Idaho
Public dollars pay for Idaho gay pride events – Idaho Freedom
This weekend, satanists, drag queens, and anti-gun advocates will assist the North Idaho Pleasure Alliance have a good time homosexual delight — and public {dollars} may even assist pay for it by way of cash appropriated by state lawmakers.
The North Idaho Pleasure Alliance’s Pleasure within the Park boasts numerous sponsorships, together with the ACLU of Idaho, the Satanic Temple of Idaho, and the anti-gun group, Everytown for Gun Security.
However the occasion, which options the same old complement of drag queens that has turn out to be a standard theme for these sorts of affairs, additionally attracts assist from Idaho’s treasury within the type of cash from the state tobacco settlement account often called the Millennium Fund. The Millennium Fund helps pay for applications resembling Undertaking Filter, an anti-smoking marketing campaign of the Idaho Division of Well being and Welfare that additionally occurs to be a sponsor of Saturday’s occasion.
Public information present the Division of Well being and Welfare contributed $1,500 to the North Idaho Pleasure Alliance on April 18 by way of the Millennium Fund.
It’s not the primary time that state authorities businesses have put up funds in assist of homosexual delight programming within the state. Information present that the Division of Well being and Welfare has been a gentle and frequent supporter for the final couple of years. The company pitched in $3,000 in 2021. This can be a drop within the bucket in comparison with what the Division of Well being and Welfare and different Idaho businesses have carried out within the title of homosexual delight. In actual fact, since 2017 the state and public well being districts have put near $117,000 into Boise homosexual delight applications.
The Idaho Freedom Basis has lengthy sounded the alarm about the best way wherein public {dollars} are getting used to advertise the leftist agenda. We’ve seen it on school campuses and in our Okay-12 public colleges. We’ve additionally seen it in our public libraries. (As a facet be aware, the Coeur d’Alene Public Library, a metropolis authorities company, can also be listed as an occasion sponsor for North Idaho Pleasure within the Park. Moreover, the Idaho State Police is co-sponsoring the occasion, however there are not any information of this company expending cash on the occasion).
It is also value noting that this isn’t the primary time the North Idaho Pleasure Alliance has turned up on our radar. From our earlier analysis, we noticed that the North Idaho Pleasure Alliance targets college students at colleges to arrange LGBTQ+ golf equipment and supply assets on transgenderism and gender identification to minors. Many of those golf equipment have been shaped in Idaho colleges, together with the Gender and Sexuality Alliance at Lake Metropolis and Put up Falls excessive colleges.
That is simply the most recent instance of misallocation of public cash. It’s one factor to look at company America cater to the homosexual agenda. It’s one other factor when it’s our cash, as residents of Idaho, that’s behind it. It makes all of us involuntary supporters of this occasion.
When lawmakers vote to fund a price range, they should begin asking the place the cash is absolutely going. They’re a part of the issue in the event that they vote for it understanding that the cash is getting used to assist this type of debauchery. The general public wants to carry politicians accountable for voting to fund these sorts of applications.
It’s time for lawmakers and Gov. Little to cease supplying leftists with public cash to hold out their efforts.
Idaho
NIC enrollment climbs after fall count
Enrollment at North Idaho College grew 15% since last fall, according to State Board of Education data.
There are 4,585 students at the college this October, up from 3,979 in 2023 and 4,296 in 2022. However, the college is still 3% down in overall enrollment from four years ago.
The growth comes as NIC fights to retain accreditation from the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities. The college Wednesday welcomed three new trustees, who ran on a platform of retaining accreditation and creating stability for the school.
The numbers continue a jump noted in August, after enrollment increased for the first time in more than a decade. In 2011, NIC had 6,750 total students.
The October numbers capture both full-time students, at 1,209, and part-time students at 2,898, an 18% increase. The part-time list includes high school students taking dual-credit classes. There are 478 students enrolled in career-technical programs — a 14% increase from last year, but a 22% decrease from four years ago, when 612 students took CTE courses.
Tami Haft, NIC’s dean of enrollment services, presented the enrollment data to NIC trustees Wednesday, and audience members applauded the news of enrollment increases. Haft noted that the college attracted 211 new students, a 37% rise in new student enrollment.
Here’s how NIC’s student enrollment breaks down:
- 47% of students are in programs to transfer to a four-year university.
- 38% are in dual-credit courses.
- 10% are in career-technical education.
- 5% are in non-degree programs.
Click here to see the fall enrollment numbers for colleges and universities statewide.
Idaho
WATCH! TCU Women's Basketball Players Van Lith and Conner After Defeating Idaho State
Idaho
Idaho Ballet Theatre's 21st annual performance of 'The Nutcracker' returning to the Colonial Theater – East Idaho News
IDAHO FALLS — Idaho Ballet Theatre will be performing its annual holiday tradition of “The Nutcracker” for its 21st year this December.
“The Nutcracker,” which is a classical ballet, will be performed Dec. 5, 6 and 7 beginning at 7 p.m. The show will be held at the Colonial Theater located at 450 A. Street in Idaho Falls. Tickets are $20 and can be purchased here.
“(The Nutcracker is) definitely one that many people are familiar with, but I think it resonates with so many people because you can see yourself in so many different moments throughout the ballet,” Director Abbey Lasley told EastIdahoNews.com.
The cast is made up of roughly 125 dancers. There are about 110 Idaho Ballet Theatre students performing in the production, ranging in age from three to 17. There will be guest performers and students from Brigham Young University-Idaho on stage as well.
“Everyone is local … and the majority are students,” Lasley said. “That’s what we really pride ourselves on is putting on a professional level production with an entire student cast.”
Lasley believes “The Nutcracker” is a “magical tradition” and a great way to kick off the Christmas season and focus on the “hopeful, optimistic, pure and beautiful aspects of this holiday.”
“There’s so much depth in ‘The Nutcracker’ that I think people don’t expect. People expect to see mostly all of the bright, shiny, sparkly, beautiful little parts of it — and we love all those parts — but there’s so many more layers,” she mentioned. “There’s so much more to be learned and to be internalized — things that can help us channel a really gratitude-based, optimistic view for the future.”
Lasley is one of three new directors who are making “The Nutcracker” possible this year.
Idaho Ballet Theatre’s founder and original director Brandy K. Jensen, who is Lasley’s mother, fainted last year during “The Nutcracker” rehearsals a few days before the performance. She had a stroke later that night and died December 14, 2023, at the age of 53.
“It was really hard, and it was a shock to all of us, but she got to do what she loved until the very last day and that was really a gift,” Lasley said.
Jensen started Idaho Ballet Theatre in 2003, and Lasley said she quickly began doing full-length productions like “The Nutcracker.”
“Every year she would add some elements — she’d polish something, rechoreograph something or improve it in some way,” Lasley explained. “By the time we got to her performance last year (of “The Nutcracker”), it was a very beautiful look at her life’s work.”
Lasley said the absence of her mother is going to weigh on the performers’ hearts during their December shows, but they are looking forward to taking the stage and honoring Jensen through their performances.
“We are very grateful to continue and be able to use everything she taught us and everything she embodied in her life to share this holiday magic and help people see the deeper meaning behind everything that we’re doing,” Lasley said.
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