Idaho
Rapid City Rush | GAME NOTES: February 17 – Idaho Steelheads at Rush
(RAPID CITY, S.D.) – The Rapid City Rush, proud affiliate of the NHL’s Calgary Flames, take on the Idaho Steelheads at 7:05 p.m. tonight at home. It’ll be the final game of the regular season that Idaho plays at The Monument.
Last night, Rapid City bullied their way to a 4-2 lead in the early third period, but a string of three goals in 85 seconds undid the Rush as Idaho won 5-4.
WATCH | LISTEN
LAST CHANCE TO DANCE AT HOME VS. IDAHO
The Idaho Steelheads play in Rapid City for the final time this season tonight. Idaho has won every game at The Monument this season and is 9-1-0 overall vs. the Rush this year. Rapid City has fared better at Idaho Central Arena, taking three of a possible six standings points from the Steelheads in their only visit to Boise this season. Last night’s loss was particularly difficult after Idaho erased a two-goal deficit and took the lead with three goals in 85 seconds. It was only the third time this season the Rush lost in regulation after leading after two periods.
TWO-THIRDS OF THE WAY HOME
The Rush have 24 games left in the regular season, marking the final third of the year. Rapid City played 18 divisional games and six non-divisional games in the final stretch. The Rush are 9-2-0 outside Mountain Division play this year, but has only 10 wins in the Mountain Division this year. Aside from Tulsa, Rapid City will face every Mountain Division opponent in the final stretch of the year.
NO DICE
Matt Radomsky stopped his first professional penalty shot last night, denying Mark Rassell what would-have-been a go-ahead goal in the first. The Rush are even on penalty shots this year.
Date Shooter Team Goaltender Result
10.20 Alex Aleardi RC Peyton Jones (IOWA) GOAL
10.20 Jesse Jacques IOWA Connor Murphy SAVE
11.05 Andy Carroll TUL Matt Radomsky GOAL
02.16 Mark Rassell IDH Matt Radomsky SAVE
SCORING FOUR OR MORE
Last night was the first time this season the Rush have not taken a standings point when scoring four or more goals. The team was previously 15-0-1 when putting more than four in. The one blemish on the record also came against Idaho in a 5-4 overtime loss on December 13.
RUSH FIGHTS CANCER NIGHT
Tonight is Rush Fights Cancer night presented by Vitalant, which is why hundreds of names are in purple paint on the ice. The annual Paint the Ice Event, presented by Veteran Painting, was a success on Thursday night leading up to tonight’s game. The Rush will wear special Rush Fights Cancer uniforms that will be auctioned off after the game with a portion of the proceeds going to The Monument Health Foundation. During the first intermission of tonight’s broadcast on FloHockey, we will show the entirety of the bell-ringing ceremony to accompany Rush Fights Cancer night.
SIMON SAYS SCORE… AND HE DOES
Simon Boyko has now scored six goals in his last seven games for the Rush. The rookie forward earned his first ECHL marker in Maine and scored once in every game against the Mariners and the Kansas City Mavericks when the team returned home. With now ten games under his belt, Boyko is averaging better-than a goal in every other game.
NEW GUY ON THE BLUE LINE
Two of the last three new Rush defenseman have logged a point in their first game with the Rush. Billy Constantinou scored against his former team in Maine on February 2, and Adam Eby had the secondary assist on Simon Boyko’s goal yesterday.
RACE TO 50 POINTS
Alex Aleardi is only three points shy of logging his third-straight 50 point season in the ECHL. The team co-captain is currently on pace to best last year’s point total of 65. Logan Nelson, the team’s other co-captain, is also within striking distance of his third-50-point season in a row, at just six points away.
20 FOR BENNY
Blake Bennett became the first Rush forward this season to score 20 goals when he opened the scoring 1:35 into the first period yesterday.
WHAT DOES IT TAKE?
After two-thirds of the year last season, the Rush were 22-24-2 entering their last 24. Rapid City pushed hard for a playoff spot finishing the final third with an 11-10-3 record. The Rush are 14 wins away from equaling last year’s 33 wins.
