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Guest Columnist ID Rep. Lucas Cayler: Is Your Legislator Idaho First?

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March 25, 2026

Is Your Legislator Idaho First?
You might be shocked after reading this…

By: Representative Lucas Cayler, District 11

This is the question that begs to be asked as we finish up the 2026 legislative session and head into the Primary Election.

Today, on the House Floor, we heard and voted on Senate Concurrent Resolution 123. This resolution is stating Idaho legislative support for International Year of Rangeland and Pastoralists (a funny word for saying sheep rancher). You can read the resolution HERE

What is International Year of Rangeland and Pastoralists? Great question and I’m glad you asked. It’s a global initiative being pushed by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Don’t believe me? Read all about it here HERE

Yes, the same UN that is a veritable hive of scum and villainy. A globalist organization that continues to push some of the most radical, Marxist agendas to accomplish some of the most absurd objectives, like eradicating hunger, poverty, gender inequality, combating climate change and pushing renewable energy objectives. The same organization that is pushing for a one-world government and constantly seeks to globalize the healthcare system, create a universal basic income and make all nations subservient to one government.

Even more concerning is the fact that on the IYRP webpage, under their news column, you can see that Idaho’s very own Governor Brad Little issued a proclamation in support of this initiative on March 19th, 2026. Read that proclamation HERE

Folks, this is a dangerous resolution that was just passed in the Senate and in the House. Resolutions often come back as legislation that gets turned into law. And as you can see below, all of the green or “yes” votes were legislators in support of this horrible resolution.

This is not America or Idaho First. This is American and worse, Idaho legislative alignment with Agenda 2030 and the United Nations.

This is unacceptable. Ask your legislator, if he or she voted for this bill why. Demand an answer. I debated hard against this bill on the floor, so ignorance isn’t an excuse.

This election, we vote on all legislative candidates here in Idaho. We also vote for a new governor. Do your homework. Know who you are voting before you head to the ballot box.

As State Representative for Caldwell District 11, I am and remain America First. My oath to defend the Constitution has no expiration date.

In liberty,

Lucas Cayler

Guest Column – ID GOP Chairwoman Dorothy Moon: Drawers Are No Substitute for Debate

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March 26, 2026

Drawers Are No Substitute for Debate

By: Dorothy Moon, IDGOP Chairwoman

Dorothy Moon, Chairwoman of the Idaho Republican Party

Our legislative process is meant to play out in plain view—in public committee hearings, open floor sessions, and recorded votes. But one of the most consequential parts often happens quietly, behind closed doors: when committee chairmen choose not to schedule bills for a hearing, effectively killing them without fanfare, public input, or a vote.

“Drawering” bills—letting them sit in committee without a hearing—has long been part of the process. Sometimes it makes sense. Our part-time Legislature simply doesn’t have the capacity to consider the hundreds of bills introduced each year, and committee chairs must manage their time carefully.

But when a bill has already passed the other chamber, the calculus changes. At that point, drawering a bill is more than gatekeeping; it becomes a way to nullify the votes of other elected representatives without transparency or accountability.

That’s exactly what we’re seeing now. The Executive Board of the Idaho GOP State Central Committee raised concerns about several bills that align with longstanding party priorities and passed the House by wide margins, yet still have not received hearings in the Senate. In fact, Senate State Affairs Chairman Jim Guthrie and Senate Commerce Chairman Dan Foreman have indicated these bills—dealing with taxpayer subsidies to teachers’ unions and holding employers accountable for hiring illegal labor—will not be heard at all.

Last week, I sent letters to Chairman Guthrie and Chairman Foreman urging them to schedule hearings rather than unilaterally kill these bills. I get it—these are controversial issues, and having to vote one way or the other opens these chairs and members of their committee up to criticism. Guess what? That’s part of the job. As an elected lawmaker, you are accountable to your constituents for the positions you take.

When a bill passes one chamber, it has already undergone debate, amendment, and a recorded vote. To then have it quietly buried in a Senate committee denies not only the House its proper role, but also the public’s ability to see where their senators stand. This behavior sends a message to grassroots voters that their priorities can be dismissed without explanation or accountability.

This isn’t about any single bill. It’s about trust in the process. Idahoans expect that when their elected representatives advance legislation, it will receive fair consideration—not be quietly set aside.

A simple reform could go a long way: require that any bill passed by one chamber receive at least a hearing in the other. That wouldn’t guarantee passage—or even a floor vote—but it would ensure transparency, deliberation, and accountability.

In a representative government, disagreement is inevitable. But silence should never be a substitute for making hard decisions. If a bill is worth killing, it’s worth killing in the open.

