IDAHO FALLS — William Albert “Bill” Hulet, a 104-year-old World War II veteran from Idaho Falls, passed away on Feb. 7.
He was under the care of Enhabit Hospice at Lincoln Court Retirement Community, according to his obituary. His funeral was scheduled for Saturday.
In a conversation with EastIdahoNews.com, Hulet’s grandson, Stefan Wood, says Hulet was a “sweet, sweet man all the way up until his last breath.”
“He never complained, was always positive and good-spirited all the way to the end,” Wood says.
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William Albert “Bill” Hulet. The World War II veteran from Idaho Falls passed away on Feb. 7 at the age of 104. (Photo: Stefan Wood)
Hulet was an active member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He served in the United States Army in Europe during World War II, where he interrogated German prisoners and earned the Bronze Star. He also served during the Korean War.
Wood describes his grandfather as a quiet guy with a “down-to-earth properness” and “positive energy.”
“Whenever he spoke, you felt edified by him,” says Wood. “He had a wonderful little chuckle. He would giggle and play off your funny comment. It was sweet and so fun.”
Hulet’s early life
Hulet was born on Oct. 11, 1921, to Vida Hill and Albert Franklin Hulet. He spent his early years in Twin Falls, then moved with his family to Driggs when he was 3. The family later moved to Victor, where he grew up and graduated from Victor High School.
Hulet attended Ricks College in Rexburg, where he was valedictorian of his class. During his high school and college years, he was active in band and choir.
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He eventually earned a bachelor’s degree from Brigham Young University and graduate degrees from the University of Washington and the University of Maryland.
Hulet shared some of his military experiences with EastIdahoNews.com in 2021. He told us then that he and his wife, Betty Mae Danks, who passed away in 2000, had only been married for a few weeks when he was drafted.
Bill and Betty Hulet in the early years of their marriage. Bill Hulet was drafted into the U.S. Army just weeks after he married Betty Hulet. (Photo: Stefan Wood)
‘He’s a mormoner’
Throughout the war, Staff Sgt. Hulet spent time in France, Germany and Belgium, where he was assigned to Army intelligence to interrogate prisoners of war and write reports.
He recalled working with an infantry division in Malmedy, Belgium in 1944 during the Battle of the Bulge. An old building had been turned into a makeshift jail for those who had been captured.
“We’d take the prisoner, set him down and talk with him,” said Hulet. “People get the wrong vision sometimes that we’re all running around in a very formal way, pointing guns. That’s not true.”
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Hulet said being held as a POW was more pleasant to the Germans than being in combat, and most of the captives felt some degree of relief to be there.
He remembered asking one young man where he’d been captured, to which the young man responded, “Up on the hillside in an orchard.”
The young soldier was part of an artillery unit, and he explained that they were under heavy American fire. He’d hidden in a hole to protect himself. When the crossfire ceased, the man crawled out and was surrounded at gunpoint by U.S. forces.
“About this time, he said to me, ‘I have an uncle in America,’” Hulet recalled.
“Where does your uncle live?” Hulet asked in response, expecting him to say something like New York or Pennsylvania. “This guy said, ‘Salt Lake City.’”
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“What’s his religion?” Hulet asked him.
“He’s a mormoner (meaning Mormon),” the man responded in broken English.
Hulet later learned the young man was also a Latter-day Saint. Though the young soldier had no information useful to Hulet and his comrades, Hulet said their religious connection was significant to him, and he felt a desire to help him.
“I (wanted) to see him not get shot doing something foolish and I (told) him he’d be safe if he was careful, didn’t cause any trouble, and did what people asked him to do,” Hulet said.
The young man and many other captives were put on a truck the next morning and taken to a prison camp in France. Hulet and the young soldier never saw each other again.
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Then-U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Bill Hulet writing an intelligence report during World War II. Hulet’s primary responsibility was to write reports and interrogate prisoners of war. (Photo: Stefan Wood)
Close to combat
While Hulet was never on the front lines, he says he was close to combat on multiple occasions. In Belgium, the house he was living in “had one corner shot off.” In another part of town, the officer in charge of his company and the man who worked with him were killed in a bomb explosion.
On another occasion in Germany, Hulet remembered the military police setting up a jail inside a school. Everyone who had lived in that community was gone, and Hulet and his team were there alone. They began to lay out their sleeping bags in a classroom to bed down for the night.
“There was a house across the street in good condition, except it had a big hole up at the top (where someone had shot at it). It was a lot warmer here than at the school, so several of us went and built a fire,” said Hulet.
One night, Hulet heard artillery fire outside the house. The shots gradually grew louder.
“I realized it was getting close, so I headed for the basement, and a shell landed in the backyard and blew a pine tree — just (boom), and it was gone,” he said. “I went back across the street, and a shell landed next to our school. All our sleeping bags were covered with glass. They’d blown all the windows out.”
