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Patriots for Liberty and Constitution to Continue Discussing “By the People” TODAY, May 18

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Patriots for Liberty and Constitution

May 18, 2026

Pocatello–Tonight at their weekly meeting, the group “Patriots for Liberty & Constitution” will continue discussing Charles Murray’s book, By the People.  This week’s discussion will cover chapter 10 of the book, as well as the upcoming elections.

Patriots for Liberty & Constitution meets at Mountain Valley Baptist Church, 202 S. 7th Avenue in Pocatello, every Monday evening at 6:30.

Bannock County Commissioners Meetings, May 18-22, 2026

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(Bannock County Press Release, May 15, 2026; Cover Photo Credit: Bannock County)

Bannock County Commissioners Meetings, May 18-22, 2026

Monday, May 18, 2026:

  • There are no meetings scheduled at this time.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026:

  • 9:00 AM Business Meeting (action items) – Information Packet
  • 10:00 AM Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Preparation Meeting (potential action item)

Wednesday, May 20, 2026:

  • There are no meetings scheduled at this time.

Thursday, May 21, 2026:

  • 9:00 AM Work Session and Claims Meeting (action items) – The agenda for this meeting will be posted on Monday, May18, 2026.

Friday, May 2, 2026:

  • There are no meetings scheduled at this time.

About BOCC Meetings

The Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) is comprised of the three elected County Commissioners: Ernie Moser (District 1, Chair), Jeff Hough (District 2), and Ken Bullock (District 3).

The BOCC generally meets twice a week: regular business meetings are on Tuesdays at 9:00 a.m. and work sessions are on Thursdays at 9:00 a.m. Meetings are generally held in the Commissioner’s Chambers at 624 E Center, Room 212, Pocatello, Idaho, unless otherwise noted. Times subject to change within 15 minutes of stated time.

During these meetings, the BOCC may: approve contracts, expend funds, hear testimony, make decisions on land use cases and take care of other County matters, and are open to the public.

Pocatello: Road Closure and Traffic Report for Week of May 18, 2026

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(Photo Credit: City of Pocatello)

May 18, 2026 (Cover Photo Credit: City of Pocatello)

The City of Pocatello’s Road Construction & Traffic Report for the week of May 18, 2026, has been published and may be read here.

Highlights include:

  • Street sweepers are currently performing their regular sweeping schedule.
  • The Street Services crew will be patching potholes and curb lines throughout the City.
  • Crews will be jetting and cleaning sewer mainlines throughout the City.
  • Hydrant flushing continues.
  • Street Services will be milling and paving Pole Line Rd, W Eldredge Rd, and Westello Blvd.
  • The Water Department is replacing the water mainline on Westello Blvd. Crews will work from 6:30 AM – 5:00 PM, Monday to Thursday.  This phase of the job is expected to last 2-3 weeks.
  • Work continues on the Benton Street Bridge over the Portneuf River April 15, 2026. West Benton Street remains closed between South Hayes Avenue and South Grant Avenue. Construction is anticipated to be finished by the end of September, weather and other unforeseen conditions permitting.
  • South 5th Avenue will be reduced to one lane between West Piedmont Road and West Darby Road so for water line work.
  • Lewis Street between S 7th Ave and S 8th Ave will be closed Wednesday, May 20, from 3 PM to 6 PM for the Law Enforcement Torch Run and the “Know Me” Fair.
  • South Garfield Avenue between Center Street and West Lewis Street will be closed from 2 PM to 9 PM on Mondays for Curbside Cravings.
  • South Garfield Avenue between Center Street and West Lewis Street will be closed from 6 AM to 3 PM every Saturday for the Portneuf Valley Farmers Market.

City of Pocatello Calendar for May 18-22, 2026

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, May 15, 2026; Cover Photo Credit: City of Pocatello)

City of Pocatello Calendar of Meetings ~ May 18-22, 2026

MONDAY, MAY 18

  • Pocatello Mayor’s Youth Advisory Council Meeting, 3:15 p.m., Council Chambers
  • Street Renaming Ad Hoc Committee Meeting, 6:15 p.m., Council Chambers

TUESDAY, MAY 19

  • Polling Location, 8:00 a.m., Council Chambers
  • Community Development Block Grant Advisory Committee Meeting, 12:00 p.m., Paradice Conference Room
  • Site Plan Review, 1:30 p.m., Iwamizawa Conference Room

WEDNESDAY, MAY 20

  • Pocatello Development Authority Meeting, 11:00 a.m., Council Chambers
  • Pocatello America250 Ad Hoc Committee Meeting, 5:30 p.m., Council Chambers

