Chick-fil-A to open next year in Stillwater

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Chick-fil-A is coming to Stillwater.

Chick-fil-A officials plan next fall to open a 5,218-square-foot restaurant with a drive-thru facility in the parking lot of the former Herberger’s department store building.

The site, 2001 Washington Ave., is located near the intersection of Washington Avenue and the Minnesota 36 frontage road, south of Harbor Freight Tools and east of Caribou Coffee.

The Stillwater City Council signed off on the plans last week.

City officials approved a conditional-use permit to allow a restaurant with a drive-thru, as well as a variance to accommodate drive-thru canopies that encroach into the required 20-foot setback, said Jason Zimmerman, the city’s community development director.

The proposed restaurant is located within the city’s business park commercial zoning district. In 2023, a plat associated with a proposed car wash was approved on the site, but the car wash never opened, Zimmerman said. That same year, the Caribou Coffee was constructed in the area, Zimmerman said.

Zimmerman said city officials are working to improve traffic flow in the area, especially at the intersection of the frontage road and Washington Avenue. “We’re looking at making some changes there, which will help,” he said. “I think that’s the biggest pinch point.”

Zimmerman, who has never eaten at a Chick-fil-A, said he is looking forward to trying it out.

“Their market study showed that this would be a good place to locate,” he said. “People really like Chick-fil-A. People, including my son, just love the food. I think there’s a lot of excitement about seeing it in Stillwater. I’m sure they’ll get a lot of customers.”

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Ex-NFL QB Mark Sanchez released from custody a week after parking fight arrest and stabbing

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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Former NFL quarterback and sports analyst Mark Sanchez was released from custody Sunday, about a week after police said he was stabbed during a fight with a truck driver outside an Indiana hotel.

The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department confirmed Sanchez’s release. He faces a felony battery charge, along with several misdemeanor charges, for what prosecutors have said was a fight over parking.

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A police affidavit says the 38-year-old Sanchez, smelling of alcohol, accosted 69-year-old Perry Tole, who had backed his truck into a hotel’s loading docks in downtown Indianapolis on Oct. 4. Tole claims in a lawsuit filed Monday that Sanchez entered the truck without permission, then physically blocked and shoved Tole, who then doused Sanchez with pepper spray.

When Sanchez advanced after being sprayed, Tole pulled a knife to defend himself, authorities said.

Sanchez was hospitalized with stab wounds to his upper right torso, according to a police affidavit. A picture of Tole circulating online shows him in a neck brace on a hospital bed, covered in blood with a deep slash to the side of his face.

Sanchez was in Indianapolis for Fox’s coverage of last Sunday’s game between the Colts and the Las Vegas Raiders.

Sanchez had a 10-year NFL career before retiring in 2019. He spent four seasons with the New York Jets and also appeared in games with Philadelphia, Dallas and Washington.

He appeared on ABC and ESPN for two years before joining Fox Sports as a game analyst in 2021.

A defense attorney for Sanchez didn’t immediately respond to a telephone message seeking comment.

Her husband was deported to Mexico. Unwilling to remain apart, she left the US to join him.

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As the vehicle approached the Tijuana border, Etelvina Lázaro’s son, sitting behind the wheel, asked her again if she was sure.

“I’ve already made up my mind,” she recalled telling him in Spanish. “I’m leaving.”

Lázaro, a 54-year-old grandmother, had lived with her family in San Diego for over 20 years. But after her husband, Margarito, was arrested by federal immigration agents in mid-July and then deported, she made the hard decision to leave her grown children and grandchildren behind and follow him to Mexico.

She is one of several undocumented immigrants who have decided to leave the country on their own amid President Donald Trump’s intensified efforts to crack down on illegal immigration.

The federal government launched a process in May dubbed Project Homecoming, urging undocumented immigrants to return to their native countries or face the consequences. Through the CBP Home mobile app, eligible individuals can register for voluntary departure and receive a $1,000 exit bonus, a flight home and an exemption from fines for failure to depart.

“Leave on your own terms. Avoid the jail cell. Avoid the humiliation,” reads an Immigration and Customs Enforcement post about “self-deportation” on the social media platform X.

A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said Thursday that “tens of thousands” of undocumented immigrants have utilized the CBP Home app but didn’t provide a specific number.

Data obtained by ProPublica from DHS indicates that there have been about 25,000 departures via the mobile app — and a little more than half of them returned with assistance from the federal agency, according to the news report.

