Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Home Blog Page 12

Pocatello Parks and Recreation Highlights: April

0

April 4, 2026

Pocatello–The city’s Parks and Rec newsletter is now available.  Highlights include:

  • Registration is now open for the Fun Run Series; for more information, click here.
  • The summer Parks and Rec Activity Guide is now available online; click here.
  • Zoo Idaho opens for the season on Saturday, April 4.
  • The City of Pocatello Hiring Fair will be held at the Public Works Annex (2405 Garrett Way) on Friday, April 10, from 2:00 PM to 6:00 PM.
  • The Portneuf Valley Environmental Fair will be held at Lookout Point Park on Saturday, April 18, from 11:00 AM to 3:00 PM.
  • Registration is now open for the Fun Run Series; for more information, click here.
  • The Midweek Race Series continues through June; for more information, click here. Both running and biking options are available.
  • Reminder: Polite pets are welcome in city parks and the City Creek Trail system.  Owners must keep their pets leashed and under control at all times, and are required to clean up after them.  To read the relevant city ordinance, click here.

UPDATE: LEOs Responding to Shooting Incident West of Pocatello

0

April 3, 2026

5:41 PM

The Power County Sheriff’s Office has released the following information:

The Power County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a shooting incident in the area of Batiste and Tank Farm Road.

At approximately 2:38 p.m., dispatch received reports of three people shot on Tank Farm Road in north Power County. Emergency responders arrived on the scene shortly after.

At this time, Tank Farm Road is closed between Rowland Lane and Siphon Road.Residents and commuters are strictly advised to avoid the area to allow law enforcement and emergency medical services to work unimpeded.

“Our priority right now is securing the scene and ensuring the safety of the surrounding neighborhood,” said Power County Sheriff Kasey Kendall. “We ask for the public’s patience and cooperation as we begin the preliminary investigation.”

The investigation is in its early stages. Further details regarding the circumstances of the shooting will be released as they become available.

Power County Sheriff’s Office is being assisted by the Bannock County and Bingham County Sheriff’s Offices, Pocatello, American Falls and Idaho State Police, and Portneuf Air Rescue. Pocatello, Fort Hall, and Power County are providing EMS and ambulance services.

3:20 PM

Bannock County Sheriff’s Office deputies are responding to a shooting incident on Tank Farm Rd, which is just west of Pocatello/Chubbuck.  The public is urged to stay away from the area; motorists are to use alternate routes.  Those located in the immediate vicinity are to remain indoors.

Updates will be shared through the Sheriff’s Office app, and will be added to this story as they become available.

 

AMVETS April 4 Pancake Breakfast CANCELLED

0

April 3, 2026

Tomorrow’s AMVETS of Pocatello’s “1st Saturday of the Month” Pancake Breakfast has been cancelled due to a heating issue at the Bannock County Veterans Memorial Building.  Event organizers expect the Grand Slam breakfast will be held as usual on the first Saturday in May.

LEOs Responding to Shooting Incident West of Pocatello

0

April 3, 2026

3:20 PM

Bannock County Sheriff’s Office deputies are responding to a shooting incident on Tank Farm Rd, which is just west of Pocatello/Chubbuck.  The public is urged to stay away from the area; motorists are to use alternate routes.  Those located in the immediate vicinity are to remain indoors.

Updates will be shared through the Sheriff’s Office app, and will be added to this story as they become available.

 

Guest Columnist Brian Almon: Sine Die 2026

0
(Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

April 2, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

Sine Die 2026
The second regular session of the 68th Idaho Legislature comes to an end.

By: Brian Almon

Brian Almon

The final days of an Idaho legislative session are always hectic. Bills that would otherwise take days or weeks to move through the system suddenly move in mere hours. When there’s a will, there’s a way—and when lawmakers are ready to go home, things move very fast.

I’ve been live-tweeting on the Gem State Chronicle’s account on X, so hopefully you’ve had a chance to follow along.

For many conservatives, illegal immigration was the top priority heading into the session. With numerous bills stalled, Sens. Kelly Anthon and Lori Den Hartog introduced four bills to address the problem. How did they fare?

