Understanding Idaho’s Budget …and why things feel tight right now
By: Idaho Gang of Eight
Idaho’s budget is not just a big pot of money. It comes from several sources, including a large share from the federal government. Many Idahoans worry about cuts without a clear understanding of where the money comes from or how it is spent.
A few quick terms
Before looking at the charts, here are a few phrases you’ll see throughout any budget discussion:
Fiscal Year (FY): Idaho’s fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30. FY 2026 covers July 2025 through June 2026.
Appropriation: Legal authority granted by the Legislature to spend money. It is not cash already spent.
Original appropriation: The starting budget approved by lawmakers, before carryovers or mid-year adjustments.
General Fund: Idaho’s main checking account, funded primarily by income and sales taxes.
Dedicated funds: Money collected for specific purposes and legally restricted to those uses.
Federal funds: Money from the federal government for specific programs, often with strict rules attached.
With that context, let’s look at the budget.
Where the money comes from (All Funds)
FY 2026 All Appropriations by Fund and Function
Idaho’s total FY 2026 budget is about $14.1 billion. When you break down where that money comes from, three things stand out:
General Fund: ~40%
Federal funds: ~39%
Dedicated funds: ~21%
Nearly four out of every ten dollars Idaho spends comes from the federal government, not from state taxes.
Federal dollars are not free money. They come with strings that limit legislative control. The money comes from you, through federal taxes, and is backed by a federal government more than $38 trillion in debt. When a state depends on federal money, it gives up state sovereignty.
Where the money goes (All Funds)
When all funds are included, most spending is concentrated in a few areas:
Health & Human Services: 42.7% of total spending, driven largely by Medicaid and other federally supported programs
Education: about 30%
Everything else: public safety, natural resources, economic development, and general government make up a much smaller share
What the state actually controls: the General Fund
Federal money makes up a large share of total spending. The General Fund is where lawmakers decide what to cut, what to fund, and what to leave out, using state tax dollars.
Education: 61.7%
Health & Human Services: 21.9%
Public safety: just under 10%
Education and Health & Human Services take up most General Fund dollars. After they are funded, there is little left for everything else.
How the General Fund is funded
FY 2026 General Fund Revenue
The General Fund relies heavily on just two sources:
Individual income tax
Sales tax
Corporate income taxes and all other taxes make up a much smaller share.
Idaho doesn’t have a revenue problem. It has a spending problem.
Idaho’s explosive budget growth
Statewide Budget Information
Idaho’s budget growth is the issue. In 2019, total spending was about $8.3 billion. By FY 2026, it reached roughly $14.1 billion — a 60% growth in six years.
Population didn’t increase by 60%, and neither did inflation.
The Governor’s budget shows ongoing spending commitments are higher than ongoing revenue. The gap is roughly $25 million in FY 2026, growing to about $100 million in FY 2027.
This isn’t a revenue problem. It’s a spending problem. It’s out of control.
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
February 3, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)
The Article V Bluff? What happens when it’s time to lay our cards on the table?
By: Brian Almon
Brian Almon
The last time I wrote about calls for an Article V Convention, I lost a few subscribers, and a senior vice president of Convention of States Action wrote an op-ed attempting to refute my concerns. Last spring, a leader of Idaho’s Convention of States organization spent two hours trying to convince me of his position and seemed offended when I remained steadfast in my views.
With two Article V resolutions working their way through the Legislature this month, I am once again compelled to wade into those stormy waters and share my thoughts on why I believe the push for a convention is misguided.
This is an extremely frustrating issue because I believe there are good people on both sides. Nevertheless, supporters of an Article V Convention are often extremely zealous in their advocacy, and I’ve seen good people—and myself—smeared as RINOs or even traitors for refusing to join their crusade.