But it’s unclear how many, like Lázaro, have left quietly.

Etelvina Lázaro in her apartment for the last time on Oct. 2 in San Diego. (Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Lázaro said she was unaware of such a process. Instead, she chose to leave on her own. In a way, she said, she is still hurt by what happened. Earlier this month, she had her son drive her to Tijuana, and from there, she flew to her hometown in Michoacán.

She left because she wanted to be with her husband, rather than out of fear of being detained. She said that fear went away when they were separated.

María Chávez, a San Diego-based immigration attorney, said two of her clients opted to self-deport after being detained outside the courthouse.

People have also been asking Chávez or other attorneys about the CBP Home app and whether those who have used it are actually receiving the $1,000.

“For the individuals who are detained, it’s because they don’t want to be detained. They’re not criminals. They’ve never done anything bad or anything that would warrant them to be detained,” she said.

In the other cases she has heard about, she said, “it’s more so about just being afraid of being caught and wanting to leave with their dignity intact,” she said. “They want to be the ones to dictate how and when.”

Also, she said, “There are people who are just leaving on their own and not even bothering to go through the app.”

Similar efforts have been made by previous administrations. In 2008, the federal government introduced a “Scheduled Departure” pilot program in some U.S. cities, including San Diego. The program ultimately ended after failing to generate interest.

The opportunity to say goodbye

Two days before Lázaro left, her church group at the Our Lady of Guadalupe parish in Logan Heights, where she and her husband were once sacristans, took a moment at the end of a meeting to hug her and say heartfelt goodbyes. It was something they never had the chance to do with her husband.

Etelvina Lázaro, right, hugs a fellow parishioner goodbye. (Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Lázaro sat with her head bowed in the middle of the room while those around her put their hands on her shoulders and wished her well one last time.

“May she know that no matter where they are in the world, they will always be part of our community,” wished one of the parishioners. “May they never feel alone.”

“It’s sad to see someone who has been forced to leave,” said Deacon Javier Mozo, who has known the family for years. “But at the same time, there is also joy because she is a woman willing to follow her husband wherever he goes. That speaks to the love between them … humans may try to divide them, but God will bring them back together in any situation.”

The night after, at her San Diego apartment, she managed to fit part of the life she had built in the U.S. over the years into three suitcases and two large bags.

Etelvina Lázaro in an almost empty apartment with 20 years of packed belongings in several suitcases on Oct. 2. (Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

She glanced around one more time. The family photos that had once adorned the walls were now in one of the bags, frameless. Among them was a photo of her and her husband on their wedding day. She also packed two hats that her husband did not have a chance to take with him.

“It was very hard to make this decision,” she said, fighting back tears. “It hurts me because of my children. It hurts that we are going to be separated.”

Their lives changed the moment she received a call from her husband letting her know that he had been arrested by federal agents while on his way to his construction job. Her husband, who had previously been deported in 2008, agreed not to fight his case and to be sent back to Mexico.

Etelvina Lázaro rests her hand on a passport. (Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Lázaro, who cleaned houses for a living, said that it didn’t take long for her husband’s absence to take a toll on her.

“I’m not the same person I used to be,” she said. “Sometimes I just want to go to bed and sleep. I don’t feel like doing anything.”

Her children encouraged her to go to Mexico to be with their father, assuring her that they would take care of each other.

“It’s sad. It won’t be the same anymore,” said her eldest son, José Peña. “I won’t be able to stop by and see my mom every day.”

At the same time, Peña said he believes it’s time for her to rest and spend time with their father.

Lázaro said that she and her husband plan to eventually move to Tijuana so that their children can visit them. Her husband plans to get back to work in construction.

Father Scott Santarosa of Our Lady of Guadalupe parish blesses a group on Oct. 1. (Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

The Rev. Scott Santarosa of Our Lady of Guadalupe said that the farewell gathering was intended to provide closure, which is something that not many immigrant families have the opportunity to experience.

“He disappeared,” he said of Lázaro’s husband. “We couldn’t say goodbye, and it left a huge hole in our people and in our community.”

Rebuilding a life together

Lázaro reunited with her husband in the rural town of San Francisco Uricho, Michoacán. They are staying with her mother, whom she had not seen in decades.

