Idaho
Why can’t Idaho Democrats find candidates to run?
Inside a modest Boise workplace, a couple of blocks from the Idaho Capitol, the place Republicans have dominated for a lot of the state’s historical past, Democrats are planning a return to prominence.
Sitting in second-hand workplace chairs beneath an image of Frank Church — Idaho’s former longtime Democratic senator — Idaho Democratic Celebration Govt Director Jared DeLoof and Chairwoman Lauren Necochea, a state consultant from Boise, instructed the Idaho Statesman that Democrats are taking part in the lengthy sport. They plan to capitalize on infighting amongst Republicans within the coming years, beginning in subsequent month’s normal election.
DeLoof, who’s been head of the state celebration since final yr, mentioned they’re centered on serving to Democrats get elected subsequent month. However the long-term targets are deepening the roster of Democratic candidates and persevering with to publicize opposition to far-reaching GOP insurance policies, corresponding to Idaho’s near-total abortion ban.
“Republican voters are actually taking a look at what’s taking place of their celebration and saying, ‘You recognize, possibly this isn’t the place for me anymore,’ and are giving Democrats a second search for the primary time in a very long time,” DeLoof mentioned.
Nonetheless, the minority celebration, which represents simply 13% of registered Idaho voters, is unlikely to see vital positive factors this November.
Democrats have forfeited in races for greater than half the seats within the Republican-dominated Legislature. In statewide races, a couple of Democrats have run standout campaigns, elevating greater than $600,000 mixed to problem favored Republicans. However some contestants for highly effective constitutional places of work have inactive campaigns or little monetary assist.
Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stephen Heidt has raised simply $24,000, a fraction of the funds raised by incumbent Republican Gov. Brad Little — almost $2.6 million — and unbiased candidate Ammon Bundy, who’s raked in $600,000, 1 / 4 of it his personal cash.
Heidt, a former trainer with the Idaho Division of Correction, secured the Democratic nomination in Could after the previous frontrunner, Sandpoint Mayor Shelby Rognstad, was disqualified from the Democratic main as a result of he wasn’t registered with the celebration.
Constructing again a ‘decimated’ bench
In a debate this month, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate David Roth was requested why he jumped from an unsuccessful marketing campaign for the state Legislature in 2020 to a federal race difficult longtime GOP Sen. Mike Crapo.
“Within the Democratic Celebration in Idaho, we don’t have a very deep bench,” Roth responded. “So usually we have now to look out and see who has the perfect expertise, who has the power to launch the perfect marketing campaign attainable.”
Roth has lengthy been an lively celebration member, holding native management positions in jap Idaho for greater than a decade and at the moment serving because the Bonneville County Democrats’ chairman.
Practically three in 5 registered voters in Idaho are Republican. A candidate like Roth, who’s keen to be an underdog, is tough to search out, DeLoof and Necochea mentioned.
Huge political donors, searching for to achieve entry to politicians, sometimes again the more than likely winners, Necochea mentioned. “Due to neglect and a difficult political surroundings in Idaho, we’ve allowed our bench to be decimated,” DeLoof mentioned. “A part of the long-term technique of this celebration must be rebuilding that bench, and that’s not one thing that occurs in a single day.”
This yr, all 105 state Senate and Home seats are open, and 53 races don’t have a Democratic candidate. Democratic contestants for Idaho treasurer, secretary of state and controller don’t have web sites and have raised little to no marketing campaign donations.
Dianna David, who’s operating for controller, instructed the Statesman that she’s a “placeholder candidate,” meant to retain a poll spot for a Democrat whereas the celebration looked for another person. That didn’t occur.
“A few of them aren’t operating probably the most strong campaigns or elevating a bunch of cash and getting on the market, however there may be worth in going into the poll field and with the ability to forged a poll for any individual who holds values just like you as a Democrat,” DeLoof mentioned. “I don’t see it as something in addition to giving Idaho voters a selection.”
In the meantime, viable candidates in most statewide races are former conservatives. Rognstad, who tried to run for governor, mentioned he was a registered Republican as a result of the one option to “have a voice” in a crimson district is voting within the GOP main.
Gubernatorial nominee Heidt within the Nineteen Eighties and Nineteen Nineties twice ran as a Republican candidate for Congress in Utah. Lieutenant governor candidate Terri Pickens Manweiler, a Boise lawyer, instructed the Statesman she was a Republican till 2020, when she determined the GOP was rising too excessive. Tom Arkoosh, a Boise lawyer operating for lawyer normal, is a former unbiased who grew to become a Democrat this yr when he changed Democratic main winner Steve Scanlin.
