Idaho
Idaho Black History Museum promotes education all year
BOISE, Idaho — Black History Month maybe over but the message is not. The Idaho Black History Museum promotes education all year.
- Boiseans have embraced all cultures and backgrounds
- Board member Craig Patrick says we can all learn something new from one of their many exhibits.
- Visitors urge everyone to spend some time in this historic church.
(The following is a transcription of the full broadcast story.)
Black History Museum director Phillip Thompson describes how Boiseans have embraced all cultures and backgrounds. So as black history wraps up and we move into another month, Thompson says education about who we are and where we’re going lives on all year. “America is a unique in the sense that all these different parties of this social experiment they should be integrated into history as a whole. I’m not saying we don’t need those months but I do thinks it’s a bit of a misnomer to think we’re going to go real hard this month and if you touch it after it, it’s OK.”
New board member Craig Patrick says we can all learn something new from one of their many exhibits. “I think the museum has done a great job with unifying message in hosting events and highlights a narrative we are all one community this is a great place to live.”
I met a man who was drawn to the exhibit one of the most famous African Americans in our history. “I’m learning more about Frederick Douglass and his meeting with Abraham Lincoln and I thought that was interesting his relationship with Abraham Lincoln.”
Visitor Bill Brudenell urged everyone to spend some time in this historic church. “Most of us who are not African American don’t really understand the history of African Americans in Idaho and the country in general.”
So next time you’re in Julia Davis Park visiting the State Museum, or Art Museum or Zoo Boise, stop in to the Black History Museum.
Idaho
Idaho Senate takes up bill to jail trans people for using public bathrooms
An Idaho bill that could make it a crime for transgender people to use restrooms aligned with their gender identity is now before the state Senate, advancing one of the most punitive bathroom proposals in the country.
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House Bill 752, already approved by the Idaho House in a 54–15 vote, was taken up this week by the Senate, where Republicans hold a 29–6 majority. If enacted, the measure would require people to use bathrooms, locker rooms, and similar facilities based on their sex assigned at birth in both government buildings and private businesses open to the public.
Related: Idaho Republicans pass bill making it a felony for transgender people to use public bathrooms
Related: Idaho Republicans pass House bill forcing doctors to out transgender kids
The penalties escalate quickly. A first violation would be a misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail. A second offense within five years could be charged as a felony, carrying a prison sentence of up to five years.
“The Legislature has a fundamental duty to protect the bodily privacy and safety of Idaho citizens,” Sen. Ben Toews, the bill’s sponsor, said in a Monday committee hearing, according to the Idaho Capital Sun. “House Bill 752 provides a clear, proactive tool to secure sex-separated private spaces in our state, while accommodating common-sense realities.”
Supporters of the measure have called the bill necessary as a matter of safety and privacy in sex-segregated spaces. But opponents of the legislation, including civil liberties groups, some lawmakers, and law enforcement voices, say the proposal creates an enforcement problem that risks turning suspicion into probable cause.
Related: Thousands of paper hearts flood Idaho capital as lawmakers pass anti-LGBTQ+ bills
Related: Idaho Republicans are trying to strip localities of nondiscrimination ordinances that protect LGBTQ+ people
Transgender people are warning that bills like this put them in danger of being assaulted. For example, the boyfriend or husband may see a transgender man following their girlfriend into a restroom, because the trans man has to use restrooms according to his sex assigned at birth, and could confront them.
In committee testimony, transgender Idahoans described how that could unfold. Nikson Matthews, a transgender man, told lawmakers that someone who recognizes or suspects he is trans could call police, prompting officers to respond to what would otherwise appear to be “a bearded man using the men’s bathroom.” If an officer decides he violated the law, Matthews said, “I could go to jail for up to a year for peeing, washing my hands, or even being in the bathroom.”
Related: Idaho Republicans pass bill making it a felony for transgender people to use public bathrooms
The alternative, he said, could be worse. Being forced into women’s facilities, Matthews warned, risks confrontation or violence. “Every single day when I’m out in public, I have to decide,” he said. “Do I feel like going to jail today, or do I feel like being attacked?”
Idaho
I worked as the owner of Idaho Falls’ oldest bar for a day. Here’s what it was like. – East Idaho News
Shane Dial, owner of Ford’s Bar in Idaho Falls, shows EastIdahoNews.com reporter Kaitlyn Hart what it’s like to own a 120 year old bar. | Jordan Wood, EastIdahoNews.com
IDAHO FALLS – EastIdahoNews.com is highlighting different careers and today, I’m Workin’ It with Shane Dial at Ford’s Bar.
Originally opened in 1906, Ford’s Bar has carried the same name through multiple owners for 120 years. It is a staple of the nightlife scene in Idaho Falls, and it’s often said that you haven’t partied until you’ve been to Ford’s.
Shane Dial, who’s been with the bar for the last five years, showed me how to open the bar, make a lemon drop martini, operate the music, the importance of working with law enforcement to manage unruly customers, and more.
Thank you to Shane Dial for letting us come learn what it’s like to be him for a day!
Check out the bar’s Facebook page here.
Watch our experience in the video above, and watch other Workin’ It videos here.
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Idaho
Oklahoma 89-59 Idaho (Mar 20, 2026) Final Score – ESPN
Beers’ 18 points, 10 rebounds power No. 4 seed Oklahoma in 89-59 rout of Idaho in March Madness
— Raegan Beers had 18 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 4 seed Oklahoma overwhelmed No. 13 seed Idaho 89-59 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament on Friday night.
Mar 21, 2026, 01:46 am – AP
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