To review: Article V of the Constitution lays out how the document can be altered:
The Congress, whenever two thirds of both houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose amendments to this Constitution, or, on the application of the legislatures of two thirds of the several states, shall call a convention for proposing amendments, which, in either case, shall be valid to all intents and purposes, as part of this Constitution, when ratified by the legislatures of three fourths of the several states, or by conventions in three fourths thereof, as the one or the other mode of ratification may be proposed by the Congress; provided that no amendment which may be made prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and eight shall in any manner affect the first and fourth clauses in the ninth section of the first article; and that no state, without its consent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate.
The Constitution has been amended 27 times since its ratification. Eleven of those amendments came out of the First Congress, following promises made during the ratification process to adopt a Bill of Rights. One of those original amendments, which prohibited Congress from voting itself a pay increase, languished until 1992, when it was finally ratified by enough states.
In each of these cases, amendments were proposed by two-thirds of Congress and then ratified by three-fourths of the states. The second method of amending the Constitution—where Congress would call a convention after being petitioned by two-thirds of the states—has never been used.
My biggest concern with this idea is simply that it has never been done before, which means any assurances about how it would proceed are inherently speculative. Proponents dismiss concerns by claiming that case law or specific provisions would ensure the process unfolds exactly as intended, but life is rarely that neat and tidy. Indeed, one of the strongest arguments against a convention is that the original Constitution itself was drafted by a convention that had been called merely to amend the Articles of Confederation.
I won’t rehash the arguments I and others have already made. If you want to read more, you can find them here:
An attempt to sign Idaho onto a call for an Article V Convention failed last year by a vote of 26–44. Rep. Bruce Skaug, who supported that effort, asked in committee last week why this year’s attempt would be any different. Rep. Tanner responded that splitting the issues into separate resolutions gave each a better chance of passing. Rep. Shirts’s resolution goes even further, explicitly referencing a “33-state strategy” intended to pressure Congress into passing a balanced budget amendment without actually convening a convention.
Loren Enns, president of Balanced Budget Now, testified in favor of HCR25 this morning, saying the goal was not to hold a convention, but to reach 33 states—one short of the number required to compel Congress to call one. This, he argued, would force Congress to pass the amendment itself.
One question I wish committee members had asked is: what if Congress calls your bluff? If you are explicitly saying you have no intention of actually convening a convention to propose amendments, how does that force Congress to act? It’s like going all in at the poker table holding an off-suit seven and two. You might scare your opponent into folding—but what if you’re wrong?
Proponents of the “threaten Congress” strategy argue that similar pressure tactics have worked in the past, but my reading suggests there is disagreement on that point. The Bill of Rights emerged from agreements made during the original ratification process, meaning Article V was not yet in force at the time. Every other amendment originated directly in Congress. The only amendment that can plausibly be tied to the threat of state conventions is the 17th Amendment, which required senators to be directly elected rather than appointed by state legislatures.
This is especially ironic, in my view. Enns claimed in his testimony that Article V was meant to serve as a check by the states against centralized power, but in reality it was the Senate that historically fulfilled that role—until the 17th Amendment severed the states’ direct influence over the federal government.
This is just one of many ways structural problems have become deeply embedded in our system. The administrative state has grown large and powerful over the past century, and Congress increasingly delegates its lawmaking authority to unelected bureaucrats. Federal spending is out of control, but roughly two-thirds of the budget is mandatory—set by statute and mostly out of reach of congressional budget writers.
Many Republicans speak in general terms about reining in federal spending, but few appear willing to do what that would actually require. Balancing the budget would mean slashing Medicare, Medicaid, and other welfare programs, as well as sharply reducing funds sent to the states. Thirty-seven percent of Idaho’s FY2026 budget comes from federal dollars. Are we prepared to backfill that with our own state tax dollars, or eliminate those programs altogether? I personally support making large cuts to government spending, and I suspect you do as well, but a great many voters would balk at such a plan.
The other option for Congress would be raising taxes, and surely no Republicans want that.
