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Guest Columnist Jeff Pierson: Not All Data Centers Are Created Equal

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March 20, 2026

Not All Data Centers Are Created Equal
The Case for Purpose-Based Restriction on Hyperscale Data Centers

By: Jeff Pierson

The debate over hyperscale data center construction in the United States has largely been framed as an economic competition — states racing to offer the largest tax breaks, the cheapest power, and the most permissive land use approvals. That framing is wrong. It skips the only question that actually matters: what is the facility being built to do?

A hospital and a slaughterhouse are both large buildings. We don’t permit them the same way. We shouldn’t permit data centers the same way either.


The Current Framework Is Purposely Blind

Existing federal, state, and local regulatory frameworks treat hyperscale data centers as a class of industrial infrastructure — roughly equivalent to a warehouse or a manufacturing facility. Zoning approvals, utility interconnection agreements, tax incentive programs, and infrastructure grants almost never distinguish between a facility hosting domestic financial services and one hosting surveillance infrastructure for a foreign-linked corporation.

This isn’t an oversight. It’s the product of aggressive lobbying by an industry that benefits enormously from keeping regulators focused on square footage, employment projections, and capital investment rather than what the servers inside actually do.

The result is that American land, American water, American power grid capacity, and American taxpayer dollars are being used to build infrastructure whose purpose, ownership, and ultimate beneficiary are often deliberately obscured.

That has to end.


A Purpose-Based Framework for Construction Authorization

Congress and state legislatures should establish a mandatory purpose-disclosure and authorization framework that conditions construction approval, utility interconnection, and any form of public benefit on what a hyperscale data center is actually built to do. The framework should operate on a tiered basis:

Tier 1 — Presumptively Authorized

Facilities whose primary purpose is:

  • Domestic commercial computing, cloud services, or enterprise IT
  • Healthcare data processing and storage
  • Financial services infrastructure
  • Academic research and national scientific computing

These facilities may proceed through standard permitting with disclosure requirements and periodic auditing.

Tier 2 — Conditional Authorization Required

Facilities whose purpose includes:

  • Media distribution and content hosting (social platforms, streaming)
  • AI model training and inference at scale
  • Telecommunications infrastructure

These require a disclosed use-case review, beneficial ownership transparency, and binding operational covenants before construction authorization.

Tier 3 — Presumptively Prohibited

Facilities whose primary or substantial purpose includes any of the following should not be authorized, full stop.


Three Categories That Should Disqualify a Project

1. Mass Surveillance Infrastructure

Hyperscale data centers purpose-built to aggregate, process, or store population-scale behavioral data — location tracking, biometric databases, communications metadata, financial transaction monitoring — represent a qualitatively different threat than ordinary commercial computing.

The distinction matters because scale is the product. A surveillance system that can process 10 million records is not merely larger than one that processes 10,000 — it is a different instrument entirely, one whose primary utility is coercive.

Domestic construction of such facilities should require a demonstrated lawful purpose, a constitutional nexus, and ongoing independent audit. Facilities that cannot satisfy that standard should not be built. This applies to private commercial surveillance operations — data brokers, behavioral advertising infrastructure, consumer profiling platforms — as much as it does to government-adjacent systems.

The legal foundation exists. The Supreme Court’s third-party doctrine has been substantially narrowed by Carpenter v. United States (2018). Congress has not caught up. A purpose-based construction authorization framework would be a meaningful step toward structural prevention rather than reactive litigation.

2. Facilities Primarily Supporting Pornography Distribution

This is the category most likely to generate reflexive first-amendment deflection, so it is worth being precise about what is and is not being proposed.

The proposal is not censorship of content. It is a refusal to extend public subsidy and public infrastructure to the industrial-scale distribution of pornography.

The distinction is critical. A publisher has a constitutional right to distribute material. That right does not include a constitutional entitlement to:

  • Tax increment financing
  • Below-market utility rates negotiated through public utility commissions
  • State and local economic development grants
  • Infrastructure upgrades to roads, power, and water systems funded by taxpayers

No serious legal scholar argues that the First Amendment compels affirmative government subsidy of speech. The government is not required to build the printing press.

