Idaho
Idaho Senate's “Rental Fee Limit” bill held in committee
BOISE, Idaho (KMVT/KSVT) — State lawmakers are looking to put new rules in place when it comes to rental application fees for homes and apartments.
“What this bill does is simply it makes a change where landlords are only allowed to charge rental applicants 2 fees at a time, rather than charging everyone who applies,” says District 16 State Senator Alison Rabe.
Senate bill 1042aa, also known as the “rental applications, fee and limit bill,” passed the senate last month. Those against the bill argued it’s government overreach, but the sponsor, Senator Rabe, says that this proposal came out of conversations with some of the largest landlord associations in the state who helped draft the language.
“Many of us don’t like telling people what to do but the businesses are coming to us asking us to codify what they’re already doing,” says Rabe.
According to the bill’s statement of purpose, the property owner or managers must actually run a background check in order to charge an application fee, and a rental must be available or expected to be available with 60 days unless the tenants agree otherwise.
“My Management” is a company that owns various rental properties in the Magic Valley, who supports this proposal.
“In my personal experience of having worked in this industry for a long time, i think there is a lot of room for vulnerable people to be taken advantage of,” says Briten Perron.
Briten Perron is the company’s asset manager. He says he’s left jobs before because of predatory application fees and believes this bill will make agencies be more honest and ethical.
“When you start an application on our website, before it even ask for a single thing, it has a list of things that says, ‘hey, if you have any of this going on, you may not even pass,’ and this one of those things the bill is looking to address — to be transparent about what is going to qualify people or disqualify them,” says Perron.
The house business committee discussed the measure Wednesday, but some people who testified argued that parts of the bill’s language are not clear. At the end of the hearing, lawmakers called for a substitute motion to hold the bill in committee and requested the sponsors re-draft a new bill.
Copyright 2025 KMVT. All rights reserved.
Idaho
BYU–I graduation: Elder Teixeira lessons from the Great Salt Lake
To the nearly 4,000 BYU–Idaho graduates about to start a new chapter of their lives, Elder José A. Teixeira offered a message of hope and encouragement.
“Heavenly Father knows each of you and has a purpose for you,” the General Authority Seventy testified during winter 2026 commencement on Friday, April 10. “Through the Atonement of Jesus Christ, hope is always available, even when the sky appears to be gray. As you remain faithful and stay in the Lord’s field, the Lord will bring light into your life in ways you cannot yet imagine.”
While addressing graduates and their loved ones gathered in the BYU–I Center for the afternoon ceremony in Rexburg, Idaho, Elder Teixeira spoke about his decision to enroll in a digital photography program offered online through a university on the East Coast.
For one of the assignments, Elder Teixeira needed to choose a location, plan a photo shoot and capture images worthy of a portfolio — on a tight schedule.
“Eventually, I selected a location along the Great Salt Lake where a small island sits in the distance,” Elder Teixeira recalled. “Under the right conditions, the water’s surface in this location can reflect the sky like a mirror, and if everything worked perfectly, the scene could be beautiful.”
As he left the office the day of the shoot, however, the sky was gray and featureless. No color or clouds.
Before driving to the spot, and again after he set up his equipment, Elder Teixeira considered packing up and going home.
But as the sun descended, something unexpected happened. The water became still. Subtle blue tones appeared, then delicate pastel colors. “For a brief moment, it looked as if heaven and earth had become one,” Elder Teixeira recalled, and he captured it on camera.
That experience taught him something he has never forgotten, he said. “Some of life’s most important, beautiful moments appear only to those who stay a little longer.” Or, in other words, “Faith often requires us to remain in place even when the sky still looks gray.”
He then shared three lessons.

Lesson 1: ‘Do not leave the field too early’
“Dear graduates, the years ahead will bring moments when conditions are not ideal. Plans may not unfold exactly as expected. Progress may feel slow to you,” said Elder Teixeira.
Preparation does not guarantee success but it places individuals on the path. “If I had not prepared the equipment, if I had not driven to the lake, if I had not remained until the last moment, that photograph would never have existed.”

Lesson 2: ‘Goals place us on the path’
Elder Teixeira’s goal that evening was to complete a class assignment, but something greater emerged, he said.
“Sometimes the goals we set in life do not produce exactly the results we expected. But they do something equally important. They place us on the right path.”
Graduates’ education will work much the same way, he noted. “The degree you receive today will open doors you cannot yet see. Some of the most meaningful chapters of your life will unfold in places you never originally planned to go and with experiences you never dreamed of.”

Lesson 3: ‘Live a life that can reflect heaven’
For a brief moment that evening, the surface of the lake reflected the sky so perfectly that the horizon almost disappeared. That image reminds him, said Elder Teixeira, that “each of us has the opportunity to live in a way that reflects heaven. … When we follow Jesus Christ, our lives begin to reflect something higher than ourselves.”
Elder Teixeira reminded graduates that there will be days when the sky appears gray, moments when progress seems slow. “But remember the lesson from the shores of the Great Salt Lake.

