Idaho
Two Idaho Falls mayoral candidates want your vote; here is their take on the issues – East Idaho News
IDAHO FALLS — With less than a week to go before a runoff election, two candidates are still in the race to become Idaho Falls’ new mayor.
Thousands of votes were cast on Nov. 4, but Jeff Alldridge and Lisa Burtenshaw did not obtain a 50% majority, resulting in a runoff election being declared.
Looking at the numbers, Alldridge secured the most votes with 47.17% or 5,599 votes, with Burtenshaw trailing behind with 46.65% or 5,537 votes. The third candidate, Christian Ashcraft, received 6.18%, or 733 votes, and will not be on the ballot for the runoff.
RELATED | Here’s who is donating to Jeff Alldridge and Lisa Burtenshaw in the Idaho Falls mayoral runoff
Idaho Falls is one of two cities hosting runoff elections in eastern Idaho, with Pocatello holding theirs to elect a new mayor between Greg Cates and Mark Dahlquist.
RELATED | Idaho Falls and Pocatello, here’s what you’ll see on your ballots in the runoff elections
EastIdahoNews.com created new questions and sent them to Alldridge and Burtenshaw to gain a deeper understanding of each candidate’s platform. Their responses, listed below, were required to be 250 words or less, and were only edited for minor punctuation, grammar and length.
The runoff election is scheduled for Dec. 2. To find a voting location near you, visit VoteIdaho.gov.
RELATED | Who will be the next mayor of Idaho Falls? These three candidates are hoping to secure your vote
QUESTIONS
How will you persuade local voters to choose your name on the ballot during the upcoming runoff election? Why should someone vote for you?
Alldridge: I built this campaign on truth and real issues, not personal attacks.
I’ve shared a clear vision for Idaho Falls, been honest about where city leadership has fallen short, and offered solutions that put current residents and families first. Candidates should debate ideas, not rely on slander or innuendo to sway voters.
On November 4, I received the most votes, showing the citizens are ready for a new direction. My support came from regular citizens and local voters. The other campaign is backed by establishment figures and officials who can’t even vote in this mayoral race. That contrast matters.
I’m running to represent the people who live here, pay taxes here, raise their families here, and want a mayor who listens, adjusts when needed, and works to make Idaho Falls stronger for everyone.
Burtenshaw: Idaho Falls deserves a mayor who is experienced and ready for the job on Day 1. It’s time for the city to get back to doing what it does best, providing essential services and getting out of the way so that businesses can prosper. This city has been and will always be my home. I want to protect the quality of life we all cherish here. I will work hard to keep our neighborhoods safe, maintain reliable city services, and protect the heart of Idaho Falls, even as we grow. My mechanical engineering degree and critical thinking skills are very valuable for understanding infrastructure, planning, and long-term city development issues. I have a comprehensive knowledge of public finance and experience in large organizational structures.
I’ve built businesses here, raised a family here, and volunteered in nearly every corner of this city. I’m honored to make my case to the citizens of Idaho Falls. With every conversation I’ve had during this campaign, I’ve left convinced that we can do better as a City. My goal is to establish strong relationships between residents and the city so you can have confidence we’re working for you on the priorities that matter to the community.
Our community wants common sense, transparency, and accountability, and that’s the kind of leadership I’ll bring to the Mayor’s office.
Do you support the Idaho Falls Airport’s new 20-year Master Plan to expand onto nearby private property? Why or why not?
Alldridge: No. The sanctity of the neighborhoods around the airport matters far more than adding another terminal or expanding runways onto nearby private property. The city should never have threatened to take the adjacent soccer park without full transparency or letting homeowners in on the discussion from the start. Until the airport fully uses land it already leases and serves passengers effectively, I will not support further expansion.
Burtenshaw: The airport is a tremendous asset for our region. I helped grow the airport to provide more travel options for our community. I fully support the continued growth of this airport. With 5 airlines operating in Idaho Falls and 12 non-stop destinations, the airport is Idaho’s second busiest. The 20-year master plan does not disrupt the soccer complex, and provides a blueprint for a new control tower, more hangars, a second taxiway and air cargo buildings. Due to the proximity of the private land, including it as a “future land acquisition” allows for the potential purchase using federal dollars if the land becomes available. It does not obligate the Idaho Falls Airport or the property owner.