DeLoof mentioned it was “positively not” a concerted effort to again conservative Democrats.
The celebration has discovered allies in lots of Republicans involved with the route of the GOP, whose new chairwoman, Rep. Dorothy Moon, of Stanley, is utilizing her platform to criticize Republicans backing Democrats like Arkoosh and Rick Simply, an Idaho Senate hopeful from Boise.
The crossover assist from Republicans mirrors a broader development, Necochea mentioned. Many Republicans are break up on election safety, exceptions to abortion bans and celebration loyalty, and Democrats hope to select up the items.
“We’re rising to fulfill the second,” Necochea mentioned. “We’re rising to beat again the extremism that threatens the way forward for our state.”
Working from the bottom up
This yr, the Idaho Legislature would have did not go 20 state company budgets — just like the lawyer normal’s and Division of Well being and Welfare’s, which incorporates funding for Medicaid — with out Democratic votes within the Home.
“There are total businesses that may disappear, if not for Democrats,” Necochea mentioned.
Democrats are unlikely to flip the supermajority within the Idaho Legislature anytime quickly, however they’ll proceed to play protection with a pair dozen representatives within the statehouse, the place a couple of votes can stymie conservative makes an attempt to dam state spending.
Heading into the final election, Democrats have centered on retaining legislative seats from districts round Moscow, Pocatello and the Wooden River Valley whereas searching for alternatives to flip seats in west Boise, Meridian and Caldwell, DeLoof mentioned.
In Caldwell’s District 11 Senate race, Democratic candidate Toni Ferro, an engineer, has out-raised her Republican opponent Chris Trakel, a navy veteran and native GOP precinct chief. Ferro has raised about $43,000 in comparison with Trakel’s roughly $28,000.
Some areas like Canyon County (Caldwell) and Bonneville County (Idaho Falls) are much less solidly conservative than they appear, DeLoof mentioned, however Democratic voters aren’t collaborating. To handle that, the celebration has its sights on native illustration, on county commissions and in rural celebration management.
When DeLoof was named director in Could of final yr, 10 of Idaho’s 44 counties had no Democratic illustration on the state central committee. The variety of “darkish counties” was diminished to 5 this yr, and DeLoof hopes to quickly get to zero.
Statewide, the Idaho Democratic Celebration employees has grown from two to 26 amid DeLoof’s tenure. That’s thanks, partially, to monetary assist from the nationwide celebration. This yr, the Democratic Nationwide Committee introduced it was sending not less than $100,000 to Idaho forward of the 2022 normal election as a part of a method to bolster campaigns in states dominated by Republicans.
“It’s not a ton, however it’s positively the kind of factor that helps us make payroll for our core employees,” DeLoof mentioned.
In the meantime, Democratic voter outreach is focusing on Latinos, led by a full-time Hispanic outreach coordinator with entry to a Spanish-speaking cellphone financial institution, a primary for the celebration.
Democrats are also hopeful about younger voters, spurred to politically have interaction by Idaho’s new far-reaching abortion restrictions. When the U.S. Supreme Courtroom’s resolution to desert federal abortion protections triggered a near-total abortion ban in Idaho, it was a “game-changer,” DeLoof mentioned.
“We all know we have now to construct this factor from the bottom up, and we’re not ignoring any a part of it,” he mentioned. “I feel we have now a little bit of a sleeping big scenario right here in Idaho with youthful voters, working class individuals and the Hispanic inhabitants.”
Idaho
Idaho Supreme Court rules on Thomas Creech’s last state appeal to avoid death penalty – East Idaho News
BOISE (Idaho Statesman) — Idaho’s high court dismissed a final state appeal from Thomas Creech on Wednesday, leaving the federal courts to decide whether Idaho can try again to execute its longest-serving death row prisoner after a failed attempt earlier this year.
The Idaho Supreme Court unanimously rejected Creech’s arguments that a second execution attempt would represent cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. In February, the execution team was unable after nearly an hour to find a vein in Creech’s body suitable for an IV to lethally inject him, and prison leaders called off the execution.
Creech became the first-ever prisoner to survive an execution in Idaho and just the sixth in U.S. history to survive one by lethal injection, according to the Washington, D.C.-based Death Penalty Information Center.
Creech alleged in his appeal that another lethal injection attempt, this time possibly with a stepped-up method known as a central line IV, which uses a catheter through a jugular in the neck, or vein in the upper thigh or chest, would violate his constitutional rights. A lower state court ruled against the claim last month.