“Stay in the field. Don’t give up. Trust that your preparation matters. And most importantly, live a life that can reflect heaven,” he said.
BYU–Idaho President Alvin F. Meredith III and Michael J. Christensen, a senior director in the office of the Church commissioner of education, also spoke during commencement.
In his remarks, President Meredith told graduates, “As you commence this next phase of your life, we wish you success in all that you pursue. But our greatest hope is that you leave here as devoted, lifelong disciples of Jesus Christ — true peacemakers, as President [Dallin H.] Oaks has invited us to become.”

Idaho
‘Perfectly legal’: Discovery of decapitated cougar stirs questions in north Idaho – East Idaho News
Farragut State Park is located near Lake Pend Oreille in north Idaho. | Jesse Tinsley, The Spokesman-Review
ATHOL (The Spokesman-Review) — Peering over a cliff at Farragut State Park, Carol Mendoza was stunned at what she saw below her, partially submerged in Lake Pend Oreille.
At the lakeshore visible from Macdonald Viewpoint was the unmistakable body of a mountain lion.
The carcass of the notoriously shy creature would have been a rare enough sight, but Mendoza was further alarmed when she took in the state of the waterlogged body.
It was headless. Not sloppily detached from animal scavengers or from a losing fight with another predator, but cleanly severed.
“It wasn’t a messy cut,” Mendoza said. “It looked pretty clean cut; it was, for sure, a human did it.”
Other parkgoers on the busy, sunny weekend reported the carcass to Farragut rangers and the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, suspecting the animal had been poached.
“It’s sad,” Mendoza said of the slain beast, questioning whether something illegal happened.
That wasn’t the case.
After getting a slew of reports, Idaho Fish and Game spokesperson TJ Ross said the circumstances of the cat’s death are unclear. But there was no evidence humans were involved beyond the postmortem decapitation.
“Everything we saw leads us to believe it died of natural causes,” Ross said. “There was no added investigation; there was no foul play involved.”
Fish and Game officers began getting reports of the carcass last week – only then the animal’s head was attached. By the weekend, more and more calls came in to report the cougar, sans head.
Officers went out to inspect the carcass to find no bullet holes or evidence to point to a human-caused death, Ross said, only its missing head, which is “perfectly legal” under Idaho salvage laws.
“That is legal in Idaho; if you come across a dead animal, you can take the antlers, take the head,” Ross said.
Had the animal been found with bullet wounds, “that changes things pretty quickly,” Ross said.
Hunting mountain lions is legal year-round in Idaho, provided the hunter has the proper tags and licensing. After a kill, hunters are required to report to Fish and Game with at least the cat’s head and genitalia to prove its sex, according to Fish and Game regulations.
In the Farragut cougar’s case, only the head was removed.
Washington has stricter rules around harvesting animal carcasses. The state allows people to salvage parts from deer and elk roadkill, requiring the harvester to apply for a permit within 24 hours.
All other wildlife salvage is unlawful in Washington; a person can’t just cut the head from a cougar and keep it like they did in Farragut, according to state law.
It’s the first time in at least 50 years a mountain lion carcass has turned up at Farragut, said park manager Liz Palfini.
Exactly when, where and how the Farragut mountain lion died is unclear, Ross said. Its carcass could have been floating around Lake Pend Oreille for any length of time, the frigid waters slowing the decomposition process and keeping animal scavengers away.
Situated around the southern end of Lake Pend Oreille, the fifth-deepest lake in the U.S., Farragut State Park is enveloped by natural areas a mountain lion may call home. Bordering the park and circling the lake are the sweeping 2.5-million-acre expanse of the Idaho Panhandle National Forests.
“We don’t make any assumptions about where the animal died or anything like that; it could’ve been in the lake for a very long time,” Palfini said, adding that the currents of the massive lake likely moved the carcass around.
While the sight of a headless big cat may have alarmed parkgoers, Ross said it’s not surprising someone wanted a trophy. Mounted cat skulls are popular, he said, as are displays of its massive claws. Its waterlogged meat wasn’t fit to eat, Ross said.
“Oftentimes with lion hunters, sometimes they have the whole thing made into a rug, which is obviously expensive,” Ross said. “Oftentimes what they do is take the head, clean all the meat and fur off it and take it to a taxidermist … it becomes a nice white skull you can put on a shelf, and it displays the teeth.”
By the time officers inspected the carcass, Ross said there were some signs of decomposition, indicating it had been washed ashore “for some time.” The death of the cougar isn’t unusual, Ross said, but the fact that it washed up in such a public venue is odd for the species, known to be reclusive.
“Seeing a dead deer is commonplace. A mountain lion, on the other hand, they’re very secretive; they don’t like to be seen by humans,” Ross said. “They die of natural causes all the time, but it usually happens where a human can’t see it.”
Ross appreciated the influx of calls to report the carcass, many coming in on the department’s Citizens Against Poaching hotline as people suspected foul play. If there had been bullet holes on the body or other evidence of a human-spurred death, the carcass would be sent for a necropsy at the department’s forensics lab in Boise, he said.
