Idaho
Almost Home: North Idaho families face barriers to permanent housing
COEUR d’ALENE — Like many people, Heather Bischof moved here and got a job. But she soon found she wasn’t making enough money.
“I was very unaware of the wages, $3 and something cents an hour,” Bischof said. “I’m like, ‘How, especially in dead season, am I supposed to make enough tips plus paycheck to afford my rent?’”
Bischof and her roommate fell behind on rent and soon found an eviction notice on their door. For Bischof, homelessness was about to become a reality.
In Idaho, 1,611 homeless individuals were counted in early 2023, but Katherine Hoyer with Panhandle Health District said that number can be deceiving.
It follows the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s definition of homelessness: having a “primary nighttime residence that is a public or private place not meant for human habitation.”
Advocates say that doesn’t match the reality many people face. Families may not qualify as homeless even though their situation is precarious.
“When you have a child, you will do anything it takes not to be in that situation,” said Lisa Donaldson, a case manager for Family Promise of North Idaho. “Maybe you’re in your car and your kids are at your mom’s, or you’re getting a hotel any time that you can, or you’re staying with a friend and then another friend.”
Chris Green, director of the Heritage Health Street Medicine Community Outreach Program, knows this from seeing many North Idahoans go through it.
He said that most people who lose their housing for the first time don’t initially think of themselves as homeless because they don’t identify with the stereotypical image of a person on a street corner, clutching a sign and asking for money. But as time goes on, mindsets shift.
“When the streets are cold and the people in your town are cold and turn a blind eye, you start to identify as a homeless person,” he said.
When someone becomes homeless, Green said, it’s critical to connect that person with resources and services as early as possible.
“If someone is, within 90 days, able to get housed and get back on their feet, they rarely become homeless again,” he said.
But the longer someone spends without housing, the harder it is to return to normal life. About one-third of people who are homeless for six months will become chronically homeless, Green said. Only about 10% of people who are homeless for longer than a year will go on to gain permanent housing.
It’s difficult to track the exact number of people who need housing but don’t meet the HUD definition of homeless, but their numbers appear to be increasing.
Nathan Whatcott is the homeless liaison for Kellogg School District. He said he noticed an alarming increase in the number of families staying in campers and RVs.
“Our current store of housing is not great. There’s just not a lot out there,” Whatcott said.
And what is available is getting more expensive.
“The rents are so high here, including the first and last month’s rent,” said Barbara Miller, founder of the Silver Valley Community Resource Center.
Fortunately, people and organizations are stepping up to help.
That’s how Bischof managed to stay housed.
“I was to the point where every single day I was shaking because I was so stressed out and my stomach just felt like it was empty and in knots,” Bischof said. “I tried looking into any resources I could.”
Her supervisor at a local brew pub contacted CDAIDE, a nonprofit that helps hospitality workers in crisis. They helped her with two months of rent and fixed her car.
“CDAIDE has been a blessing,” Bischof said. “Even though it couldn’t cover everything, I didn’t expect anything. I was so thankful. I was in shock for quite some time.”
Family Promise also aims to help families avoid homelessness in the first place, whether by rental assistance when funding is available or by other means.
“We can help them come up with ideas of how not to come into the shelter and avoid that trauma for their children but still be able to work with them and help them while they’re staying somewhere else,” Donaldson said.
Family Promise partners with 18 local churches to provide homeless families with a safe place to stay and receive services while they find permanent housing. During the day, parents and children can spend time at a shelter. At night, churches open their doors to the families.
The organization also provides supportive services, including classes on parenting, financial literacy, being a good tenant and more. Even when a family “graduates” by entering permanent housing, services remain available to them.
“We can walk with a family for as long as it takes them, usually up to a year, to walk on their own,” Donaldson said.
Even school districts can help. Whatcott said the district can sometimes use federal McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act funds to get propane so families can cook and stay warm, but it can’t assist with rent.
But not everyone who needs assistance will ask for it.
