Thursday, March 26, 2026
Home Blog

ISP: Two Vehicle Fatality Crash in Pocatello

0

(Idaho State Police Press Release, March 26, 2026)

BANNOCK COUNTY–The Idaho State Police is investigating a two-vehicle fatality crash which occurred on Thursday, March 26, 2026, at 7:12 AM on Interstate 15 at mile marker 69, in Pocatello.

A 2002 Nissan Altima, driven by a 69-year-old male from Pocatello, was travelling northbound on Interstate 15. A 2023 Freightliner semi-truck and trailer, driven by a 39-year-old male from Utah, was travelling southbound on interstate 15. The Nissan Altima left the roadway, crossed through the median, and collided with the semi-truck head on.

The driver of the Nissan Altima was not wearing a seatbelt and succumbed to his injuries at the scene of the crash. The driver of the semi-truck was wearing a seatbelt.

The southbound lanes of travel on Interstate 15 were blocked for approximately 4.5 hours.

Idaho State Police was assisted by Bannock County Sheriff’s Office, Pocatello Police Department, Chubbuck Police Department, Pocatello Fire Department, Bannock County Search & Rescue and the Idaho Transportation Department.

This crash is under investigation by Idaho State Police.

Guest Columnist Brian Almon: Abolish the Senate

0
(Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

March 24, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

Abolish the Senate
A modest proposal to solve our legislative impasse.

By: Brian Almon

Brian Almon

With perhaps less than a week to go in the 2026 legislative session, a large number of important conservative bills that passed the House remain pending in Senate committees. The Gem State Brief’s bill tracker now has additional dropdown filters, which show that as of Tuesday morning, 21 bills that already passed the House remain ensconced in Chairman Jim Guthrie’s drawer in Senate State Affairs.

That is more than twice the number of House-passed bills pending in any other Senate committee.

Some of the bills Guthrie has declined to schedule a hearing for include:

  • H557, preventing cities from enacting policies regarding discrimination by sexual orientation or gender identity.
  • H607, creating a private cause of action when establishments allow men to use the women’s restroom.
  • H700, holding employers accountable for knowingly hiring illegal aliens.
  • H704, requiring Idaho employers to use the federal E-Verify system to ensure new hires are legally allowed to work in the country.
  • H720, requiring cities with populations greater than 25,000 to divide into council districts.

Our republican system of government was not designed so that one man could unilaterally veto legislation that already passed the House with 40, 45, 50, or even 55 votes. Yet here we are.

Both the rules of the Senate and Mason’s Manual of Legislative Procedure allow for parliamentary procedures that could bypass a committee chairman, but too few senators are willing to challenge leadership. Earlier in March, Sen. Christy Zito attempted to call House Bill 745 from committee, where Chairman Dan Foreman was refusing to schedule a hearing. Foreman moved to excuse the committee from reporting the bill, a parliamentary procedure designed to block the attempt to bypass the committee. That motion received the required two-thirds majority, with only nine senators voting against it.

Had just three more senators been willing to buck the system, H745 could have been debated on the Senate floor.

Members of any committee can, under Mason’s, move to consider a bill that the chairman did not place on the agenda. Again, however, too few are willing to upset the apple cart. Leadership tends to frown on such actions and has historically been willing to punish those who step out of line. Anyone who hopes to hold a future committee chairmanship knows they must play by the (unwritten) rules.

I recently spoke with a legislator who believes they were denied even a vice-chairmanship simply because they challenged leadership on a procedural vote several years ago.

Of course, the buck stops with President Pro Tempore Kelly Anthon. He not only has the power to appoint and remove committee chairs, but he also decides where to send bills. H700 and H704 came from the House Business Committee, but Anthon routed them to Senate State Affairs instead of the Senate equivalent. He defended the decision in multiple interactions on X over the past few weeks, arguing that he was following longstanding Senate procedures by sending immigration bills to State Affairs.

That might well be true. It seems reasonable, then, to ask the question posed by Anton Chigurh in No Country for Old Men: “If the rule you followed brought you to this, of what use was the rule?”

