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Legislative Notebook: Idaho House OKs firing squad bill, committee approves state employee pay bump • Idaho Capital Sun

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Legislative Notebook: Idaho House OKs firing squad bill, committee approves state employee pay bump • Idaho Capital Sun


In an effort to help Idahoans follow major bills, resolutions and memorials through the legislative process, the Idaho Capital Sun will produce a “legislative notebook” at the end of each week to gather information in one place that concerns major happenings in the Legislature and other news relating to state government. To receive the full extent of our reporting in your inbox each day, sign up for our free email newsletter The Sunrise on our website at idahocapitalsun.com/subscribe/.

Here is our quick rundown of the major happenings during the fifth week of the Idaho Legislature’s 2025 session.

Idaho House passes firing squad bill, sends legislation to the Senate for consideration

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Only five states – Idaho, Utah, South Carolina, Oklahoma and Mississippi – have laws that allow a state to execute a death row inmate via firing squad, but Idaho is one step closer to becoming the first state in the nation making the firing squad its main method of execution.

After years of the Idaho Department of Correction struggling to acquire lethal injection drugs from pharmacies, Rep. Bruce Skaug, R-Nampa, is sponsoring House Bill 37 to make lethal injection an alternative method of Idaho executions and elevate the firing squad to its main method.

On the Idaho House floor on Thursday, Skaug said he believes death by firing squad is a more humane execution method because it is “quick” and “certain.” He also argued that the firing squad would reduce legal appeal issues in the court system and reduce failed execution attempts – like the state’s failed attempt to execute death row inmate Thomas Creech in February 2024 when it could not establish an IV line to administer the drugs.

Constitutional amendment to raise ballot initiative requirements advances in Idaho Legislature

After 10 minutes of deliberation, the House passed the bill 58-11 on a nearly party-line vote. All nine House Democrats opposed the bill, along with two Republican House lawmakers: Rep. Lori McCann, from Lewiston, and a substitute legislator for Rep. Josh Wheeler, from Ammon.

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Redesigning the state’s execution chamber for a firing squad cost $313,915, Idaho Department of Correction spokesperson Kuzeta-Cerimagic told the Idaho Capital Sun. But the chamber’s full renovations are initially estimated to cost $952,589, she said.

She also confirmed the agency is considering using “a remote-operated weapons system alongside traditional firing squad methods” to carry out executions. But the agency had not finalized its policies and procedures for a firing squad, she said in a Tuesday email to the Sun.

The bill now heads to the Idaho Senate for consideration. It would have to pass the Senate and avoid Gov. Brad Little’s veto to become law.

Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee approves pay increases for all state employees

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After failing to find consensus on proposals to increase pay for Idaho’s 25,000 state employees on Jan. 16 and Jan. 31, the Legislature’s powerful budget committee on Thursday approved new raises.

Under the plan, all state agencies would receive funding to cover raises of $1.55 per hour for all full-time permanent positions. Agency directors and institution presidents would then have flexibility to use that money to distribute raises of no less than $1.05 per hour and no more than $1.55 per hour – based on merit. If agencies do not award the full $1.55 pay increases, the additional funding left over must be returned to the Idaho Legislature.

But some employees will earn even more under that plan. The state’s IT and engineering employees would receive salary increases of 4.5%. Idaho State Police troopers would receive increases not to exceed 8%. Health care and nursing state employees would receive raises of $1.55 per hour or 3%, whichever amount is greater.

The pay increases for state employees will be built into the maintenance of operations budgets for all state agencies and departments that JFAC set Jan. 17. The maintenance budgets will then be sent to the Idaho House of Representatives and Idaho Senate for consideration.

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Legislation of interest during the fifth week of the 2025 session

