Idaho
How an Idaho Falls democrat became the state’s 16th governor and started a political dynasty – East Idaho News
That is the primary in a sequence of tales about former Gem State Governors from jap Idaho.
IDAHO FALLS – Barzilla Clark’s election as Idaho’s sixteenth governor in 1936 was the end result of an concept deliberate out almost 30 years earlier.
The 55-year-old Democrat had already served for a decade as Idaho Falls’ mayor when he had crushed his Republican opponent, Frank Stephan, within the gubernatorial election with 58% of the vote (115,098 whole votes), in accordance with the e-book “Idaho’s Governors.”
An engineer by occupation, one of many main highlights throughout Clark’s time as mayor was the event of the hydroelectric dam and energy plant. Within the e-book, an essay from Willard Barnes notes Clark’s first speech to the Idaho Legislature was centered on offering higher freedom for cities to determine hydroelectric energy vegetation.
Clark had unsuccessfully run for governor in 1914 following a stint on the Idaho Falls Metropolis Council. He was elected mayor for the primary time in 1912 earlier than one other profitable run in 1926. And he in the end misplaced his re-election bid for governor after only one time period.
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However no matter how issues performed out, it was the start of a political dynasty that formed public coverage in Idaho all through the twentieth century.
A ‘civic-minded’ household
The choice to enter politics was a pure match for Clark. His father, Joseph, was the primary mayor of Idaho Falls when it was included as a metropolis in 1891.
“He (Joseph) was very civic-minded and was most likely only a pure to run for mayor,” Michael Moore, creator of a 2015 article in regards to the Clarks, tells EastIdahoNews.com. “(Joseph) additionally ran for governor on a kind of third occasion tickets, the prohibitionist ticket (in 1892).”
Barzilla had two uncles who served as governors in different states, Barnes writes. Barzilla’s brother, Chase, was additionally elected mayor and went on to function governor. A cousin, D. Price Clark, served as a U.S. Senator for Idaho.
Joseph had introduced his household to what was then Eagle Rock from Hadley, Indiana in 1884. Barzilla was the fourth of 5 kids.
Barzilla’s curiosity in engineering was a trait he inherited from his father, who labored as a civil engineer. Joseph was fascinated by irrigation and hydroelectric tasks and the waterfall in Eagle Rock was seemingly a giant attraction for him. Joseph was instrumental within the metropolis’s first energy plant changing into operational, in accordance with a historical past from Idaho Falls Energy.
Barzilla attended college in Idaho Falls earlier than transferring to Indiana to attend school. Whereas there, he was badly injured in a race.
“He had not correctly educated for (it) and he collapsed,” Barzilla’s 76-year-old granddaughter, Patricia Younger, says.
The harm resulted in some kind of lung an infection, in accordance with Barzilla’s obituary, which contributed to his loss of life in 1943. He moved again to Idaho to recuperate, the place he ultimately met Ethel Peck, the lady who turned his spouse.
Throughout this time, he rode the open vary as a cowboy and he labored as a caretaker for a mine in Stanley close to Sunbeam Scorching Springs.
“Chase’s spouse, Jean Burnett, began Robinson Bar Ranch on the Sawtooth Nationwide Recreation Space of the Salmon River (a property owned by the Clarks for a few years). One of many household tales … is that Chase and Barzilla, whereas constructing a rooster coop on the ranch, plotted out their political careers,” says Younger.
Political highlights and accomplishments
When Barzilla was sworn-in as mayor in 1926, he expanded what his father had began with a sequence of upgrades to town’s energy plant.
“The best satisfaction of my political profession has been the constructing and profitable operation of municipal energy vegetation at Idaho Falls, Idaho,” Barzilla wrote in a biographical sketch.
Along with the hydroelectric dam, Barzilla established a lot of town’s fashionable facilities — such because the water and deep effectively system, metropolis sewer, metropolis corridor, fireplace station, Northgate Mile, airport, and Pinecrest Golf Course — with out going into debt.
“This was an unimaginable feat contemplating lots of Barzilla’s enhancements got here earlier than the New Deal packages supplied metropolis governments with a considerable supply of federal funds,” the Put up Register reported in 1991.
U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt carried out the New Deal program throughout the Nice Despair in hopes of restoring monetary prosperity and getting unemployed People again to work via many public tasks.
“Idaho Falls had a number of the most public works (tasks) of any of the communities within the state,” Younger explains.