  • Senate Bill 1440, levying a tax on remittances along with a credit for those in the country legally, failed to receive a committee hearing.
  • Senate Bill 1441, pushing local law enforcement to enter into 287(g) agreements with ICE, was sent to the Senate amending order, where it remained at adjournment.
  • Senate Bill 1442, requiring audits of NGOs engaged in refugee resettlement and data on illegal aliens arrested by law enforcement, passed the Senate but failed in House State Affairs.
  • Senate Bill 1443, allowing early release of illegal alien prisoners for the purpose of deportation, failed in Senate State Affairs.
  • Additionally, Senate Bill 1247—the weak E-Verify bill that passed the Senate earlier in the session—was radiator-capped in the House and turned into a new 287(g) bill after stakeholders could not agree on a path forward for E-Verify. This bill passed the House but was not taken up by the Senate.

In the end, not a single immigration bill made its way to Gov. Brad Little’s desk. This is a major failure for the Legislature this year and demonstrates the challenge we face in ensuring that Idaho jurisdictions and employers follow the law.

There was more drama related to legislation prohibiting taxpayer subsidies for teachers’ unions. House Bill 745 was locked in a drawer by Sen. Dan Foreman, so the Senate—led by Sens. Brian Lenney and Cindy Carlsonradiator-capped House Bill 516 with the language from H745.

Sen. Dave Lent attempted a procedural motion to send H516 to committee to die, but the motion failed. The Senate eventually passed the bill and sent it back to the House.

On Thursday morning, members of the House vehemently debated whether to concur with the Senate’s amendment. After concurrence passed, Rep. Lori McCann moved to send the bill to committee to die. This motion failed as well, and the bill ultimately passed the House, heading to Gov. Little’s desk.

The governor had not signed H516 as of this writing. The Idaho Education Association, along with its union allies, is bringing tremendous pressure on the governor to veto the bill. We need to bring pressure of our own. Call Gov. Little’s office at 208-334-2100 and respectfully ask him to sign House Bill 516.

Senate Bill 1336, bringing new civics requirements to public high school students, drew a lot of debate as well. It barely passed the House Education Committee, and critics then spent the better part of an hour debating against the bill on the House floor. Reps. Monica Church and Lori McCann, both with public education backgrounds, strongly argued against the bill, claiming it imposed too much work and too many mandates on local schoolteachers.

Rep. Chris Mathias made perhaps the oddest argument against the bill, claiming that all of the founding documents the bill required students to study—including the Declaration of Independence, the Federalist Papers, and Common Sense—were written by “white dudes” and giving that as a reason to vote against the bill.

Nevertheless, S1336 passed the House easily and headed to the governor’s desk. Floor sponsor Rep. Barbara Ehardt debated passionately in favor of bringing knowledge and appreciation of our heritage to the next generation.

Social issues dominated the final weeks of the session. House Bill 752, requiring people to use public restrooms corresponding to their biological sex, and House Bill 822, prohibiting teachers and counselors from socially transitioning children without parental consent, both passed in the final days. House Bill 561, levying harsh penalties against cities that continue defying last year’s flag bill, also passed and was signed into law, prompting Mayor Lauren McLean to tearfully take down the LGBTQ+ pride flag that had flown over Boise City Hall for the past few years.

In response to these bills, a group of protesters occupied Gov. Little’s office on Wednesday, with nine arrested after refusing to leave. Prior to adjournment, House Minority Leader Ilana Rubel shared a limerick with her colleagues, asking them to stop being so mean to LGBTQ folks.

The Senate adjourned sine die (without day) at about 6:20 p.m., with the House following ten minutes later. Several bills remain on the governor’s desk, and if he vetoes them, the Legislature will be unable to attempt an override. That said, any bill in danger of a veto did not pass with a two-thirds majority in the first place, so it doesn’t make sense for legislators to return next week.

Over the next few days, I’ll bring you in-depth analysis of the legislative session—both the good and the bad. I believe most of this year’s frustration could be resolved with a few small changes to the makeup of the Legislature. I’ll also have an analysis of the Republican legislative primary for you soon, so you know where to get the most bang for your buck.

It’s been an intense week—even for me, and I’m on the outside looking in. I’ll have more information for you soon. As always, the Gem State Chronicle is here to give you the tools you need to be an engaged citizen of our republic. Thank you for your support—it’s an honor and a privilege to serve you in this way.

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

ARPA-H Launches Groundbreaking, $144M Program to Combat Toxic Microplastics in the Human Body

0

(U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Press Release, April 2, 2026)

WASHINGTON—APRIL 2, 2026—The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), today announced STOMP: Systematic Targeting Of MicroPlastics, a nationwide $144 million program to create the definitive toolbox for measuring, researching, and affordably removing microplastics and nanoplastics (MNPs) in the human body.