  • House Bill 93: The Idaho House passed on Friday in a 42-28 vote the bill that provides a refundable tax credit up to $5,000 for a parent of homeschooled or private school students to pay for expenses including tuition and fees, tutoring, textbook costs, curriculum and transportation. The refundable tax credit is increased to $7,500 for special needs students. The bill may be considered by the Idaho Senate in the coming days of the session.
  • House Bill 40: The Idaho House passed on Monday in a 63-7 vote a bill that would reduce Idaho’s individual and corporate income tax rates from 5.695% to 5.3%. It was referred to the Senate’s Local Government and Taxation Committee and may be taken up in the coming days of the session.
  • House Bill 158: Sponsored by Reps. Marco Erickson and Barbara Ehardt, both R-Idaho Falls, the bill would establish a media shield law to protect sources who provide journalists with confidential information. The bill may be taken up by the House Judiciary, Rules and Administration Committee in the coming days of the session.
  • House Bill 83: Sponsored by Rep. Jaron Crane, R-Nampa, the bill would create a new crime known as illegal entry and allow local law enforcement to engage in immigration enforcement. The Idaho House State Affairs Committee voted to advance the bill to the House floor with a recommendation that it pass. It has been filed on the House’s third reading calendar and may be heard in the coming days of the session.
  • House Bill 26: Sponsored by Idaho State Treasurer Julie Ellsworth, the bill would allow people with disabilities to establish ABLE accounts. “ABLE,” an acronym for Achieving a Better Life Experience, allows people with disabilities who collect Social Security Income to save money for future qualifying needs, such as transportation, housing or medical expenses. The Idaho House Health and Welfare Committee advanced the bill to the full Idaho House with a recommendation that it pass. The bill is on its third reading calendar and may be taken up in the coming days of the session.
  • Senate Concurrent Resolution 103: Introduced by Sen. Ali Rabe, D-Boise, on Tuesday, the resolution would establish a bipartisan working group to study housing availability and affordability, as well as land use regulations that affect housing. It may be taken up by the Idaho Senate in the coming days of the session.
  • Senate Bill 1025: Sponsored by Sen. Dave Lent, R-Idaho Falls, the bill would expand the state’s Empowering Parents program by $20 million to be able to cover costs such as tuition for students at private, public and home schools and includes $30 million in funding to support special education. It was advanced by the Senate Education Committee without a recommendation on whether it pass or fail. It was filed on the Senate’s third reading calendar and may be taken up in the coming days of the session.

What to expect next week 

Monday will be a busy day at the Statehouse because Feb. 10 is the deadline for state lawmakers to introduce new legislation – with some exceptions for certain privileged committees. Those committees are:

  • The Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee, the Legislature’s budget committee
  • Senate Judiciary and Rules Committee
  • Senate State Affairs Committee
  • House Education Committee
  • House Health and Welfare Committee
  • House Revenue and Taxation Committee
  • House State Affairs Committee
  • House Ways and Means Committee

As of 3 p.m. Friday, at least 22 pieces of legislation are scheduled to be introduced and at least 11 other pieces of legislation are scheduled for full public hearings on Monday. To see the full schedule, click on the “all available Senate committee agendas” link and the “all available House committee agendas” link on the right side of the Legislature’s website. 

According to the Legislative Services Office, legislators have prepared more pieces of legislation by the fourth week of the session ending Jan. 31 compared to the same time frame in the last five years. There are 422 pieces of legislation that have been prepared by Jan. 31 in 2025 compared to just 320 in 2023, for example.

ProgressRpt

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Quote of the week

“ … Idaho is now considered one of the least affordable housing markets in the United States, and I think it’s incumbent on us as state government to try to provide solutions to those problems. It’s what people want us to focus on, and it’s one of those kitchen table issues that is affecting everyday Idahoans in really big ways. Rising housing costs are causing more people to lose housing. It’s causing workforce challenges. It’s causing challenges for young people who want to stay in our state and older people who want to age in place. It’s affecting everyone in different ways.

Idaho Sen. Ali Rabe, D-Boise, on Senate Concurrent Resolution 103, which will establish a bipartisan housing working group in Idaho

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Social media post of the week

Our bill text is now online. You can read it and follow its progress here: legislature.idaho.gov/sessioninfo/… #Idaho #FirstAmendment

[image or embed]

— Melissa Davlin (@davlin.bsky.social) February 6, 2025 at 11:37 AM

Photo of the week

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More than 100 people march while holding Mexican flags and signs to protest President Donald Trump’s immigration policies outside of the Idaho State Capitol in Boise on Feb. 7, 2025. Similar demonstrations have also taken place in Idaho Falls and Twin Falls in recent days. (Photo by Mia Maldonado/Idaho Capital Sun)

How to follow the Idaho Legislature and Idaho Gov. Brad Little’s work during the session

Here are a few tools we use to track the Legislature’s business and how to let your voice be heard in the issues that matter most to you.