WATCHING THE HORIZON
The Rush head on the road to Greenville, S.C. for a Thursday tilt with the Greenville Swamp Rabbits. The road trip kicks off a six-straight game stretch where the Rush play exclusively South Division opponents as the Savannah Ghost Pirates head west to face the Rush for three to open March. Rapid City is 2-3-1 all-time against Greenville and has not faced Savannah in team history.
MADE HARDIE
James Hardie scored his 10th goal of the season last night, and looks to continue his offensive output. Hardie’s mother, Sonia, fought and beat breast cancer while James was in juniors with the Mississauga Steelheads. You can read their feature story on rapidcityrush.com ahead of Rush Fights Cancer.
Idaho
Idaho Falls City Council delays vote on proposed alcohol ordinance – Local News 8
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) – A controversy is brewing as the City of Idaho Falls reviews its alcohol ordinance.
The goal is to consolidate four existing ordinances for beer, wine and liquor into a single law and ensure compliance with state code.
However, at its meeting last Thursday, the Idaho Falls City Council unanimously voted to remove the proposed ordinance from its agenda, in order to receive and consider additional public comment.
The proposed ordinance would:
1. Require commercial establishments selling, dispensing or permitting consumption of alcohol – including beer, wine or liquor – to have an alcohol license, alcohol catering permit or a charitable event permit.
2. Business events with 20 or less employees consuming alcohol at the business would be allowed.
3. Require alcohol servers to complete training every three years.
4. Individuals who violate the law could be charged with a misdemeanor.
Idaho Falls City Council President Jim Francis said the changes were the culmination of months of collaboration between law enforcement, business owners and city attorneys.
“We wanted to provide a safe environment – the primary point here – for public gatherings,” Francis said. “We recognize that certain antiquated elements of the current code are overly restrictive and needed to be addressed. We wanted to make the code more accessible to the public. We needed to address over-pouring issues. We wanted to reduce penalties where possible for violations, particularly the first offenses, and yet make the code clear enough to be enforceable consistently by law enforcement.”
But City Council Member John Radford said the changes represent an overreach by city government.
“I believe it’s a bad policy. What problem are we solving in the name of trying to solve a non-problem?” Radford said. “We’re becoming big brother around alcohol in your private property. I’m concerned that landlords will be at risk of being charged with a misdemeanor if they knowingly, which I made sure that was in there, because that is what we’ve been talking about, allowed people to drink in our business. We will be outside the norm of Idaho cities. This is a big step, and I don’t think the public has weighed in on this.”
At a City Council Work Session on June 1, Idaho Falls Chief of Police Bryce Johnson cited an increase in alcohol-related crime – particularly downtown – as a reason for the changes.
“DUI is there, but this would include sexual assaults, assaults, batteries, disturbances, urination, public vandalism, shooting – all sorts of crimes,” Johnson said.
But business owners are concerned about the potential impact on commercial enterprises.
“The ordinance doesn’t address the real problem – which is people drinking … at one event and then showing up in a bar or restaurant already hammered and causing problems anyway,” ” said Terri Ireland, representing the Idaho Falls Downtown Merchants Association. “The industry is really well-regulated by state and local laws already.”
The City of Idaho Falls began the process of updating its alcohol ordinance in January 2026, seeking input from community stakeholders.
Multiple community members spoke out about the ordinance.
For more in-depth information, you can read the full 39-page proposed alcohol ordinance here.
Idaho
Idaho attorneys rebuff DOJ threat to prosecute Secretary of State in voter roll dispute
BOISE, Idaho (CBS2) — A simmering dispute between Idaho’s top elections official and the U.S. Department of Justice escalated this month after federal officials warned Secretary of State Phil McGrane about possible prosecution tied to non-citizens voting in Idaho.
The Justice Department sent a letter earlier this month threatening McGrane with prosecution. The warning came amid a broader conflict between the Trump administration and McGrane, whom the administration has sued over his refusal to provide unredacted voter rolls to the federal government.