“Today, HHS is taking decisive action to confront microplastics as a growing threat to human health,” said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. “Americans deserve clear answers about how microplastics in their bodies affect their health. Through ARPA-H’s STOMP program, we will measure microplastic exposure, identify sources of risk, and develop targeted solutions to reduce it.”

Plastic from our food, air, and water is accumulating in the human body. Researchers have detected microplastics in lungs, arterial plaques, and brain. Animal studies show this causes disease 1 ,2; in human studies the data shows a high correlation 3.

Yet to date, we are still remarkably in the dark. We don’t have a precise way to measure microplastics in our organs, nor do we understand which ones are affecting us in what ways—because each plastic works differently. This is important: We can’t clear what we can’t measure, and we can’t develop interventions that are precise, safe, and effective for impacts we don’t understand.

“Microplastics are in every organ we look at—in ourselves and in our children. But we don’t know which ones are harmful or how to remove them,” said Alicia Jackson, Ph.D., ARPA-H Director. “Nobody wants unknown particles accumulating in their body. The field is working in the dark. STOMP is turning on the lights.”

The STOMP program, led by Program Managers Drs. Ileana Hancu and Shannon Greene, is designing its tools to be fast, affordable, and broadly available because the goal is not a breakthrough that reaches the few, but a foundation that protects everyone and helps to lower the potential downstream costs that microplastic-related disease could otherwise impose on our healthcare system.

STOMP will focus on three technical areas across two phases: measurement and mechanism (phase one) and removal (phase two).

“A key first step is to measure microplastics accurately and understand how they reach different organ systems,” said ARPA-H Program Manager Ileana Hancu, Ph.D. “So we must establish a solid, shared foundation for precise measurement and mapping.”

During the first phase, STOMP performers will design experiments to understand microplastics within the human body. They will also develop gold-standard microplastics measurement methods, including a clinical test that will quantify individual microplastic burden, thus making monitoring and intervention possible at scale. While microplastics accumulation in the human body is a generally shared concern, the extent of accumulation is not agreed upon. This happens mainly because measurement techniques are not good enough, producing inconsistent results across labs. The CDC will serve as an independent validator of these methods, ensuring the field can trust what it’s measuring.

Critically, this work will then produce a risk stratification mechanism for plastic materials—ranking them by biological harm—so that scientists, policymakers, and industry share a common answer to the most important question in the field: which microplastics need to be addressed first, most urgently, and in what ways.

ARPA-H Program Manager Shannon Greene, Ph.D. noted, “It’s physically impossible for us to completely divorce our lives from plastics. They are in everything we touch—our clothes, the materials from which we get our food and water. We need to understand how microplastics are distributed throughout the body and what harm they are causing before we can take the next leap forward to ultimately remove them and improve human health.”

Removal is the focus in phase two and where the earlier work proves indispensable. Different microplastics accumulate in different organs, cross different cellular barriers, and disrupt different biological pathways. Only by knowing which types cause the most harm, where they concentrate, and how they move through the body can we design interventions that are precise, safe, and effective. The approaches will draw on pharmaceutical biology and bioremediation science, run in reverse.

These technologies will enable individuals and healthcare providers to detect and reduce potentially harmful microplastics, particularly for vulnerable groups such as pregnant women, children, patients with chronic disease, and highly exposed workers. With reliable, broadly available testing methods, public health authorities, regulators, and health stakeholders could guide policy, monitor interventions, and address health impacts for decades to come.

ARPA-H expects that teams will be needed to address the full goals of STOMP. Prospective proposers are encouraged to form multidisciplinary teams with a range of technical expertise. Learn more about STOMP on its program page, including details about the solicitation and Proposers’ Day registration.

Important Outdoor Tips for National Safe Digging Month: Avoid Hazards Underground and Overhead

0

(Idaho Power News Brief, April 1, 2026)

As you prepare for more outdoor activities this spring, Idaho Power reminds you that April is Safe Digging Month, and the company is sharing important tips for staying safe while working and playing outdoors.

  • If you are planning any yard work that requires digging, call 811 at least two business days before to mark underground utility lines to avoid. Locating and avoiding these power lines and cables can help prevent personal injury, expensive damage, and power outages.
  • Check for overhead power lines and other nearby electrical equipment, and stay at least 10 feet away from them. Power lines are energized and dangerous. Be especially cautious when using ladders or other tall equipment.
  • Talk to your children about keeping kites, drones, and other items away from power lines as well.
  • Don’t trim trees near power lines. Only qualified, line-clearing contractors should prune trees near power lines. If you notice a tree interfering with power lines, contact Idaho Power online at idahopower.com/contactus.
  • Ensure sprinklers don’t spray power lines, as water can conduct electricity.
  • Before plugging into outdoor cords, inspect the cords to ensure there is no damage or fraying caused by winter weather. If there is, replace them.