Growth should be guided by facts, public input, and respect for property rights. The airport can continue to grow responsibly through smart land use planning, infrastructure improvements, and strategic partnerships that balance regional economic opportunity with local impacts.
What are your thoughts on the citywide installation of water meters?
Alldridge: I am opposed to metering residential water.
Burtenshaw: Water metering is as complicated as it is controversial. The city has gradually been installing water meters for commercial property over the past 20 years. Due to our current infrastructure limitations, city-wide residential water metering is not feasible. The water landscape in Idaho is evolving, and to comply with state law, all new construction since 2007 has included meter pits. The city is proactively installing these pits (not the meters themselves) as part of a long-term plan. Should the state mandate full metering in the near future, our focus will be on implementing the change with an emphasis on water conservation and maintaining affordability. Idaho Falls is in a region where new groundwater rights are unavailable. The city is becoming better stewards of our current water rights by using surface water (canals) for irrigation. Pinecrest Golf Course, Sunnyside park and Community park have already been converted to surface water irrigation, saving millions of gallons of potable water each year. The city will continue to look for ways to conserve and protect our water.
As Idaho Falls grows, traffic, commuting, and parking in the downtown area are quickly becoming more difficult. What kinds of solutions would you propose to ease these transportation issues?
Alldridge: Idaho Falls isn’t growing as rapidly as we’re led to believe. New developments are happening faster than our actual population growth. Meanwhile, the growth we do have is straining our current roads and infrastructure.
When we build mostly apartments, we bring more people who eventually want single-family homes. This drives up demand and prices for locals.
Downtown access is already tight. When the city tried to fast-track paid parking downtown, residents and small-business owners pushed back hard. That tells you something. We should be making parking easier, not harder.
The city should consider public-private partnerships to expand free, convenient parking and better signal timing. The solution is making sure growth and our transportation system stay in sync.
Burtenshaw: For many years, during the 1990’s and early 2000’s, downtown was often described as “deserted.” I am glad to see the downtown become vibrant with more local shops and new restaurants, but this revitalization is creating traffic and parking issues. Bonneville County is the largest downtown employer, providing essential county services and operating the courthouse, DMV, and elections offices. The city, county, merchants, IFDDC, and landlords must work collaboratively to address employee parking and parking alternatives for a wide variety of downtown businesses.
Downtown needs to remain accessible and welcoming for residents, visitors, and businesses alike. Possible options include expanding shared parking, improving pedestrian crossings, and dedicated parking for employees.
Do you believe that Idaho Falls would benefit from more options for public transportation? If so, what kinds and who should pay for it?
Alldridge: Yes. For Idaho Falls, small and flexible public transit makes more sense than big buses on fixed routes. Point-to-point micro-transit can serve people more directly.
Public transportation will never fully pay for itself through fares, and that’s okay. It’s a public good, especially for seniors, people with accessibility needs, and residents with mobility challenges. Because it won’t be self-sufficient, we need to be honest that it must come from our local budget and not rely on the assumption that federal dollars will cover ongoing costs.
We should design transit so it can scale up or down based on real demand and what our revenues can support. We need to improve mobility for people who need it most, in a way the city can maintain over time.
Burtenshaw: Reliable transportation options strengthen our workforce, improve access to education and healthcare, and support economic growth. I am a strong supporter of the current GIFT program, which already provides valuable service to Idaho Falls residents. It’s a great example of a practical, right-sized transit solution that fits our community.
Looking ahead, we need to increase GIFT service to our metropolitan area. Idaho Falls and Ammon are not divided by daily life because we share employers, schools, shopping areas, and neighborhoods. Our transportation planning should reflect that reality. My established regional and statewide networks can help facilitate GIFT’s reach to improve efficiency and accessibility for everyone.
Funding should continue to come from a mix of local, state, and federal sources, along with creative grant opportunities. The focus for public transportation in Idaho Falls should remain on services that meet real needs without creating an unsustainable burden on taxpayers.
According to Zillow, the average house price in Idaho Falls is $468,436, while the average annual income is $50,907. What will you do to help locals work and live in Idaho Falls more affordably?