Clark was a giant supporter of FDR’s New Deal insurance policies and a giant proponent of pure useful resource conservation. Making the latter the main target of his gubernatorial marketing campaign earned him an election victory.
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“An act in regards to the growth, conservation and use of irrigation water handed. (Clark’s administration) created a State Water Conservation Board,” Barnes writes.
Younger notes that he additionally created the Idaho Division of Fish and Sport.
“He launched fairly a couple of individuals (from jail) as a result of there was no cash within the state treasurer’s workplace to handle them,” Younger says. “J. Edgar Hoover didn’t recognize my grandfather releasing anyone from jail.”
Clark was blissful to satisfy with FDR and his spouse once they paid a go to to the Gem State in 1937.
“It was my privilege to spend the day with them, exhibiting them the sources of a typical irrigated valley within the west,” Barzilla wrote in 1937. “Proof that the tour was spectacular is seen by the truth that the President in his current hearth chat made specific point out of his go to to the Boise valley.”
Nationwide, public opinion of FDR’s New Deal turned extra important within the late Nineteen Thirties,” in accordance with Historical past.com, and added to political tensions in Idaho.
Clark, who had confronted a divided legislature since his inauguration, discovered it more and more tough to maneuver laws ahead. He had pushed for an overhaul of the monetary and tax system early on in his administration, which in the end failed. A proposed restructuring of the Public Well being Division additionally failed.
A scarcity of emergency aid funds at one level drew concern from county commissioners throughout the state. Lots of them demanded that the Governor name a particular session of Congress to handle it.
“The individuals are not going to take a seat and starve,” one commissioner is reported to have mentioned. “I don’t desire a rebel in our county or state. However a particular session will be the solely method round it.”
Governor Clark ultimately known as a particular session and was in a position to purchase the mandatory funds.
Although Younger says Clark was well-respected as an individual, many citizens weren’t glad along with his administration. Within the 1938 election, he misplaced to his Republican opponent, Clarence Bottolfsen, of Arco, who gained with 57% of the vote (106,268 whole votes), in accordance with voting data.
(A governor’s time period was solely two years on the time. It didn’t turn into a four-year time period till 1946.)
‘The passing of such an excellent citizen’
Clark stepped away from public service after failing to get re-elected and returned house to Idaho Falls. He’d written various newspaper columns over time masking the historical past of Bonneville County. This led to the publication of his 1941 e-book, “Bonneville County within the Making.”
In August 1943, Clark turned unwell and was checked right into a hospital. He handed away a couple of weeks in a while September 21 at 9:25 a.m. He was 63. An obituary within the Put up Register attributes his reason for loss of life as “pneumonia complicating a lung an infection.”
“I remorse very a lot the passing of such an excellent citizen as Mr. Clark,” then Idaho Falls Mayor E.W. Fanning informed the Put up. “I’ve recognized him since boyhood and really feel that Idaho Falls has misplaced one in every of its most beneficial residents. As a longtime mayor of Idaho Falls, he left many invaluable accomplishments by which he shall lengthy be remembered.”
Clark died earlier than Younger was born, however she’s grown up listening to tales about him and he or she describes him as a “jokester” who was “enjoyable to be round.”
“I believe my grandfather was one, that if he had a nickel in his pocket throughout the despair, and he noticed somebody who was wanting drained (and rundown), he would give them the cash and say, ‘Go to a film and cheer your self up.’ These are the form of tales I’ve heard in regards to the form of public servant he was,” Younger says.
A narrative in Clark’s obituary mentions a time when he held up a gathering within the Statehouse as a result of he was chatting with a janitor within the basement in regards to the issues of the day.
“Clark would present up buzzing some tune of his boyhood and grinning the grin that gained for him the appellation: ‘Authorities with a smile,’” his obituary says.
A legacy of public service
Within the years since his loss of life, the Clark household’s involvement in public service has been an ongoing custom. Barzilla’s son, Ferris, served on the Idaho Falls Metropolis Council and owned what was the Westbank Resort by the greenbelt. Younger served for greater than 20 years as a Justice of the Peace Choose in Boise County, and her husband, Byron Johnson, was a former Idaho Supreme Court docket Justice. He handed away in 2012.
And Younger’s father, Merlin Younger, was a federal chapter decide for the state of Idaho for a few years.
Patricia recollects many vigorous political discussions in her household over time and he or she says an oft-repeated assertion from her mom has at all times caught along with her.
