Thursday, February 26, 2026
Home Blog

Guest Column – ID GOP Chairwoman Dorothy Moon: Trump Knocked It Out of the Park Again

0

February 26, 2026

Trump Knocked It Out of the Park Again

By: Dorothy Moon, IDGOP Chairwoman

Dorothy Moon, Chairwoman of the Idaho Republican Party

President Trump has given many great speeches over the years, but this week’s State of the Union Address took the cake. Between honoring American heroes, reflecting on a year of tremendous progress, and calling out Democrats for their blatant hypocrisy, Donald Trump delivered a masterpiece on Tuesday night.

The president’s consistent message—just as it has been since the day he came down that golden escalator—was “America First.”

  • Our foreign policy, including military action, should be focused on protecting the American people, not exporting democracy abroad.
  • Our natural resources, including precious metals and oil, should be used for the benefit of the American people—not multinational corporations with little regard for our liberties.
  • Government welfare—if it exists at all—should support Americans with genuine needs, not noncitizens who take advantage of our system and scam the American taxpayer.

Perhaps the most telling moment of the night came when President Trump asked those who believe the American government should serve the American people, rather than illegal aliens, to stand. Republicans stood for the American people, while Democrats remained seated, glowering.

It is fair to ask what the other party truly stands for. From my vantage point, their priorities appear to be open borders, harming children through abortion and transgender ideology, raising taxes on those who work to support those who do not, fostering a culture of victimhood, and endless hatred for America.

During his address, President Trump highlighted examples of American excellence. He honored the U.S. men’s hockey team for winning gold at the Winter Olympics and awarded goalie Connor Hellebuyck the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He presented U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, who was attacked on the streets of Washington, D.C., last year, with a Purple Heart. He also awarded the Legion of Merit to Scott Ruskan of the U.S. Coast Guard for rescuing 165 people during a devastating flood in Texas.

President Trump presented the Medal of Honor, our nation’s highest military award, to two extraordinary men:

Royce Williams served as a naval aviator in World War II, as well as in Korea and Vietnam. During a 1952 battle, Williams helped shoot down four enemy jets despite his own aircraft being riddled with bullets.

At age 100, Royce Williams attended the State of the Union Address, where First Lady Melania Trump presented him with the Medal of Honor.

U.S. Army Chief Warrant Officer Eric Slover piloted a Chinook helicopter during the daring raid to capture narco-dictator Nicolás Maduro. The aircraft came under heavy machine-gun fire, and Slover was shot four times in the leg and hip. Nevertheless, he managed not only to land the helicopter safely, but to position it so that his gunner could neutralize the threat.

On Tuesday night, Americans were presented with a vision of national greatness. Democrats can shout and scream all they want, but President Trump and the GOP are going to keep America great for generations to come.

Guest Columnist Martin Hackworth: Higher Education’s Solution to Solving Its Many Problems? Less Higher Education.

0

February 25, 2026

Higher Education’s Solution to Solving Its Many Problems? Less Higher Education.
Only in the world of administrators in higher education will you find anyone making arguments that the best way to fix problems in education is to provide less of it.

By: Martin Hackworth

North Dakota is the latest state to approve a limited number of baccalaureate degrees requiring far fewer than the traditional 120 minimum credit hours. There are movements like this afoot in state-funded higher education systems across the country—all driven by discontent over outrageous tuition costs, which have far outpaced inflation for decades.

North Dakota’s program actually has some merit. But the general concept of requiring fewer credits for graduation and allowing high schools to offer courses for college credit are solutions that administrators in higher education and state legislatures have come up with to address the tuition issue across the country. While the tuition issue is serious, these solutions often leave something to be desired.

Only among those from the cloistered world of administrators in higher education and their frenemies in state legislatures will you find people who think that the best way to fix problems with education is to provide less of it.

Almost a decade has passed since I retired from higher education. But efforts to cut tuition costs by requiring less of students were alive and on the front burner for much of my academic career. Faculty members generally fought these types of tuition cost-cutting measures tooth and nail. And we were damned well right to do so. Of the approximately 10,000 students with whom I dealt in various classes during my time in the academic barrel, exactly zero of them would have benefited from less education.