How to find your legislators: To determine which legislative district you live in, and to find contact information for your legislators within that district, go to the Legislative Services Office’s website and put in your home address and ZIP code. Once you’ve entered that information, the three legislators – two House members and one senator – who represent your district will appear, and you can click on their headshots to find their email address and phone number.

How to find committee agendas: Go to the Idaho Legislature’s website, legislature.idaho.gov, and click on the “all available Senate committee agendas” link and the “all available House committee agendas” link on the right side of the website. 

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How to watch the legislative action in committees and on the House and Senate floors: Idaho Public Television works in conjunction with the Legislative Services Office and the Idaho Department of Administration through a program called “Idaho in Session” to provide live streaming for all legislative committees and for the House and Senate floors. To watch the action, go to https://www.idahoptv.org/shows/idahoinsession/Legislature/ and select the stream you’d like to watch.

How to testify remotely at public hearings before a committee: To sign up to testify remotely for a specific committee, navigate to that committee’s webpage, and click on the “testimony registration (remote and in person)” tab at the top.

How to find state budget documents: Go to Legislative Services Office Budget and Policy Analysis Division’s website https://legislature.idaho.gov/lso/bpa/budgetinformation/.

How to track which bills have made it to Gov. Little’s desk and any action he took on them (including vetoes): Go to the governor’s website https://gov.idaho.gov/legislative-sessions/2025-session/. You can scroll down to the bottom of the site and enter your email address to get alerts sent straight to your inbox when the page has been updated.

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Reporting from Idaho Capital Sun journalists Clark Corbin, Mia Maldonado and Kyle Pfannenstiel and Idaho Reports journalist Ruth Brown contributed to this legislative notebook.



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Mountain Home neighbors kickoff Juneteenth celebrations as Idaho marks 25 years of recognition

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Mountain Home neighbors kickoff Juneteenth celebrations as Idaho marks 25 years of recognition


MOUNTAIN HOME, Idaho — Mountain Home neighbors are coming together this weekend to honor Juneteenth, commemorating the end of slavery in the United States.

June 19 marks the day enslaved people in Galveston Bay, Texas, were freed — more than 2 years after President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation.

WATCH | Mountain Home marks 25 years of Juneteenth Celebrations—

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Mountain Home celebrates Juneteenth with a weekend of community events

The Mountain Home Juneteenth Committee hosts an annual Juneteenth 5K to honor the holiday. Saturday’s festivities continue at noon at Carl Miller Park with food, live music, games, and more.

Committee Vice President Dylisaly Reed said this year’s event marks an important milestone. 25 years ago, efforts led by former Mountain Home Mayor Joe B. McNeal helped Idaho become one of the first states to officially observe Juneteenth — though the holiday did not become an official state and federal holiday until 2021.

“It took the help and the foresight and the running, and the legacy of Dirk Kempthorne and Joe B. McNeil, who did what they had to do in order to make this happen for us,” Reed said.

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RELATED | Idaho Black History Museum commemorates Juneteenth

Many neighbors said they only learned about Juneteenth a few years ago. Purvis Cowens, who attended the Mountain Home Juneteenth 5K, said awareness remains a challenge.

“We don’t talk about it in school. A lot of people of color are really not familiar with it,” Purvis Cowens said. “So it’s a good deal to get it out there and get it in the community.”

To help change that, the committee uses money raised through its events to fund 5 scholarships for local high school seniors, who write essays about what Juneteenth means to them.

Charlotte Cowens, who hosts the Mountain Home Juneteenth 5K, said understanding history is essential.

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“It’s nice to know history because you got to know your history to know where you’re going. So if you don’t know where you came from, you never know where you’re going,” Charlotte Cowens said.

Reed said the scholarship has already made a meaningful impact.

“This was a young Caucasian gentleman, and he won, and he said when he did the research for his essay, he found out so many things he absolutely just never knew. And that’s all we want,” Reed said.

The committee said these events and the scholarship funds wouldn’t be possible without their sponsors, including Freer Foundation, Mountain Home Black History Committee, St. Luke’s, A Taste of Texas, and many more local businesses and churches.

To learn more about the Mountain Home Juneteenth Committee and this weekend’s events, click here.