Hyperscale data centers hosting pornography as a primary or substantial use case should receive no public benefit of any kind — no tax abatement, no infrastructure grant, no utility preference. They may operate under existing law. They may not do so on the public’s dime.

This position is consistent with longstanding obscenity and community standards jurisprudence and does not require Congress to resolve any contested constitutional questions. It requires only that subsidy programs specify eligible use cases — a routine exercise of legislative appropriations authority.

3. Facilities with Material Foreign Government or Corporate Access

This is arguably the highest-stakes category and the least adequately addressed by current law.

CFIUS reviews foreign acquisitions of existing domestic infrastructure. It does not adequately address greenfield construction of new infrastructure by entities with material foreign government ties, nor does it address operational relationships that give foreign governments effective access to data processed in nominally domestic facilities.

A purpose-based construction framework should prohibit authorization for any hyperscale facility where:

  • A foreign government holds direct or indirect ownership of 5% or more
  • Operational agreements, data processing contracts, or equipment supply chains create meaningful access rights for entities subject to foreign government legal compulsion (China’s National Intelligence Law being the most obvious example)
  • The facility’s primary customer base includes foreign state-owned enterprises or government agencies

This is not a trade restriction — it is a sovereignty position. The People’s Republic of China does not permit American companies to build unrestricted data infrastructure on Chinese soil. Reciprocity is not protectionism.


No Public Subsidy, No Public Infrastructure, No Exceptions

The subsidy question deserves its own treatment because the numbers have become absurd.

State and local governments across the country have collectively offered tens of billions of dollars in tax abatements, infrastructure grants, utility rate preferences, and land deals to hyperscale data center operators. In many cases these concessions persist for decades. In virtually no cases are they conditioned on the nature of what the facility does.

The public policy rationale offered is jobs and tax base. The reality is that hyperscale data centers are among the most capital-intensive and least labor-intensive industrial facilities ever constructed. A one-million-square-foot hyperscale facility may employ fewer than 50 permanent workers. The jobs argument is almost always fictitious at the scale being claimed and it is debatable whether any subsidies ever offer an equal return, regardless of the industry.

Meanwhile the infrastructure costs are real and are borne by everyone else:

  • Power: Hyperscale facilities are consuming grid capacity at a rate that is materially affecting electricity prices and reliability for residential and small commercial customers in affected markets. That is a direct wealth transfer from the general public to data center operators.
  • Water: Cooling water consumption at hyperscale facilities is substantial and in arid western states represents a genuine resource conflict with agriculture and municipal supply.
  • Roads: Construction traffic and ongoing logistics operations impose road maintenance costs that are rarely internalized by project developers.
  • Transmission: Grid interconnection upgrades required by large loads are frequently socialized across ratepayers rather than charged to the benefiting customer.

The correct policy position is simple: no public subsidy of any kind for hyperscale data center construction, operation, or associated infrastructure. Not tax abatements. Not TIF districts. Not utility rate preferences. Not infrastructure grants. Not state economic development funds.

If the economic case for a facility requires public subsidy to pencil out, that is the market telling you the facility should not be built where it is being proposed. Listen to the market.


The Counterarguments and Why They Fail

“This will drive investment overseas.” Investment in surveillance infrastructure and foreign-accessible data centers going overseas is not a loss — it is the goal. We should not be competing to host it.

“You can’t define purpose with enough precision to regulate it.” We regulate purpose in land use law constantly. We distinguish industrial from commercial from residential uses. We distinguish uses within those categories. Defining permitted and prohibited data center purposes is not categorically more difficult than any other conditional use permitting exercise.

“Foreign investment creates jobs.” See above. Hyperscale data centers do not create meaningful employment relative to their capital base, public subsidy received, or infrastructure impact. The jobs argument is a lobby talking point, not an economic analysis.


