Hirschhorn Museum, The Wash

ington Post reports.

FLORIDA Key West: Organizers of Key West Race Week have can-

celed the 2018 regatta because of declining participat­ion and dependence on sponsorshi­p.

GEORGIA Atlanta: State records show that police officers forced out of law enforcemen­t agencies are finding jobs in Georgia’s schools, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and WSB-TV report.

HAWAII Lihue: The Honolulu City Council may hike parking prices and expand enforcemen­t hours to raise $4 million for a rail project, The Honolulu Star-Ad

vertiser reports.

IDAHO Boise: Idaho is making more than 27,000 records available digitally, The Idaho Press Tribune reports.

ILLINOIS Coal Valley: Several new bird species have joined the Niabi Zoo’s Australian Outback aviary in time for the 2017 season, The (Moline) Dispatch reports.

INDIANA Bloomingto­n: A new local exhibit features pieces created by a Vietnamese artist and a U.S. soldier during the Vietnam War, The Herald Times reports.

IOWA McIntire: Organizers have raised half the $10,000 needed for a local veterans memorial, The

Mason City Globe Gazette reports.

KANSAS Hutchinson: A prison inmate who was eligible for release in July will instead spend another four-plus years behind bars after attacking a guard, The Hutchinson

News reports.

KENTUCKY Lexington: Several windows were shattered at The

Lexington Herald-Leader office, and police are investigat­ing whether the damage was caused by gunfire. No one was injured.

LOUISIANA Baton Rouge: Insurance Commission­er Jim Donelon is urging Louisiana residents to know what their deductible­s are, take pictures of items in their homes and keep an inventory of possession­s for hurricane season.

MAINE Winthrop: Officials in

Winthrop and Readfield are delaying plans to rebuild the dam at the outlet of Maranacook Lake. A consultant estimated the cost at $237,000, but the bids ranged from $400,000 to $500,000.

MARYLAND Baltimore: The targets of two would-be robbers turned out to be federal undercover agents, WBAL-TV reports.

MASSACHUSE­TTS Province

town: Forty-four people were rescued last weekend after being stranded on a breakwall during high tide in this historic Massachuse­tts coastal resort town.

MICHIGAN Wyoming: Part of the Kent County Sheriff’s office was evacuated Tuesday after a detective became ill during the testing of suspected narcotics.

MINNESOTA St. Paul: Minnesota’s Court of Appeals has upheld a state law allowing counties to hire private firms for financial audits.

MISSISSIPP­I Jackson: A facility that coats and paints coils of steel is paying a $98,000 civil fine for environmen­tal violations, including improper storage of hazardous waste.

MISSOURI Springfiel­d: City Utilities in Springfiel­d has begun shutting down one of its long-time power stations as it moves toward more renewable energy, The Springfiel­d News

Leader reports.

MONTANA Billings: Montana farmers expect minimal drought concerns in the growing season,

The Billings Gazette reports.

NEBRASKA Lincoln: Two firefighte­rs suffered minor injuries when a propane gas grill exploded.

NEVADA Gardnervil­le: A wet winter has produced a bumper crop of cheatgrass in Nevada, and fire officials expect it to dry out and become prime fuel during wildfire season, The (Gardnervil­le)

Record-Courier reports.

NEW HAMPSHIRE Nashua: Daniel Webster College in Nashua has officially shut down. Many of the school’s students and staff are transition­ing to Southern New Hampshire University.

NEW JERSEY Union Beach: Police shot and killed a bear that was roaming through Union Beach last weekend.

NEW MEXICO Albuquerqu­e: The University of New Mexico has extended the contract of the school’s interim president for up to another 12 months, The Albuquer

que Journal reports.

NEW YORK Albany: Cornell University will get $2.5 million in federal funds to support developmen­t of cybersecur­ity software.

NORTH CAROLINA Charlotte: A man jumped out of a plane waiting to take off in Charlotte and was stopped from running onto the runway last week. He was stopped by an airport worker.

NORTH DAKOTA Fargo: A defective boiler may have caused an apparent carbon monoxide leak the La Quinta Inn and Suites. At least 10 people were sickened, WDAY-TV reports.

OHIO Columbus: The American Medical Associatio­n has listed Ohio as the top state when it comes to monitoring prescripti­on drugs.

OKLAHOMA Duncan: Police say a 17-year-old boy was fatally shot as he fled after he and several other people tried to rob a home.

OREGON Bend: The High Desert Museum’s otter count is now three after a hiker found a 3-pound male while walking along the Metolius River, The Bend Bulletin reports.

PENNSYLVAN­IA

Warren: State education officials have given the green light for a college offering low-cost instructio­n in nine counties lacking a community college.

RHODE ISLAND Hopkinton: Work on the National Grid’s $20 million state substation is done,

The Westerly Sun reports.

SOUTH CAROLINA Columbia: A home used to help people taking care of loved ones with Alzheimer’s disease was damaged by a severe storm last weekend.

SOUTH DAKOTA Sioux Falls: State officials won’t pursue past tourism taxes from vendors at the Sioux Falls farmers market, the

Argus Leader reports. But the market has agreed to pay a 1.5% tourism tax going forward.

TENNESSEE Mount Juliet: State lawmaker Mae Beavers says she’ll jump into the race for Tennessee governor this weekend.

TEXAS Austin: State lawmakers want to give the Texas Board of Education broader veto power over textbooks used in schools.

UTAH Copperton: The Copperton Metro Township is expected to take control of a local cemetery from the Jordan School District,

The Deseret News reports.

VERMONT White River Junc

tion: The local Veterans Affairs Medical Center is holding an open house June 30 to hear from veterans and family members.

VIRGINIA Richmond: Officials are studying a DNA database expansion to include more people convicted of misdemeano­rs, The Richmond Times-Dispatch reports.

WASHINGTON Leavenwort­h: The Washington State Patrol is asking people to be on the lookout for medical supplies in the Wenatchee River. A delivery truck spilled part of its load into Peshastin Creek, KPQ Radio reports.

WEST VIRGINIA Wheeling: A plan to relocate a Civil War monument from Wheeling Park to West Virginia Independen­ce Hall has been delayed, The Intelligen­cer/Wheeling News-Register reports.

WISCONSIN Elm Grove: Three people were injured when show ponies pulling a wagon in a Memorial Day parade in Elm Grove rushed onto a crowded sidewalk.

WYOMING Rawlins: Work has resumed on the biggest onshore wind developmen­t in the U.S., The

Rawlins Daily Times reports.

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