Nacho Libre is aware of rivers. Okay, perhaps not the actual Nacho, however undoubtedly my pal Kurt, who has kayaked all around the world and is standing earlier than me, cocktail in hand, dressed as the fictional Mexican wrestler. We’re at a campsite alongside the Center Fork of the Salmon River in central Idaho, and Señor Libre is on a roll.
Idaho
In Idaho, R & R means rapids and relaxation
“This is likely one of the greatest — if not the greatest — river journeys within the nation,” he says of the Center Fork, which cleaves by the alpine forest, excessive desert and shadowy gorges of the two.4 million-acre Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness. We’re right here in mid-June with my spouse, Cathleen, and 21 mates, many from the College of Colorado at Boulder, Class of ’80-something, on a five-day guided run of the river, which drops 2,900 vertical toes over 100 free-flowing miles and serves up a gradual parade of Class III and IV rapids; Kurt and two others are kayaking whereas the remainder of us are driving rafts.
“It’s the gradient, the surroundings, the truth that there’re no dams,” Kurt continues, sweeping his drink throughout a view that options towering ponderosa pines, the luminous currents of the river and a hatch of caddis flies rising like mud into columns of daylight. In brief, the Center Fork is a portal into bygone eras of pure purity, Native American and frontier historical past, and near-zero connectivity with the skin world. No cell reception, no roads, no proof of the trendy world.
Nonetheless, on the put-in, it’s arduous to fathom we’ll have any peace over the approaching days. Two dozen rafts are tied up alongside the shore, and groups are ferrying oars, dry baggage and coolers from a mud parking zone down a 100-foot wood ramp to the boats. Shuttle buses steer round a frenzy of guides in frayed ball caps, shoppers struggling into moist fits and kayakers ready for breaks within the motion to shoulder their boats all the way down to the water.
However minutes after we shove off into a cold drizzle at elevation 6,000 toes, civilization feels very distant. The river sluices by a misty forest of lodgepole pines and Douglas firs, many skeletonized by wildfires, and begins into 5 miles of almost steady rapids.
Thankfully, we look like in succesful fingers. Our lead information, Jamie Zahner, 56, a shaggy, ursine outdoorsman, has been working the Center Fork for 20 years, the previous 10 with our clothing store, Center Fork River Expeditions. Standing within the firm’s warehouse the evening earlier than our departure, Jamie impersonates a raft, a paddle, quite a lot of consumer prototypes, a leaning ponderosa pine tree (beneath which we’re instructed to not camp), the wind and the river itself as he preps us for the week forward.
“Tomorrow’s going to be chilly … like ice-on-the-windshield chilly, and Tuesday morning, too,” he says, hugging himself in a mock shiver. “However then it warms up.” He smiles skyward to the imagined sunshine. “Plus, the river’s at a enjoyable degree proper now, actually cooking. You all know what to do in the event you see your buddy falling off a raft?” Jamie teeters, windmilling for a saving hand. “So listen. You fall in and it is perhaps some time earlier than we are able to get to you.”
Amongst our different six guides: Sadie Grossbaum: 31, gold dreadlocks, 5 months pregnant, works winters as a predator tracker, heading into Idaho’s snowy wilds at 2 a.m. to stalk mountain lions and wolves; Madeline Martin, a lithe 29, enjoys snorkeling in freezing rapids and teaches winter avalanche security programs in Fernie, British Columbia; and Mark Martin (no relation to Madeline), match, bearded and 38, encyclopedic data of river life, moonlights as a conservation advocate. All our guides are educated in emergency response, wilderness drugs and swift-water rescue, and so they may little doubt survive weeks within the backcountry on sticks, leaves and a handful of ants.
We, after all, couldn’t. And so lashed to our armada are a humiliation of garments, meals, booze, kitchenware, tents, sleeping baggage and camp chairs, and the important requirements: musical devices, costumes, glow-in-the-dark bocce balls and hula hoops.