THURSDAY, MAY 21

  • Housing Alliance & Community Partnerships Mtg., 11:00 a.m., 750 N. 5th Avenue
  • City Council Clarification Meeting, 5:30 p.m., Council Chambers
  • City Council Meeting, 6:00 p.m., Council Chambers

FRIDAY, MAY 2

  • No Meetings Scheduled

Guest Columnist Raúl Labrador: Jim Jones’ Credibility Problems Are Hard to Ignore

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May 11, 2026

Jim Jones’ Credibility Problems Are Hard to Ignore

By: Attorney General Raúl Labrador

Credibility is not a lifetime appointment. It is earned through accuracy, honesty, and reliability. When those are missing, past titles and reputation are not enough.

For years, Jim Jones has relied on former titles to portray himself as a neutral legal authority while advancing claims that are not merely debatable, but repeatedly and demonstrably false. Yet Idaho newspapers continue to publish his opinions as though they still carry unquestioned authority. Recent history suggests otherwise.

Consider his claims about school choice. In early 2025, Jones declared the Parental Choice Tax Credit unconstitutional. He warned lawmakers they would be knowingly violating the Idaho Constitution if they passed it. He made these claims plainly, repeatedly, and without qualification, presenting his view as settled law.

It wasn’t.

On February 5, 2026, the Idaho Supreme Court unanimously upheld the program. Every justice rejected the argument Jones had been advancing. The court awarded attorney fees and costs against his side. This was not a close call. It was a complete repudiation.

Yet, there was no acknowledgment, no correction, no explanation to readers how he got it so wrong.

This pattern constantly repeats itself. In 2024, Jones dismissed opposition to Proposition 1 as coming from “the extremist branch of Idaho’s Republican Party.” Idaho voters rejected it 70-30.

In March 2026, he suggested legislative hesitation over my office’s budget “indicates broad unhappiness with my legal performance.” The House Majority Leader rejected his characterization on the floor the next day, and the Legislature approved my budget enhancement by wide margins. 

In April, Jones attacked my position on birthright citizenship for the children of illegal aliens as bowing to Donald Trump’s “royal edict.” That criticism was particularly revealing because minimal research would have shown I held this constitutional position long before Trump became president.

Which brings us to his two most recent columns. In one, Jones criticized me for endorsing David Worley over State Senator Jim Guthrie. He labeled Worley, an Army National Guard infantry officer, a “Christian nationalist” and “disgraced National Guard officer.” while calling Guthrie, who had an affair with another married legislator, the “epitome of courage and leadership.” That’s rich.

Jones implied that I endorsed Worley because I “have cozied up with Christian nationalist groups” like Alliance Defending Freedom, citing the Southern Poverty Law Center as his authority for this characterization. A few days after newspapers printed his column, a federal grand jury indicted the SPLC on 11 counts of wire fraud, false statements to a federally insured bank, and conspiracy to commit money laundering, alleging it funneled millions to individuals tied to the Ku Klux Klan and Aryan Nations between 2014 and 2023. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said the SPLC was “manufacturing racism to justify its existence.”

In another column, Jones accused my office of sending a letter to Twin Falls School Board Chairman Eric Smallwood for political reasons, timed to influence the May primary. The facts say otherwise. The school district called a mandatory meeting with the teacher’s union to discuss the Republican primary, held it on public property, and advocated against specific candidates. The conduct was publicly reported in January. My office completed its legal review in April through our normal process. Our letter was sent without a press release or media campaign. If the intent had been political, we would have publicized it widely. We did not. Once again, Jones substitutes speculation and his own political views for truth and evidence.

Jim Jones is the worst kind of political pundit: the self-righteous moralizer who treats policy disagreements not as legitimate debates over competing ideas, but as proof that his opponents are corrupt, hateful, or morally deficient. Rather than engage arguments on their merits, he relies on character assassination, which is why he gets so much about Idaho wrong.

This consistent pattern matters because Idaho newspapers treat him as a neutral legal authority rather than what the record shows: a political actor with a clear and longstanding point of view who served as treasurer for Democrat Tom Arkoosh’s campaign for Attorney General against me. That background is never mentioned when his columns run, leaving readers without the context they need to evaluate what they are reading.

The problem isn’t that Jones disagrees with conservative policy. Reasonable people can disagree. The problem is that Jones makes sweeping claims without substantiating them, refuses to acknowledge errors when proven wrong, and substitutes speculation for evidence. Credibility depends on accuracy and intellectual honesty. Increasingly, Jones lacks both.