Alldridge: The numbers vary by source. According to the city’s 2026 Adopted Annual Budget, the median household income in Idaho Falls is $63,000 and the median home value is $420,000. At today’s interest rates, a family putting 20 percent down would need to earn roughly $109,000 a year to afford that home. That shows how far out of reach ownership has become for many working families.
The city can’t fix interest rates, but we can influence what gets built and where. We should encourage community-minded developers to build homes people can actually buy. Ownership gives families stability, helps build equity, and strengthens neighborhoods. More rentals will not solve our affordability problem.
We also need to grow good-paying jobs in Idaho Falls. We have talented people connected to the Idaho National Laboratory and some of the most affordable electricity in the country through Idaho Falls Power. Groups like REDI and the Idaho Innovation Center already work to attract and grow businesses. The city should be an active partner helping local entrepreneurs access programs like America’s Seed Fund through SBIR and STTR, which bring federal support to new tech and research ideas. We have what we need to become a real tech-and-innovation hub. We can become another Silicon Slopes. That would help local incomes better match today’s housing costs.
Burtenshaw: Housing affordability is a national issue and is one of Idaho Falls’ biggest challenges.
The city can lead on this issue by reducing red tape, making development predictable, and responsibly using impact fees to ensure that infrastructure keeps up with growth. As mayor, I’ll focus on promoting a mix of housing options that fit individuals and families. That mix includes entry-level homes and quality options in every price range. I can help address the other side of affordability by working to attract and retain businesses in our local economy that pay good wages and offer stable employment. I support the next generation of nuclear reactors being developed at the INL, and its alignment with workforce development at the College of Eastern Idaho. We can continue to expand our footprint as a regional hub for healthcare, and champion the long-standing companies that contribute to the stable job market. A healthy job market and balanced housing supply are the foundation for long-term affordability.
If elected, how will you govern differently from the previous administration?
Alldridge: I would not be a continuation of the current leadership. I would govern differently in three ways: by improving communication, rebuilding trust and engagement with residents, and strengthening the culture inside city government.
First, communication has to change. City Council meetings are too restrictive because residents can’t speak to agenda items. Under my leadership, agendas will be posted two weeks in advance on every city channel, and public comment will be allowed before votes. After each meeting, the city will share a short update on what was decided and what comes next. Livestreams should be easy to find on the city website and on YouTube.
Second, we need better ways for residents to engage. Formal council meetings can feel intimidating and don’t always invite real conversation. I will hold regular, informal Q&As and open discussions where people can ask questions and understand the reasoning behind decisions. When people understand the why, trust grows. The citizens are the best consultants the city will ever have.
Third, the culture inside city government needs attention. Employees do their best inside a system that often works against them. Departments are stuck in silos. I want employees to have more autonomy to solve problems, work across departments, and raise concerns without fear of reprisal.
That’s the kind of new leadership I plan to bring to Idaho Falls.
Burtenshaw: My candidacy is driven by genuine change and a shift from top-down decision making. In my administration, communication, accountability, and partnership with the people of Idaho Falls will have priority. I’ll work to make what we do at City Hall more accessible with regular communication, better information tools, and useful community updates on major projects and spending. My opponent and I agree that listening to the citizens needs to increase, where we differ is the fact that listening alone is not helpful unless you have the experience and skills to solve their concerns.
I am solutions oriented and understand that problems are best identified and resolved in a collaborative work environment. We need to break down internal barriers and focus on excellent customer service for every resident and business.
What role can the city government play in partnering with grocery stores, local farms, or food distribution networks to help make food prices in Idaho Falls more stable and affordable?
Alldridge: The city’s role is not to set grocery prices. What the city can do is help people’s food budgets stretch further by supporting a healthy economy where wages rise and cost pressures go down.
That means growing jobs that pay decent wages so people aren’t choosing between housing costs and groceries. It also means partnering with nonprofits like Community Food Basket that help families when they need support.
Burtenshaw: City government can’t and shouldn’t control food prices, but we can play a role in supporting and protecting our agricultural economy. Idaho Falls can work with Bonneville County and the City of Ammon to implement growth management policies that protect agricultural land. We can support local farmers through our relationship with the Greater Idaho Falls Chamber Agricultural Advocacy group. Together we can advocate for state policies that keep Eastern Idaho a thriving agricultural region.