Shortly after launch, we hit a prepare of six-foot standing waves that explode over the bows, smacking us with a 45-degree wake-up name. (The Center Fork is fed predominantly by snowmelt, particularly in spring and early summer season.) It’s certainly gasp-inducing chilly, and the fast doesn’t a lot finish as settle right into a mile-long Class II/III ramble that culminates in Murph’s Gap, a Class III/IV pour-over with a behavior of flipping even closely loaded rafts.
We encounter no such drama, though John McKinney — who’s audaciously kayaking the Center Fork following a 15-year break from boating — takes the primary of some swims he’ll endure after failing to roll his boat upright in rapids.
At Mile 13, we attain our first camp, type a fireplace line to unload the rafts, disperse to pitch our tents and return to search out that the guides have arrange the kitchen and bar, full with hors d’oeuvres, and constructed a fireplace. They’ve additionally, on the finish of a really non-public path, arrange the “groover,” a five-gallon bucket with a rest room seat and a stellar view.
After dinner, and after Cathleen and I observe a whisker of path within the fading daylight as much as a rocky moraine with steam rising from its far border, and after we sink right into a 106-degree scorching spring beneath ambling clouds and piercing stars — in spite of everything that, on our return to camp, we hear the faint strains of reside music. It’s my pal Dan Rubinoff — a tall, scraggly-haired hippie — on acoustic guitar, and his accomplice, Joice Moore, taking part in a bass plugged right into a toaster-size, battery-powered amp.
Their music is mellow, stunning, authentic. It’s additionally mildly curious, as a result of in a pre-trip group e mail trade, Dan had requested that individuals decrease using Bluetooth-enabled audio system on our journey. “We’re touring an extended option to be in one of the vital unimaginable distant wilderness areas left within the nation,” he wrote. “We spend quite a lot of time on rivers and like the pure sounds that these areas give us.” He signed off, “Love ya, Rube.”
After I ask him in regards to the seeming contradiction, he doesn’t blink. “Individuals have been making reside music round campfires for 1000’s of years,” he tells me. So despite the fact that Joice’s bass is amplified, “it’s completely totally different” from piping canned music from a cellphone by a speaker. Truthful sufficient, brother.
The following morning, scorching espresso in hand, I take heed to these pure sounds — the timeless wash of the river, the calls of osprey, canyon wren and western tanager, the wind by the pines — whereas watching fog billow down the mountainside.
We’re gradual to interrupt camp, however no person appears to care: The Center Fork is clipping alongside at 5,500 cubic toes per second — by late summer season, it’ll drop effectively under 1,000 CFS — and we must always attain our subsequent camp with time to spare. Nonetheless, the extreme terrain and ever-changing climate right here can scuttle even the best-laid plans.
In 2006, not far under our first camp, a pure dam broke excessive on the riverbank, sending an enormous movement of fallen bushes, soil and rocks into the river at Lake Creek — the place a fast had been created just a few years prior by an identical particles movement. Within the 2006 breach, a multitude of logs washed a half-mile downstream earlier than sealing off one of many Center Fork’s marquee rapids, Pistol Creek.
“We had teams backed up for 3 days,” Jamie tells me in Camp 2 as he flips (wild-caught Alaskan) salmon filets over the hearth. “A whole bunch of individuals. All of us simply sat there till the Forest Service confirmed up with dynamite and cleared it out.”
Pistol right now is hanging — a plunging, narrowing S-turn with a lateral present that, Sadie warns us as we strategy it, endeavors to smash us right into a rock wall on river left and, if issues go poorly, bounce us into an enormous, churning gap. (With a number of well-timed oar strokes, she reduces the smash to a nudge and the opening to a roadside attraction.)