Check out a short video demonstrating these safety tips and more on Idaho Power’s YouTube channel.

Pocatello Mayor’s April Newsletter Posted

0
City of Pocatello City Hall

April 4, 2026

Pocatello Mayor Mark Dahlquist’s most recent Newsletter has been posted on the City of Pocatello website.

In this edition, Mayor Dahlquist mentions upcoming community events, highlights the City’s Yard Waste Program, the City’s Landscaping codes, recognized the 25th Anniversary of the Marshall Public Library’s Poetry Wall, and reminded pet owners to license their animals.

To view the Mayor’s Newsletter, visit: Pocatello Mayor’s Newsletter, April 2026.

AG Labrador Defends Gun Manufacturers Against New York Lawsuits

0

(Attorney General’s Office Press Release, April 2, 2026)

BOISE, ID — Attorney General Raúl Labrador joined a coalition led by Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen in defending firearms manufacturers against lawsuits filed by the cities of Buffalo and Rochester, New York. The cities are attempting to hold Smith & Wesson, Glock, Ruger, and Taurus financially liable for crimes committed by third parties using lawfully manufactured and sold firearms.

The consolidated lawsuits seek to circumvent the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA), which Congress enacted in 2005 specifically to stop politically motivated litigation designed to bankrupt the firearms industry through legal fees. Before PLCAA, anti-gun activists coordinated a wave of municipal lawsuits in the 1990s and early 2000s that forced the firearms industry to spend over $200 million in defense costs, causing some manufacturers to close and others to lose insurance coverage.

The amicus brief filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of New York argues that Buffalo and Rochester’s claims are barred by federal law and violate the Second Amendment. The brief points out that while these cities blame lawful gun manufacturers for crime, both cities have adopted sanctuary policies that prevent cooperation with federal immigration enforcement and bail reform laws that release violent offenders back onto streets instead of detaining them.

“Buffalo and Rochester are trying to bankrupt gun manufacturers by holding them liable for crimes they did not commit, eliminating Americans’ ability to buy firearms and exercise their Second Amendment rights,” said Attorney General Labrador. “Congress prohibited these lawsuits in 2005 to stop activists from destroying the firearms industry through litigation instead of working through legislatures. Instead of prosecuting criminals and keeping violent offenders behind bars, these cities are attacking the companies that supply firearms to law-abiding Americans and law enforcement across our country.”

The PLCAA prohibits lawsuits against firearms manufacturers, distributors, dealers, and trade associations for damages resulting from criminal misuse of their lawfully sold products by third parties. Congress found that the firearms industry is heavily regulated, operates lawfully, and should not be liable for crimes committed by others. The law protects manufacturers from being used by activist groups and politicians to achieve through litigation what they cannot accomplish through the legislative process.

Buffalo and Rochester’s lawsuits claim gun manufacturers violated New York’s “reasonable controls” statute by not doing enough to prevent criminal misuse of their products after lawful sale. The cities seek both monetary damages and court-imposed supervision of manufacturing and distribution practices. The amicus brief argues these claims are precisely what PLCAA prohibits and would unconstitutionally burden Second Amendment rights.

Read the brief here.

Gov. Little’s “Enduring Idaho” Budget Plan Clears Legislature

0
(Photo Credit: Karyn Simmons)

(Governor’s Office Press Release, April 2, 2026)

Boise, Idaho – Governor Brad Little issued the following statement today as the 2026 legislative session adjourned [Thursday].

“For months, the Idaho Legislature and I worked closely to balance the budget and rightsize spending in line with taxpayers’ means. We stayed focused on what matters most to Idaho’s future — protecting public schools and investments in water and transportation, supporting public safety, and continuing implementation of President Trump’s Talent Strategy through LAUNCH.

“Some of the budget decisions were not easy, but I am pleased the Legislature stuck to my ENDURING IDAHO plan — a forward-looking, responsible budget that keeps our state on a strong trajectory. Idaho’s economy remains the strongest in the nation, and our actions this session position us to continue that record of success. I appreciate my legislative partners for their hard work and commitment to the people of Idaho,” Governor Little said.