At some point, given his record of getting so much wrong, the question becomes unavoidable: why is Jim Jones still treated as a credible voice?

Low-Cost Vaccine, Microchip Clinic to Be Held at Pocatello Animal Services, Saturday, June 6

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, May 13, 2026)

Pocatello Animal Services will host a low-cost Vaccine & Microchip Clinic Saturday, June 6, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the animal shelter, 3100 Avenue of the Chiefs.

This year’s clinic will feature expanded services to help pet owners keep their animals healthy, protected, and safely identifiable. All vaccines and microchips will be available for just $10 each, providing an affordable way for families to stay current on essential preventative care.

Services available include:

  • Rabies Vaccine – Protects pets and people from the rabies virus and is required by law for dogs and cats in most communities.
  • DAPPV Vaccine (Dogs) – Protects against Distemper, Adenovirus (Hepatitis), Parvovirus, and Parainfluenza, which are highly contagious and potentially fatal diseases.
  • FVRCP Vaccine (Cats) – Protects against Feline Viral Rhinotracheitis, Calicivirus, and Panleukopenia, helping prevent serious respiratory and gastrointestinal illnesses.
  • Microchips – A permanent form of identification that greatly increases the chances of reuniting lost pets with their families.

Please note: the shelter will be closed for adoptions during the clinic to allow staff to safely and efficiently assist community members attending the event.

For more information, please contact Pocatello Animal Services at 208-234-6156.

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.

Author Charles Castleberry to Speak on “The Declaration’s Forgotten Liberties” at SUFI Town Hall, Wednesday, May 20

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(Stand Up For Idaho Press Release, May 12, 2026)

Idaho Falls–Charles Castleberry, author of the book, “The Declaration’s Forgotten Liberties”, will be here to speak to us. His presentation offers a fresh and often surprising journey into the origins of the American founding—well beyond familiar narratives of tea taxes and revolution.

Through vivid images, original research, and dramatic storytelling, the lecture traces the road to independence from English covenants and constitutional charters, through forgotten debates in Parliament, the First Continental Congress Declaration of Rights, and the remarkable documentary trail showing how Jefferson’s thought evolved into the Declaration of Independence. The audience will encounter under-taught episodes and neglected voices that illuminate the Declaration not as an isolated event, but as the culmination of a long constitutional argument over liberty, rights, and self-government.

Castleberry’s research challenges conventional assumptions, restores overlooked context to the Declaration’s grievances, and presents America’s founding documents as part of a larger story of covenant, resistance, and ordered liberty. The program is especially timely as the nation approaches the 250th anniversary of American independence.

“This is not simply a lecture about the past,” Castleberry says. “It is an invitation to rediscover principles that still matter.”

Blending scholarship with compelling visuals and narrative, “Founding to the Future” is designed for students of history, lovers of liberty, and all who wish to better understand the constitutional roots of the American experiment.

Don’t miss this opportunity to learn more about the founding of our nation.

Attendance is free, although donations to support Stand Up For Idaho’s mission are greatly appreciated. We are an IRS 501(c)3 nonprofit organization and donations are tax deductible.

The Westbank event center, 525 River Pkwy, 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.

Law Enforcement Torch Run for Special Olympics Idaho Arrives in Pocatello Wednesday, May 20

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(Pocatello Police Department Community Message, May 14, 2026)

The Law Enforcement Torch Run for Special Olympics Idaho is coming through Pocatello on May 20, 2026!

Come out and support the runners as they carry the Flame of Hope through our community. Cheer them on at the start, along the route, or at the finish line!

Run begins: 3:00 PM
Starting Location: Frazier Hall near 5th & Carter
Finish Line: Caldwell Park

Bring your friends, family, signs, and energy to help encourage the runners and support Special Olympics Idaho athletes!

Pro-2A Letter Writer Backs David Worley for Idaho Senate

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May 16, 2026

Liberal Republicans often wait until they are in a position of influence before exposing an anti-gun agenda.  One of Idaho’s prominent adversaries of Constitutional Carry, former Representative Rich Wills, was massacred at the ballot box by Christy Zito in 2016, just two months after claiming Idaho was the “Wild West” with Constitutional Carry.  Perhaps it should surprise no one that Wills later came out in favor of multiple Democrat Party Pet Projects, most infamously backing Prop 1 in 2024.  Senator Guthrie, who has now served sixteen years in the Idaho Senate, fits this Rich Wills mold.