What States Can Do Now

Federal action is preferable for foreign ownership restrictions, but states can move immediately on subsidy and land use questions:

  1. Require purpose disclosure as a condition of any economic development incentive application for data center projects above a defined capacity threshold
  2. Define ineligible uses in economic development statutes — surveillance aggregation, pornography distribution, and foreign-government-accessible facilities explicitly excluded from incentive eligibility
  3. Require beneficial ownership transparency to the same standard as CFIUS for any facility receiving public benefit
  4. Mandate utility cost internalization — require that any load above a defined threshold bear the full cost of grid interconnection and transmission upgrades without socialization to other ratepayers
  5. Establish a community impact review process for hyperscale facilities that explicitly considers purpose, water consumption, road impact, and grid effects on existing residential and agricultural customers

Idaho has the additional leverage of water law. Consumptive water use rights for industrial facilities are subject to state appropriation review. Purpose should be a factor in that review.


Conclusion

The hyperscale data center industry has successfully convinced most state and local governments that the question of what a facility does is irrelevant — that a data center is a data center, and the only variables worth discussing are jobs and tax revenue.

That argument benefits exactly one party: the industry making it.

The rest of us — the ratepayers subsidizing grid upgrades, the farmers competing for water, the communities absorbing infrastructure costs, the citizens whose data is being processed in facilities we helped build — have a legitimate interest in what these facilities are for.

Purpose-based construction authorization is not a radical idea. It is the application of a principle we already accept in every other domain of land use and industrial permitting to a sector that has so far successfully evaded it.

The evasion should end.

Jeff A. Pierson is the owner of Confidential Solutions LLC and a policy researcher. He writes on Idaho energy, land use, and technology policy at jeffapierson.substack.com.

Bannock County Launches “March Madness” Contest to Name Newest Member of Mosquito Abatement Team

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(Bannock County Press Release, March 19, 2026)

BANNOCK COUNTY, Idaho – As the NCAA tournament tips off, Bannock County is launching its own version of “March Madness.” The community is invited to help name the newest recruit at the Mosquito Abatement District: a high-tech Hylio AG-230 pesticide drone.

The drone is a critical addition to the County’s public health mission. By reaching remote marshy areas and stagnant water that traditional trucks cannot access, the drone allows the team to stop mosquitoes at the source—preventing the spread of mosquito-borne illnesses like West Nile virus.

To celebrate its arrival, the County is inviting residents to submit name suggestions for the drone starting today.

“We wanted a fun way to introduce the public to this new technology,” said Dana Evans, Bannock County Mosquito Abatement supervisor. “This drone is going to help us reach areas that were previously inaccessible, and we can’t wait to see the creative names our community comes up with.”

Purchased in 2024, the drone can treat up to 60 acres per hour with precision, while also protecting fields and marshes from damage caused by heavy trucks. The drone also assists the county’s noxious weed control efforts. After a successful first season in 2025, the County wants to give this hard-working tool an official name.

Contest Details

The naming contest is open to all Bannock County residents. A review panel will select the top submissions to face off in a “bracket-style” tournament on Bannock County’s Facebook and Instagram. The bracket tournament begins Tuesday, March 24. The final championship round will be held on Monday, April 6, with the winner announced the following day.

Entry Rules

  • One entry per person
  • All entries must be received by Sunday, March 22, 2026, at 11:59 p.m.
  • All names must be family-friendly. Offensive language and political statements will be disqualified.
  • Names should be 25 characters or fewer.

Be Creative! We encourage names that relate to Idaho, Bannock County, mosquito control, or aviation.

To submit a name idea, use our provided submission form or visit the Bannock County Facebook or Instagram pages.

ISU Honors Program, Pocatello Police Partner for Donation Drive

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(Pocatello Police Department Community Message, March 19, 2026; Cover photo credit: Aid for Friends FB)

Idaho State University Honors Program and the Pocatello Police Department have teamed up for a donation drive to support Aid for Friends.

Aid for Friends works to not only provide immediate shelter and essential services, but also personal and professional support to individuals and families experiencing or facing homelessness. Together, we can help bring hope to those in our community who need it most.