The Article V Convention—whether as a bluff or a sincere effort—strikes me as a mythical “fix everything button.” It feels like a Hail Mary pass, an attempt to solve every problem at once and then ride off into the sunset. That’s not how life works, and it’s not how politics works. We are not going to fix every problem quickly, or perhaps even within our lifetimes. Our responsibility is to do the best we can with the circumstances we face and, hopefully, leave the country in better shape for the next generation.
If you support an Article V Convention, I hope you read this in the tradition of spirited debate—iron sharpening iron. This issue cuts across factional lines, with people I deeply respect on both sides. I hope we can engage in a productive discussion about how to move our country in the right direction without impugning one another’s motives, resorting to name-calling, or trying to push dissenters out of polite society.
I believe the time, energy, and money being devoted to the Article V Convention would be better spent elsewhere, but I’m not going to castigate those who support it. We all want to leave our nation better than we found it, so let’s have productive conversations and get to work.
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
Skip the cooking this Saturday and enjoy the AMVETS of Pocatello’s “1st Saturday of the Month” Pancake Breakfast! A Grand Slam breakfast will be served Saturday, February 7, from 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m., at the Bannock County Veterans Memorial Building, 300 N. Johnson Avenue in Pocatello.
Breakfasts include pancakes, eggs, bacon, hashbrowns, two kinds of sausage, biscuits & gravy, coffee, and orange juice. Nobody goes away hungry!
Breakfast is only $12.00…First Responders in uniform and kids 5 years old and younger eat free!
This month, Idaho Rebels 12U Baseball Team will be working the tables for tips and donations.
(Idaho Fish and Game Press Release, January 26, 2026)
Join Idaho Public Television, Idaho Fish and Game, Idaho Trails Association, and Backcountry Hunters and Anglers for a special screening event of a selection from the Outdoor Idaho episode, Doing Good in the Great Outdoors.
This free event will be held on Tuesday, Feb. 10 at the Bengal Theater on the Idaho State University Campus in Pocatello. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. for mingling and refreshments, followed by the screening and a panel discussion on volunteerism starting at 7 p.m.
The Outdoor Idaho team will take you on a journey into the heart of conservation, where you will meet trail crews, Idaho Master Naturalists, hunters, parks volunteers, conservation groups, and even some budding high school biologists who give of their time and talents to make the Idaho outdoors a better place. Don’t be surprised if you see southeast Idaho friends and community members featured with their hands in the dirt and feet in the streams as they “do good in the great outdoors”.
For more information on this event, please contact Tessa Atwood, volunteer services coordinator for Idaho Fish and Game, at 208-232-4703 or by email at tessa.atwood@idfg.idaho.gov.
(Idaho State Police Press Release, February 4, 2026; Cover image credit: ISP)
MERIDIAN, Idaho — Idaho State Police Forensic Services (ISPFS) has renewed its forensic testing accreditation through the American Association for Laboratory Accreditation (A2LA).
ISPFS is accredited to ISO/IEC 17025:2017, the international standard for forensic science laboratory competence and quality, following an on-site assessment and evaluation by the A2LA Accreditation Council. The accreditation is valid through June 30, 2029.
“This achievement demonstrates that our laboratories meet or exceed internationally recognized standards for quality and technical competence,” ISPFS Laboratory System Director Matthew Gamette said. “It reflects the professionalism of our scientists and staff and reinforces the reliability of the forensic services we provide to law enforcement, the courts, and the public.”
The Scope of Accreditation identifies the specific forensic tests and calibrations covered under the standard and will be published in A2LA’s public database of accredited organizations. ISPFS will maintain compliance through regular technical and quality assurance reviews.
Maintaining accreditation ensures that ISPFS continues to operate in accordance with recognized forensic science standards, supporting the integrity of criminal investigations and judicial proceedings throughout Idaho.