The primary recorded run of the Center Fork occurred in 1926; filmmaker Henry Weidner canoed it, taking 4 months and capturing 800 reels of movie for a nature documentary. The primary descent in a rubber raft adopted in 1929, however leisure journeys didn’t take off till after the signing into legislation of the 1968 Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. The Forest Service began issuing permits to outfitters within the Seventies, and the business continued to develop after the 1980 designation of the realm as wilderness. And though new improvement is prohibited in wilderness areas, the Frank Church-River of No Return accommodates lively airstrips for small planes and some outdated ranches and miners’ cabins, all of which predated the wilderness designation.
What additionally predated that, after all, have been the ten,000 years that the Shoshone Indians and different tribes lived right here, subsisting on bighorn sheep (which nonetheless thrive right here) and native salmon (which don’t), earlier than their forcible removing by the U.S. Military within the late 1800s. At varied stops, we see remnants of the Indians’ time — rounded depressions, principally, which served as firepits inside their teepees, together with an obsidian arrowhead that Mark finds at our second camp.
Day 3 carries us by among the week’s calmest swimming pools, however even right here there are highlights: our vivid orange rafts drifting dreamlike over crystalline inexperienced waters, a waning moon rising over a ridge, Rube really mooning me from a raft as I take my 2 hundredth photograph of the day.
From our third camp, in an enormous grove of ponderosas, Cathleen and I run a path two miles downriver, by forest, meadow and sage, earlier than turning up Loon Creek, which pours forth from the mountains in a turquoise cascade. This delivers us to the nicest scorching spring of the week, a 6-by-15-foot log-and-earthen berm inside steps of the creek.
Upon our return, we verify that we’re the truth is in ursus nation. We’re taking part in music — Dan, Joice, Cathleen, our mates Ned and Invoice, and I — when two bears, one inexperienced and one blue, twirl into the clearing. They pose no risk, aside from demanding danceable tunes, and are trailed by Nacho Libre, a pregnant nun and Groucho Marx.
And in the event you’re pondering {that a} costume evening within the wilderness is needlessly indulgent, please observe that the next night, our guides escape their masquerade assortment — a function, they guarantee us, of each journey. As a fierce windstorm strafes the gorge and we scatter to batten down our tents, I catch a glimpse of a lion, a Nordic queen and Pippi Longstocking calmly cooking us dinner.
By Day 4, we’ve dropped into the mountain mahogany, juniper and parched, treeless hillsides of the excessive desert. We’ve additionally arrived in summer season, with highs within the 80s, cloudless skies and, for a few of us, tentless nights beneath the spangled heavens.
That afternoon, we seashore the boats and stroll to a wall adorned with Shoshone petroglyphs, together with one in every of a dude squaring off in opposition to bighorn sheep. From right here it’s a 10-minute float to camp, however the guides give us the choice to hike whereas they deadhead the rafts. We observe switchbacks as much as a rocky ridge with chook’s-eye views of the river 800 toes under, because it hews by an entrancing panorama — groves of riverside pines, wildflower-laced meadows and craggy summits, all swaddled in dazzling sunbeams.
On the final morning, we break camp by 8 a.m. and file downstream because the river squeezes between the three,000-foot-high slabs of Impassable Canyon, so named as a result of there are not any roads or trails on this some 20-mile stretch of charging white water. Coming round a bend, I spot a flash of vivid crimson on a riverside rock — McKinney, I think, emptying his kayak after a swim. However as we draw close to, the shape reveals itself: Nacho Libre in his cape, masks and glossy high-top boots, standing one-legged and holding his kayak paddle-spear-like, as if posing for a petroglyph.
He’s going through upriver, an inveterate white-water miner, basking for yet another second within the glow of the mom lode.
Briley is a author primarily based in Takoma Park, Md. His web site is johnbriley.com.
1 Benner St., Stanley, Idaho
Easy log cabins — with warmth, air-con and full loos — on a 2.5-acre property a few half-mile from the middle of Stanley and a three-minute stroll to Center Fork River Expeditions’ primary warehouse. Cabins from $204 in rafting season; two-night minimal on weekends.