When people need help, Green said, shame can stop them.
“Be brave,” he said. “Wade into the discomfort. Ask for help often and everywhere. Realize that there are people who care and people who want to help and don’t let a bad experience turn you away from asking for help.”
Green invites anyone facing homelessness to visit the Heritage Health Street Medicine Community Outreach Center at 109 E. Harrison Ave. in Coeur d’Alene.
He said that perhaps the biggest misconception he encounters about Kootenai County’s homeless population is that it’s made up of “outsiders.”
“Over 95 out of 100 are from North Idaho,” he said. “The vast majority of people we serve are born and raised here. They have nowhere else to go.”
Last week, the sun beat down on Bischof’s front porch as her son, Austin, 7, and daughter, Ellie, played in the water during the heat of a summerlike May evening.
Bischof paused as Ellie came up the porch step with a purple pansy in her hand, asking if her mom to please put it in her hair. Ellie, who would turn 5 the next day, held still and grinned as her mom smoothed her flyaway strands, tucked the flower behind her ear and kissed her on the top of her head.
The downtown Coeur d’Alene home is well-lit. Down the hallway past the bedrooms and the laundry room, a door opens to a small fenced backyard where grape vines grow along the fences and a patch of rhubarb is already exploding with life on the other side of the wood.
“This feels so good,” Bischof said. “We’re really lucky to get in here. I love it so much.”
She stood on the back porch of the home, which she rents with a new love interest, Sean. Their rent is $2,000 a month. It takes up a lot of their income, so they budget carefully.
Bischof looked around the backyard, sharing how this was the first time she hadn’t felt the impending doom of having to find another place to live.
“This feels like home,” she said. “I’ve never felt like I could settle down and call something home. I know I’m not going to have to struggle and scramble to find a place to live for us in a month from now or two months from now.”
Idaho
Church of Jesus Christ begins preliminary work for Coeur d’Alene Idaho Temple
Preliminary infrastructure work to support the future Coeur d’Alene Idaho Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-days Saints is now underway, per a press release published Monday on ChurchofJesusChrist.org.
Preliminary work for the temple began following the city’s approval. It includes grading and the installation of underground utility infrastructure, such as water, sewer and electrical service connections to the city’s existing systems, according to the church’s release.
“Design work on the temple continues, and a date for an official groundbreaking ceremony has not yet been announced,” the church’s release states.
Plans to construct the Coeur d’Alene Idaho Temple were first announced during the church’s October 2024 general conference by then-church President Russell M. Nelson.
The future temple will serve Latter-day Saints throughout north Idaho and the inland northwest.
Currently operating temples in Idaho include the Boise, Burley, Idaho Falls, Meridian, Pocatello, Rexburg and Twin Falls temples.
Three temples in Idaho — including the Coeur d’Alene, Teton River and Caldwell Idaho temples — are currently under construction or in planning/design stages, and one other Idaho temple is scheduled to be dedicated this fall.
Learn more about the Coeur d’Alene Idaho Temple and others worldwide on the Church News’ temple almanac.
Idaho
9 Best Small Towns To Retire In Idaho
Idaho’s smaller communities make retirement feel both calm and useful. The state combines a low cost of living with broad outdoor access across the Panhandle lakes, the Snake River Plain, and the Sawtooth foothills. Sandpoint anchors the Panhandle on the shore of Lake Pend Oreille, Idaho’s largest and deepest lake. Hailey sits in the Wood River Valley below the Sun Valley resort and pulls a year-round senior population that has grown alongside the resort. McCall opens onto Payette Lake in the Salmon River drainage. The nine below cover every corner of the state and rank among the best retirement options Idaho offers.
