Idaho
Head golf pro for the city of Idaho Falls stepping down after 46 years – East Idaho News
IDAHO FALLS – Although Tim Reinke says he’s never had a bad day in his 46-year career, he’s calling it quits.
The 65-year-old Idaho Falls man has been the manager of all golf operations at Pinecrest, Sand Creek and Sage Lakes Golf Courses. He was also promoted to Head Golf Pro of Pinecrest in 1984.
In a conversation with EastIdahoNews.com, Reinke says the reason for his retirement isn’t tied to anything in particular. He just feels now is a good time to step down.
“I love it (my job). I could easily do it another 10 years, but I decided, as long as I’m healthy, I might as well go and do some other things I haven’t had a chance to do,” Reinke says.
Reinke didn’t mention anything specific he plans to do in retirement, but he says he’s spent a lot of time away from home on weekends through the years and would like to spend more quality time with his wife.
Reinke’s last day with the city will be on April 30. A retirement celebration will be held at Pinecrest Golf Course on April 25.
Replacing him in the role is Sean Thomsen, who previously worked as the city’s assistant golf professional.
Coming to Idaho Falls
Reinke started working for the city of Idaho Falls in 1979. He was 18 then, but had been working around golf courses since age 9. Reinke and his family moved to Billings, Montana around that time. It was here that his dad joined a golf club.
“I thought he was crazy when he did it. I thought, What are you doing, dad? That just sounds so dumb,” he says.
It wasn’t long before Reinke picked up a club and fell in love with the sport. He eventually started working at the same golf club where his father played.
Mike Taylor was the club’s PGA professional. Taylor started working as the professional golfer for the city of Idaho Falls in 1975. That’s how Reinke ended up here.
“I’d worked with him in Laurel (near Billings),” Reinke explains. “When I turned 18, my mother told me I had to get a summer job so I came out to Idaho Falls.”
There were only two golf courses in town back then. The courses were consistently packed and Reinke remembers turning about 400 people away on a daily basis during his second year of employment.
Sage Lakes Golf Course was built several years later.
Reinke enrolled in the Professional Golfers Association early on so he could start teaching golf. He remembers scoring 98 out of 100 on the test — the highest score in the nation at the time.
“I got a national award,” says Reinke. “I think there were about 34,000 applicants for the test. It was quite a nice honor, but I laugh about it now because … most of the applicants hadn’t even opened the textbook (after a weeklong course). The test is about what’s in those books.”
Four years after moving to Idaho Falls, Reinke became the head golf pro at age 23 when Taylor took a job in Arizona. More than four decades later, Reinke is thrilled with how things turned out and to call Idaho Falls home.

‘I’ve enjoyed every minute’
Reinke has received multiple awards during his tenure. He was named the Golf Professional of the Year in the Rocky Mountain region three times. Golf Digest named him one of the top golf instructors in Idaho twice.
“Reinke … has been the low scoring professional many times in pro-am events, as well as winning the Senior Division of the Idaho Open in 2012,” according to a news release from the city.
Reinke was inducted into the Rocky Mountain Section of the Professional Golfers’ Association Hall of Fame in 2021.
Although Reinke is honored with all the awards, he says it’s the people that have made it a worthwhile career. It’s those interactions he’s going to miss most.
Even in retirement, Reinke says he isn’t going anywhere and is still planning to stick around as a golf instructor.
“I’m going to continue teaching. I’ve got thousands of students that I’ve given lessons to throughout the years. Retiring will give me more time to give lessons without worrying about the shop every day,” he says.
He has nothing but good things to say about his successor and wishes him the best in his new role.
“I truly have had zero bad days here,” says Reinke. “It’s been a seven-day-a-week job. I probably average 16 hours a day … and I’ve enjoyed every minute of it.”
In a news release, Mayor Rebecca Casper praises Reinke for his contributions to the city’s golf courses over the years and wishes him well in his retirement.
“Tim has been a huge driving force in making Idaho Falls golf courses the success they are today,” Casper says. “More importantly, Tim has helped teach and share his love of the game with countless generations over the years. He’s been a true steward of the sport — not just in our City, but in golf communities nationwide. He will be greatly missed, and we wish him well in his retirement.”
The public is invited to Reinke’s retirement celebration on April 25. It’s happening from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Pinecrest Golf Course.
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Idaho
Idaho State Police seek help identifying driver in Jerome County hit-and-run
JEROME, Idaho(CBS2) — Idaho State Police are asking for the public’s help to identify a driver and vehicle involved in a hit-and-run crash at a Jerome County intersection.
Investigators said the crash happened Feb. 1 at about 6:35 p.m. at the southbound U.S. 93 intersection with Crossroads Point. A vehicle traveling southbound on U.S. 93 rear-ended a 2020 red Toyota Corolla at the intersection, according to investigators.
After the crash, the driver pulled into the Valley Country Store parking lot, then left the area and traveled northbound on U.S. 93, investigators said.
The driver was described as a young male. The suspect vehicle is believed to be a black SUV with damage to the front passenger side. Investigators said the license plate may contain the characters “1B,” which is commonly associated with Bannock County registration.
Anyone who witnessed the crash, saw a vehicle matching the description, or has information that could help identify the driver is asked to contact Idaho State Police Dispatch at 208-846-7500 and reference the Feb. 1 hit-and-run crash on U.S. 93 in Jerome County.
Idaho
GALLERY: Here are your wind damage photos – East Idaho News
Downed tree in Idaho Falls. The video above shows downed trees along the Snake River in Idaho Falls and at Freeman Park. | Daniel V. Ramirez, EastIdahoNews.com, Video by Jesse Vosika, EastIdahoNews.com
IDAHO FALLS – Numerous people are reporting damage to homes and property Thursday afternoon due to strong winds.
A high wind watch is in effect until 9 p.m. Thursday, according to the National Weather Service in Pocatello. Meteorologist Jack Messick tells EastIdahoNews.com the wind will die down on Friday, but another round of wind will be back on Saturday.
RELATED | Strong winds causing road closures, property damage throughout eastern Idaho
The public is urged to store or tie down any loose items to prevent any further damage. EastIdahoNews.com will continue to monitor conditions and provide updates as they come in.
Here are your weather-related photos. If you have an image you want to share, send it to news@eastidahonews.com.