Less tuition and fees? Absolutely. Less education? Not so much. Don’t even get me started on dual-enrollment courses. Only twice in 25 years was a student who’d taken physics in high school able to test out of my Engineering Physics course—and both of these kids took graduate courses from me before they were 15.

Lowering tuition costs by requiring fewer credit hours and allowing high schools to offer college-level courses are ideas popular only among people who don’t deal with a lot of college students in classrooms. The last thing that we need to be doing right now is requiring less of most college students in terms of breadth, depth, or rigor. That’s been true for some time.

Indeed, the results of the initial wave of such efforts are already in the books and not encouraging. Far too many students are receiving bachelor’s degrees without basic reading, writing, and mathematical skills, let alone any useful exposure to history, geography, language, science, or any of the rest of humanity’s vast intellectual accomplishments.

You know—the things that college is supposed to be about; what makes a university different from a trade school.

A narrow focus is entirely appropriate for a two-year technical degree or a vocational certificate, but it’s not, at least in my opinion, acceptable for anyone who desires to enter the professional class with a baccalaureate degree and all that it traditionally implies about the bearer.

I have ranted and raved here at Howlin’ about higher education, ad infinitum, ad nauseum for years. The last installment of this continuing series was Bait and Switch at the Academy, in which I posited that never, in the entire history of humanity, has a concept so wonderfully noble and egalitarian as promoting swaths of the working class to the professional class through higher education fallen so utterly short of its ideals.

Every year that I was a faculty member, we fought some effort to lower tuition costs by cutting back on content—sometimes even from within. Administrators in many pre-med programs thought that physics was unnecessary for their students. Even the engineering department at one place that I taught thought that two semesters of physics were too much for many engineering fields. This is, of course, absurd, but it’s what you get when administrators run departments instead of teaching faculty.

There were constant efforts to either eliminate or, barring that, reduce the rigor of basic science requirements like geology, astronomy, or football physics for non-majors. Why should an English major, as I was often asked, be required to take a course in astronomy, a foreign language, or history? How is that going to help them in their hopeless quest for a job at an English factory somewhere?

I’ll tell you why—because a four-year college degree isn’t merely a job training certificate. You get those over at Vo-Tech. A baccalaureate degree is supposed to guarantee that its bearer has been at least exposed to some of the vast treasure of knowledge that humans have painstakingly acquired over several millennia. Believe it or not, that’s a helpful part of being well-educated.

Being well-educated has been considered a good thing for most people since the Enlightenment. Ignoring all of that is why we have so many minimally competent professionals these days.

I think that the ultimate plan in higher education is worse than just reducing breadth, depth, and rigor; it’s to wait for AI to take all the effort out of learning. Why struggle, for instance, with all of those rotations during a medical residency if you can just ask AI to diagnose your patients and use robots to perform surgery?

An additional benefit to this scheme is that administrators may finally rid themselves of pesky faculty and generate enough tuition to pay their salary with pure AI instruction. Since most administrators already don’t much care that their graduates often can’t demonstrate that they learned much, and faculty are a pain in the ass, why not achieve the same outcomes without the hassles on the cheap?

Again, I’ll tell you why. Because I’d sure like for my surgeon to be better than Dr. Lexus in Idiocracy. So would you. We are already closer to this than I’d like. My last visit to an optometrist involved me explaining to him why the human eye is diffraction limited (which depends on pupil dilation, which depends on ambient lighting) in terms of resolving the bottom line on the eye chart. Medicare paid a lot for this guy’s questionable services. AI is unlikely to make this type of situation any better.

Look—not everyone who pursues an education beyond high school needs a baccalaureate degree. I’m very much an advocate of education in the trades. More emphasis there would be nothing but a good thing. The world needs more mechanics than it does English majors (and physicists) anyway. Even two-year technical degrees should be very focused. There’s nothing preventing anyone in these programs from pursuing an education beyond the minimum standards if they so desire. That should be encouraged, perhaps, but not required.

