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Nampa legislator brings back Texas-style immigration bill to Idaho House committee • Idaho Capital Sun

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Nampa legislator brings back Texas-style immigration bill to Idaho House committee • Idaho Capital Sun


Rep. Jaron Crane, R-Nampa, introduced a bill on Tuesday to the Idaho House State Affairs Committee that replicates a 2023 Texas law creating a new crime called illegal entry.

According to the bill, “a person who is an alien commits an offense if the person enters or attempts to enter this state directly from a foreign national at any location other than a lawful port of entry.”

The bill would allow local law enforcement officers to check the documentation status of individuals.

“This will allow law enforcement to go ahead and take fingerprints, do mug shots, and do all of the things that we would do to document the person,” Crane said. 

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The first instance of being discovered as unauthorized by law enforcement would result in a misdemeanor charge, and a second occurrence would lead to a felony charge and deportation, according to the bill. 

The bill is a replica of a controversial Texas law — Senate Bill 4 — that Texas lawmakers approved in 2023. However, the Texas law is not currently being enforced. Legal challenges from the U.S. Department of Justice and immigration advocacy organizations have repeatedly prevented its enforcement, the Texas Tribune reported

Crane said the only difference is that the Idaho bill includes a severability clause, which means that if a portion of the law is found unconstitutional, the rest of the law can still stand and be enforced. The bill also declares an existing emergency, so it would take effect immediately after receiving a signature from the governor.

Idaho state Rep. Todd Achilles (right) talks with Rep. Brooke Green, both D-Boise, prior to the Jan. 7, 2025, meeting of the House State Affairs Committee. (Pat Sutphin for the Idaho Capital Sun)

Last year, Crane introduced the same bill. The bill passed the House floor, but the legislative session ended before it could reach the Senate floor.

Rep. Todd Achilles, D-Boise, said the bill “clearly violates” the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution, which grants the federal government authority to establish laws that supersede state laws, including those related to immigration.

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Achilles said he also is concerned about the civil immunity clause in the bill, which he said weakens accountability for law enforcement. Additionally, he said he was concerned about the bill’s fiscal note. It proposes a $250,000 appropriation along with a $1 million general fund allocation, raising concerns about the potential costs associated with training, jail operations and court proceedings.

The committee voted to move the bill forward, clearing the way for a full hearing at a later date.

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Carter's bold protection of 100 million acres of wild Alaska began with a float trip in Idaho • Idaho Capital Sun

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Carter's bold protection of 100 million acres of wild Alaska began with a float trip in Idaho • Idaho Capital Sun


This column was first published on Rocky Barker’s “Letters from the West” blog on Dec. 30, 2024.

The most significant land conservation act in American history started on a raft trip down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River.

President Jimmy Carter and his family rafted down the Salmon River in August 1978. (Courtesy of the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library)

Jimmy Carter, who died Dec. 29, 2024, at the age of 100, protected more than 100 million acres of Alaska public lands as national parks and preserves, national wildlife refuges, designated wilderness areas, and wild and scenic rivers. The 1980 Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act passed because Carter boldly used presidential power to make it happen.

The wilderness and national park legislation had been on environmentalists’ agenda since the 1960s, after the passage of the Wilderness Act. Several attempts were made to push it through, but each was stopped by the powerful Alaska congressional delegation.

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Carter invited newly reelected Idaho Gov. Cecil Andrus to Plains, Georgia, in 1976 to interview for Interior secretary. Andrus invited Carter, an avid angler, to raft down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in Idaho with their wives. Carter accepted, then picked Andrus to lead Interior.

Carter joined Andrus in Boise and flew into Indian Creek by helicopter in late August of 1978. Legendary outfitter Norm Guth guided them and their wives, Rosalynn and Carol, for four days through the heart of Idaho wilderness. Sitting around the campfire, Andrus told Carter he had the power to preserve the Alaska lands using the Antiquities Act, said the late Chris Carlson, Andrus’s longtime aide in his book, “Eye on the Caribou.”

President Jimmy Carter tosses around a Frisbee while taking a break from rafting the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in Idaho
President Jimmy Carter tosses around a Frisbee while taking a break from rafting the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in Idaho. (Courtesy of the Jimmy Carter Presidential Libary)

“You have the authority sir,” Andrus responded.

“Let’s do it,” Carter said.

After Congress reached a deadlock on legislation that would protect the Alaska lands, Carter acted. He declared 56 million acres as a national monument. He set aside another 36 million acres he could add later.

Carter had forced the Alaska congressional delegations’ hand. They returned to the table and passed the bill with 106 million acres of protected lands. The law almost doubled the sizes of the national park and wildlife refuge systems and tripled the size of the National Wilderness Preservation System.