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The Red Ball Express
Several months after D-Day, Hulet and his unit were part of a convoy of trucks across France known as the Red Ball Express. They were hauling gasoline for the tanks at the front of the line.
When Hulet and his company caught up with their division, the line came to a halt.
“Somebody came back and said the fellow up front was following a bicycle. He saw the bicycle with a little light on the back and thought it was the person to follow,” said Hulet. “But now we were on the wrong road and had to find our way through a different (route).”
Then-U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Bill Hulet and his comrades travel in a Jeep during World War II. Hulet was part of a convoy known as the “Red Ball Express.” (Photo: Stefan Wood)
The convoy made its way up a series of cliffs to get back on track, he said. Once they started traveling on the main road again, it wasn’t long before the sound of machine-gun fire again brought everything to a halt. Hulet said they waited out a minor skirmish between the allies and the Germans.
“I got a coat up around me and went to sleep,” Hulet explained. “It seems the captain had gone to sleep too, and the people in front of us had driven away. So now we’re out there, and we’re leading the convoy, and I’m just really glad it wasn’t me.”
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When the war ended, Hulet wasn’t sent home immediately. He and another member of his division were sent to replace mayors of towns throughout Germany who were Nazi supporters. He spent some time in Austria after that to help determine which of a group of German prisoners would be released.
He was discharged and sent home in October 1945.
Then-U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Bill Hulet during World War II. Hulet did not return home until October 1945. (Photo: Stefan Wood)
Life after the war
After attending college, Hulet had a long career helping veterans with employment and related issues — first with the Idaho Employment Security Agency, and later as director of the U.S. Office of Veterans Affairs for Idaho.
He and his wife raised seven children in Boise. He moved to Idaho Falls 10 years after his wife’s passing in 2010.
Hulet has 31 grandchildren and 44 great-grandchildren. In a written tribute to Hulet in 2018, multiple family members praised him for his efforts as a husband, father and grandfather.
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“He is such a gentle and loving soul,” Hulet’s granddaughter, Christina Doddroe, wrote. “I remember vividly a time when my feelings were so hurt by a loved one and he spoke to me with such kindness and empathy that I could not help but feel my heart soften and heal.”
Wood recalls catching his first fish with Hulet on a fishing trip and Wood “felt so proud.” As an adult, Wood says he spent a year getting to know his grandpa. Once a month, Hulet would tell him a story from his life and it’s an experience Wood still cherishes to this day.
Wood says his grandpa “had a goodness about him” and it’s his smile and positive energy he’s going to miss most.
“He would laugh at my cheesy jokes and play along. I loved that,” says Wood.
In addition to his wife, Hulet is preceded in death by his parents, and two sons, Michael and Barry.
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Bill Hulet and some of his grandchildren in a recent photo. Hulet had 31 grandchildren and 44 great-grandchildren at the time of his passing on Feb. 7. (Photo: Stefan Wood)
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
IDAHO FALLS — Two prominent Idaho Statehouse reporters say this past legislative session was “unrelenting,” chaotic, largely driven by budget cuts, and they see the Legislature getting more powerful.
Kevin Richert and Clark Corbin recapped this past legislative session at a forum on the ISU Idaho Falls Campus on Thursday.
Richert is a senior reporter at Idaho Education News, with more than 30 years of experience covering education policy and politics. Corbin is a senior reporter at the Idaho Capital Sun who has covered every Idaho legislative session, gavel to gavel, since 2011.
The event was hosted by the City Club of Idaho Falls, which “exists to sponsor and promote civil dialogue and discourse on all matters of public interest” and strives to be “nonpartisan and nonsectarian,” according to its website.
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Budget cuts
Both Richert and Corbin said this session was driven by budget cuts. Corbin said this was due to a lack of revenue stemming from past income tax and the adoption of new federal tax cuts.
“Cuts for almost every state agency and state department dominated the legislative session,” Corbin said. “We’re talking about 4% budget cuts for most state agencies and departments in the current fiscal year, and we’re talking about an additional 5% budget cuts for almost all state agencies and departments starting next year — fiscal year ’27 — and continuing permanently.”
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Richert said he thought higher education was taking the brunt of budget cuts. “It’s not a question of whether tuition fees are going to go up at the universities; it’s a question of how much,” he said.
When asked what the future would hold, Corbin said the budget cuts aren’t likely to go away, and their effects will be felt over time.
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“There could always be a change of leadership in the House, but they do expect the budget crunch to continue in the next year’s legislative session,” Corbin said.
‘Radiator capping’
Richert said he has one word to describe this year’s legislative session: “unrelenting.”