The city also has several community gardens. As the mayor, I will continue to support and promote farmers markets and explore partnerships that make it easier for small producers to connect with Idaho Falls consumers.
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Idaho
‘God is not silent,’ testifies Elder Clement M. Matswagothata to BYU–Idaho students
Clinging to one’s faith in Jesus Christ — no matter how much or how little faith — can help weather questions and doubts, said Elder Clement M. Matswagothata, a General Authority Seventy, at a BYU–Idaho devotional Tuesday, March 10, in Rexburg, Idaho.
Elder Matswagothata shared his experiences, teachings and testimony about navigating doubts and questions while still continuing to build faith.
He also emphasized the importance of building upon one’s faith and taking questions and doubts to the Lord. With patience in the Lord’s timing, these questions will be answered because “God is not silent.”
“Do not let one unanswered question cancel a hundred answered prayers,” Elder Matswagothata said. In times of trouble, “keep walking with Christ.”
‘Does God still speak?’
Growing up in Botswana, Elder Matswagothata had been raised in a place where heaven had “often felt close.”
Though Elder Matswagothata was not born into the Church, his family members had always been committed to the Lord. Through their firm faith, he learned his own.
With this conviction, Elder Matswagothata sought to deepen his knowledge of God. Reading passages from the Bible about prophets that spoke to their people, he wondered, “Does God still speak?”
This questioning resulted in an urgent search, leading him to contend with religious leaders about personal belief. But his faith was not won with words. ”I always walked away feeling empty inside,” he recalled.
While Elder Matswagothata was warned against meeting with missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he saw an opportunity.
“I asked them the same question I had asked many in the past: ‘Do you believe in a God who speaks — like He spoke to Adam, to Moses, to Isaiah, to Elijah and to my favorite prophet, Samuel?’”
The missionaries then relayed the experience of Joseph Smith, another young boy who had the same question.
Elder Matswagothata received a “settled, confident, personal witness” that “God the Father and His Son, Jesus Christ, appeared to the boy Joseph Smith and called him to be a Prophet.”

Learning by the Holy Ghost
Elder Matswagothata explained that testimony is “spiritual knowledge placed into a person’s heart and mind by God,” and it is not perfect knowledge.
“The Lord has never required omniscience as the price of discipleship,” he said.
To wondering disciples, he assured them that “faith and questions can coexist,” but they still require “some steps of faith.”
The real enemy to faith in Christ is not questioning, Elder Matswagothata said, but to “drift.”
This slow, turning away from the Savior happens when people “decide to skip once, then twice, then often — until what used to feel normal and natural, like praying daily and searching the scriptures, starts to feel distant,” he said.
To counter drift, covenants “keep us connected to Jesus Christ,” even when faced with spiritually turbulent times.
Elder Matswagothata then shared his own faith-testing experience.

As a missionary, he met with a man that pressed him on the Church’s restriction on priesthood and temple blessings, noting that Elder Matswagothata was of African descent. He had never heard of the restrictions before.
“It felt as if everything I had known about God, His Son, Jesus Christ, and the witness of the Holy Ghost was suddenly harder to reach,” he said.
Seeking comfort, Elder Matswagothata met with his mission president, who invited him to return and bear testimony to the man. He did.
In that moment, “I felt the Lord’s reassurance fill me — almost from head to toe — with ‘peace … which passeth all understanding,’” he said, citing Philippians 4:7.
This experience taught him that unknowns should “not erase what the Holy Ghost had already taught.”
Anchoring faith
“The adversary will always raise questions faster than we can answer them,” said Elder Matswagothata.
“A resilient testimony isn’t built by collecting perfect answers — it’s built by staying with Christ” through study, prayer and acting in faith “and allowing Him to teach you according to His will and timing.”
Elder Matswagothata offered three “anchors” of faith in Christ.
First, stay close to the Savior.
Second, stay grounded in truth by looking for it in “trustworthy places,” such as teachings of living prophets and apostles and scriptures.
And third, stay with the Spirit by choosing “music, media, friendships and habits that invite the Spirit to be with you.”

Elder Matswagothata cited Jesus’ words in John 6. When Jesus taught “a hard saying,” many disciples went away.