The purpose of a system is what it does. It’s fair to ask what is the point of Senate rules, procedures, and traditions if the result is one man disregarding the will of a majority of the House—and potentially a majority of the Senate as well.

It raises another question: what is the point of having a Senate at all?

The Idaho Legislature was modeled after the United States Congress, a bicameral legislature with an upper and lower chamber. At the national level, the upper chamber—the Senate—was originally designed to represent the sovereign states in the federal government. State legislatures appointed two senators for each state and had the authority to recall them at any time.

While passing a bill required consent of both chambers, the two bodies had very different day-to-day focuses. The Senate ratified treaties and confirmed presidential appointments, giving states enormous influence over the executive and judicial branches, as well as foreign policy.

The lower chamber—the House—was always meant to have a populist flavor. Membership was apportioned according to population, so the House would always represent the people. It was responsible for drafting all bills related to taxation, reflecting the principle of no taxation without representation.

Idaho’s Legislature was structured similarly, with the upper chamber representing counties and the lower chamber representing the people. The Senate also confirms gubernatorial appointments, while the House is responsible for taxation bills.

However, things have changed since 1890. The 17th Amendment, ratified in 1913, removed the power of state legislatures to appoint senators, curtailing the states’ influence in federal government. In 1964, the Supreme Court ruled that state legislatures must be apportioned by population, not geography, shifting Senate representation from counties to districts.

Today, both the House and the Senate represent the same 35 districts, with two representatives and one senator per district. Yet my impression, after following Idaho politics for some time, is that Senate members still see themselves as distinct from their House colleagues. If the House is the engine of populism, the Senate is the brakes.

And brakes indeed! As of Tuesday morning, the Senate had 49 bills on its third reading calendar, another 30 on second reading, plus 10 gubernatorial appointments and 11 resolutions. Compare this to the House, which had four bills on third reading, 16 on second, and four resolutions.

I can definitely see the wisdom in a chamber that slows the process. Laws passed during populist waves often have unintended consequences. Conservatism values traditions and prefers they not be discarded lightly.

However, when reform is necessary, that same intransigence can be a detriment. When conservative lawmakers are working to dismantle the regulatory and administrative overreach that is strangling our society like kudzu, the Senate’s inability to move quickly allows government to continue operating where it does not belong. With nearly half of President Trump’s final term behind us, time is of the essence with regard to addressing illegal immigration, and hiding behind Senate procedure to avoid some uncomfortable votes is not principled leadership.

The ultimate question, then, is why have a Senate at all? The natural laws of the universe do not require a bicameral legislature. Nebraska voters adopted a unicameral legislature in 1934, and the state operates just fine. Nebraska also gives members the authority to elect committee chairs, rather than relying on seniority or the discretion of leadership.

Idaho would surely function just as well with a unicameral legislature. A single body could handle legislation, administrative rules, and gubernatorial appointments, and would likely get more done in the short three-month session than the current system, where each chamber duplicates work.

We wouldn’t necessarily have to lose one third of our Legislature—why not just fold the House and the Senate into a single 105-member unicameral body? The chambers might need some remodeling—perhaps we could add a few more desks to the House side, while turning the Senate side into a museum highlighting all the great bills that died on that side of the rotunda.

Sen. Guthrie, rather than abusing his power over the committee agenda—and then having the chutzpah to propose a rule limiting legislative drafts per member—might support abolishing the Senate entirely, so he wouldn’t have to worry about the problem at all.

This is, of course, a modest proposal. There are many reasons not to discard tradition too quickly, and perhaps it’s best not to go that far. In that case, why not make smaller changes, such as requiring that all bills that pass one chamber be guaranteed a committee hearing in the other?

Or why not allow legislators to use the rules already available to them? If leadership quashes any attempt to use Senate Rule 14(e) to retrieve bills from committee chairs’ drawers, why have the rule at all? It should be abolished if it is never allowed to be used.