Donations can be dropped off at the Pocatello Police Department:
Monday–Friday, March 17th – April 18th, 2026
7:00 AM – 5:00 PM

To learn more about Aid for Friends and view their current needs, please visit: http://aidforfriendspocatello.com/

Registration Now Open for American Heroes Student Art Contest

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March 21, 2026

Registration is now open for the American Heroes Student Art Contest.  The contest website explains:

American Heroes Student Art Contest, sponsored by Freedom 250 and the National Endowment for the Humanities, invites 3rd- through 12th- grade students from all states and territories to celebrate America’s 250th Birthday by creating original two-dimensional artworks, inspired by their favorite historical American hero, chosen from the list of 250 notable Americans – statesmen, athletes, scholars, artists, musicians, scientists, entrepreneurs, and more – to be honored in statues in the National Garden of American Heroes.

America’s youth will stand on the shoulders of great American artists of the past to create a new expression of American art today! By marking this historic milestone through original artmaking, they will reignite America’s history, heroes, and values for a new generation… and for a chance to earn a trip to Washington, DC, and have their artwork included at the Great American State Fair!

Submission Deadline: Friday, May 1, 2026, 11:59 p.m ET

Eligibility: Any student in grades 3–12 who is a legal resident of any of the 50 states or 6 U.S. territories is eligible to enter.

Submission Requirements: Participating students should create and submit an original, handmade two-dimensional artwork and a 200-word artist statement. Use the steps outlined in the section below.

Submission Categories:

  • Upper Elementary School Students (Grades 3-5)
  • Middle School Students (Grades 6-8)
  • High School Students (Grades 9-12)

Judging Criteria: A panel of artists and educators will evaluate submissions based on age-level artistic excellence and technical skill, creativity and innovation, relevance to the thematic pillars and submission requirements, and clarity and meaning of the artist statement.

Awards: 168 first-place awardees (1 student from each category representing all 56 states and territories) and their designated parent/guardian will receive a travel and lodging allowance to travel to Washington, DC, to attend the student art exhibition and an award ceremony during the Great American State Fair, to give recognition to state, regional, and overall winners. Travel dates will be shared with the notification of award. Award recipients will be notified by May 2026.

How to Enter the Contest.

Students must develop submissions individually and may not enter as a group.

1. Choose a Hero from the provided list for the National Garden of American Heroes. Download the at-a-glance biographies of 250 American heroes.

2. Use the style of one of the American Art Movements from the last 250 years. Download a Slide Deck of american art movements.

3. Create an original, handmade Two-Dimensional Work of Art (painting, mixed media, film-based photograph, or drawing; no AI; no larger than 24 inches in height or width) that depicts your selected American Hero or one aspect of his or her life:

  • A Portrait of the American Hero
  • A Place that was significant to the American Hero
  • A Key Historical Event for which the Hero is known
  • An Object or Symbol representing an important aspect of the Hero
  • An American Cultural Practice that is associated with this Hero

4. Write your own Artist Statement of approximately 200 words, describing how your artwork depicts the Hero and answering the following prompts:

  • Explain how your artwork was influenced by a particular historical American art movement or artist.
  • Describe the subject of your artwork: Which American Hero did you choose, and how does your artwork represent this historical figure?
  • Share why your artwork’s subject is important (or matters): Why does this matter to our nation, to your community, and to you? What might this person teach us about living heroically?

5. With the help of a parent, guardian, or teacher, submit your artwork onto the Art Submission Portal with a high-resolution photo or digital scan, along with the artist statement.

*Students under the age of 18 are required to have a signed permission form from a parent or legal guardian to participate. This form is available here and must be submitted with the final artwork through the application portal.

DOE Investments Advance Nuclear Workforce and Fuel Cycle Capabilities

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(Idaho National Laboratory Press Release, March 19, 2026)

By Sarah Lusk, INL Communications

The global landscape of nuclear nonproliferation is evolving, demanding a new generation of experts equipped with the latest skills, insights and capabilities. The Athena Initiative, a U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration program, is at the forefront of this mission. The initiative is designed to build the expertise and infrastructure necessary to safeguard the world from nuclear threats.

Athena was launched in 2022 as part of NNSA’s Nonproliferation Stewardship Program to ensure the United States maintains its expertise and competencies in nuclear nonproliferation. A significant part of this effort involves maintaining capabilities for nonproliferation in irradiated fuel processing.