“The application does not support, with any likelihood, the conclusion that the pain other inmates purportedly suffered in other states establishes an ‘objectively intolerable’ risk of pain for Creech, as required under the Eighth Amendment,” Idaho Chief Justice G. Richard Bevan wrote for the court.
Idaho’s five justices also ruled against Creech in a similar appeal earlier this month.
The court’s ruling Wednesday sided with Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador’s office and was determined on legal briefs alone. No oral arguments were scheduled in the appeal.
Justice Colleen Zahn recused herself from Creech’s appeal and was replaced by Senior Justice Roger Burdick, who retired from the court in 2021. Zahn cited her decadelong tenure in the Attorney General’s Office before her appointment to the Supreme Court bench, state courts spokesperson Nate Poppino previously told the Idaho Statesman.
The State Appellate Public Defender’s Office, which represented Creech in the case, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from the Idaho Statesman. The Attorney General’s Office declined to comment Wednesday after the ruling.
The Federal Defender Services of Idaho, which represents Creech in three other active appeals in federal court, did not immediately respond to a request for comment, including over its own federal appeal with the same legal arguments as the case just dismissed by the Idaho Supreme Court.
Creech was set to be executed earlier this month after he was served with a death warrant from Ada County Prosecuting Attorney Jan Bennetts’ office. A federal judge issued a stay and hit pause on the scheduled execution timeline before Idaho could follow through on the state’s first execution in more than a dozen years.
Creech, 74, has been incarcerated for 50 years on five murder convictions, including three victims in Idaho. His standing death sentence stems from the May 1981 beating death of fellow prisoner David D. Jensen, 23, for which Creech pleaded guilty. Before that, Creech was convicted of the November 1974 shooting deaths of two men in Valley County in Idaho, and later the shooting death of a man in Oregon and another man’s death by strangulation in California.
Arizona judge to decide federal appeals
Presiding over Creech’s three pending federal lawsuits is visiting U.S. District Judge G. Murray Snow from the District of Arizona. He stepped in after U.S. District Judge Amanda Brailsford for the District of Idaho was forced to recuse herself from one of Creech’s cases over her decadeslong friendship with Bennetts.
Snow, an appointee of former President George W. Bush, is no stranger to death penalty cases. He has handled several in Arizona, which, like Idaho, maintains capital punishment — though Arizona’s Democratic governor issued a pause on all executions last year.
In a 2016 case, Snow ruled that witnesses to an execution must be allowed to see the entirety of the execution. That includes when a prisoner is brought into the execution chamber and strapped down to a gurney, as well as when chemicals are administered during a lethal injection.
Idaho’s prison system recently revamped its execution chamber to add an “execution preparation room” and cameras with closed-circuit live video and audio feeds to meet similar legal requirements for witnesses. The renovation, associated with possible use of a central line IV, cost the state $314,000.
In another Arizona case in 2017, Snow ruled that prison officials did not have to reveal their suppliers of lethal injection drugs or the credentials of anyone who participates in an execution. The identities of suppliers and members of the execution team are protected pieces of information under Arizona law.
Snow rationalized in his decision that some suppliers may not sell the drugs to the state if they were not granted anonymity, the Associated Press reported. Lethal injection drugs have in recent years become difficult to buy for corrections systems across the U.S., because of mounting public pressure and drug manufacturers prohibiting sales to prisons for use in executions.
Faced with its own challenges obtaining lethal injection drugs, Idaho approved a similar law in 2022 that shields any potential identifying information about drug suppliers, as well as the identities of execution participants, from public disclosure. The next year, Idaho prison officials paid $50,000 to acquire lethal injection drugs for the first time in several years, but withheld from where, citing the new law. The going retail price for the drugs is about $16,000, a doctor of pharmacy declared in court records.
Idaho prison officials later bought a second round of lethal injection drugs for $100,000, but those expired, court records showed. That led to another $50,000 purchase, according to an invoice obtained by the Statesman through a public records request, in the weeks leading up to Creech’s scheduled execution.
Already, Snow has issued rulings in favor of Creech, including the stay of execution in one case. He also granted a doctor who specializes in assessing trauma the ability to evaluate Creech. Labrador’s office opposed the evaluation while Creech’s death warrant was active.
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Idaho
For a year, Idaho pregnant moms’ deaths weren’t analyzed by this panel. But new report is coming.