Likewise, why rely on Mason’s if no one is willing to invoke its provisions to move legislation past recalcitrant chairmen? At that point, you might as well throw the book in the trash and simply do whatever leadership says.

There is plenty of room for reform here. Legislators are not our leaders; they are public servants—our representatives in the lawmaking process. The Capitol is not a palace for an untouchable elite; it is the people’s house, a monument to republican government.

Something has to give, but maybe we can start small. Perhaps the first step is for voters in District 28 to abolish Sen. Guthrie instead.

Editor’s note:  This article originally appeared in the Gem State Chronicle.  I encourage our readers to visit their website and consider subscribing.  Find this and other informative articles at the Gem State Chronicle here: About – Gem State Chronicle

Guest Columnist Senator Tammy Nichols: Idaho Schools Should Be Safe. But There Are Gaps We Can’t Ignore

0

March 23, 2026

Idaho Schools Should Be Safe. But There Are Gaps We Can’t Ignore

By: ID Senator Tammy Nichols

ID Senator Tammy Nichols (Photo Credit: Tammy Nichols)

Idaho’s schools should be among the safest places for our children, but recent cases show there are still gaps we need to address.

Ensuring students have a safe learning environment is one of the most important responsibilities shared by educators, families, and policymakers. This legislative session, we are advancing Senate Bill 1412 to strengthen safety policies within Idaho schools.

Schools should always be places where students feel secure and supported as they focus on learning and personal development. But they must also be prepared to respond when serious concerns arise.

S1412, the Idaho Student Safety and Educator Disclosure Act, takes a practical step forward by improving transparency and accountability in hiring and reporting practices.

While current Idaho law requires personnel files to be shared between school districts, it does not always ensure that critical information, such as pending investigations, resignations during investigations, or disciplinary actions involving misconduct, is clearly disclosed during hiring decisions. This bill ensures schools are asking the right questions and getting the information they need when individuals will be working with students.

Recent cases in Idaho highlight why this matters.

In Boise, a special education classroom investigation involving a paraprofessional raised serious concerns about abuse of vulnerable students, along with questions about reporting timelines. In CaldwellWilder, and Gooding, coaches and teachers were arrested and charged with sexual misconduct involving minors. In Fruitland, a school district faced a federal lawsuit over how misconduct allegations were handled.

These cases are not representative of the many dedicated educators across Idaho, but they do show where systems can fall short, and where improvements are necessary.

S1412 also reinforces an important requirement already in Idaho law: schools cannot rely solely on internal processes when abuse is suspected. These situations must be reported to law enforcement. This bill makes that expectation clear and consistent.

Additionally, when an individual resigns, is terminated, or is placed on leave during an investigation involving student misconduct, the bill ensures that information is referred to the appropriate oversight body. This helps prevent serious concerns from being overlooked or lost in the system.

This legislation strengthens school safety procedures while supporting educators and administrators with clearer expectations and better coordination.

Senate Bill 1412 will be heard on the floor this week in the Senate, and I look forward to continued discussion on how we can best protect Idaho students.

Student safety is not a partisan issue; it is a responsibility we all share. Families deserve confidence that their children are attending schools where safety remains a top priority.

S1412 is a commonsense step toward ensuring Idaho schools remain safe, supportive places for students to learn and grow.

In Liberty,

Senator Tammy Nichols
District 10

Southbound I-15 Closed Between Pocatello Creek Rd and Center St.

0

March 26, 2026 (Cover photo credit: ITD FB)

Pocatello–An early-morning crash has resulted in the closure of southbound I-15 between the Pocatello Creek Road exit and the Clark Street exit.  Idaho Transportation Department recommends that motorists use alternate routes and expect delays.  Updates will be available on Idaho 511.

City of Pocatello Provides Update on Center Street Underpass Project

0

(City of Pocatello Press Release, March 25, 2026)

The City of Pocatello continues to make progress on the Center Street Underpass project, a key investment to improve safety, accessibility, and connectivity for pedestrians and motorists.