Sandpoint
The main attraction in Sandpoint is the shoreline on Lake Pend Oreille, Idaho’s largest lake at 43 miles long with 111 miles of shoreline. The lake is also the deepest in the state at 1,158 feet, with the Selkirk and Cabinet ranges rising behind it. The Sand Creek Boardwalk runs along the marina at a manageable grade with benches and views, which makes it a strong walking option for retirees with mobility considerations. The Granary Arts District covers the renovated grain-silo industrial block north of downtown with galleries, a microbrewery, and high-quality resale shops. The Bonner County Historical Society and Museum on East Ontario Street, set in Lakeview Park alongside the lake, runs exhibits covering the local fur trade through the 1920s. Bonner General Health, the in-town acute-care hospital, handles emergency, surgical, imaging, and rehabilitation services.
Hailey
Hailey sits in the Wood River Valley 12 miles south of the Sun Valley resort and runs as the year-round commercial center for the broader Blaine County community. The Draper Wood River Preserve covers 124 acres on the south side of Friedman Memorial Airport with paved walking paths at a maximum 5% grade, which works well for the older demographic. The Hailey Farmers Market on Saturdays at Roberta McKercher Park runs June through October with local produce, meat, fish, pottery, and jewelry. The Liberty Theatre on Main Street, built in 1938 on the site of a former outdoor ice-skating rink, was purchased and refurbished by Bruce Willis and Demi Moore in 1994 (Willis was a longtime Hailey property owner). The couple donated the building to the Sun Valley Center for the Arts in late 2016, and local resident Logan Fredrickson purchased the theater in 2023 after it was nearly demolished, restoring it as an Art Deco performance venue. St. Luke’s Wood River Medical Center in nearby Ketchum is the regional acute-care hospital.
McCall
Payette Lake, a 5,330-acre glacial lake carved during the last Ice Age, sits at the eastern edge of McCall and runs as the town’s primary recreational anchor. The Payette Lake Waterfront has accessible lakeside promenades and picnic areas. Ponderosa State Park covers about 1,000 wooded acres on a peninsula extending into the lake. The McCall Winter Carnival in late January and early February runs ten days of snow sculptures, vendor markets, art, live music, and the Mardi Gras Parade closing the festival. The Central Idaho Historical Museum on Mission Street covers the regional Civilian Conservation Corps history through the Forest Service buildings and the Fire Warden’s House. St. Luke’s McCall is the in-town hospital, with St. Luke’s in Boise the closest tertiary-level acute-care facility about 100 miles south.
Moscow
Moscow sits on the rolling Palouse on the Washington-Idaho border and is the home of the University of Idaho, the state’s flagship public research university, founded in 1889. The university adds the cultural and concert calendar that distinguishes the town from the smaller agricultural communities around it. The Hamilton Indoor Recreation Center off South Mountain View Road runs senior-specific group programming, an indoor pool, and courts. Carol Ryrie Brink Nature Park on the south end of town runs a paved trail through restored riparian habitat along Paradise Creek. The McConnell Mansion at 110 South Adams Street, built in 1886 by merchant William J. McConnell, runs as the Latah County Historical Society headquarters and is open for tours. McConnell served as Idaho’s third state governor from 1893 to 1897 (Idaho had become a state in July 1890, so McConnell was a state rather than territorial governor), and the mansion is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Gritman Medical Center provides acute care in town.
Rexburg
Porter Park, the oldest park in Rexburg, runs the carousel that has been a town fixture since the 1950s along with walking paths, tennis and basketball courts, and the Beehive Pavilion event space. Brigham Young University-Idaho on South Center Street is the dominant institution in town and adds the cultural and athletic calendar that runs through the school year. Hemming Village on South Yellowstone Highway covers the regional shopping anchor with Freeman Clothing, Downeast, and Deseret Book. The Legacy Flight Museum on Airport Road runs a collection of historic warplanes including the P-51D Mustang “Ole Yeller.” The Romance Theater on East Main Street, opened in 1917 as an Art Deco-influenced movie house, runs current independent and family films year-round. Madison Memorial Hospital is the in-town acute-care facility.