This accreditation marks the first time ISPFS has been accredited to perform digital/electronic/video forensic analysis. ISPFS passed first time accreditation in this discipline with no assessment findings. ISPFS performs digital forensics in the Meridian laboratory. ISPFS has also expanded the accreditation scope to include crime scene analysis and enhanced toxicology analysis in the last few years.
Visit the Idaho State Police Forensic Services website for more information.
Boise–This week’s Capitol Clarity, The Idaho Freedom Foundation’s weekly legislative update, will focus on school choice. This week also marks the event’s return to its original time, noon. IFF President Ronald Nate shared the details in an email:
Capitol Clarity has returned to the 12 noon lunch hour!
This week we will hear from Max Nelsen of the Freedom Foundation (Washington state) regarding the Idaho Education Association lawsuit attacking school choice.
Be sure to remember – Capitol Clarity will be during the noon hour starting this week.
Please join us this Thursday at noon at the Idaho State Capitol for this important information for Idaho parents and taxpayers.
Event Details:
What: Capitol Clarity: Teachers’ Union vs. School Choice
(Stand Up For Idaho Press Release, February 2, 2026)
Idaho Falls–Wednesday, February 11th – Christopher Holton, Stephen Gele’, and Colonel Paul Deckert – Center for Security Policy – Shariah, Civilization Jihad, and the Threat to the Constitution
Should Idaho be concerned about Shariah law? The answer is a resounding “YES”. No matter how much we want it to be, Idaho is not immune from what is happening across the country and we need to be aware of the dangers we face.
The Center for Security Policy is a national security organization founded by former Reagan administration Defense officials to promote peace through American strength. “Keeping our country safer means being aware of the dangers we face and supporting those who protect us” is a quote from the Center.
Christopher Holton, Senior Analyst and Director for State Outreach at the Center for Security Policy, and attorneys Stephen Gele’ and Colonel Paul Deckert will join us via zoom to discuss Shariah law and “Civilization Jihad” and how they are a threat to the Constitution and our country.
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.
Getting ready for Sunday’s big game? Keep the excitement high and your energy use low with a few simple gameday tips:
Dial down the thermostat. Extra bodies (and all that cheering) will naturally warm your home.
Rely on small appliances. Slow cookers, air fryers, and pressure cookers deliver crowd-pleasing snacks while using less energy than your oven or stovetop.
Keep the focus on the field. Switch off lights and electronics in rooms you’re not using to save energy without missing a play.
Run full dishwasher loads. Modern, energy efficient dishwashers use less energy and water than washing by hand—perfect for postgame cleanup.
Looking for an easy, energy-friendly appetizer? Your slow cooker has you covered.
Slow Cooker Buffalo Chicken Dip
Ingredients
2 cups cooked, shredded chicken
8 oz cream cheese, softened
1 cup buffalo wing sauce
1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
½ cup ranch dressing
Add all ingredients to your slow cooker, cook on low for 2–3 hours (stirring occasionally), and serve with celery sticks, tortilla chips, or crackers.
(Bannock County, February 3, 2026; Cover photo credit: Bannock County)
Bannock County Planning & Development Services is drafting a comprehensive Land Use & Development Ordinance to replace current zoning code.
What changes are being proposed?
Planning & Development aims to consolidate and modernize eight existing ordinances into a comprehensive Land Use and Development Ordinance (LUDO) for Bannock County. This ordinance will regulate zoning, land use, subdivision, and other key aspects of county planning. [Note: Proposed changes may be read here.]
Goals:
Enhance clarity, consistency, and enforceability
Align with state and federal regulations
Use the Comprehensive Plan to guide the ordinance
Public Input Opportunities
Upcoming Input Opportunities
Public Hearings | Late April – Early June
Public hearings are your chance to share feedback on the proposed ordinance draft. Hearing dates will be posted on bannockcounty.gov/ourfuture and shared through this email once scheduled.
Previous Input Opportunities
Thank you for being part of the process! Community input has guided this work from the beginning.