Jesus asked the twelve apostles, “Will ye also go away?”
“Everyone faces a ‘Will ye also go away?’ moment. How will you answer yours?” asked Elder Matswagothata.
God’s work will move forward–on a worldwide and personal level.
“Here I stand — a simple man from the African continent — bearing witness of eternal truths and watching that inspired prophecy unfold.”
Idaho
Grocery Outlets to close in Idaho Falls, Pocatello after company announces poor earnings – East Idaho News
IDAHO FALLS — Two local grocery stores are closing their doors, along with 34 others across the country, after their CEO announced last quarter that sales were unacceptable.
On Friday, the Grocery Outlets in Idaho Falls and Pocatello announced on Facebook that they’ll be closing their doors by March 21.
The Idaho Falls Grocery Outlet first opened its doors in July 2022, and the one in Pocatello opened in April 2023.
RELATED | Grocery store offering bargain prices opens in Idaho Falls
RELATED | New ‘bargain market’ to open in Pocatello next week
EastIdahoNews.com contacted the operators of the Idaho Falls Grocery Outlet and was referred to corporate. They did not respond to a request for comment.
However, on March 4, Grocery Outlet CEO James Potter spoke during an earnings call with investors, on the closure of the stores in Idaho and across the country. Potter told investors during the call that the company’s fourth-quarter results were “unacceptable.”
“Our outlook for 2026 reflects a business with more work to do than we expected,” Potter said. “I own this, and I own fixing these issues.”
Potter said 36 stores were identified as lacking a viable path to sustained profitability despite the company’s support. The majority of the identified stores were located on the East Coast.
“However, it’s clear that we expanded too quickly and that these closures are a direct correction,” Potter said.
According to a list on Gordon Brothers’ website, a third store in Idaho will also close in Smelterville, located in Idaho’s panhandle. The investment firm’s website shows that all 36 locations are available for sublease.
With these closers, Potter said the company hopes to bring back $12 million and free up resources to assist other stores in different markets.
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Idaho
Turn shopping into a tradition at the Spring Bazaar in Idaho Falls – East Idaho News
IDAHO FALLS — A local event can be your one-stop shop if you are looking for a Mother’s Day gift, Easter basket fillers, and spring or summer decor.
The Spring Bazaar is returning to Bonneville High School this year on Saturday, March 14, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. It’s free to enter. You can “shop, eat, mingle, and repeat” at the craft fair, according to the flyer.
The first 100 people through the door will get a free cinnamon roll from Mrs. Powell’s.
“It’s a great opportunity to get out of the house because the weather is getting nice and spend some time with your girlfriends and your family,” said Haylie Rowberry, the event coordinator.
A fun giveaway will be happening during the day, and it will be a scavenger hunt.
“We did something similar last year, and it was a big hit, so we thought we would try it again,” Rowberry told EastIdahoNews.com.
Here’s how the scavenger hunt works. DJ Guido — who runs the music at the event — is giving away an item from a vendor every hour. Participants have to find the booth selling the item, get a claim ticket to win and bring it back to him.
There will be 120 vendors at the Spring Bazaar. New this year is a business called Cow Friend Soap, which is a bath and body booth. Another one is Turtle Tea, which sells boba drinks. Then there’s Beau & Bows, which sells matching hairbows and neckties for the whole family.
See the list below of all the vendors that will be there.
“I love that it’s an opportunity to support the local community and support small businesses and local entrepreneurs,” Rowberry said.
There are junior vendors, who are under 18, like Brysens Ball Claws. It’s 3D printed golf accessories.
There’s also one vendor who is Deaf, and he’s an artist, Rowberry said. His name is Frankie Grant.
“He does drawings and postcards. He makes his own bookmarks and kids’ painting kits. He is very talented, and so I am excited to have him this year,” she said.
There will be Girl Scout cookies there, too and plenty of food vendors to choose from.
The Spring Bazaar has grown in popularity over the years. Rowberry said she’s created a slogan for the event, “Spring Bazaar: where shopping turns into traditions.”
“The Spring Bazaar has become a tradition for many. I have talked to several families that have been coming for years and years, and they look forward to it every year,” she added.
Rowberry puts on the Fall Bazaar, which will be happening in November.


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