This project is a complex effort taking place in a unique environment, with construction occurring adjacent to an active railroad line. Work is being closely coordinated with Union Pacific Railroad and carried out under strict safety standards. Because of the active rail line, certain work must be carefully timed around rail operations, which can affect sequencing and progress.

Crews are also navigating typical challenges associated with underground construction in the Historic Downtown area, including large boulders and other obstructions. These conditions require adjustments in construction methods, but work continues to move forward safely.

While the City had anticipated opening the underpass to one lane of traffic at this stage, current conditions require continued evaluation to ensure any traffic changes can be made safely. Opening one lane remains a priority and will occur as soon as it is safe for the public and construction crews.

“We know this project is important to our community, and we appreciate everyone’s patience as work continues,” said Mayor Mark Dahlquist. “This is a complex project, but the end result will be a safer, more connected Pocatello that serves residents for generations to come.”

“We are committed to delivering this project safely and efficiently,” said Public Works Director Tom Kirkman. “Our crews are making solid progress every day, and working diligently to keep things moving forward.”

The project is expected to be completed by the end of 2026. Once completed, the underpass will enhance pedestrian safety and improve connectivity while preserving the historic link between neighborhoods. The project remains on track, though timelines may adjust due to construction conditions.

The City of Pocatello appreciates the continued patience and will provide updates as work progresses.

For more information about the Center Street Underpass project, please visit pocatello.gov/m/newsflash/Home/Detail/2448.

U.S. Energy Information Administration to Study Data Center Energy Use

0

(EIA Press Release, March 25, 2026)

EIA is launching three voluntary pilot field studies to evaluate energy consumption in data centers, with web-based pilot surveys in Texas and Washington state as well as in-person interviews in Northern Virginia and Washington, DC.

EIA identified 196 companies operating data centers across Texas, Washington state, and the Northern Virginia-DC region. Each company will be asked to report on the energy use of at least one data center in the targeted region. The questionnaire will cover energy sources, electricity consumption, site characteristics, server metrics, and cooling systems.

“A tremendous amount of excellent work goes into our retrospective consumption surveys, but they were conceived decades ago. Going forward, that excellent work will be geared toward faster cycles and finer detail,” EIA Administrator Tristan Abbey said.

Background
Administrator Abbey is prioritizing data collection efforts in our rapidly evolving energy sector. In February, EIA launched three voluntary pilot field studies to assess the feasibility of collecting data on graphite, vanadium, and zirconium, all of which are minerals critical to the energy sector. Graphite is used in batteries and advanced manufacturing; Vanadium is extracted in petroleum refining; and zirconium is used for nuclear fuel cladding.

EIA is also in early-stage planning for pilot field studies in other areas of the energy economy, including the nuclear sector.

The product described in this press release was prepared by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), the statistical and analytical agency within the U.S. Department of Energy. By law, EIA’s data, analysis, and forecasts are independent of approval by any other officer or employee of the U.S. government. The views in the product and this press release therefore should not be construed as representing those of the U.S. Department of Energy or other federal agencies.

Guest Columnist Brian Almon: The Illegal Alien Lobby at Work

0
(Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

March 23, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

The Illegal Alien Lobby at Work
Special interests are fighting tooth and nail to maintain their foreign-born workforce.

By: Brian Almon

Brian Almon

It was an unholy alliance from the start: Democrats worked against enforcement of immigration laws because they wanted to import a new population of left-wing voters, while Republicans worked against those same laws to maintain a supply of cheap labor. Now, the chickens have come home to roost.

President Trump is doing what he can at the federal level, even as Democrats have shut down the Department of Homeland Security to prevent it from enforcing the law. Here in Idaho, the same unholy alliance is working to stymie any attempt to support the president’s efforts.

I have been writing about the need for immigration enforcement for a long time. In February 2024, I examined competing resolutions—one calling for actual enforcement, the other calling for more foreign workers and implicit amnesty:

What does it mean to be an American citizen? Does it mean you have special rights and privileges, as recognized in the Constitution and a thousand years of English Common Law? Or does it mean you are interchangeable for a foreign worker who will work for cheap?