Reassembled Maternal Mortality Review Committee will review 2023 data in next report, due Jan. 31
Newly reassembled after Idaho lawmakers let it disband, a group of Idaho medical experts is preparing a report about pregnant moms who died in 2023.
The Idaho Maternal Mortality Review Committee met Thursday for the first time since being disbanded in 2023.
The committee’s next report is due to the Idaho Legislature by Jan. 31, as required in the new Idaho law that re-established the group.
The review committee’s purpose has been to identify, review and analyze maternal deaths in Idaho — and offer recommendations to address those deaths.
The committee’s last report, using data from 2021, found Idaho’s maternal mortality rate nearly doubled in recent years — and most of those deaths were preventable.
The committee was previously housed in the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare. But the new law that reinstated it placed the committee under the Idaho Board of Medicine, which licenses doctors.
The committee is working to first address maternal death cases in 2023, and will then look into 2022 cases, Idaho Board of Medicine General Counsel Russell Spencer told the Sun in an interview.
That’s “because the Legislature would like the most up to date” information available, Idaho Board of Medicine spokesperson Bob McLaughlin told the Sun in an interview.
Idaho has several laws banning abortion. In the 2024 legislative session, Idaho lawmakers didn’t amend those laws, despite pleas from doctors for a maternal health exception.
How Idaho’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee works
The review committee, under the Department of Health and Welfare, analyzed de-identified medical records, health statistics, autopsy reports and other records related to maternal deaths.
The committee’s work “was not intended to imply blame or substitute for institutional or professional peer review,” according to a Health and Welfare website. “Rather, the review process sought to learn from and prevent future maternal deaths.”
The reinstated committee, under the Board of Medicine, will still analyze de-identified cases. The cases “will not be used for disciplinary actions by the Board of Medicine,” the board’s website says.
An advisory body to the Board of Medicine, the review committee is meant to “identify, review, and analyze maternal deaths and determine if the pregnancy was incidental to, or a contributing factor in, the mother’s death,” the Board of Medicine’s website says.
The board’s website says the committee report “will provide insights into maternal death trends and risk factors in Idaho year over year.”
Next Idaho maternal mortality report to include 2023 data
The review committee hasn’t yet fully reviewed or published findings from Idaho maternal deaths in 2022 and 2023.
In 2023, 13 Idaho maternal death cases were identified for review, and 15 cases were identified in 2022, Spencer told the Sun.
But he said the actual number of maternal death cases to be reviewed could be reduced, for instance, if the person wasn’t pregnant or if the death occurred outside of the year the committee was analyzing.
Spencer told the Sun the committee has already reviewed seven of the 13 maternal death cases identified in 2023.
The committee will also work to ensure that each case is “correctly associated with maternal mortality,” he said.
“If so, then it will go in front of the committee, and the committee and the committee will determine whether it was related to the pregnancy or if it was incidental to the pregnancy,” Spencer said.
The committee plans to meet three times this year, including last week’s meeting, he said.
The committee will likely review 2022 data in the first half of 2025, while it awaits the 2024 data, McLaughlin told the Sun in an email.
“It usually takes a full calendar year to receive relevant documents, input data, and have committee meetings,” he said. “We are doing everything in our power to review 2022’s data as soon as possible, along with the cases from 2023 and the expected cases for 2024 coming to us in 2025.”
How Idaho lawmakers reinstated the committee
In summer 2023, Idaho became the only U.S. state without a maternal mortality review committee, after state lawmakers let the committee disband by not renewing it.
In 2024, the Idaho Legislature reinstated the maternal mortality review committee through a new bill, House Bill 399, that widely passed both legislative chambers before Gov. Brad Little signed it into law.
Work to revive the review committee started soon after Little signed the new bill into law on March 18, McLaughlin told the Sun in an email before the meeting.
The Idaho Board of Medicine hired a coordinator for the review committee, who started Aug. 5, and worked to ensure the committee had access to data to conduct the work, such as receiving information to start case review from the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare’s Bureau of Vital Statistics and working with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention “to execute a data sharing agreement and memorandum of understanding” for its database, McLaughlin told the Sun.
Idaho Medical Association CEO Susie Keller said in a statement that the association was grateful to the Legislature for reinstating “this important health care resource for women and families.”
The medical association “commends the Idaho Board of Medicine for meeting the challenges of re-establishing” the review committee, Keller added.
Who’s on the committee now?
The reinstated Idaho Maternal Mortality Review Committee includes a mix of health care professionals, including doctors, midwives, a nurse and a paramedic.