One thing that made it feel that way was that some bills were recycled over and over, he said. For example, Richert said the Legislature saw five different versions of a bill that proposed cuts to the Idaho Digital Learning Alliance.
“We had multiple bills that came from the dead,” he said.
The journalists said this is partly due to a tactic called “radiator capping.” The term means to replace the entire car — the bill’s text, in political terms — while only keeping the radiator cap: the bill number. By rewriting a bill on the House or Senate floor while maintaining its number, failed bills can effectively bypass the committee process.
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“Those are the changes they tried to make on immigration bills, on union bills this year,” Corbin said. “It made it extremely difficult for the public to have any idea what was going on, to have any opportunity to participate in the legislative process and share their opinions.
A more powerful, more chaotic Legislature
Richert said Idaho’s annual legislative sessions are trending longer, commonly going into the early part of April, and producing a record number of bills.
“There are rumblings that this Legislature, as a body, is wanting to expand its reach over more and have even more power over the other branches of government to the point of — are we trending towards more of a full-time professional legislature?” Richert said. “We’re a long way from there.”
“The legislative branch of government, particularly the Idaho House of Representatives, is the most powerful I’ve seen it in 16 years of covering state government,” Corbin said.
He added that this year’s legislative session was unlike any he’s experienced.
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“The overall temperature in the building was bad,” Corbin said. “It was divisive. It was chaotic. People were not hiding their feelings of disgust for each other. These traditional ideas of decorum and respect very much fell by the wayside.”
Richert said Gov. Brad Little vetoed very few bills that came across his desk, and the ones he did weren’t high-profile.
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“I think the governor behaved like he was very concerned about the supermajority-controlled Legislature, and I think that that Legislature, in turn, asserted itself and took control of the agenda this year,” Corbin said.
Are legislators representing Idaho?
Corbin said some bills this year also focused on the LGBTQ+ community, such as a bathroom restriction for transgender individuals, and a bill that banned the City of Boise from waving a Pride flag.
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When asked if these were what Idahoans wanted, Corbin said it doesn’t necessarily appear so to him, based on his review of Boise State University’s annual public policy survey.
“For years and years, I’ve heard concerns about affordability of housing, access to housing, managing the growth of the state of Idaho, having quality public schools available for our young people — that also generates a workforce pipeline for some of our businesses,” Corbin said. “I’ve heard about paying for wildfires. I’ve heard about having good roads, supporting access to public lands, public recreation, those are the concerns I hear from Idahoans.”
“But the Legislature spent a significant amount of time over the last two, three, four years placing additional restrictions on LGBTQ communities, placing restrictions on what teachers can and cannot teach in their classrooms, what school boards can and cannot do,” Corbin continued. “They talked about requiring a moment of silence every day to begin the public school day, where children could pray or read the Bible.”
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RELATED | Gov. Brad Little signs public school ‘moment of silence’ bill into law
Corbin said it may be his own opinion, but perhaps it is easier to “make a bunch of noise about what’s going wrong and (distract) people with social issues” rather than focus on harder issues that Idaho faces.
“I think what you saw on the policy space is a reflection of the fact that you had legislators thinking about reelection, and legislators with time on their hands — and that’s not always a good combination,” Richert said.
Accountability
When asked how people can keep legislators accountable, Corbin said it can be done by following the state Legislature through trusted news sources, going to community events and voting.
“This is a great year to practice accountability, because all 105 state legislators and all statewide elected officials are up for election this year,” he said.
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The rotunda as seen on March 16, 2026, at the Idaho State Capitol Building in Boise. (Photo by Pat Sutphin for the Idaho Capital Sun)
Ahead of the 2026 primary elections, the League of Women Voters of Idaho is teaming up with several local groups to hold candidate forums and voter education events in the hopes of boosting voter turnout.
The groups invited all candidates for public office in Ada and Canyon County’s commissions, and inlegislative district 11, which is in Canyon County.
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The groups that are hosting include Mormon Women for Ethical Government, the Caldwell Chamber of Commerce, the American Association of University Women’s Boise branch and the College of Idaho’s Masters of Applied Public Policy Program.
Here’s when and where the forums are:
Ada County Commissioner District 2:7-8:30 p.m. April 24 at Meridian City Hall, located at 33 E. Broadway Ave. in Meridian.
Ada County Commissioner District 1:7-8:30 p.m. April 28 at Valley View Elementary School, located at 3555 N Milwaukee St. in Boise.
Legislative District 11:6:30-8:30 p.m. April 30 at Caldwell City Hall, located at 205 S. 6th Ave. in Caldwell.
Canyon County Commissioner:6-8 p.m. May 7 at Caldwell City Hall, 205 S. 6th Ave. in Caldwell.
Learn more about candidates at the League of Women Voters’ online voter guide,VOTE411.ORG.
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