Mountain Home
Mountain Home sits on the Snake River Plain 40 miles east of Boise and runs as the closest community to Mountain Home Air Force Base, the long-time economic anchor that opened as Mountain Home Army Air Field in August 1943 and was renamed an Air Force base in January 1948. The base is currently home to the 366th Fighter Wing. Legacy Park along the south side of downtown runs flat walking paths around a duck pond stocked for community fishing, with grassy and sheltered areas that work well for picnics. The Mountain Home Historical Museum on East Jackson Street occupies a former Carnegie Public Library, built in 1908 with Carnegie funding, and covers the Native American, fur-trade, mining, logging, and agricultural history of the area. The town was originally named Rattlesnake Station after the 1864 Ben Holladay stagecoach stop on the Overland Stage Line; the Oregon Trail passed nearby but the station itself served Holladay’s Salt Lake City-to-Walla Walla route. The post office was renamed Mountain Home in 1876 and the town was moved to its present location in 1883 when the Oregon Short Line Railroad arrived.
Emmett
Emmett City Park, established in 1913, covers 12 acres in the heart of town with grassy lawns, picnic shelters, pavilions, and the sports facilities that anchor the city’s recreation programming. The park hosts the annual Emmett Cherry Festival every second full week of June, drawing the regional crowd for the orchard harvest celebration in what was historically one of Idaho’s most productive cherry districts. The free festival runs daily entertainment, nightly concerts, a parade, and carnival rides. The Gem County Historical Society and Museum on East Main Street covers the early-19th-century fur-trapping arrival in the area, the 1862 gold rush growth, and the agricultural transition. Admission is free year-round. Valor Health is the in-town acute-care hospital, with St. Luke’s in Boise the closest tertiary-level facility about 30 miles east.
St. Anthony
St. Anthony sits on Henry’s Fork of the Snake River, one of the most productive trout fly-fishing waters in the country. Henry’s Fork holds a large population of rainbow and brown trout, and the river through and around St. Anthony runs calm enough for senior-friendly walk-in access. The Henry’s Fork Greenway runs along the river through town. Yellowstone Gem World on South Bridge Street is a longtime regional rock and mineral shop. The Silver Horseshoe Inn on East Main Street, built around 1910 with an underground tunnel system that local lore connects to the Prohibition era, runs as the town’s historic tavern and lodging. Madison Memorial Hospital in nearby Rexburg, 15 miles south, is the regional acute-care facility.
Bonners Ferry
Kootenai National Wildlife Refuge, 2,774 acres along the Kootenai River below the Selkirk Mountains, supports more than 300 species of wildlife including 223 species of birds. The refuge was established in 1964 for migratory bird habitat and has expanded to include meadows, forests, and agricultural lands managed for waterfowl. The Boundary County Museum on Main Street, opened in 1974, runs rotating exhibits including the current Idaho Day display marking the state’s history and a Kootenai Tribe exhibit donated by the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho. The Gathering Place on Bonners Ferry Highway runs three sections: Sharon’s Store with Amish furniture, toys, and local lotions; a coffee shop with breakfast and sandwiches; and a bakery with house-made doughnuts and danishes. Boundary Community Hospital is the in-town critical-access facility.
Idaho As A Retirement Base
The nine towns above split into three regional clusters that shape any retirement-relocation decision. Sandpoint, Bonners Ferry, and Moscow cover the Panhandle and Palouse end of the state, with the closest air travel through Spokane. McCall, Hailey, and Mountain Home sit on the central Idaho side. Rexburg, St. Anthony, and Emmett cover the eastern Idaho end, with Idaho Falls and Boise as the closest medical and air-travel hubs. Idaho’s state income tax has dropped substantially in recent reform cycles and is now competitive with the broader Mountain West, which makes the cost-of-living math work for retirees coming from higher-tax states.
Idaho
Video: Two Fighter Jets Collide During Idaho Air Show
new video loaded: Two Fighter Jets Collide During Idaho Air Show
By Axel Boada
May 18, 2026
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