But if one wants to pursue a baccalaureate degree, they should be prepared to accept the responsibility that goes along with a credential that is supposed to guarantee that the bearer actually possesses some breadth and depth of knowledge.

There are better ways to lower costs in higher education than reducing breadth, depth or rigor anyway. First, to paraphrase Dick the Butcher: The first thing we do, let’s get rid of all the administrators.

Well, maybe not all, but a lot of them. Administrative bloat is such a well-documented feature of contemporary higher education that hardly anyone even bothers to dispute it anymore. Between the mid-1970s and today, the number of full-time administrators at colleges and universities in this country increased, on average, by an estimated 200%, while the number of faculty increased by only 92%. That is a threefold increase in the number of non-instructional staff per student, which occurred over the same period of time that tuition skyrocketed while every reliable indicator of student success declined.

Good administrators are worth their weight in gold. They solve problems and make life better for everyone. The problem is that they are few and far between. As higher ed sinks like the Titanic, which it is as we speak, students and faculty get the first shot at lifeboats. I’d throw some deans and provosts of my acquaintance overboard myself. Let’s see if they swim as well as they posed and preened.

The next thing would be to eliminate degrees in almost any program that contains the word “studies” in its title—or, alternatively, make these programs ineligible for federally guaranteed student financial aid. These low-enrollment, low-ROI (for everyone) programs are black holes in budgets whose worth is always calculated in terms of ephemeral and difficult-to-quantify things like virtue and diversity since their actuarial value is nil. Bin them.

Finally, I think that degrees are too important to be awarded by those with a vested interest in awarding them whether the recipients are deserving or not. In order to be awarded any college degree or certificate, one should be required to pass a standardized exam in that field. The exam does not have to be difficult, just a guarantor of minimum competency, which does not exist in the present system. Test anxiety? I don’t care. If you can’t operate under stress, go find something to do that is less stressful.

I would, by the way, allow anyone to take these exams. I worked with many students who were sufficiently far ahead of their contemporaries that placing them with average students in a classroom was like pitting a naked man against a freight train. If you can gain competency without spending as much as a day in a classroom, why should anyone hold you back? It’s sure not going to be me.

But solving the many problems in higher education by requiring less of it for the masses? Nah, I’m not down with it.

 

Associated Press and Idaho Press Club-winning columnist Martin Hackworth of Pocatello is a physicist, writer, and retired Idaho State University faculty member who now spends his time with family, riding bicycles and motorcycles, and arranging and playing music. Follow him on X at @MartinHackworth, on Facebook at facebook.com/martin.hackworth, and on Substack at martinhackworthsubstack.com.

Idaho Museum of Natural History Announces Homeschool Days

0

February 26, 2026

Pocatello–In a recent Facebook post, the Idaho Museum of Natural History announced that they will hold special Homeschool Days once a month for the remainder of the school year.  The post reads:

Announcing HOMESCHOOL DAY at the IMNH starting Friday, Feb. 27. Homeschool students and their families are encouraged to explore the Museum and experience our shared natural history on selected Homeschool Days, the last Friday of the month, from 12 – 4:30 pm. We are offering this program at our regular education tour price of $4/person.

We will have self-guided education packets on Hagerman Horse.

Homeschool day schedule: Feb. 27, March 27, April 24, and May 29.

The Idaho Museum of Natural History is located in Building #12 on the ISU campus, 698 E Dillon St, Pocatello, ID.

Chris LaCivita Joins Governor Brad Little Campaign as Senior Advisor

0

(Brad Little for Idaho Press Release, February 26, 2026)

Boise, ID — Governor Brad Little announced today Chris LaCivita is joining the Brad Little for Governor campaign as a senior adviser.

LaCivita served as a co-campaign manager and senior adviser to President Donald Trump’s historic 2024 presidential campaign.

LaCivita’s career has spanned several decades in Republican politics, with roles supporting many conservative Republican candidates and initiatives. He’s held leadership positions at the National Republican Senatorial Committee, Congressional Leadership Fund, and the Republican National Committee among others. LaCivita is one of the most trusted advisers in the business.