Idaho’s chief of civil litigation, James Craig, responded on July 10. In a letter first reported by the Idaho Statesman, Craig pushed back on the federal warning, writing, “Insinuations of criminal violations of the federal election laws are not well taken,” and asking the department to “stop threatening your friends in Idaho.”
Craig also requested that the lawsuit against McGrane be dismissed and criticized the Justice Department for sending its letter directly to McGrane rather than to the Idaho attorney general’s office.
The attorney general’s office said the state has already referred 15 cases of possible non-citizen election violations to the Justice Department but is not aware of any of them being prosecuted. Craig’s letter ends by asking the department to do so.
Idaho
Idaho Property Taxes are Here to Stay
The Idaho Legislature won’t eliminate property tax next year. My bold prediction. There will be a few bills introduced, a lot of chatter on talk radio and online, and then action will be kicked down the road. If it looks like a winner in the 2028 Election, it’ll sail through in session a few weeks before the 2028 Primary. Wet an index finger and raise it in the air. Then vote.
As an old Libertarian (with a capital L), I’m familiar with the basic argument. If you own it, why do you have to pay rent? The answer always comes back to, “It’s the best system we have to fund local governments”. Forms have been in place since colonial times, even if scattered geographically. The idea gained steam in the years after the Civil War when a handful of economists blamed property ownership for growing poverty in cities. Property accrued value as space became a premium. So-called reformers believed the tax would balance economic inequality, and appealed to noblesse oblige.
Your Taxes Get Sprinkled Like a Good Rain
I live in Twin Falls County, where we have 78 taxing districts that rely on the current system. If you ask what can replace it, you’re called a Republican in name only (RINO) by compatriots. Obviously, not everything funded by the tax is a waste. First responders and snow plows come to mind. It makes me think of the calls to gut the federal government, but while maintaining Social Security and Medicare. The former makes up nearly a quarter of the budget. Medicare is only 14 percent, but additional health spending brings the tab to another quarter. Historian Niall Ferguson grew up in Scotland, and he summed up Great Britain a couple of weeks ago. People want more, not less, welfare spending. Are we different?
Before anyone in Boise wipes out property tax, legislators need to consider what voters want to stay, and how to fund it otherwise. If they don’t, they’ll see a backlash at the ballot box. Just because I say I want taxes reduced, I didn’t mean the programs that benefit me! The answer won’t be available over 90 days next year.
More than 20 years ago I hosted a weeklong series on tax alternatives. Among the proposals we examined were Flat Tax, Fair Tax, and Automated Payments Tax. People are most familiar with the first. Everyone pays a flat percentage. Say 12 to 15 percent. Of income, I guess. Of course, we need to define income. Professor Gad Saad is leaving Canada for a job in the United States and has to pay an exit tax based on his estimated assets. Estimated is the dirty word! That’s left to bureaucrats.
This Requires Study and Gaming Outcomes
Go ahead and adopt the flat tax, and please the conservatives, however. Many people, even on the right, have paid very little when it comes to present income confiscation. See how they react when they get a wake-up call. The Fair Tax is a national sales tax of 23 percent. Or it was the percentage proposed 20 years ago. That sounds large, but when you consider your overall tax burden right now, if it replaced what currently exists, you would be better off. This isn’t to say that local governments wouldn’t institute their own taxes. If you live in a blue state or city, that’s a given. Proponents argue that citizens have the option of not paying taxes if they choose not to buy. Obviously, you need to buy some things, unless you’re destitute and living exclusively on handouts.
Automated Payments Tax (APT) is a 1 percent charge on every transaction. A company buys steel to build trucks; it pays 1 percent on the steel. And on every other purchase. The dealer buys the truck for his lot and pays one percent. You buy from the dealer and pay one percent. An economist at the University of Indiana told me it would cover the federal budget. We had that conversation in 2005, when the national debt wasn’t even a quarter of what we see today. None of these plans address the debt, but if state and local governments are creative, maybe we can find something that replaces property taxes.
What we’ll get is a commission from the politically connected who’ll meet once a month for bagels and orange juice. In three years, they’ll provide a solution that works best for them.
Highest Gas Taxes By State in the U.S.
Here are the top 10 states for gas taxes.
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