“It at least gives us the opportunity to investigate and determine if we need to look deeper into it,” Ross said of the poaching hotline.
As for the lifeless cat body, removal wasn’t an option, Ross said, given the steep incline of the cliff. Officers moved the body to a less visible area of the park.
Already starting to decompose, he expects the headless animal to be reduced to bones within weeks as the cycle of life turns.
“There will be all kinds of mice and ravens and magpies and things that take advantage of that pretty quickly,” he said. “All energy is borrowed.”
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Idaho
Idaho governor signs bill to force teachers, doctors to out transgender minors to their parents – East Idaho News
BOISE (Idaho Capital Sun) — Idaho Gov. Brad Little on Friday signed into law a bill to require teachers and doctors to out transgender minors to their parents, or face lawsuits.
House Bill 822 requires schools, health care providers and child care providers to notify parents within three days after the entities receive “any request by the minor student to participate in or facilitate the social transition of the minor student.”
That would include: Using a different name than their legal name, including a nickname; using pronouns or titles that don’t align with their sex assigned at birth; using restrooms, locker rooms, changing rooms, or overnight lodging that are meant to be used by another sex; and playing on a sports team of another sex.
Entities would be banned from assisting a minor’s social transition efforts without written consent from their parent. The attorney general could seek up to $100,000 in civil fines for entities that violate the bill.
The law takes effect July 1.
The bill passed the Republican supermajority-controlled Legislature widely, with support from all but three Republican lawmakers who were present for the votes. The bill was largely opposed by the Legislature’s 15 Democrats. Boise Democratic Rep. Brooke Green said she accidentally voted in favor of the bill last week.
Major medical groups say gender-affirming care is medically necessary and safe. The American Medical Association last month reiterated that gender-affirming care is “medically necessary.” Some European nations are tightening standards for gender affirming-care.
Nine protestors who opposed anti-trans bills were arrested on trespassing charges last week in the Idaho governor’s office at the Capitol in Boise after refusing to leave once the office closed.
The bill builds on a wave of anti-LGBTQ+ bills the Legislature and the governor have approved in recent years.
Last week, on Transgender Day of Visibility, Little signed into law two anti-LGBTQ+ bills. In the morning, the city of Boise removed an LGBTQ+ pride flag — because the governor signed an expanded flag ban law. In the afternoon, just as people rallied on the Capitol steps for Trans Day of Visibility, Little signed a bill that advocates describe as the most extreme transgender bathroom ban in the nation. The bill criminalizes transgender people using bathrooms that align with their gender identity, including in private businesses.
House Bill 822, focused on minors’ social transition, was brought by Rep. Bruce Skaug. The Nampa Republican lawmaker led efforts to criminalize gender-affirming care for all minors in Idaho and expand the ban to taxpayer funds, which prevented Medicaid from covering gender-affirming care and prompted an eastern Idaho clinic to halt offering gender-affirming care.
In 2020, Idaho became the first state to ban transgender girls and women from competing on sports teams that align with their gender identity.
Bill closes loophole in law that banned gender-affirming care for minors, lawmaker says
In the Senate’s debate, Coeur d’Alene Republican Sen. Ben Toews, who cosponsored the bill, said the bill closes a loophole for social transitions in the state’s law that outlaws gender affirming care for minors.
“A loophole was left in the law, and it did not mention social transitions, the process by which vulnerable children are led into the pipeline,” Toews said. “This bill is before us today to close that loophole. This legislation upholds parental rights through transparency.”
Sen. James Ruchti, a Pocatello Democrat, recounted a story — featured in his local newspaper, the Idaho State Journal — about a couple who was arrested after allegedly severely beating a 7-year-old girl.
“When we write these statutes, we’re writing them for all families,” Ruchti told senators. “And so when nurses, when doctors, when educators tell us ‘We need a little room to be able to handle these situations carefully … it means that we have to possibly go to a family like this and tell them something that that family may not be in a great place to hear.’”
Dr. Jessica Rolynn, a doctor who practices gender-affirming care in eastern Idaho, told the Idaho Capital Sun that the bill “removes the professional judgement that allows clinicians and educators to keep children safe.”
“Not every home is safe. Some youth face rejection, emotional harm, or even homelessness when sensitive information is revealed without careful planning,” Rolynn said. “This bill contains no mechanism for safety assessment and no allowance for clinical discretion.”
Idaho Capital Sun is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Idaho Capital Sun maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Christina Lords for questions: info@idahocapitalsun.com.
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