Center Fork River Expeditions
915 Eva Falls Ave., Stanley
Center Fork River Expeditions runs six-day journeys on the Center Fork and primary stem of the Salmon River from late Might by September. It additionally provides fly-fishing journeys and “musical adventures” that includes skilled musicians. Most journeys are in oar boats with one paddle raft, though shoppers might hire inflatable kayaks or stand-up paddleboards (Principal Salmon solely), or carry their very own hard-shell kayaks. Journeys from $1,899 (Principal Salmon) and $2,599 (Center Fork) per grownup, with reductions for ages 16 and below and for big teams; value consists of tents, sleeping baggage and pads, dry baggage, moist fits and meals.
Potential vacationers ought to take native and nationwide public well being directives relating to the pandemic into consideration earlier than planning any journeys. Journey well being discover data will be discovered on the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention’s interactive map exhibiting journey suggestions by vacation spot and the CDC’s journey well being discover webpage.
Idaho
For a year, Idaho pregnant moms’ deaths weren’t analyzed by this panel. But new report is coming.
Reassembled Maternal Mortality Review Committee will review 2023 data in next report, due Jan. 31
Newly reassembled after Idaho lawmakers let it disband, a group of Idaho medical experts is preparing a report about pregnant moms who died in 2023.
The Idaho Maternal Mortality Review Committee met Thursday for the first time since being disbanded in 2023.
The committee’s next report is due to the Idaho Legislature by Jan. 31, as required in the new Idaho law that re-established the group.
The review committee’s purpose has been to identify, review and analyze maternal deaths in Idaho — and offer recommendations to address those deaths.
The committee’s last report, using data from 2021, found Idaho’s maternal mortality rate nearly doubled in recent years — and most of those deaths were preventable.
The committee was previously housed in the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare. But the new law that reinstated it placed the committee under the Idaho Board of Medicine, which licenses doctors.
The committee is working to first address maternal death cases in 2023, and will then look into 2022 cases, Idaho Board of Medicine General Counsel Russell Spencer told the Sun in an interview.
That’s “because the Legislature would like the most up to date” information available, Idaho Board of Medicine spokesperson Bob McLaughlin told the Sun in an interview.
Idaho has several laws banning abortion. In the 2024 legislative session, Idaho lawmakers didn’t amend those laws, despite pleas from doctors for a maternal health exception.
How Idaho’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee works
The review committee, under the Department of Health and Welfare, analyzed de-identified medical records, health statistics, autopsy reports and other records related to maternal deaths.
The committee’s work “was not intended to imply blame or substitute for institutional or professional peer review,” according to a Health and Welfare website. “Rather, the review process sought to learn from and prevent future maternal deaths.”
The reinstated committee, under the Board of Medicine, will still analyze de-identified cases. The cases “will not be used for disciplinary actions by the Board of Medicine,” the board’s website says.
An advisory body to the Board of Medicine, the review committee is meant to “identify, review, and analyze maternal deaths and determine if the pregnancy was incidental to, or a contributing factor in, the mother’s death,” the Board of Medicine’s website says.
The board’s website says the committee report “will provide insights into maternal death trends and risk factors in Idaho year over year.”
Next Idaho maternal mortality report to include 2023 data
The review committee hasn’t yet fully reviewed or published findings from Idaho maternal deaths in 2022 and 2023.
In 2023, 13 Idaho maternal death cases were identified for review, and 15 cases were identified in 2022, Spencer told the Sun.
But he said the actual number of maternal death cases to be reviewed could be reduced, for instance, if the person wasn’t pregnant or if the death occurred outside of the year the committee was analyzing.
Spencer told the Sun the committee has already reviewed seven of the 13 maternal death cases identified in 2023.
The committee will also work to ensure that each case is “correctly associated with maternal mortality,” he said.
“If so, then it will go in front of the committee, and the committee and the committee will determine whether it was related to the pregnancy or if it was incidental to the pregnancy,” Spencer said.
The committee plans to meet three times this year, including last week’s meeting, he said.