“Chris’ immense experience and understanding of political campaigns and strategy in races all across the country will be a huge asset to our campaign operation,” Governor Little said. “His insight and ability to deliver winning messages and tactics are unparalleled. I am glad to have him on the team.”

“Joining the Brad Little for Governor campaign is a great honor and opportunity,” LaCivita said. “Governor Little has been delivering results for Idahoans, and he is just getting started. I look forward to working with his team to keep Idaho one of the best states in the country.”

For more information about Governor Brad Little, visit www.bradlittleforidaho.com.

Stossel in the Classroom Student Essay/Video Contests Deadline is March 13

0

February 26, 2026

In their most-recent newsletter, Stossel in the Classroom reminds students and teachers that the deadline is looming to submit entries in their current essay and video contests.  Contest topics include: America at 250, Congressional Term Limits, Tariffs, and Birthright Citizenship.  All entries must be submitted by March 13.  For full details, click here.

Fmr. ICAC Commander to Speak at SUFI Town Hall, Wednesday, March 4

0

(Stand Up For Idaho Press Release, February 22, 2026)

Idaho Falls–Nick Edwards, Idaho Attorney General’s Office: Protecting Our Children in the Digital Age

Nick Edwards, Chief Investigator for the Idaho Attorney General’s Office and former Idaho Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force Commander, will be here in person and will provide a critical update on child exploitation trends impacting Idaho – including right here in East Idaho.

Over the past several years, Idaho has seen a significant increase in child exploitation arrests. In this presentation, Chief Edwards will break down why those numbers are rising, what trends investigators are seeing in online exploitation, sextortion, and social media-facilitated crimes, and how technology is being used both by offenders and law enforcement. Attendees will gain insight into:

  • Why arrests are increasing across Idaho
  • Current online threats targeting children and teens
  • The role of social media, gaming platforms, and encrypted apps
  • What parents, educators, and community leaders need to know
  • How the Idaho ICAC Task Force is aggressively combating child exploitation through partnerships, proactive investigations, digital forensics, and education

This is a powerful, data-driven discussion focused on awareness, prevention, and the collective responsibility to protect Idaho’s children. This is a must attend meeting for everyone!

Attendance to our Town Halls is free but donations are greatly appreciated. We are an IRS 501(c)3 nonprofit organization and donations are tax deductible.

Snake River Event Center (Shilo Inn), 780 Lindsay Blvd., Idaho Falls
6:30pm (Doors open at 6:00pm)

About Stand Up For Idaho: We are a nonpartisan, nondenominational, nonprofit organization striving to inform and educate the public on a wide range of topics that affect people’s lives. We advocate for the common good, well-being, and civic betterment for all Idahoans, and for the rights and liberties guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of Idaho.

Bannock County Veterans Memorial Building Invites Community To Help Celebrate 100th Anniversary

0

February 27, 2026

Pocatello–The Bannock County Veterans Memorial Building celebrates its 100th birthday on this year’s Memorial Day!  The community is invited to take part in a full week of celebrations to honor the milestone.  A post on the BCVMA Facebook page has the details:

For 100 years, the Memorial Building has stood as a proud symbol of remembrance, resilience, and community spirit. Since its dedication in 1926, generations have passed through its doors—gathering for dances in the 1930s, sending loved ones off to service in the 1940s, celebrating weddings and reunions in the decades that followed, and creating cherished traditions that continue today. From black-and-white photographs to modern-day celebrations, the building has been the backdrop for a century of memories, honoring those who served while bringing neighbors, friends, and families together under one historic roof.

This milestone would not be possible without the love, dedication, and tireless care of the volunteers who have preserved and protected the Memorial Building for generations. Their commitment has ensured that its legacy remains strong and welcoming for all. Now it’s time to celebrate 100 incredible years! We invite everyone—past and present—to join us on Memorial Day as we honor the history, share stories, and look ahead to the next century of community.