“If I used to be complaining about one thing, she’d say, ‘Properly, what are you going to do about it?’ In order that’s form of my motto. What am I going to do about it after I don’t like what’s happening?” Patricia says.
Within the subsequent installment, we’ll hint the political profession of Barzilla’s brother, Chase Addison Clark, and his election because the Gem State’s 18th governor. We’ll additionally focus on the controversial political assertion that some say tarnished his repute endlessly.
Idaho
NIC enrollment climbs after fall count
Enrollment at North Idaho College grew 15% since last fall, according to State Board of Education data.
There are 4,585 students at the college this October, up from 3,979 in 2023 and 4,296 in 2022. However, the college is still 3% down in overall enrollment from four years ago.
The growth comes as NIC fights to retain accreditation from the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities. The college Wednesday welcomed three new trustees, who ran on a platform of retaining accreditation and creating stability for the school.
The numbers continue a jump noted in August, after enrollment increased for the first time in more than a decade. In 2011, NIC had 6,750 total students.
The October numbers capture both full-time students, at 1,209, and part-time students at 2,898, an 18% increase. The part-time list includes high school students taking dual-credit classes. There are 478 students enrolled in career-technical programs — a 14% increase from last year, but a 22% decrease from four years ago, when 612 students took CTE courses.
Tami Haft, NIC’s dean of enrollment services, presented the enrollment data to NIC trustees Wednesday, and audience members applauded the news of enrollment increases. Haft noted that the college attracted 211 new students, a 37% rise in new student enrollment.
Here’s how NIC’s student enrollment breaks down:
- 47% of students are in programs to transfer to a four-year university.
- 38% are in dual-credit courses.
- 10% are in career-technical education.
- 5% are in non-degree programs.
Click here to see the fall enrollment numbers for colleges and universities statewide.
Idaho
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Idaho
Idaho Ballet Theatre's 21st annual performance of 'The Nutcracker' returning to the Colonial Theater – East Idaho News
IDAHO FALLS — Idaho Ballet Theatre will be performing its annual holiday tradition of “The Nutcracker” for its 21st year this December.
“The Nutcracker,” which is a classical ballet, will be performed Dec. 5, 6 and 7 beginning at 7 p.m. The show will be held at the Colonial Theater located at 450 A. Street in Idaho Falls. Tickets are $20 and can be purchased here.
“(The Nutcracker is) definitely one that many people are familiar with, but I think it resonates with so many people because you can see yourself in so many different moments throughout the ballet,” Director Abbey Lasley told EastIdahoNews.com.
The cast is made up of roughly 125 dancers. There are about 110 Idaho Ballet Theatre students performing in the production, ranging in age from three to 17. There will be guest performers and students from Brigham Young University-Idaho on stage as well.
“Everyone is local … and the majority are students,” Lasley said. “That’s what we really pride ourselves on is putting on a professional level production with an entire student cast.”
Lasley believes “The Nutcracker” is a “magical tradition” and a great way to kick off the Christmas season and focus on the “hopeful, optimistic, pure and beautiful aspects of this holiday.”
“There’s so much depth in ‘The Nutcracker’ that I think people don’t expect. People expect to see mostly all of the bright, shiny, sparkly, beautiful little parts of it — and we love all those parts — but there’s so many more layers,” she mentioned. “There’s so much more to be learned and to be internalized — things that can help us channel a really gratitude-based, optimistic view for the future.”
Lasley is one of three new directors who are making “The Nutcracker” possible this year.
Idaho Ballet Theatre’s founder and original director Brandy K. Jensen, who is Lasley’s mother, fainted last year during “The Nutcracker” rehearsals a few days before the performance. She had a stroke later that night and died December 14, 2023, at the age of 53.
“It was really hard, and it was a shock to all of us, but she got to do what she loved until the very last day and that was really a gift,” Lasley said.
Jensen started Idaho Ballet Theatre in 2003, and Lasley said she quickly began doing full-length productions like “The Nutcracker.”
“Every year she would add some elements — she’d polish something, rechoreograph something or improve it in some way,” Lasley explained. “By the time we got to her performance last year (of “The Nutcracker”), it was a very beautiful look at her life’s work.”
Lasley said the absence of her mother is going to weigh on the performers’ hearts during their December shows, but they are looking forward to taking the stage and honoring Jensen through their performances.
“We are very grateful to continue and be able to use everything she taught us and everything she embodied in her life to share this holiday magic and help people see the deeper meaning behind everything that we’re doing,” Lasley said.
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