AG Labrador Leads Multi-State Coalition Opposing Court-Ordered Sex-Change Surgeries for Prisoners

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(Attorney General’s Office Press Release, March 26, 2026)

BOISE, ID — Attorney General Raúl Labrador, together with Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita, and a coalition of 24 total states, has filed an amicus curiae brief in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals strongly arguing that the Eighth Amendment does not require states to provide prisoners with risky, controversial, and medically debated sex-change surgeries.

The case, Emalee R. Wagoner v. Jennifer Winkelman, Commissioner of Department of Corrections (No. 25-6813), arises from a U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska order directing the state to refer the prisoner for surgical consultation. The multi-state brief argues that this ruling exceeds constitutional limits and overrides states’ authority over prison medical care and policy, so the decision should be reversed.

“A federal court ordered Alaska to refer a prisoner for sex-change surgery consultation, which threatens to set a precedent that forces other states to provide these procedures using taxpayer dollars,” said Attorney General Labrador. “Idaho supports Alaska in defending state medical decisions against judicial overreach. The Eighth Amendment ensures basic medical care for prisoners, but it doesn’t require states to provide experimental gender transition surgeries.”

The brief stresses that the Eighth Amendment bars deliberate indifference to serious medical needs but does not guarantee prisoners access to any particular treatment—especially those that are unproven, highly debated, and carry significant risks with uncertain benefits.

“The Eighth Amendment stops cruel and unusual punishment. It doesn’t give prisoners the right to demand risky, optional surgeries when doctors and scientists still strongly disagree about whether they’re safe or even helpful,” said Attorney General Rokita. “If courts force states to provide these expensive, controversial procedures in one prison, it will open the floodgates everywhere—putting Hoosier taxpayers and families across the country on the hook for hundreds of thousands of dollars per surgery in virtually every state. We cannot let that happen. We have to win this case to protect hardworking taxpayers from footing the bill for these insane surgeries.”

It notes that such surgeries are unavailable for free to citizens in nearly half of U.S. states, underscoring they are not a basic necessity. The amici also contend that prior Ninth Circuit case law does not require these procedures, and mandating out-of-state prisoner transfers for unavailable care raises major federalism issues and conflicts with the Prison Litigation Reform Act.

The coalition asks the Ninth Circuit to vacate the district court’s injunction and affirm states’ discretion in managing prisoner healthcare and corrections.

Read the coalition’s brief here.

Little, Critchfield Announce First-of-its-Kind Public-Private Partnership for AI Education

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(Governor’s Office Press Release, March 26, 2026)

The Idaho Department of Education announced today a groundbreaking public-private partnership that positions Idaho at the national forefront of AI-driven education.

The first-of-its-kind in Idaho initiative is designed to accelerate responsible AI adoption across K-12 schools. It also advances the vision outlined in Senate Bill 1227, one of the most forward-looking frameworks in the country. The bill, sponsored by Senator Kevin Cook, calls for expanding AI literacy, strengthening digital skills, and ensuring Idaho students are prepared for a rapidly evolving technological landscape.

“As this technology continues to evolve and grow, it’s clear that we have an imperative to make sure that our students are prepared to thrive in environments that demand proficiency with this new tool,” said Idaho Superintendent of Public Instruction Debbie Crichfield. “I’m grateful to our partners for their support and am proud to say that this historic collaboration puts Idaho at the national forefront of AI education.”

Through partnership with Idaho National Laboratory (INL), Idaho STEM Action Center, Microsoft, Micron, and Stukent, Idaho sets the benchmark for responsible AI adoption in education by uniting world-class industry partners to elevate Idaho educators, enhancing statewide curriculum, and ensuring equitable access to high-quality AI learning opportunities for every student.