The BCVMA is currently accepting donations for Birthday Bingo prizes and for the Murder Mystery Dinner’s silent auction.  For more information, or to donate, contact the Bannock County Veterans Memorial Association:

Guest Columnist Brian Parsons: When The Tourniquet Costs Too Much

0

February 24, 2026

When The Tourniquet Costs Too Much
“You may delay, but time will not.”- Benjamin Franklin

By: Brian Parsons

For a year now, I’ve waged a campaign to warn of legislative incompetence at best, malfeasance at worst. Last March, I wrote about the bait-and-switch from House Bill 138 to House Bill 345. The legislature brought Medicaid reform by first throwing out what Scott Adams termed “The First Big Ask.” The first big ask is a negotiating tactic President Trump often uses by throwing out extreme terms, only to return to where he hoped to be all along. In this case, they offered Medicaid Expansion Reform to settle on Medicaid Managed Care.

What is Medicaid Managed Care? It’s Medicaid as run by insurance corporations versus state entities. This is a win, right? Think of all of the money the private sector will save. Not exactly. Managed Care Organizations cost three times as much to administer as our existing system, so we can expect as much as 10% of current healthcare dollars to be diverted from healthcare to bureaucracy and profits in places like California or Minnesota. What’s worse, since those healthcare companies reside outside Idaho, expect hundreds or thousands of jobs in local Idaho communities to be lost. Managed Care can save you money if you go from an unmanaged fee-for-service system to a managed Medicaid system. But we’re not.

You see, for the last 33 years, each of 350,000 Medicaid enrollees was assigned to an Idaho clinic or doctor’s office, which was tasked with approving medical spend based on necessity and appropriateness under a system called Healthy Connections Primary Care Case Management. The Department of Health and Welfare set requirements for doctors’ offices, and in return for managing Idaho’s Medicaid patients, the state paid a supplement for services such as 24/7 phone access, late-night walk-in clinics, and care coordination that handled referrals and managed services for complex patient needs. Since Idaho’s Medicaid reimbursement is often below the cost of providing services, this cost-saving tradeoff made Medicaid acceptable.

To get HB 345 through, its authors needed to show cost savings, so they slashed the only primary care cost-containment tool Medicaid providers had: Case Management. The total program cost is $24 million annually, but after Federal matching dollars, Idaho has been responsible for $6.3 million annually. This cost represents less than 0.1% of Idaho’s $5.2 billion annual Medicaid budget. Still, it saves the state as much as $400 million a year by diverting patients from Emergency Rooms and from duplicative or inappropriate specialty therapies and services. As of January 01, Case Management no longer exists. Medicaid patients are decoupled from doctors, and there is no expectation that patients get permission to spend taxpayer dollars.

When this bill passed, it was understood that the cost-containment program would be rolled into the Managed Care Organizations’ contracts. In this way, primary care would continue its responsibilities, and only the payer would shift from government to insurance. What was not anticipated was a 3-year ramp-up period to Managed Care. Nobody is expected to resume this work until 2029. This delay has left Medicaid patients unmanaged as of January 01, and many primary care clinics are financially underwater due to Medicaid. The state’s budget has no gatekeepers between the emergency room and the public credit card. Add in Governor Little’s additional 4% rate cuts, and Medicaid is not only unmanaged, but it’s also unacceptable. Healthy Connections Case Management should never have been terminated.

As the husband of a community pediatrician, I’m keenly aware of the state of medicine in Idaho. Because one-third of Idaho’s kids are on Medicaid, this disproportionately affects pediatrics.  As the vice chair of a county political party, I’m uniquely positioned to discuss the matter with elected officials. One aspect, in particular, that rarely gets discussed is that our social policy is being blamed for what are clearly fiscal policy problems. Idaho lost OBs because Medicaid is unacceptable, and it was blamed on the inability to kill babies in the womb. Prepare to lose pediatricians because Medicaid is unacceptable, but hear that it’s because doctors couldn’t perform pediatric gender transitions. Idaho already ranks dead last in the United States for pediatricians per capita.