The committee will likely review 2022 data in the first half of 2025, while it awaits the 2024 data, McLaughlin told the Sun in an email.
“It usually takes a full calendar year to receive relevant documents, input data, and have committee meetings,” he said. “We are doing everything in our power to review 2022’s data as soon as possible, along with the cases from 2023 and the expected cases for 2024 coming to us in 2025.”
How Idaho lawmakers reinstated the committee
In summer 2023, Idaho became the only U.S. state without a maternal mortality review committee, after state lawmakers let the committee disband by not renewing it.
In 2024, the Idaho Legislature reinstated the maternal mortality review committee through a new bill, House Bill 399, that widely passed both legislative chambers before Gov. Brad Little signed it into law.
Work to revive the review committee started soon after Little signed the new bill into law on March 18, McLaughlin told the Sun in an email before the meeting.
The Idaho Board of Medicine hired a coordinator for the review committee, who started Aug. 5, and worked to ensure the committee had access to data to conduct the work, such as receiving information to start case review from the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare’s Bureau of Vital Statistics and working with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention “to execute a data sharing agreement and memorandum of understanding” for its database, McLaughlin told the Sun.
Idaho Medical Association CEO Susie Keller said in a statement that the association was grateful to the Legislature for reinstating “this important health care resource for women and families.”
The medical association “commends the Idaho Board of Medicine for meeting the challenges of re-establishing” the review committee, Keller added.
Who’s on the committee now?
The reinstated Idaho Maternal Mortality Review Committee includes a mix of health care professionals, including doctors, midwives, a nurse and a paramedic.
The members are:
- Dr. Andrew Spencer, a maternal-fetal medicine (MFM) specialist
- Faith Krull, a certified nurse midwife
- Jeremy Schabot, deputy director of training and safety at Ada County Paramedics
- Dr. John Eck, a family physician in Boise
- Joshua Hall, the Nez Perce County coroner
- Dr. Julie Meltzer, who specializes in OB/GYN care
- Krysta Freed, a licensed midwife
- Linda Lopez
- Dr. Magni Hamso, the medical director for Idaho Medicaid
- Dr. Spencer Paulson, a pathologist
- Tasha Hussman, a registered nurse
On Thursday, the committee named Eck as chair and Spencer as vice chair, on voice votes without any opposition.
The committee then entered executive session — where the public is not allowed to attend — to review cases.
The previous iteration of Idaho’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee conducted most of its work in executive session, similar to other states, McLaughlin told the Sun in an email.
“To do its work, the (Maternal Mortality Review Committee) must review records of hospital care, psychiatric care, and other medical records, all exempt from disclosure” under Idaho law, McLaughlin said. “We also want to encourage open and free discussion among the members of the committee, which an executive session helps to promote.”
Two past committee members re-applied, but weren’t selected
Four of the review committee’s current members had served on the Idaho Maternal Mortality Review Committee when it concluded its final report in 2023, including Hamso, Meltzer, Freed and Krull.
But two doctors who had previously served on the committee applied and were not selected. Both of those doctors — Dr. Stacy Seyb and Dr. Caitlin Gustafson — have been involved in lawsuits against the state of Idaho or state government agencies related to Idaho’s abortion bans.
Upon request, the Idaho Board of Medicine provided the list of committee applicants to the Idaho Capital Sun. But McLaughlin said the Idaho Public Records Act did not allow the state medical licensing agency to “provide a more specific answer” about reasons applicants weren’t selected.
The head of the Idaho Academy of Family Physicians, in a statement, said the organization was “deeply invested” in the review committee’s work.
“The IAFP is deeply invested in the continued work of the (Maternal Mortality Review Committee) in its new iteration and hopes to see the high-quality data analysis and reports that were provided by previous (review committees). This work is crucial to supporting maternal health and well-being in Idaho,” organization executive director Liz Woodruff said in a statement.
Russ Barron, administrator of the Board of Medicine’s parent agency called the Division of Occupational and Professional Licenses, made the appointments “in consultation” with the Board of Medicine, McLaughlin told the Sun.