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This story was initially reported by a journalist and has been, in part, converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

Send tips to neighborhood reporter Sahana Patel

Have a story idea from Southeast Boise, the Boise Bench, or Mountain Home? Share it with Sahana below —





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Idaho Targets Japanese Beetle in Caldwell to Protect Agriculture

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Idaho Targets Japanese Beetle in Caldwell to Protect Agriculture


POCATELLO, Idaho — Idaho agriculture officials are taking aggressive action after five Japanese beetles, a highly destructive invasive pest, were detected in Acequia near Rupert, according to information provided by the Idaho Farm Bureau Foundation.

The Idaho Farm Bureau Federation reports the Japanese beetle, a non-native insect that feeds on more than 300 species of agricultural and ornamental plants, poses a significant threat to Idaho agriculture. In response to the discovery, the Idaho State Department of Agriculture (ISDA) has deployed about 800 traps in the Rupert area to determine the extent of the infestation.

“We take an aggressive approach to make sure we don’t see those numbers boom before we can actually handle the situation,” said Vene Stewart, an ISDA pest survey and detection specialist helping lead eradication efforts.

Stewart said Japanese beetles are not selective feeders.

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“They eat about 300 different types of flowering plants. Pretty much anything that flowers, they would love to demolish,” Stewart said.

The ISDA is also conducting eradication efforts in Caldwell and Pocatello. Last year, the department detected 160 Japanese beetles in Caldwell and 12 in Pocatello. Residents in those areas, as well as Acequia, may notice the yellow traps used to monitor the pest’s presence.

“We will be treating all three of those areas this year,” Stewart said.

Caldwell, like Acequia, is located in a major agricultural region. About 700 traps have been placed throughout the Caldwell area.

“The Caldwell infestation isn’t moving at all,” Stewart said. “In fact, where we are finding the beetles is getting to be a smaller and smaller area. You like to see that.”

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The department has also placed approximately 550 traps in the Pocatello area.

Stewart said eradication efforts require ongoing monitoring and treatment.

“It’s unfortunately not something that we can just treat one time and assume everything’s going to be (OK) the following year,” she said. “It’s something we’re going to have to keep up on.”

According to a recent University of Idaho study, agriculture accounts for one in every nine jobs in Idaho, 17% of total sales and 12% of the state’s gross domestic product.

ISDA officials have worked to eliminate Japanese beetles wherever they appear in Idaho. About 15 years ago, large numbers of the beetles were detected in the Boise area. Officials say the state’s eradication campaign there resulted in no detections in Boise for several years. According to ISDA officials, the effort became the largest documented Japanese beetle eradication in U.S. history.

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“We definitely want to protect our agriculture, especially in Caldwell where it is such an agriculture-(rich) area,” Stewart said. “It’s definitely important to the residents and the farmers out there to make sure that we keep our eye on it and make some progress.”

Stewart said the department’s eradication efforts have received support from farmers, local residents and city officials.

Adult Japanese beetles are about a half-inch long with metallic green bodies and copper-colored wing covers. The insects can skeletonize leaves and leave holes in plants while feeding.

Officials warn that if the beetle were to establish a permanent presence in Idaho, it could lead to reduced crop production, increased pesticide use and potential market restrictions through quarantine measures.

Native to Japan, the beetle was first detected in the United States in 1916 and is now found throughout most states east of the Mississippi River.

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Although Idaho has preventative measures in place to reduce the risk of introduction from infested states, ISDA officials believe the beetles still arrive by hitchhiking with people moving from affected areas.



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Idaho State Police arrest Dillon Thorpe on rape, child enticement charges in Elmore County

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Idaho State Police arrest Dillon Thorpe on rape, child enticement charges in Elmore County


A joint investigation by the Elmore County Sheriff’s Office and the Mountain Home Police Department has led to the arrest of a man accused of multiple sexual offenses in Elmore County and the city of Mountain Home.

An arrest warrant was issued on June 10, 2026, for Dillon Thorpe following an investigation conducted by Elmore County Sheriff’s Office detectives. Thorpe was taken into custody on June 11, 2026, on a warrant by the Idaho State Police.

Thorpe is charged with rape, child enticement, lewd conduct with a minor, and sexual abuse of a child under the age of 16.

Authorities said additional details about the investigation will not be released at this time because of the nature of the crimes and to protect the privacy of victims and witnesses.

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Law enforcement believes there may be additional suspected victims and/or witnesses who have not yet been identified. Anyone with information or evidence relevant to the investigation is encouraged to contact the Elmore County Sheriff’s Office or the Mountain Home Police Department to make a report.



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