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Idaho
‘God is not silent,’ testifies Elder Clement M. Matswagothata to BYU–Idaho students
Clinging to one’s faith in Jesus Christ — no matter how much or how little faith — can help weather questions and doubts, said Elder Clement M. Matswagothata, a General Authority Seventy, at a BYU–Idaho devotional Tuesday, March 10, in Rexburg, Idaho.
Elder Matswagothata shared his experiences, teachings and testimony about navigating doubts and questions while still continuing to build faith.
He also emphasized the importance of building upon one’s faith and taking questions and doubts to the Lord. With patience in the Lord’s timing, these questions will be answered because “God is not silent.”
“Do not let one unanswered question cancel a hundred answered prayers,” Elder Matswagothata said. In times of trouble, “keep walking with Christ.”
‘Does God still speak?’
Growing up in Botswana, Elder Matswagothata had been raised in a place where heaven had “often felt close.”
Though Elder Matswagothata was not born into the Church, his family members had always been committed to the Lord. Through their firm faith, he learned his own.
With this conviction, Elder Matswagothata sought to deepen his knowledge of God. Reading passages from the Bible about prophets that spoke to their people, he wondered, “Does God still speak?”
This questioning resulted in an urgent search, leading him to contend with religious leaders about personal belief. But his faith was not won with words. ”I always walked away feeling empty inside,” he recalled.
While Elder Matswagothata was warned against meeting with missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he saw an opportunity.
“I asked them the same question I had asked many in the past: ‘Do you believe in a God who speaks — like He spoke to Adam, to Moses, to Isaiah, to Elijah and to my favorite prophet, Samuel?’”
The missionaries then relayed the experience of Joseph Smith, another young boy who had the same question.
Elder Matswagothata received a “settled, confident, personal witness” that “God the Father and His Son, Jesus Christ, appeared to the boy Joseph Smith and called him to be a Prophet.”

Learning by the Holy Ghost
Elder Matswagothata explained that testimony is “spiritual knowledge placed into a person’s heart and mind by God,” and it is not perfect knowledge.
“The Lord has never required omniscience as the price of discipleship,” he said.
To wondering disciples, he assured them that “faith and questions can coexist,” but they still require “some steps of faith.”
The real enemy to faith in Christ is not questioning, Elder Matswagothata said, but to “drift.”
This slow, turning away from the Savior happens when people “decide to skip once, then twice, then often — until what used to feel normal and natural, like praying daily and searching the scriptures, starts to feel distant,” he said.
To counter drift, covenants “keep us connected to Jesus Christ,” even when faced with spiritually turbulent times.
Elder Matswagothata then shared his own faith-testing experience.

As a missionary, he met with a man that pressed him on the Church’s restriction on priesthood and temple blessings, noting that Elder Matswagothata was of African descent. He had never heard of the restrictions before.
“It felt as if everything I had known about God, His Son, Jesus Christ, and the witness of the Holy Ghost was suddenly harder to reach,” he said.
Seeking comfort, Elder Matswagothata met with his mission president, who invited him to return and bear testimony to the man. He did.
In that moment, “I felt the Lord’s reassurance fill me — almost from head to toe — with ‘peace … which passeth all understanding,’” he said, citing Philippians 4:7.
This experience taught him that unknowns should “not erase what the Holy Ghost had already taught.”
Anchoring faith
“The adversary will always raise questions faster than we can answer them,” said Elder Matswagothata.
“A resilient testimony isn’t built by collecting perfect answers — it’s built by staying with Christ” through study, prayer and acting in faith “and allowing Him to teach you according to His will and timing.”
Elder Matswagothata offered three “anchors” of faith in Christ.
First, stay close to the Savior.
Second, stay grounded in truth by looking for it in “trustworthy places,” such as teachings of living prophets and apostles and scriptures.
And third, stay with the Spirit by choosing “music, media, friendships and habits that invite the Spirit to be with you.”

Elder Matswagothata cited Jesus’ words in John 6. When Jesus taught “a hard saying,” many disciples went away.
Jesus asked the twelve apostles, “Will ye also go away?”
“Everyone faces a ‘Will ye also go away?’ moment. How will you answer yours?” asked Elder Matswagothata.
God’s work will move forward–on a worldwide and personal level.
“Here I stand — a simple man from the African continent — bearing witness of eternal truths and watching that inspired prophecy unfold.”
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