The initiative involves building and enhancing specialized infrastructure for aqueous processing of spent fuel — processes that use solvents to separate materials like uranium from others containing chemical and radiological impurities. This infrastructure is being developed at the Idaho National Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Savannah River National Laboratory and Argonne National Laboratory. It includes specialized hot cells, glove boxes and equipment to safely manage complex aqueous processing procedures and techniques such as fuel and target receipt, fuel dissolution, solvent extraction and ion exchange.

Building expertise

Workforce development is a major emphasis of the Athena Initiative.

“One of our challenges is we’ve lost a lot of senior expertise,” said Kevin Lyon, a senior technical advisor on fuel cycle science and technology at INL.

By creating and sustaining foundational competencies in irradiated fuel processing, Athena ensures that the next generation of nonproliferation experts can meet future challenges.

The program begins with cold surrogate streams —or simplified models — of the fuel process. These models help develop baseline skills in safe benchtop and pilot plant environments so new experts understand aqueous processing of nuclear fuels. As expertise deepens, the work progresses to radiological processing with uranium in fume hoods and enclosure environments, then to transuranic processing in glove boxes, and ultimately to irradiated fuel processing in hot cell environments.

Athena includes rotations at different national laboratories, giving multidisciplinary early-career staff members hands-on experience in aqueous processing. Athena has hosted eight rotations to date, covering fuel dissolution, plutonium uranium reduction extraction, or PUREX, solvent extraction testing and equipment installation and maintenance. INL has hosted four of these rotations, including hands-on experience with a solvent extraction system like the one being installed at Beartooth, a configurable nuclear fuel cycle test bed at INL scheduled to come online in 2028.

Athena scientists can engage with colleagues and visit nuclear facilities, both internationally and domestically. “By physically seeing international nuclear fuel cycle facilities and interacting personally with leading experts from other nations, new researchers gain perspective that is difficult to develop any other way,” said Lyon. “With these experiences, INL staff have expanded their worldview and are far better prepared to innovate, collaborate and execute with excellence.”

Retrieving materials

In collaboration with the NNSA Mobile Packaging Program and the NNSA Office of Nuclear Materials Verification, the National Technical University of Athens in Greece has sent about 1,500 kilograms of natural and low-enriched uranium to the United States.

The Uranium Verification Team is a specialized group with expertise in verifying the quantity and composition of uranium materials in foreign nuclear facilities, while the Mobile Uranium Facility is part of NNSA’s Mobile Packaging Program, which processes and secures fissile materials.

This effort is part of NNSA’s broader strategy to address the urgent need to build a new cohort of nonproliferation subject matter experts.

“The timing was fortuitous, as we were actively looking for relevant materials to enable testing and workforce development for the foreseeable future,” Lyon said.

In Athens, the Nuclear Materials Verification Uranium Verification Team and Mobile Uranium Facility characterized and retrieved 1,555 kilograms of unirradiated uranium Magnox fuel and 71 kilograms of low-enriched uranium oxide.

Most of the uranium metal rods with Magnox cladding will be processed in INL’s Moran test bed facility, a pilot-scale plutonium uranium reduction extraction facility at the Critical Infrastructure Test Range Complex west of Idaho Falls, Idaho. Magnox is an alloy composed of magnesium, aluminum and other alloying metals used as cladding for unenriched uranium metal fuel. The Athena initiative is building a new capability at Moran to remove the cladding from the fuel so it can be used in the facility, which is expected to come online in summer 2026.

The enriched oxide material from Greece has been stored at the Idaho Nuclear Technical and Engineering Center, where INL has reprocessed nuclear fuels since the 1950s. This enriched oxide is being shipped to Los Alamos National Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and Oak Ridge National Laboratory to enable a wide range of multiprogram research and development activities.

Maintaining leadership in nonproliferation

One of the key challenges Athena addresses is scalability. The project team employs data science, process monitoring, material characterization and computational modeling. With specialized instruments designed to function in testing environments at a range of levels, the initiative helps scientists use data analytics and computational modeling to understand how processes observed in smaller-scale settings can translate to larger, more globally relevant systems.