Etelvina Lázaro and her husband Margarito on their wedding day. (Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

In a phone interview last week, she said that the town of more than 2,000 inhabitants has changed a lot since she and her husband left in search of a better life. There are more houses and people. Still, she said, many like her migrated to the U.S. over the years.

She acknowledged the sadness she felt the night she crossed the border back into Mexico after being away for many years.

A week later, after having had time to process things, she says she feels she can, at least for now, adapt to living in her old town again.

Suicide claims more Gen Z lives than previous generation

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By Tim Henderson, Stateline.org

Editor’s note: If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988. There is also an online chat at 988lifeline.org.

For Gen Z adults, the oldest of whom are now reaching their late 20s, suicide is taking more lives than 10 years ago when millennials were the same age, according to a Stateline analysis of federal death statistics.

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The bulk of the increase, 85%, is among Black and Hispanic men, many in Southern and Midwestern states.

Experts disagree on the root causes of the growth in suicides, but they see a wave of untreated depression that can lead to suicidal thoughts, one that affected all age groups after the Great Recession but lingers on among young adults, especially non-white men.

Theories behind the increase range from bullying on social media, since Gen Z was the first generation to grow up with the internet, to economic despair, to cultural resistance to seeking help for depression.

Gen Z suicides have continued at a fast pace this year, with 1,148 in January and February, the latest months available from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about the same as in 2024. The CDC bases its data on death certificates.

Among those grappling with the crisis is Rodney Harris of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, who has enlisted barbers and churches in his state to draw out stories of personal pain before they lead to a suicidal crisis. Harris is an associate professor in the school’s Suicide Prevention Institute.

He’s fighting a perception that you can shake off mental health issues on your own.

“The research tells us that we have got to find a live person to go to them, particularly Black and brown kids, because if we don’t, they’ll get lost,” said Harris. “There’s a perception that you’re going to be strong and not complain about things, and that can keep you away from treatment.”

Some visible signs of the crisis have shaken communities in recent weeks.

A bridge in majority-Hispanic Taos County, New Mexico, closed to pedestrians in September after a rash of suicides, including that of a teenager less than two weeks ago.

Also in September: A Black 21-year-old student hanged himself from a tree on a Mississippi university campus, authorities said, in a case that raised fears of lynching before his death was ruled a suicide.

For Julian “Wolf” Rivera, who died at 27 in 2019 in suburban Middletown, New York, there was a combination of issues, his mother said: pressure to support a growing family with a second child on the way, a night job in a warehouse that he found unfulfilling, discrimination he felt because of his Hispanic background despite being born and raised nearby by parents with a Puerto Rican heritage.

Rivera also struggled to accept and then to find help for his mental health issues, said his mother, Jessie Edmond.

“He was diagnosed with depression. He used to get angry. ‘Why? Why do I need medicine to be normal?’” Edmond said. “He would take medicine, go to therapy, feel better and say, ‘I don’t need medicine anymore.’ When he was in crisis he finally reached out, but nobody was taking patients. No one called him back.”

Like many states, New York is facing the unexpected loss of millions of dollars for mental health programs as part of cutbacks by the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency task force. Federal grants for mental health crisis teams and drug treatment were cut by $88 million in April, and more cuts are feared as President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act takes effect.

Among other things, the federal government in July ended an LGBTQ+-specific suicide helpline for people under 25.

A growing awareness of the suicide problem among young people led to federal responses, including a 2019 Congressional Black Caucus report on suicide among young Black people. But some of those programs are facing setbacks under the new Trump administration, and they could disappear or be forced to rely more on already stressed state funding.

More despair

Suicides increased among Asian, Black, Hispanic and Native young adults, according to the Stateline analysis, with Native people having the highest rate in both 2014 and 2024. The number of suicides dropped slightly for white people, but increased as a rate because population fell as Gen Z took over the age bracket from the more numerous millennial generation.

Suicide became the second-highest cause of death for young Hispanics, surpassing homicide, and became the No. 1 cause of death for young Asians, surpassing accidents. Men have the highest rates, especially Black and Hispanic men, who together account for 85% of the total increase in suicide, 822 of 965.

Young white adults had a higher suicide rate in 2014 than Black or African American people, but by 2024 the rate for young Black adults was higher. Men have the highest suicide rates but the rate for women is growing faster, from about one-fifth of the rate for men to one-fourth in 2024.

The largest increases in suicide rates for the age group were in Georgia (up 65%), North Carolina and Texas (up 41%), Alabama (up 39%) and Ohio (up 37%).