Do our heritage and culture matter? Does it mean anything if English remains the primary language of our country? Can the Constitution be adapted for a new population that developed with different social and legal traditions?

Unfortunately these questions are swept aside. Democrats see the potential of new voters who will support their agenda while Republicans see cheap labor for their biggest donors.

IACI, the Big Ag coalitions, and their Main Street Caucus puppets have no loyalty to the American people or citizens of Idaho. They would happily replace us all with a servile foreign population that works for less and votes how they’re told.

The resolution with teeth was sponsored by Rep. Dale Hawkins and Sen. Glenneda Zuiderveld, the latter of whom is now facing professional repercussions for opposing the special interests that resist immigration enforcement. On Friday, Zuiderveld shared a letter sent to her husband, Tom, informing him that three of his clients would no longer work with him, explicitly due to the senator’s “political role”:

Notice that the author of the letter revealed that one customer demanded the company fire Tom Zuiderveld, and that several other companies might also cease doing business with him. Does that sound like a threat to you?

According to its website, Tom Zuiderveld has been an independent sales representative for Schaeffer Manufacturing since 2005. The company serves a wide variety of industries, but note that the three mentioned in the letter are all in the cattle and dairy sector—the very industry that claims to rely on foreign labor to survive. Recall that a lobbyist for the Idaho Dairymen’s Association claimed that up to 70% of its workforce could be illegal:

Wouldn’t it be something to be a fly on the wall of any formal or informal meeting of dairy owners and lobbyists discussing what to do about these troublesome legislators who oppose their agenda? I would not be surprised if there were a coordinated effort to target the livelihoods of those who disagree with their positions on foreign workers and illegal immigration.

Isn’t it also interesting that Sen. Zuiderveld faces repercussions for supporting legislation that upholds the law, while those who advocate for violating immigration law face none? Sen. Jim Guthrie, for example, has long advocated for giving driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants. This year, he has used his authority as chairman of Senate State Affairs to refuse hearings on bills that would hold employers accountable for hiring illegal workers. Yet he appears to have faced no professional consequences for these actions.

Guthrie also seems accustomed to avoiding consequences, as he faced no serious professional repercussions for his adultery earlier in his legislative career. On Monday morning, he presented a bill before his own committee designed to push back against door-knockers sharing factual information with voters in his district—he clearly wants to strictly control information flowing to his constituents.

What about Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen? A farm owned by her company was raided by ICE in January 2025, resulting in the arrest of an employee who was not only in the country illegally but had also previously been charged with drug possession as well as domestic violence in front of a child. Mickelsen has vehemently defended the agricultural industry’s practice of employing illegal workers on the House floor and recently posted a video claiming we need more foreign labor because she once had to wait 45 minutes for food at Taco Bell.

Yet I have heard of no professional repercussions for her, her family, or her business. I am not even sure whether Mickelsen has ever declared a conflict of interest under House Rule 80 for owning a business that has employed at least one illegal worker while debating and voting on immigration enforcement bills.

Under our current system, advocating for driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants, discarding enforcement bills passed by the House, or even employing illegal workers with criminal histories carries no penalty. Those individuals are not only unsanctioned—they receive generous campaign donations from agricultural and dairy interests.

On the other hand, supporting the rule of law brings down the hammer even on to one’s family business.

This is worse than hypocrisy. It is a system that rewards wrongdoing while punishing those who do what is right. Changing that system will require more people to get involved in the political process and apply enough pressure to counterbalance Big Ag lobbyists and PACs.

Both Sen. Guthrie and Rep. Mickelsen have challengers this year. If you want to see change, start there. Sen. Zuiderveld also has a challenger—one who is already benefiting from agricultural interests.

I discussed the issue with Matt Edwards on Idaho Signal Monday:

You and I must decide how much we truly care about our state and its future. Are you willing to stand up to the lobbyists, PACs, and special interests that would see you replaced and your posterity displaced? Or is it too great a burden, too risky, or just not worth the effort?

The choices we make today will set the course of our state for generations to come.

