Idaho
Viewpoint: Getting ready for Idaho Gives 2022
Over its first 9 years Idaho Provides has raised greater than $16 million for lots of of Idaho nonprofits.
BOISE, Idaho — Perhaps it is training or the setting. Maybe animals or serving to the hungry or homeless. Do you may have a favourite trigger you wish to help? Arising quickly, you will have the prospect to select from greater than 600 nonprofits multi functional straightforward location on-line.
Idaho Provides runs Might 2-5. That is the tenth yr for the statewide donation drive.
Idaho Provides is organized and operated by the Idaho Nonprofit Middle. It is designed to convey the state collectively by elevating cash and consciousness for Gem State nonprofits. It began again in 2013 as a one-day, statewide day of giving. In 2020, at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, it switched to a multi-day occasion and went absolutely on-line.
Through the years, the individuals of Idaho have confirmed to be very beneficiant. Within the first yr, 2013, Idahoans donated almost $580,000. In 2015 donations topped $1 million for the primary time. Donations went over $1.5 million in 2018. The giving exploded within the first two years of the pandemic. In each 2020 and 2021 donations got here in slightly below $4 million. The entire raised within the first 9 years stands at precisely $16,089,531. Greater than 630 nonprofits have signed up for Idaho Provides 2022.
On this version of Viewpoint, Idaho Nonprofit Middle CEO Kevin Bailey discusses the whole lot it is advisable find out about Idaho Provides. Beneath is an excerpt:
Kevin Bailey: “I feel Idaho runs on nonprofits. I feel for those who care concerning the high quality of life, the vibrancy of your neighborhood and actually, once more, simply the standard of life the place you reside, you need to care about nonprofits. Investing and supporting, volunteering, and possibly most significantly, donating to nonprofits is what makes them thrive and run.”
Doug Petcash: “This yr the pandemic has eased up. We’re additionally seeing excessive inflation. What are your fundraising expectations for this yr?”
Kevin Bailey: “It is all the time arduous to foretell somewhat bit, however I feel we have been so near $4 million of whole donations raised on Idaho Provides, so we’re actually hoping Idaho rallies and continues that basically robust help for the 600-plus nonprofits which have registered, and we might like to prime that $4 million mark. So, we have now 4 days of giving this yr. Let’s examine if we are able to get 1,000,000 every of these days.”
Bailey additionally talks about the wide range of nonprofits which have registered, how straightforward it’s to donate by way of the occasion, and explains how the Idaho Nonprofit Middle helps charities throughout the state on a day-to-day foundation. Viewpoint airs Sunday mornings at 9 o’clock on KTVB proper after Meet the Press.
See each episode in our YouTube playlist:
Idaho
Idaho Parks and Recreation debuts new online reservation system on Monday
Idaho Parks and Recreation has been working all fall to instill their new Idaho Time Registration system and it goes online on Jan. 6.
There will be changes as this reservation system will have different prices — similar to reserving hotels or airplane tickets, it all comes down to demand. Plus people will have to be ready next week to reserve a campsite this summer in a state park.
“We have really seen the demand for camping in Idaho grow and we want to make it first of all easier to get their campsites,” said Robbie Johnson of Idaho Parks & Rec. “A high-demand campsite is going to cost you a little bit more, but in the time where there’s not so much demand it is going to cost you less.”
An example of this would be reserving a campsite at Ponderosa State Park near McCall around the 4th of July. That’s about as busy as it gets and the cost of a site with electricity and hookups will cost Idaho residents $42.
“So when we are talking about variations in pricing we are not talking about huge jumps,” said Johnson. “We are not here to discourage and make it harder to use our state parks, but the camping fees are what funds the state parks.”
The reservation system will allow people to reserve campsites, cabins and yurts nine months out. It will have a much easier interface, be easier to use on your smart phone and it will feature pictures that rangers take at the state parks.
“It’s going to be so much easier to find a park, look at a map, click on it and put your dates in,” said Johnson.
However, they have to unveil somehow so they chose a staggered start when the new system comes online next week. On Monday, people will be able to reserve through May 31, on Tuesday through June 30, on Wednesday through July, Thursday through August and Friday through September.
People will get put into a waiting room in the order they log on. You can reserve up to three campsites, but you don’t secure the reservation until you pay for it. Robbie Johnson advises people to consider multiple options, be quick and be prepared.
“The old reservation system is on our website and that is where you can go in and check out the map because you actually won’t be able to go into the new system until it actually launches the first week,” said Johnson.
So if you have summer plans at a favorite camping spot in your favorite state park be prepared for next week if you want to lock down some sites. If you don’t get what you want you can always check for cancellations.
Idaho
Obituary for Jackie Hitz Daniel – East Idaho News
Jackie Hitz Daniel, 80, peacefully passed away on Friday, Dec. 20, 2024, in Moscow, Idaho. She was born Nov. 23, 1944, in Shelley, Idaho to Jack Hitz and Coy Peck Hitz and was the oldest of four children.
She graduated from Idaho Falls High School in 1963 and married Don Moore that year. Their marriage produced four children. She was married to Garry Daniel from 1983 until his passing in 2010.
Jackie worked for decades in bookkeeping and administrative support roles, with many years spent in medical offices in Idaho Falls and Rexburg. She was an avid bowler in her earlier years. She also enjoyed crocheting, with dozens of babies being recipients of the softest blankets ever.
Jackie is survived by her brother Phil (Kathy) Hitz of South Jordan, Utah, son Dennis (Tina) Moore of Boise, daughter Trish (Steve) Poulos of Idaho Falls, daughter, Kristy (Jason) Mayer of Genesee, daughter-in-law Sydney Moore of Los Osos, California, 16 grandchildren, and 13 great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, brothers Noel Hitz and Paul Hitz, and son, Darin Moore.
Graveside services will be held in Idaho Falls in 2025, on a date to be determined. The family would like to extend special thanks to the teams at Gritman Medical Center and Aspen Park of Cascadia in Moscow, who provided such loving care in Jackie’s final weeks.
Idaho
Idaho man arrested after planting IED on railroad car
An Idaho man has been arrested after planting an IED on a parked railroad car, according to officials. The device was safely detonated by a bomb squad.
Officers were dispatched on Wednesday to the 600 block of North 8th Street in Payette, Idaho, following reports of a suspicious person seen near a parked railroad car attempting to light something on fire, according to a statement by the Payette Police Department.
Police located a suspected undetonated Improvised Explosive Device (IED) next to the train car. Officers followed fresh footprints in the snow to a camp trailer parked near a residence in the 600 block of North 8th Street.
The suspect attempted to flee but surrendered to authorities after a brief foot pursuit, police said. He has been identified as 40-year-old Payette resident Brent Sharrai.
Sharrai was arrested on outstanding warrants, with additional charges including possession of a destructive device, possession of a controlled substance, possession of paraphernalia, and resisting and obstructing officers. Federal charges for possession and manufacturing of a destructive device are pending.
Payette Police reported that a bomb squad from nearby Nampa was called to assist in safely handling the device. Union Pacific Railroad was notified, and all trains scheduled to pass through the area were placed on standby for approximately five hours until the scene was declared safe.
The Nampa Bomb Squad used a specialized robot to remove the IED from the train car before safely detonating it. A search warrant executed at Sharrai’s camp trailer uncovered items similar to the device found on the train car.
The incident is under investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), with no motive disclosed at this time.
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