Another significant challenge is detecting and predicting unusual or unexpected changes in processing. Using real-time process monitoring along with artificial intelligence helps teams develop predictive capabilities, ensuring that any deviations from expected processes are swiftly detected and addressed.

Beartooth will enhance Athena’s flexible testing environment for aqueous processing. Experts will use the test bed to support a wide range of aqueous separations. Because of the lab’s adaptable design, it can process various fuel types under multiple chemical separation schemes.

Enhanced instrumentation and monitoring

Enhanced instrumentation and monitoring equipment are fundamental to Athena’s success. These tools will provide the data necessary for Beartooth’s digital twin, a virtual version of the test bed that will operate in parallel with its physical counterpart. The digital twin integrates real-time information to fine-tune new monitoring and safeguard approaches. This will help nonproliferation decisions, material diversion and misuse analysis, and characterizing and detecting nuclear material processing operations.

Advancing the mission

INL’s longtime experience with nuclear nonproliferation and separations chemistry makes it a natural partner for the Athena Initiative. The lab has top nonproliferation experts with experience in nuclear facility inspection, modeling and simulation, material science, physics, and engineering. From developing new technologies for safeguarding nuclear material to refining analytical techniques, INL’s researchers and engineers are at the forefront of the nation’s efforts to maintain national and international security.

With NNSA support, INL is prepared to anticipate and respond to evolving threats and opportunities in the nuclear fuel cycle, addressing nonproliferation challenges today and well into the future. By partnering senior staff members with young professionals from across the Department of Energy complex, the Athena Initiative preserves knowledge and helps a new generation of experts.

About Idaho National Laboratory
Battelle Energy Alliance manages INL for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Energy. INL is the nation’s center for nuclear energy research and development, and also performs research in each of DOE’s strategic goal areas: energy, national security, science and the environment. For more information, visit www.inl.gov. Follow us on social media: Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and X.

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

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(White House Press Release, March 20, 2026)

We are getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great Military efforts in the Middle East with respect to the Terrorist Regime of Iran: (1) Completely degrading Iranian Missile Capability, Launchers, and everything else pertaining to them. (2) Destroying Iran’s Defense Industrial Base. (3) Eliminating their Navy and Air Force, including Anti Aircraft Weaponry. (4) Never allowing Iran to get even close to Nuclear Capability, and always being in a position where the U.S.A. can quickly and powerfully react to such a situation, should it take place. (5) Protecting, at the highest level, our Middle Eastern Allies, including Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Kuwait, and others. The Hormuz Strait will have to be guarded and policed, as necessary, by other Nations who use it — The United States does not! If asked, we will help these Countries in their Hormuz efforts, but it shouldn’t be necessary once Iran’s threat is eradicated. Importantly, it will be an easy Military Operation for them. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J. TRUMP

Guest Column – ID GOP Chairwoman Dorothy Moon: The Importance of Defending Private Property

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March 19, 2026

The Importance of Defending Private Property

By: Dorothy Moon, IDGOP Chairwoman

Dorothy Moon, Chairwoman of the Idaho Republican Party

You know, there might be nothing more important than private property. Those of us who have chosen to build our lives far from the cities understand that better than most. I live on a mountain in Custer County, on one of the few plots of land that isn’t owned by the state or federal government. Living in this rugged country gives you a different perspective on independence. We don’t rely on government to solve all our problems—in fact, we really just want to be left alone.

That’s the hard part, though. Government agents are everywhere, looking for even the smallest infraction. They cross onto private property without a warrant, set up secret cameras in open fields, and treat our mines, ranches, and timber operations like their own backyard.

I say enough is enough.

The Idaho GOP passed Resolution 2025-4 last year for this very reason: to extend our Fourth Amendment protections to all private property beyond the curtilage. Senate Bill 1326 is the fulfillment of that resolution. It declares, loud and clear, that no government agent—local, state, or federal—can set foot on private land—your property—without a valid warrant.

Knock on the front door like a good neighbor? Fine. Sneak past the gate, plant surveillance gear, or conduct a fishing expedition? Not in Idaho anymore.

