Idaho
Idaho Fish and Game recognize 2 hunter education instructors on 45 years of service | Idaho Fish and Game


Idaho
Idaho kicks off Affordable Care Act open enrollment as premiums are set to rise nationwide

On Wednesday, open enrollment for Affordable Care Act plans began in Idaho, offering a preview to the rest of the country of how much monthly premiums are set to increase in 2026.
Many Idahoans will have to decide whether they’ll be able to afford coverage once the enhanced subsidies that kept premiums lower for many middle-class families expire at the end of the year.
Bob McMichael, 63, and his wife, Leslie, 62, already know they won’t.
Both are retired and make about $42,000 a year. They currently pay $51 a month for their ACA plan. Late last month, they got a notice that their monthly premium would increase to $2,232 next year without the subsidies.
“We’re facing a stratospheric increase in health care and probably don’t have any option to stay on health care as of January 2026,” McMichael said.
After getting the notice, the McMichaels wrote to Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, urging him to support extending the subsidies.
That decision is at the heart of the government shutdown fight on Capitol Hill, with Democrats saying Republicans must agree to keep in place the enhanced subsidies, first introduced in 2021, before they’ll vote to reopen the government. Without the tax credits, average out-of-pocket premiums are expected to rise by $1,200 a year in Idaho, a 75% increase, according to state health officials.
“A pretty big number of people are going to see their premiums double, if not more,” said Hillarie Matlock, policy director of Idaho Voices for Children, a nonprofit group that advocates for health insurance access.
More than 100,000 people in Idaho got enhanced subsidies this year — about 87% of all state ACA enrollees, according to data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
About 25,000 Idahoans are likely to drop their coverage for next year if the subsidies expire on Dec. 31, said Pat Kelly, executive director of Your Health Idaho, the state’s ACA marketplace.
The state has spent the last year preparing for the loss of subsidies and expected premium hike, Kelly said.
“We’ve spent a lot of this year training agents on what the changes will be and how we will communicate those changes to their consumers,” he said.
Gideon Lukens, a senior fellow and director of research and data analysis on the health policy team at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan research group, said that a 60-year-old couple earning $85,000 a year in Idaho could see about a $1,500 increase in their monthly out-of-pocket premiums.
A family of four earning $130,000 a year could see about a $650 increase in their monthly premiums. “And that’s not an outlier,” he said. “For some people, it’s going to be a lot worse.”
“We’ve heard from a couple of folks that they’re trying to get as much taken care of before the end of the calendar year just because they’re concerned about the inability to address things in a preventative way or even do their appointments next year because of the cost,” Matlock, of Idaho Voices for Children, said.
People on ACA plans who don’t qualify for tax credits won’t be spared either, Lukens said: Premiums are expected to rise about 18% on average for them as insurers raise rates for next year.
“Virtually all marketplace enrollees in Idaho are going to see their premiums increase,” he said.
Mark and Sarah Lathrop, of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, don’t qualify for enhanced subsidies. The couple, who own Liberty Lake Wine Cellars just across the border in Washington, currently pay $1,116 a month for their ACA plan.
Their 2026 renewal notice shows that premium climbing to $1,351 a month, a 21% increase, while their plan out-of-pocket maximum will jump from $12,000 to $18,400.
Mark Lathrop said they have already cut back on travel, dining out and other expenses as sales have flattened in their wine business and costs have risen, mainly due to tariffs.
Despite the higher premiums, the couple plan to keep their coverage due to a medical condition that requires annual monitoring.
“I don’t think my situation is as bad as some others that are losing tax credits though, but it will be common among small-business owners,” Mark Lathrop said.
Idaho
Active Situation: Idaho Falls Police order evacuations, street closures near Lomax and Wabash – Local News 8

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Idaho Falls Police Department (IFPD) is on scene for an active situation near the corner of Lomax Street and Wabash Avenue. Residents in several nearby homes have been evacuated.
Both streets are currently blocked – Lomax Street from N Freeman to Fanning, and Wabash from Gladstone to 1st Street- for the safety of the public and to give officers the space to work. Residents in nearby homes who have not been evacuated are being directed to shelter in place unless told otherwise by officers on scene. IFPD is directing all other members of the Idaho Falls Community to avoid the area.
This is a developing story, and IFPD has stated it will provide additional updates online. Local News 8 has a reporter en route and will provide updates from the scene as they become available.
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Idaho
24-year-old Post Falls woman dead in North Idaho car crash

A 24-year-old Post Falls woman died in a car crash early Sunday morning in Idaho’s Shoshone County .
Idaho State Police responded to the crash just before 3 a.m. Sunday and pronounced the woman dead at the scene.
The woman was driving south on Coeur d’Alene River Road in a black Kia Sportage, according to a police news release. Near milepost 13, she failed to turn and veered off the roadway. The Kia rolled over. She was not wearing a seat belt according to the release.
Idaho State Police is investigating the crash. Police did not identify the deceased woman.
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