Here are a few examples of Senator Guthrie’s interference with pro-Gun Rights legislation:

Idaho’s “Parade Ban” Infringement: In 2024, Senators Foreman and Herndon introduced S1240, which would have removed the section of Idaho Code that prohibits a group of private citizens from carrying guns in a group setting or from parading with them. The “Militia Parade Ban” dates back to 1927 and is a relic of the Al Capone era of gun battles between the Mob and the Federal Government.

Pro-gun advocates can’t get a repeal of this statute through Guthrie’s committee because of his “drawer-veto” power, as was the case in 2024.  Senate Bill 1240 never got a public hearing.

Gun Free Zones: In the 2024 Legislative Session, H415 was introduced.  It progressed through the House and was transmitted to the Senate.  This bill would have allowed teachers with Enhanced Concealed Carry Permits to defend Idaho Public Schools, just like the bill that the State of Tennessee recently passed.  H415 would have hardened our schools.

As an alternative, Chairman Guthrie introduced S1418 that would have required yearly training for school staff and faculty and would have authorized a local school board to cancel the program.  S1418 was voted down in Guthrie’s committee on a 4 to 5 vote, while H415 never progressed past Guthrie’s “drawer-veto”.

Concealed Carry: In 2024 two bills that attempted to expand concealed carry rights were assigned to the Senate State Affairs Committee.  There, they received “drawer-veto” treatment by Chairman Guthrie without even a public hearing.  S1228, authored by Senator Foreman, would have allowed for concealed carry on Idaho’s colleges and universities.  S1310, authored by Senator Herndon, would have allowed for concealed carry at private events held at locations leased, rented, loaned, etc. from a public entity.  Neither bill got a public hearing as Chairman Guthrie did not allow them to advance to the next step.

Vote David Worley. There is an alternative to Chairman Guthrie’s “drawer-veto” that has been killing gun rights legislation: it is Mr. David Worley, who is challenging Guthrie in the May 19 GOP Primary.

Worley is a Pro-2A Conservative and a career armed services soldier who considers a gun a “tool in the toolbox”.  Please vote for David Worley on May 19th.

-Devin Miller

Guest Columnist Chris Schnitzler: Voters Deserve Honesty, Not Gaslighting

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May 11, 2026

Voters Deserve Honesty, Not Gaslighting

By: Chris Schnitzler, Candidate for Bannock County Commissioner

Voters deserve honest answers when candidates are campaigning.  Unfortunately, it is not something that they usually get.  Politicians work themselves into all kinds of knots in their attempts to obscure their records.

Case in point:  Sitting Commissioner Jeff Hough’s recent post on his Facebook page where he stated, “I’ve been your Commissioner for six years.  In that time, we cut your property tax levy by $15 per $100,000 of value.”  This is a classic example of misdirection.

Having worked in real estate for many years, I know a bit about property taxes and how they’re calculated.  The levy rate, which he claims to have lowered, is a calculated number, derived by taking the budget set by a taxing authority and dividing it by the total taxable value of properties within the district that are subject to assessment.

The county commissioners play a part in setting only one of the two numbers used in determining the tax levy: the amount they plan to spend. Hough’s record over the last six years in county spending shows that the levy rate changed in spite of his and his colleagues continued spending increases.  In FY 2021, the portion of Bannock County spending attributable to property taxes was (after adjusting for the Governor’s public safety grant subsidy of $4.9M) $27.8 million.  In the current fiscal year 2026, that number is now $31.3 million…an increase of $3.5 million.  In fact, there was only one year in which the portion of spending attributable to property tax by the county declined.  It was in FY 2024, when fiscal hawk John Crowder was commissioner and was able to push through his agenda of putting taxpayers first…without defunding seniors, veterans, the homeless and others…and without giving himself a 14.5% raise, as the commissioners did this year.

So, why did the levy rate decrease? It’s because of the denominator in the levy rate calculation.  From 2021 to 2025, the latest year for which numbers are available, the total taxable assessed value of property in Bannock County went from $5.5 Billion to $10.3 Billion.  It was the increase in property values that drove the reduction in the levy rate…not Hough’s increased spending, which worked in the opposite direction.

The important number for property taxes isn’t the levy rate; it’s what you actually pay in taxes.  One of my friends recently shared how the annual county property taxes that she and her husband pay have increased from $1355 per year to $1783 over the last five years.  That’s an increase of 32%, and that number is directly related to the commissioners’ spending.

I’m running for Bannock County Commissioner to bring back an honest and transparent government that works for the citizens of Bannock County, not one that tries to gaslight them.  If that’s something that you value, I’d be honored to have your vote on May 19.