The highest rate is in Alaska, which was also highest in 2014, up 34% to a rate of 49 suicides per 100,000 population, followed by New Mexico and Montana. The lowest rate was in New Jersey, with a rate of 6.9, a decrease of 31% since 2014, when it was ranked No. 47 behind California, New York and Massachusetts.

Harris’ work in North Carolina was part of the federal Black Youth Suicide Prevention Initiative, under the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. The state, along with others, also used a one-year federal grant to enhance access to mental health services for young people.

North Carolina’s health department has pledged to continue the work, Harris said. The state “remains committed to providing resources to communities which have been marginalized and where mental health challenges persist,” a state health department spokesperson, James Werner, told Stateline in a statement.

The federal initiative was formed to reduce suicides among Black young people and children, with 15 states and the District of Columbia chosen to make state-specific policy plans: Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Tennessee.

North Carolina and Minnesota have released action plans based on the program. And other states have also taken action: Louisiana created promotional campaigns to reach young people at a rivalry college football game, and Oregon developed a youth-led suicide prevention coalition with matching funds from the state health department.

Georgia stands out for the biggest change in youth suicides; they rose 70% to 311 deaths in 2024. The state used two federal programs, the youth suicide prevention initiative and one from the U.S. Office of Minority Health to the medical school at Morehouse School of Medicine, to look for policy solutions to high suicide rates.

A report from the medical school outlining policy recommendations is nearing completion, said Susan McLaren, an assistant project director with the Georgia Health Policy Center at Georgia State University, which is evaluating the ideas.

The medical school is embracing the concept of “nothing about us without us” that brings in young people to lead decision-making about suicide prevention policies, McLaren said.

“The current crisis among our Black youth is a result of many things: stigma, lack of resources and treatment, and insufficient focus on creating safe spaces and dialogue to prevent and intervene in mental health challenges,” McLaren said.

McLaren declined comment on funding issues, but the staff at the Office of Minority Health, which provided the Morehouse grant, has reportedly been slashed in a Trump administration reorganization.

Another federal program at SAMHSA, the Garrett Lee Smith State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention and Early Intervention Program, gives grants of up to $735,000 to states and tribes to fight youth suicide. The program is named for the son of Republican U.S. Sen. Gordon Smith of Oregon. The younger Smith died the day before his 22nd birthday in 2004.

‘No one magic answer’

The overall crisis in suicide among youth has long puzzled researchers, but it’s associated with an increase in untreated depression, said Dave Marcotte, a professor at American University in Washington, D.C., who wrote about the crisis in 2023 for the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Suicide rates for all age groups fell for decades before rising again starting in 2000, Marcotte said, and getting worse in the Great Recession. Rates for middle-aged people fell back again, but for young people the crisis never abated, he said.

“There’s likely no one magic answer to this,” Marcotte said. “Future job prospects for this generation are not what they were for older generations. Today’s generation is not guaranteed a position in society that’s better than their parents. That’s one hypothesis.”

Today’s generation is not guaranteed a position in society that’s better than their parents. — Dave Marcotte, American University professor

Another theory: Those born after 1995, including Gen Z adults, are the first to spend their entire adolescence with smartphones and social media. Substituting in-person socializing with bullying-prone online chatting is a prime cause of young depression, said Jean Twenge, a psychology professor at San Diego State University, who wrote an influential 2017 article in The Atlantic with the headline “Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?”

Heavy users of social media are more likely to be depressed, Twenge told Stateline, even among marginalized groups. And politics seems to play little part, she argues. In a post this May, Twenge noted that increases in Black and Hispanic depression began in 2012, as President Barack Obama was about to be elected to a second term, and well before Donald Trump was elected for the first time.

That same year, though, saw virulently racist memes and hate speech become increasingly widespread on Facebook and Twitter as Obama ran for reelection.

Researcher Jonathan Haidt added another reason why today’s youth might face more mental health challenges: When they were children, parents became more leery of letting them play unsupervised as fears of kidnapping and abuse increased. So they spent less time learning to interact face-to-face and more time in an adult online world they weren’t prepared to handle.

“These two trends — overprotection in the real world and underprotection in the virtual world — are the major reasons why children born after 1995 became the anxious generation,” wrote Haidt, a professor at New York University, in his 2024 book “The Anxious Generation.”

©2025 States Newsroom. Visit at stateline.org. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.