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“Jimmy Carter was, with Theodore Roosevelt, one of the two most committed conservationists ever to occupy the Oval Office,” said Andrus, who died in 2017.

President Jimmy Carter’s float trip down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in 1978. From left to right are Cliff Blake, Middle Fork District Ranger; Mike Schulte, Kayak Patrol; Al Carroway, Law Enforcement; President Jimmy Carter; Ted Anderson, River Ranger; Judy Clapp, Kayak Patrol. (Courtesy of the Salmon-Challis National Forest)

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Recent storms help eastern Idaho Snowpack – Local News 8

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Recent storms help eastern Idaho Snowpack – Local News 8


Average isn’t always something to celebrate, but after a relatively warm and quiet start to winter, having average snowpack is a welcome status.

“It depends on what metric you’re looking at. But we’re right about a normal snowpack for this time of year,” said David Hoekema, a hydrologist with the Idaho Department of Water Resources.

Much of the snowpack came from the storms in the past few weeks, making up for lost time from earlier in the winter.

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Reservoir capacity is also right about average. A hot dry summer meant draw downs were more significant, but leftover water from previous winters meant the system had some extra water to give when it was needed.

The one area that’s struggling a bit for snowpack? Some of the Lost River Basins.

“Those Lost Basins up there, that’s where we’re really seeing a potential signal that drought could be developing,” said Hoekema. “We need to get some storms from the south to bring moisture to those mountains.”

The good news is, Idaho’s snowpack typically peaks around April 1st, meaning we still have about two-and-a-half months of snowpack building left.

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Statehouse roundup, 1.13.25: Idaho is a model for funding charter facilities, a national adviser says

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Statehouse roundup, 1.13.25: Idaho is a model for funding charter facilities, a national adviser says


Idaho’s charter school facilities funding model is a “success story” that other states should follow, a policy adviser for a national school choice advocacy group told lawmakers Monday. 

In 2023, the Legislature passed two bills that helped charters obtain short- and long-term financing for facilities. One bill created a $50 million revolving loan fund to jumpstart newer charters, while the other offered state-backed credit enhancement to established charters, lowering their interest rates on bonds. 

These financing tools cost the state nothing on an ongoing basis and they’ve saved $113 million, Matthew Joseph, senior policy adviser at ExcelinEd, told the House Education Committee. 

“It means that every charter school in Idaho is able to reinvest the money … into instruction,” Joseph said. “… I work in states all over the country that are not nearly as advanced as Idaho is.”

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Unlike traditional public school districts, Idaho’s charter schools can’t levy taxes on patrons to raise funds for facilities. Instead, they leverage state facilities dollars along with bonds and private donations to finance capital projects.

Matthew Joseph, a senior policy adviser at ExcelinEd, testifies before the House Education Committee Monday. (Ryan Suppe/EdNews)

On top of the financing tools, the state gives charters a per-student allocation for facilities costs. The per-student amount decreased, from $400 to $300, with last year’s House Bill 521, the sweeping facilities funding bill that directed $1.5 billion to traditional districts.

Charter advocates are preparing to introduce a proposal restoring these funds. Blake Youde, a lobbyist for the Idaho Charter School Network, told the House Education Committee that HB 521 eliminated about $3 million in state lottery funds for charters.

“I anticipate that we will be trying to work with you to make charter schools whole again,” Youde said.

Traditional districts lost lottery funding to the tune of $29 million. The Idaho School Boards Association also called for restoring these funds, which traditional districts used for routine maintenance costs and staff salaries.

‘Unfinished work:’ Liebich makes pitch for second State Board term

Kurt Liebich was first appointed to the State Board of Education in February 2020 — weeks before the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered schools across the state and the nation.

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“When I signed up five years ago, what I was getting into was not at all what I thought I was getting into,” Liebich said Monday.

On Monday afternoon, the Boise businessman was back before the Senate Education Committee, seeking confirmation to a second five-year State Board term.

Liebich said he decided to seek a second term to focus on “unfinished work,” especially in K-3 literacy, middle school math and preparing high school graduates for college or career.

“Within K-12 you’ve made massive investments in education,” Liebich said. “We could and we should get a return on the investment.”

State Board of Education member Kurt Liebich

Over the past five years, Idaho’s K-12 budget has increased by nearly 40%.

The committee took no action on Liebich’s appointment. The committee will likely vote later this week, said Senate Education Chairman Dave Lent, R-Idaho Falls.

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The nomination will then go to the full Senate.

At least two other State Board nominations are likely to go through Senate Education.



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