Editor’s note:  This article originally appeared in the Gem State Chronicle.  I encourage our readers to visit their website and consider subscribing.  Find this and other informative articles at the Gem State Chronicle here: About – Gem State Chronicle

Idaho Gang of Eight: Budgets Are in Bloom

0

March 22, 2026

Budgets Are in Bloom
Planted over years. Now the bill is coming due.

By: Idaho Gang of Eight

Spring has arrived in Idaho.

The days are getting longer, the trees are starting to bud, and the legislative session is entering its final stretch. Around here, that can only mean one thing:

Budgets are in bloom.

In the last six years, Idaho’s state budget has grown by roughly 60 percent. That far outpaces both inflation and population growth. It’s not like Idaho families suddenly had more money to spare. Government just kept growing.

Now the bill is coming due.

At the start of the session, there was reason for cautious optimism. Lawmakers are getting set to approve cuts to maintenance budgets totaling $812,997,400, a step in the right direction.

But there’s an old saying that still holds true:

When the legislature is in session, hold onto your wallet.

Those cuts will be wiped away by budget enhancements totaling $861,975,700, which is almost a $50 million increase from last year’s budget. And they aren’t done yet.

The legislature talks about restraint, but the numbers tell a different story.

So What’s the Legislative Plan?

What happens when the legislature doesn’t actually cut spending at all?

The FY26 supplementals and add-ons have already wiped out over $150 million of the rescissions.

Enhancements for FY27 have consumed the rest of the maintenance reductions, and then some.

And when it’s all said and done, the FY27 budget will be larger than FY26.

So what is the plan?

Hope for stronger revenues?

Assume the economy will hold?

Keep adjusting around the edges while spending continues to grow?

That’s not a plan.

Real change means aligning ongoing spending with ongoing revenue, not one-time money or moving dollars between categories. It means stopping the pattern of growing government faster than inflation and population.

Without that, nothing changes.

We’ll be back in the same position next year, likely in a deeper hole.


A Different Approach

There is one group of legislators in the building that has been consistent from the beginning.

The Gang of 8 has been clear:

We warned about the spending.

The spending continued.

A budget shortfall is the result.

Overspending today leads to painful cuts tomorrow. That is what Idaho is facing now.

For two years, the Gang of 8 warned that a 60 percent increase over six years was unsustainable. Instead of slowing down, the Legislature accelerated spending.

Now the bill is coming due.

Responsible budgeting would have avoided this position. Instead, decisions are now being made under pressure.

The Gang of 8’s approach remains simple:

  • No new federal money
  • No new employees
  • No more budget increases

Because if spending continues to outpace inflation and population, the outcome is predictable.

Borrowed Money, Real Consequences

The “Rural Health Care Transformation Act” is how this keeps happening.

The funding comes from a $50 billion federal fund added at the last minute to the “Big Beautiful Bill” to secure a key vote in the U.S. Senate.

To get the money, states must agree to federal rules, program structures, and ongoing compliance.

We’ve seen this before, in 2021, ARPA funds were called what they are—borrowed from our grandchildren.

This isn’t free money. It’s borrowed money, with interest. A debt handed to our kids.

The national debt has reached $39 trillion. Inflation has followed. Idaho families are paying for it.

And now we’re being asked to do it again.

We won’t put our children in shackles to sustain it.


Watch the Debate

David lays this out clearly on the floor.

Watch his remarks here.


This is the result of years of unchecked spending. Idaho can change course now, or be forced into harder decisions later.

Which way Idaho?