This is not a novel idea. Our Founding Fathers firmly believed that private property rights were paramount. Jefferson and Madison, inspired by political philosophers such as John Locke, saw property rights as a bulwark against tyranny. Property isn’t just dirt, rocks, or timber—it’s the foundation of liberty. The civilization we take for granted today was built by miners, ranchers, and pioneers who defended their claims with blood, sweat, and an indefatigable will.

This isn’t just a theoretical exercise. Ask any rancher, logger, or miner in Idaho, and they’ll have stories of government agents jumping fences, setting up cameras, and getting into their business without a warrant or probable cause.

SB 1326 draws a necessary line in the sand. It requires agents to obtain a warrant before entering private property and to notify our elected sheriffs before executing those warrants. It protects everything that matters: water rights, weed control, civil process, and true emergencies. It holds those agents accountable for violating the law and our private property rights with hefty fines.

Property rights are paramount. They are not privileges granted by government, whether in Boise or Washington, D.C.—they are God-given and inalienable. If we don’t protect them here in the West, who will?

 

SB 1326 has been a long time coming. It’s time we stand together and say with one voice: No more warrantless intrusion. We are Idaho. We defend what’s ours.

City Reviewing Naming of Cesar Chavez Avenue in Pocatello

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City of Pocatello City Hall

(City of Pocatello Press Release, March 19, 2026)

The City of Pocatello is aware of recent information and allegations reported in a New York Times investigation regarding civil rights figure Cesar Chavez.

Cesar Chavez Avenue, located in Pocatello, was named in recognition of the civil rights leader. In light of recent reports, the Mayor and City Council are reviewing the information and considering potential next steps regarding the roadway’s name, including the possibility of renaming Cesar Chavez Avenue.

“We understand that this news may be troubling to members of our community,” said Mayor Mark Dahlquist. “We are taking a thoughtful and measured approach as we gather information and consider any appropriate next steps.”

The City will continue to keep the public informed as discussions move forward.

Survey and Open House Set for Pocatello’s University Area Plan, Wednesday, April 1

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, March 19, 2026)

The City of Pocatello invites community members to participate in an upcoming open house and online survey as part of the development of a 10-year plan for neighborhoods within the University area.

The open house will be held Wednesday, April 1, from 6:00 to 7:30 p.m. at the Senior Activity Center, 427 N. 6th Ave., Pocatello, Idaho. The meeting will provide an opportunity for residents, property owners, and stakeholders to share feedback and help shape the future of the area.

Area, or neighborhood, plans were identified in the City’s Comprehensive Plan. The University Area Plan will establish a shared vision for these neighborhoods and guide future decisions related to development, affordable housing, transportation options, public amenities, and other priorities for growth.

  • As part of this planning effort, the public is also encouraged to participate in an online survey, available at: arcg.is/eaqmL1
  • The City’s 2040 Comprehensive Plan can be viewed online at: storymaps.arcgis.com

For more information on this project, contact Jim Anglesey at 208-234-6514 or janglesey@pocatello.gov.

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.

Chuck Norris Passes Away

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March 20, 2026

Chuck Norris (Photo credit: Chuck Norris Facebook page)

The family of actor and martial artist Chuck Norris has announced that he passed away yesterday morning, March 19.  Their statement, available on his Facebook page, reads:

It is with heavy hearts that our family shares the sudden passing of our beloved Chuck Norris yesterday morning. While we would like to keep the circumstances private, please know that he was surrounded by his family and was at peace.

To the world, he was a martial artist, actor, and a symbol of strength. To us, he was a devoted husband, a loving father and grandfather, an incredible brother, and the heart of our family.
He lived his life with faith, purpose, and an unwavering commitment to the people he loved. Through his work, discipline, and kindness, he inspired millions around the world and left a lasting impact on so many lives.
While our hearts are broken, we are deeply grateful for the life he lived and for the unforgettable moments we were blessed to share with him. The love and support he received from fans around the world meant so much to him, and our family is truly thankful for it. To him, you were not just fans, you were his friends.
We know many of you had heard about his recent hospitalization, and we are truly grateful for the prayers and support you sent his way.
As we grieve this loss, we kindly ask for privacy for our family during this time.
Thank you for loving him with us.

With love,

The Norris Family