A invoice that may permit Idaho’s undocumented immigrants to use for restricted driver’s licenses is heading to the Senate ground – nevertheless it’s not being endorsed by the committee which despatched it there.
The invoice, sponsored by Sen. Jim Guthrie (R-McCammon), would permit any Idaho resident 16 or older to acquire a restricted license with solely proof of identification and a passing rating on the state driving examination. Acceptable Identification may very well be a delivery certificates or a foreign-issued identification card.
“Undocumented residents are in our society; they’re in our economic system, our markets and what could also be most acceptable to in the present day’s dialogue, on our roads,” Guthrie stated in opening remarks to the committee. He positioned the duty for immigration management and border safety on the ft of the federal authorities.
“The feds have failed on this regard they usually have failed miserably,” he stated.
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Restricted IDs can be issued in a vertical orientation, like these at the moment issued to anybody beneath 21, and wouldn’t be allowed as acceptable identification for firearms purchases or airport safety.
The proposal obtained combined testimony in a Senate Transportation Committee listening to Tuesday.
“I’m speaking in regards to the worry of being deported for taking a sick relative to the hospital or the worry of being deported for taking kids to highschool,” stated Stephanie Gonzalez Tena, a College of Idaho scholar.
The Idaho Dairymen’s Affiliation and the Idaho Farm Bureau additionally help the hassle, saying it could make the state’s roads safer by rising the share of insured drivers. Native organizer Eric Medina offered the committee with a petition containing greater than 8,000 signatures in favor of the invoice.
However sheriffs nonetheless oppose it, worrying it’ll make it tough for them to implement immigration legal guidelines and will even incentivize unlawful immigration into Idaho.
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The committee voted to ship the invoice to the ground, however with out a suggestion. Meaning it isn’t advocating for the invoice to move.
Sen. Lori Den Hartog (R-Meridian) made that movement, noting her vote on the Senate ground may not match her vote to move the laws out of committee.
“We’d want the knowledge of the entire physique as we debate and deliberate this,” she stated.
Two years in the past, an identical driver’s license invoice did not make it out of committee.
Yessi Puerto Vallarta has been a family-run restaurant for over 25 years | Kaitlyn Hart, EastIdahoNews.com
IDAHO FALLS — For over 25 years, a local Mexican restaurant has been serving authentic family recipes to east Idaho.
Maria Hernandez, the manager of Yessi Puerto Vallarta, says her family has been in the food business for decades, serving homemade Mexican dishes that have been passed down for generations.
“We got started from a friend in the family that used to have restaurants in the Washington area, and we decided to try our luck and start a business with the family,” says Hernandez. “It’s always been a family restaurant, and we’ve been in the area for, oh wow, over 25 years now.”
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EastIdahoNews.com was lucky enough to try some of their most popular dishes, starting with the Pollo a la Crema.
This dish consists of sliced chicken, a cream sauce with mushrooms and onions, a side of rice and beans and tortillas.
“This has been a very popular item on the menu,” says Hernandez. “It is a really good dish.”
Next, we tried Hernandez’s favorite dish on the menu, the Chile Rellenos.
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The Chile Rellenos are stuffed green peppers with cheese, battered with an egg and smothered with white cheese and red sauce. On the side is a chimichanga with sour cream, guacamole, rice and beans.
“This would have to be, I’d say, a very very popular meal as well,” says Hernandez. “Everybody comes in here and says ‘I’m here for the Chile Rellenos; I know they’re good.’”
Lastly, we tried a personal favorite: street tacos. The types available are steak, spicy or marinated pork with or without pineapple, carne asada, grilled chicken, or chorizo.
“We cook the meat every time people order a taco,” says Hernandez. “They come with the cilantro and onion, and some slices of lime. The pineapple pork and the carne asada are very, very popular. Our chorizo is also homemade, so it’s really popular.”
Everything we tried was absolutely delicious, so we highly recommend trying Yessi Puerto Vallarta the next time you’re going out to eat!
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You can find them at 2668 East Sunnyside Road. They are open Monday through Thursday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Friday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Check them out on Facebook here.
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An Idaho photographer is showcasing hundreds of vintage neon signs that once shone brightly outside popular Idaho landmarks, businesses, and more.
Neon signs were a popular addition to the outside of businesses between 1920 and 1950 – but by the 1960s, businesses steered away from them due to cost.
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“I wanted to capture what still remained of all the vintage neon that I had grown up seeing around Boise, many of which were already disappearing at a rapid rate during the 80’s and 90’s,” Photographer Jess Jackson said. “Since the sign industry was already moving away from neon and into bland, generic looking, backlit LED stuff, I wanted to preserve what was left through my photography, before our last examples of the “golden era” of neon disappeared as well.”
From 2006-2012, Jackson took hundreds of photos of neon signs when he drove throughout the state for his job.
“Instead of sitting around in hotel rooms during my off-time, I decided to start looking for neon signs to photograph as a way to pass the evenings since I usually traveled alone,” he said. “That led into exploring some of the smaller, more remote towns and photographing what neon they still had.”
After five years, Jackson had built a large collection of photographs, and he decided to organize the neon sign pictures into the shape of Idaho – called Signs of Idaho.
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“The signs I’ve featured are unique in the sense that there are no copies of them,” he said. “You’ll only find the Torch Lounge sign in Boise, the Turf Club in Twin Falls, Buddy’s in Pocatello, or the Corner Club in Moscow,” he said. “Those are local icons that people have attached their own personal memories to and that’s what I think makes them unique and special.”
While several of the signs in the photograph align with the location where they were taken, many do not.
“A lot of areas in Idaho don’t have any neon signs left, where some parts of the state, like Pocatello, Twin Falls, or Boise still have relatively large collections,” Jackson said. “It just became impossible to put these all in their exact location and still maintain the shape of Idaho, which was the primary objective.”
The individual photographs featured in Signs of Idaho can be found on Jackson’s Flickr page.