Idaho
Tax rebate 2022: Idaho taxpayers have three days to apply for payment worth up to $600
Tlisted below are solely three days left for Idaho residents to file their taxes and obtain a rebate that can give them as much as $600.
The Gem State is giving this rebate to anybody who has been a resident of Idaho for the complete 12 months of 2020 and 2021 and has filed their taxes for a similar tax years. The state defines a full-year resident as somebody who has both stored a house in Idaho for a whole 12 months and spent greater than 270 days of the 12 months there or as an individual who has domiciled within the state for your entire tax 12 months, in line with the state’s tax fee.
The precise cost that residents will obtain from this rebate will both be $300 for particular person filers and $600 for joint filers or 10% of a taxpayer’s 2020 earnings taxes, whichever possibility is bigger.
UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO PROFESSOR SUES TIKTOK TAROT CARD READER WHO ACCUSED HER OF MURDER
Idaho residents eligible for this rebate who supplied banking data when submitting their 2021 tax returns will obtain this cost by means of a direct deposit to their checking account. For anybody else who’s eligible, they are going to obtain this rebate through a test within the mail.
The state has already been issuing these rebates since September, with the intent to offer the entire funds by March 2023. Roughly 75,000 rebates are being despatched out by the tax fee each week.
In complete, the tax fee estimates that it’s going to ship about 800,000 rebates by March of subsequent 12 months, all of which can complete $500 million.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
Any Idaho residents keen on monitoring their rebate can accomplish that through the use of the The place’s My Rebate instrument. To make use of this, one might want to present both a Social Safety quantity or Particular person Taxpayer Identification Quantity, in addition to an Idaho driver’s license quantity, state-issued ID quantity, or 2021 Idaho earnings tax return.
Idaho
Numerica to sponsor North Idaho activities through Jan. 4
Numerica is sponsoring Five Days of Family Fun for families to enjoy at no cost over winter break. The events tie into the credit union’s Numerica CARES for Kids program.
“The holiday season can be a magical time, but it also comes with financial challenges,” Carla Cicero, Numerica’s president and CEO, said in a Dec. 18 news release.
Free North Idaho events:
• Tuesday | Hayden Cinema, 9:30 a.m., Hayden. “Sonic the Hedgehog 3” | 2 p.m. “Mufasa: The Lion King”
• Wednesday | Triple Play Family Fun Park. 10 a.m. Raptor Reef Indoor Waterpark
• Thursday | Coeur d’Alene on Ice, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Skate rentals included.
• Friday | Make It Messy! 1857 W. Hayden Ave., 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Open play.
• Jan. 4 | Spokane Chiefs Hockey, 6:05 p.m. Up to four tickets per family. Reservations required.
Visit Numerica’s Facebook page for details.
Headquartered in Spokane Valley, Numerica serves more than 170,000 members in the Inland Northwest.
Idaho
Salute to Idaho Agriculture: Sawtooth Reindeer Ranch
CAREY, Idaho (KMVT/KSVT) — Shaylin and Eric Heywood said they dreamed of owning reindeer, and last year, it came true when they opened the Sawtooth Reindeer Ranch in Carey.
“Seeing all the kids just in awe that reindeer actually exists makes all the work worth it,” Eric Haywood said.
Since then, they’ve learned how to take care of these unique creatures, and it’s a lot of work.
“I was full-time, we were both full-time, but now I am a stay-at-home-reindeer mom full-time,” Shaylin Heywood said. “These guys do require quite a bit, it’s out here all day every day.”
Their business centers around tours of their ranch and bringing their reindeer to events across the Magic Valley. Another one of their goals is to spread the knowledge of how important these animals are to agriculture.
“The huge culture and history they actually have in agricultural life,” Shaylin Haywood said. “Idaho recognizes that, but like how we have horses, cows and dogs, the Sami people they have reindeer, that is their livestock animal.”
Eric Heywood said that raising reindeer comes with unique struggles.
“When they’re not feeling good, they really do a good job at disguising it,” Eric Heywood said. “Because they don’t want to show weakness, because if they show weakness in a herd environment, they are usually the ones that get cut out or taken out.”
With their reindeer’s success over the years, the Heywoods said they know the community is there for them.
“Everybody has been awesome, and it’s been really cool to see kind of like cheer and happiness that they bring no matter where we go or who comes here, it’s been awesome,” Shaylin Haywood said.
The ranch is preparing to welcome some new additions next year.
“Also, keep an eye out because this spring, we are expecting our first round of calves, so we will have a bunch of baby reindeer running around,” Shaylin Heywood said.
Copyright 2024 KMVT. All rights reserved.
Idaho
Innovating in agriculture: Bare Beans brings ready-to-eat foods for this week’s Made in Idaho
RUPERT, Idaho — Magic Valley farmers and food producers are always innovating, making the region a “Mecca” for food production. Bare Beans in Rupert is one company that is bringing a fresh approach to a classic food staple
- Bare Beans produces cooked, ready-to-eat beans farmed in the Magic Valley.
- Unlike canned beans, Bare Beans have no liquid, preservatives, or additives.
(Below is the transcript from the broadcast story)
Business is booming at Bare Beans in Rupert
“We go through about five of these a day,” Huff said.
Beans have been grown in Idaho as long as there’s been agriculture. And Huff’s husband has farmed them most of his life.
Huff founded Bare Beans in 2018, after looking for a product she could produce using her family’s agricultural commodities
“We simulate the whole scratch homemade process. We do a batch-made kettle-cooked bean that has a great quality, great taste, great smell, but we don’t have all the icky stuff that’s in a can,” Huff said.
The project was no overnight matter.
“Michelle has been in the food industry for like 20 years or so, and we keep seeing this term ‘value-added,’” said Bare Beans marketing director Beth Cofer. “And so when she knew there was something that her husband was already growing that she could revalue back to she thought of this and started talking about it and worked on it until she was able to perfect it into what it is today.”
After the research and development had been sorted out, they started product testing.
“We kind of did a little grassroots marketing and brought to school districts in the area and we just gave the beans away,” Huff said. “And we got some great feedback and we were like ‘Okay, we’re onto something here.’”
The process is just like you’d make beans from scratch at home — they soak beans in batches to rehydrate them, then cook them.
“After they’re done getting cooked, they get all the way out up here to the shakers up there,” Huff said. “They get pumped up there onto our shaker, and then they come down here and get packaged into our packaging.”
The beans are an ingredient in many products, and they distribute nationwide. And they’re revamping their retail product, so you should be seeing Bare Beans in your grocer’s aisles by late 2025.
“We’re just trying to get back to our the original way of rehydrating them all night, open batch kettle cooking, and getting back to the quality of good food,” Huff said.
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