  • Idaho National Laboratory (INL) to expand STEM engagement and AI learning opportunities: INL is deepening its commitment to educator support and STEM engagement through its newly launched “Teaching in the Age of AI” professional development series. These workshops offer Idaho teachers practical, classroom-ready strategies for integrating AI concepts into instruction. Beyond workshop delivery, INL has provided funding to support AI trainings for Idaho educators. To date, approximately 70 teachers have participated, reaching an estimated 4,200 Idaho students with enhanced AI learning opportunities.
  • Idaho STEM Action Center: Idaho STEM Action Center has awarded a $250,000 grant to the Idaho Department of Education to offer statewide AI training to educators. Funding will support development of a statewide course for educators to receive training on AI literacy and generative AI tools. Funding will also support regional AI innovators to support effective implementation, regional in-person teacher trainings, and a “train the trainer” cohort to improve AI leadership in schools statewide.
  • Micron to support AI ecosystem development with AI-focused teacher training: Micron’s investment in AI education reflects its deep commitment to helping Idaho learners and educators thrive in an evolving AI-driven economy. As part of the White House’s AI Commitment to America’s Youth, Micron pledged to empower 40,000 learners and educators by 2029. As a part of its commitment, Micron supported Idaho’s Hour of AI program, reaching 5,000 students and educators across the state. Partnering with the state on an expansion of teacher training will reinforce Idaho’s position not just as an adopter of AI in education, but as a contributor shaping the nation’s future-ready workforce. By embedding AI curriculum, educator training, and mentorship opportunities across Idaho schools, Micron is helping to build the state’s AI ecosystem from the ground up.
  • Microsoft collaboration to strengthen AI literacy and educator credentialing: As part of this statewide effort, Microsoft will provide AI literacy programs and educator credentialing through the Microsoft Elevate for Educators platform to ensure that teachers across Educators will have access to robust, classroom-ready professional learning resources. Microsoft Copilot Chat will also be available for hands-on AI use by Idaho educators and students ages 13+, supported by enterprise grade security, strong privacy protections, and administrative controls specifically designed for education settings. The partnership also establishes a pathway for school districts to explore customized digital assistants co-designed with local educators to support instructional tasks, district operations, and student services.
  • Stukent donation expands access to high-quality AI curriculum: To ensure AI learning is accessible to students regardless of geography or district resources, Idaho-based educational technology company Stukent will donate its full AI curriculum, including teacher training materials, to every Idaho public high school. This contribution will provide engaging, industry-aligned coursework that equips students with foundational knowledge and real-world AI skills.

 “Idaho Senate Bill 1227 reflects a thoughtful, human-centered approach to AI in education. It rightly emphasizes transparency, safety, accessibility, and the protection of student data. Those principles align closely with Microsoft’s commitment to responsible AI, keeping teachers at the center of learning and maintaining public trust,” said Kia Floyd, General Manager for State Government Affairs at Microsoft. “By establishing a forward-looking statewide framework, Idaho will become a national leader, and we are proud to partner with the State to help prepare students and teachers for an AI-influenced future.”

“Preparing Idaho’s educators to confidently use and teach artificial intelligence is an investment in our students, our workforce, and our state’s future.” said April Arnzen, EVP and Chief People Officer of Micron Technology. “When educators have access to high-quality AI training, they are better equipped to spark curiosity, strengthen critical thinking, and help students understand how technology can be used responsibly and collaboratively—to enhance learning, solve real-world problems, and support human creativity. At Micron, we believe empowering educators with AI skills today will ensure Idaho’s learners are ready to thrive in tomorrow’s innovation economy.”

Though responsible adaptation of AI will require new, forward-thinking strategy, Idaho is well-positioned as an innovator and trailblazer when it comes to integrating this new technology into public school classrooms.

“This public-private partnership represents a unified commitment to ensuring Idaho students and educators have the tools, knowledge, and opportunities needed to thrive in an AI-driven world,” said Critchfield. “By aligning state leadership with major innovators, Idaho is not just participating in the AI conversation – it’s leading it.”

Bannock County Seeks Community Feedback on Advanced Nuclear Energy Exploration

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(Bannock County Press Release, March 26, 2026)

What’s your take on Advanced Nuclear Energy?

Bannock County is partnering with Portneuf Valley Development to begin a preliminary effort to gauge resident interest about the potential role of advanced nuclear energy in our county’s future.

Following a study by the Idaho National Laboratory (INL), our area was noted as a potential location for future industry development—ranging from hosting a reactor to establishing manufacturing businesses within the supply chain.

We want to hear from you.

We invite all residents to share their perspectives by completing a brief survey. Your feedback will help officials understand the community’s stance before any further steps are considered.

The survey is available now through April 9. To ensure a fair collection of data, responses are limited to one per person.

Statement from President Trump Regarding Pause of Certain U.S. Military Efforts in Iran

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(President Donald Trump via Truth Social, March 26, 2026)

As per Iranian Government request, please let this statement serve to represent that I am pausing the period of Energy Plant destruction by 10 Days to Monday, April 6, 2026, at 8 P.M., Eastern Time. Talks are ongoing and, despite erroneous statements to the contrary by the Fake News Media, and others, they are going very well. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J. TRUMP

ISP: Two Vehicle Fatality Crash in Pocatello

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(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

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(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

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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.

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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.