In response to the fallout from HB345, we drafted an amendment to patch the hole left in Idaho Medicaid and have spoken with the majority of the legislature and the Lt. Governor’s office on the issue. We received support from 35 Idaho hospitals and clinics, the Idaho Chapter of the AAP, and the Idaho Academy of Family Physicians. We acquired legislative sponsors in the Health and Welfare Committees of the legislature, and we’re merely awaiting the opportunity to make our case before the legislature.  To date, the chairs of the respective committees, Representative John VanderWoude and Senator Julie VanOrden, have refused a hearing, citing budget concerns.

Idaho hasn’t yet felt the bleeding in its primary care infrastructure or budget. Primary care is currently working extra hours at their own cost and holding out hope that the legislature that broke Medicaid can fix it before we bleed out. Since reimbursement is delayed by months and the program only ended on January 01, the first impacts will be felt when the legislature adjourns in March or April, when doctors begin reducing after-hours services or eliminating Medicaid contracts altogether. In the meantime, legislative pushback stems from budget hesitancy over the cost of the tourniquet to stop the bleeding. As others have noted, Idaho is sitting on $1.6 billion in rainy-day funds, but the government says it’s not yet raining.  It will be a sad day in Idaho when we realize we allowed our primary care infrastructure to collapse for $6.3 million, while $1.6 billion sits in the other pocket.

If you or your child is on Medicaid, this affects you.  If your doctor isn’t maximally impacted and can keep their lights on, even those not on Medicaid will feel this, as after-hours access and services begin to dry up.  Keep Idaho’s primary care solvent and protect Idaho’s fragile budget. Call Senator VanOrden and Representative VanderWoude and tell them to hear RS33073 to restore the Healthy Connections Case Management program.  Your doctor’s ability to care for you may depend on it.

What’s Happening in Downtown Pocatello This Weekend?

0

(Historic Downtown Pocatello, February 24, 2026)

Don’t miss all of the excitement happening in Historic Downtown Pocatello this week!  Take a look and come shop, dine and play in the historic heart of our community!

The Orange and Black store, 103 S. Main St., has the largest selection of officially licensed Idaho State University apparel in the area at discount prices! They offer ISU clothing for all ages, including onesies, children’s wear, t-shirts, sweatshirts, hats and more! Show your Bengal pride and support your community in one stop!

The Yellowstone Restaurant’s Y Lounge, inside the historic Hotel Yellowstone, hosts weekly Wine Tasting every Tuesday from 5-7:00 p.m.  Enjoy a delicious selection of wines while you enjoy appetizers and a custom prepared meal.

Snake River Fly, 257 N. Main St., has all of the fishing gear you need to wrap up this winter fishing season, a record looking Steelhead Season, and the spring warm up ahead!  Poles, nets, flies, shirts, hats, hooks and more!  Shop local and fish local!

If it’s time to order spring sports shirts and uniforms or update your company’s brand with new shirts, hats and customized premium items, Alston T-Shirt Printing & Embroidery, 245 N. Main St., would love to help you!  From one item to a thousand, their staff can help design and select what you need, at great prices.  Stop in or call 208-242-3264 today.

The First National Bar, 232 W. Center St., has some fantastic live music scheduled this week.  On Wednesday, don’t miss Ronnie and The Redwoods with Shawn Barnby live on stage beginning at 8:15 p.m.  On Thursday, catch Aaron Golay & The Original Sin with David Henry.  Music starts at 8:15 p.m.  And, don’t forget the First National serves brunch specials every Saturday and Sunday!

Vain & Vintage, 149 N. Main St., is not your average antique store. This beautiful shop including a huge selection of clothing, jewelry, home décor and more! This is a must stop when coming Downtown!

Pocatello Flooring, 123 N. Main St., has a huge selection of hardwood, carpet, and waterproof luxury vinyl flooring. Spring is the perfect time for new flooring in your home!

Gate City Coffee & Wine Bistro, is now serving “Burgers at the Bistro!”  Choose from 12 different 1/3lb locally-ground beef burgers.  Stop in to take a look at their amazing selection of toppings, and gluten-free buns are also available.  Burgers are available until 7:00 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and until 4:00 p.m. on Sundays and Mondays.