Committee members were selected based on their education, training and clinical expertise, the Board of Medicine’s website says.
Asked why some past review committee members weren’t selected to serve on the new committee, Spencer told the Sun, “there’s nothing wrong with anybody who wasn’t on.”
Spencer said he couldn’t discuss reasons why specific people weren’t selected.
“We’re very, very grateful for everybody who’s ever served on this committee. We had enough interest in the committee that we were able to fill the different slots with people who hadn’t served before and provide new perspectives,” he told the Sun.
This article was written by Kyle Pfannenstiel of the Idaho Capital Sun.
Idaho
More steelhead bound for the Boise River
More steelhead are headed for the Boise River the day before Thanksgiving.
Approximately 110 additional steelhead will be released into the Boise River on Wednesday, Nov. 27. The Fish and Game fish stocking trucks will be releasing fish at the usual locations:
- Glenwood Bridge
- Americana Bridge
- Below the Broadway Avenue Bridge behind Boise State University
- West Parkcenter Bridge
- Barber Park
The fish are trapped at Hells Canyon Dam on the Snake River and will be released in equal numbers (~22 fish) at these five stocking locations.
Boise River steelhead limits are 2 fish per day, 6 in possession and 20 for the fall season. Though required in other steelhead waters, barbless hooks are not required for Boise River steelhead angling.
In addition to a valid fishing license, anglers looking to fish for one of the hatchery steelhead need a steelhead permit. Permits can be purchased at any Fish and Game office or numerous vendors across the state.
All steelhead stocked in the Boise River will lack an adipose fin (the small fin normally found immediately behind the dorsal fin). Boise River anglers catching a rainbow trout longer than 20 inches that lacks an adipose fin should consider the fish a steelhead. Any steelhead caught by an angler not holding a steelhead permit must immediately be returned to the water, and it is illegal to target steelhead without a steelhead permit.
For more information regarding the Boise River steelhead release, contact the Fish and Game Southwest Regional Office in Nampa or call (208) 465-8465. Check the department’s website to learn more.
Idaho
Idaho certifies 2024 general election results, setting up Electoral College process – East Idaho News
BOISE (Idaho Capital Sun) — The Idaho State Board of Canvassers voted unanimously Tuesday at the Idaho State Capitol in Boise to certify Idaho’s 2024 general election results.
The Idaho State Board of Canvassers officially signed off on results of the Nov. 5, 2024, election after noting that none of the election outcomes changed following the county certifications and a random audit of ballots in eight Idaho counties.
In addition to none of the outcomes changing, none of the races in Idaho were within the 0.5% margin that qualifies for a free recount, Idaho Secretary of State Phil McGrane said.
“I’ve been involved in elections for a very long time,” McGrane said during Tuesday’s meeting of the Idaho State Board of Canvassers. “This was truly one of the smoothest elections that I’ve ever been part of – from leading into the election to going through it – and I think it’s really a credit to so many different people for us to be able to hold an election like this. I think the preparation and the very, very cooperative relationship that we have with the counties and the county clerks offices has just been huge.”
The Idaho State Board of Canvassers consists of McGrane, Idaho State Treasurer Julie Ellsworth and Idaho State Controller Brandon Woolf.
Record number of Idaho voters voted in 2024 general election
Tuesday’s vote to certify Idaho’s election results also makes the 2024 general election the largest election in state history in terms of the number of voters who voted. Official numbers released following the canvass show that 917,469 voters cast ballots, beating the previous record of 878,527 from the 2020 general election.
Idaho law allows voters to register to vote and vote on Election Day. Final, official 2024 general election results showed there were 121,015 same-day registrations on Election Day.
The number of same-day voter registrations this year was so large that if all 121,015 voters who participated in same-day voter registration created a new city, it would have been the third-largest city in Idaho, just between Meridian and Nampa.