The members are:
- Dr. Andrew Spencer, a maternal-fetal medicine (MFM) specialist
- Faith Krull, a certified nurse midwife
- Jeremy Schabot, deputy director of training and safety at Ada County Paramedics
- Dr. John Eck, a family physician in Boise
- Joshua Hall, the Nez Perce County coroner
- Dr. Julie Meltzer, who specializes in OB/GYN care
- Krysta Freed, a licensed midwife
- Linda Lopez
- Dr. Magni Hamso, the medical director for Idaho Medicaid
- Dr. Spencer Paulson, a pathologist
- Tasha Hussman, a registered nurse
On Thursday, the committee named Eck as chair and Spencer as vice chair, on voice votes without any opposition.
The committee then entered executive session — where the public is not allowed to attend — to review cases.
The previous iteration of Idaho’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee conducted most of its work in executive session, similar to other states, McLaughlin told the Sun in an email.
“To do its work, the (Maternal Mortality Review Committee) must review records of hospital care, psychiatric care, and other medical records, all exempt from disclosure” under Idaho law, McLaughlin said. “We also want to encourage open and free discussion among the members of the committee, which an executive session helps to promote.”
Two past committee members re-applied, but weren’t selected
Four of the review committee’s current members had served on the Idaho Maternal Mortality Review Committee when it concluded its final report in 2023, including Hamso, Meltzer, Freed and Krull.
But two doctors who had previously served on the committee applied and were not selected. Both of those doctors — Dr. Stacy Seyb and Dr. Caitlin Gustafson — have been involved in lawsuits against the state of Idaho or state government agencies related to Idaho’s abortion bans.
Upon request, the Idaho Board of Medicine provided the list of committee applicants to the Idaho Capital Sun. But McLaughlin said the Idaho Public Records Act did not allow the state medical licensing agency to “provide a more specific answer” about reasons applicants weren’t selected.
The head of the Idaho Academy of Family Physicians, in a statement, said the organization was “deeply invested” in the review committee’s work.
“The IAFP is deeply invested in the continued work of the (Maternal Mortality Review Committee) in its new iteration and hopes to see the high-quality data analysis and reports that were provided by previous (review committees). This work is crucial to supporting maternal health and well-being in Idaho,” organization executive director Liz Woodruff said in a statement.
Russ Barron, administrator of the Board of Medicine’s parent agency called the Division of Occupational and Professional Licenses, made the appointments “in consultation” with the Board of Medicine, McLaughlin told the Sun.
Committee members were selected based on their education, training and clinical expertise, the Board of Medicine’s website says.
Asked why some past review committee members weren’t selected to serve on the new committee, Spencer told the Sun, “there’s nothing wrong with anybody who wasn’t on.”
Spencer said he couldn’t discuss reasons why specific people weren’t selected.
“We’re very, very grateful for everybody who’s ever served on this committee. We had enough interest in the committee that we were able to fill the different slots with people who hadn’t served before and provide new perspectives,” he told the Sun.
This article was written by Kyle Pfannenstiel of the Idaho Capital Sun.
Idaho
More steelhead bound for the Boise River
More steelhead are headed for the Boise River the day before Thanksgiving.
Approximately 110 additional steelhead will be released into the Boise River on Wednesday, Nov. 27. The Fish and Game fish stocking trucks will be releasing fish at the usual locations:
- Glenwood Bridge
- Americana Bridge
- Below the Broadway Avenue Bridge behind Boise State University
- West Parkcenter Bridge
- Barber Park
The fish are trapped at Hells Canyon Dam on the Snake River and will be released in equal numbers (~22 fish) at these five stocking locations.
Boise River steelhead limits are 2 fish per day, 6 in possession and 20 for the fall season. Though required in other steelhead waters, barbless hooks are not required for Boise River steelhead angling.
In addition to a valid fishing license, anglers looking to fish for one of the hatchery steelhead need a steelhead permit. Permits can be purchased at any Fish and Game office or numerous vendors across the state.
All steelhead stocked in the Boise River will lack an adipose fin (the small fin normally found immediately behind the dorsal fin). Boise River anglers catching a rainbow trout longer than 20 inches that lacks an adipose fin should consider the fish a steelhead. Any steelhead caught by an angler not holding a steelhead permit must immediately be returned to the water, and it is illegal to target steelhead without a steelhead permit.
For more information regarding the Boise River steelhead release, contact the Fish and Game Southwest Regional Office in Nampa or call (208) 465-8465. Check the department’s website to learn more.
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