Vintage Vinyl, 102 N. Main St., has a wonderful selection of new and used vinyl and so much more. They always offer 25% off most used vinyl.

The Healthier Place To Eat, 121 S. Main St., is a family-owned restaurant providing a variety of gourmet dining options.  When you stop in for a meal you will find natural and organic meats, real salt, organic vegetables, natural & organic cheeses, gluten free options, and non GMO oil.  Stop in and get yourself a delicious meal today.

Old Town Actors Studio presents “Blithe Spirit” by Noel Coward.  Performances run February 27, 28, March 6, 7, 9, 13, and 14. Curtain opens at 7:30 p.m.  Tickets are available via link on their Facebook page.

Westside Players will present the last two performanes of “The Cottage: A Comedy Behind Closed Doors” by Sandy Rustin this Friday and Saturday.  Dinner is served at 6:30 p.m. Curtain opens at 7:30 p.m. For tickets please visit www.westsideplayers.org .

The Crafter’s Market inside Station Square, 200 S. Main St., will be open on Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.  Handcrafted items full of local love will be available for shoppers.

Upcoming events include:

Join us for the March First Friday Art Walk on Friday, March 6, from 5:00-8:00 p.m.  First Friday Art Walk features art, music, food, fashion and more in over 20 Downtown shops and restaurants. Admission and parking for this event are free.

Valentine Ballroom & Valentine Bridal will present the 2026 Idaho Bridal Fair on Saturday, March 7. If you are newly engaged or have a wedding coming up, be sure to register for the show at www.idahobridalfair.com. Admission is free and the show will be open from 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the Red Lion Hotel Pocatello.  There will be live demonstrations throughout the event.  At 1:00 p.m. enjoy an elegant fashion show presented by Valentine Ballroom & Valentine Bridal.  Over 40 vendors will be on site featuring everything an engaged couple needs to plan the perfect wedding and future.

Tickets are now available for the 15th Annual Gate City Brewfest returning to Pocatello on Saturday, March 14.  From 1:00-5:00 p.m. brewers will offer over 80 different beers for tasting in restaurants, breweries, pubs and bars throughout Downtown Pocatello.  Sample craft beers new to our area along with local and regional favorites.  Tickets are $30 in advance or $40 at the door. To purchase tickets, please visit www.gatecitybrewfest.com .

Special Reminder: The Center Street Underpass is now closed as the final stage of the renovation project continues.  During the construction, please continue to come Downtown for spectacular shopping, delicious dining options, live entertainment, community events, and more!  Your friends and neighbors Downtown would love to see you sharing your love for our locally owned businesses!

Grandfather of Baby Cyrus To Speak at This Week’s Capitol Clarity, Thursday, February 26

0

February 25, 2026

Boise–At this week’s Capitol Clarity, The Idaho Freedom Foundation’s weekly legislative update, Diego Rodriguez, will speak about the Baby Cyrus story.  IFF President Ronald Nate shared the details in an email:

In 2022, the nation watched in shock as an otherwise healthy nursing infant was forcibly taken from his parents in a gas station parking lot. What began as a disagreement over a nutrition appointment ended with a tactical police intervention, proving that even the most loving homes are not immune to state overreach.

The story of Baby Cyrus wasn’t an isolated incident — it was a warning to every parent in America that medical kidnapping is a looming reality — and it happens all too often.

When the state claims to know better than a loving parent, the foundation of every home is under threat. We invite you to join us for a critical event to uncover how a missed appointment can escalate into a police-enforced seizure and what you can do to protect your rights.

We will be hearing directly from Diego Rodriguez, the grandfather of Baby Cyrus, as he shares his family’s harrowing journey through a system that chose authoritarian overreach instead of compassion.

Additionally, we will screen segments of the documentary Never in America, exposing the systemic “gray areas” allowing state agencies to override parental rights and dismantle families without warning.

🗓️When: Thursday, February 26th | 12:00 PM (Noon)

📍Where: Idaho State Capitol, East Wing Room 42

Stand up. Get informed. Ensure your family isn’t next.

We hope to see you this Thursday!

Nate also noted that a livestream link will be available later this week.