Turnout for the 2024 general election came to 77.8%, trailing the 2020 general election record turnout of 81.2%.
Certifying Idaho election results sets stage for Electoral College to meet
The vote to certify Idaho’s election results Tuesday helps set the stage for the Electoral College process used to officially vote for the president and vice president of the United States.
“The purpose of today’s meeting, really, is to certify the results as official,” McGrane said. “So up until this point, all of the results have been unofficial for the state of Idaho. That includes everything from the presidential race, federal races and state races.”
Now that Idaho’s election results are official, state officials will send the results to Washington, D.C., McGrane said.
Then, on Dec. 17, Idaho’s electors will officially cast their votes for President-elect Donald Trump in the electoral college.
Idaho has four electoral college votes – one for each of its members of the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate – and all four of Idaho’s electoral votes will go for Trump.
Election audit uncovers poll worker errors, disorganized records
On Nov. 15, the Idaho State Board of Canvassers selected eight random Idaho counties for the audit, the Sun previously reported. The counties selected were Latah, Bingham, Elmore, Bear Lake, Custer, Minidoka, Clearwater and Jerome counties.
On Tuesday, Chief Deputy Secretary of State Nicole Fitzgerald said the audit results matched the unofficial election results completely in Bingham and Minidoka counties. But there were small discrepancies, poll worker errors, hand counting errors, labeling or organizational errors that the audit uncovered in six of the counties audited. None of the discrepancies – the largest of which involved 12 ballots in Elmore County – was large enough to change the outcome of any of the elections, McGrane said during the Idaho State Board of Canvassers meeting and again during a follow up interview with the Sun.
For example, in Bear Lake County, Sen. Mark Harris, R-Soda Springs, lost one vote as a result of the audit, while his Democratic challenger Chris Riley gained one vote in the audit. Election officials on Tuesday attributed the difference to a hand counting error on election night in Bear Lake County. The error did not change the outcome. Final election results show that Harris defeated Riley by a margin of 20,907 votes to 6,062.
In Custer County, Republican Sen.-elect Christy Zito, lost one vote in the audit and her Democratic challenger David Hoag gained one vote due to what Fitzgerald described as an error in the hand-counting process on election night. That difference did not change the outcome either. Final election results show Zito won 17,750 votes to 6,859 votes.
In Elmore County, the audit was off by 12 ballots. Fitzgerald said there were 2,183 ballots reported in the five Elmore County precincts selected for the audit. But auditors only counted 2,171 ballots in the audit, Fitzgerald said.
The 12-vote discrepancy was likely due to issues and inconsistencies with the resolution board process on election night, Fitzgerald said. The resolution board comes in when a ballot is rejected as unreadable by voting machines due to an issue such as damage, stains, tears or some other issue where the resolution board is called in to take a look at the ballot to determine voter intent.
“What appears to have happened was that those ballots were just not very carefully labeled or organized on election night,” Fitzgerald said during Tuesday’s meeting.”It was really difficult for our audit team to determine which ballots belonged in the audit count.”
After Tuesday’s meeting to certify election results, McGrane told the Sun some of the notes and records connected with the resolution board process in Elmore County were handwritten instead of printed.
McGrane told the Sun he believes all votes were counted properly and the issue came down to organization and record keeping and not being sure which ballots should be part of the audit count, which was a partial audit of Elmore County and the seven other counties, not a full audit.
McGrane and Fitzgerald said they do not believe a full audit is necessary in Elmore County, but they said state election officials will follow up with Elmore County election officials about the discrepancies.
“We are going out there and meeting with them so we can identify some opportunities for process improvement,” Fitzgerald said.
The 12 vote discrepancy would not have changed the outcome of any election in Elmore County. The closest race Elmore County was involved in was a District 8 Idaho House race that Rep.-elect Faye Thompson won over her closest rival, Democrat Jared Dawson, by more than 9,800 votes in an election that included three other counties. All but one county level election was uncontested in Elmore County during the 2024 general election.
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