In Liberty,

Senator Christy Zito, District 8
Zito4Idaho@protonmail.com

Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld, District 24
GZuiderveld@senate.idaho.gov
Substack: @glenneda

Senator Josh Kohl, District 25
JKohl@senate.idaho.gov
Substack: @joshkohl4idaho

Representative Faye Thompson, District 8
FayeforLD8@gmail.com

Representative Lucas Cayler, District 11
LCayler@house.idaho.gov
Substack: @lucascayler

Representative Kent Marmon, District 11
KMarmon@house.idaho.gov
Substack: @kentmarmon

Representative Clint Hostetler, District 24
CHostetler@house.idaho.gov
Substack: @theidahoresolve

Representative David Leavitt, District 25
DLeavitt@house.idaho.gov
Substack: @Leavitt4Idaho

The Simpson Standard: Immigration, Law Enforcement, Tribal Witness Days

0

(U.S. Representative Mike Simpson, March 20, 2026)

First and foremost, thank you to the thousands of Idahoans who joined my telephone town hall earlier this week! I appreciated the opportunity to answer several questions and hear what Idahoans had on their minds. We wrapped up just in time before the big Idaho men’s basketball game. Congratulations on an amazing season, Vandals! You make Idaho proud.

It was a busy week here in DC! The House passed several bills this week focused on strengthening law enforcement and protecting taxpayers. You can learn more about the Deporting Fraudsters Act and the BOWOW Act below.

As appropriations season begins, respective appropriations subcommittees are holding hearings to prepare for the upcoming Fiscal Year 2027 budget. I serve as Chairman of the House Interior and Environment Appropriations Subcommittee, and one of our subcommittee’s top bipartisan priorities is prioritizing funding for our nation’s Tribes. You can learn more about the Tribal Witness Days hearings we hosted below.

Deporting Illegal Alien Frausters

We are targeting illegal alien fraudsters. This week, the House passed the Deporting Fraudsters Act, a bill that would make criminal aliens who defraud United States taxpayers deportable.

Those who enter this country with the intent of defrauding the American people should not be allowed to stay. Foreign fraudsters who play the system and the American people must be held accountable. Billions of dollars in fraud were uncovered under the noses of failed leaders like Tim Walz and Keith Ellison in Minnesota. What happened in Minnesota should never have happened. I’m happy to see this bill pass!

Passing the BOWOW Act

Harming a law enforcement working animal is appalling and evil. As a dog lover and someone who adamantly supports the working dogs who have served on the front lines, voting in favor of this bill was one of the easiest decisions of my congressional career.

Tribal Witness Days Hearings

This week consisted of full days of hearings with Tribes from across the nation sharing their stories, hearing their priorities, and discussing how the federal government can continue to uphold our trust and treaty obligations to our Tribal brothers and sisters.

Thank you to all the Tribal members who traveled out to DC for our subcommittee’s Tribal Witness Days.

Pocatello Mayor’s Youth Advisory Council to Hold Essential Needs Drive for the Little Free Pantry

0

(City of Pocatello Press Release, March 24, 2026)

The Pocatello Mayor’s Youth Advisory Council (MYAC) is asking for your help to support those in need. MYAC will be holding an Essential Needs Drive Saturday, April 4, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Pocatello Police Department Substation, located at 800 Yellowstone Avenue near Fred Meyer.

During the event, MYAC members will be collecting donations of non-perishable, shelf-stable food, non-perishable snacks, feminine hygiene products, toiletries, and other essential items to support individuals and families in need.

Collected items will be placed in the two Little Free Pantries established by MYAC. Currently, there are two locations, one is located in the City Hall parking lot (near recycle bins) and the other is located in the parking lot of the Community Recreation Center (near Freckleton Park).

The Pocatello Mayor’s Youth Advisory Council is comprised of 9th through 12th grade students who live within the Pocatello/Chubbuck School District boundaries. Members are appointed by the Mayor and serve until they graduate.

For more information on the Little Free Pantry, visit Ribbon-Cutting for the Mayor’s Youth Advisory Council’s Little Free Pantry.

In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, it is the policy of the City of Pocatello to offer its public programs, services, and meetings in a manner that is readily accessible to everyone, including those with disabilities.  If you are disabled and require an accommodation, please contact Skyler Beebe with two (2) business days’ advance notice at sbeebe@pocatello.gov; 208.234.6248; or 5815 South 5th Avenue, Pocatello, Idaho.  Advance notification within this guideline will enable the City to make reasonable arrangements to ensure accessibility.