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She told the crowd gathered at JUMP in downtown Boise that the collaborative spirit required to establish the city, isolated in the high mountain desert, can be applied to some of its main challenges of today, like housing.
Recent News
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Organizers for Idaho’s open primaries initiative said they’ve gathered enough signatures to qualify the issue for the November general election.
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The procession and memorial for Ada County Sheriff Deputy Tobin Bolter is scheduled for Tuesday, April 30. Bolter was killed as he attempted a traffic stop earlier this month in Boise, the first deputy who died in the line of duty in ACSO history.
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Recreation groups said the agency lacked accurate information about trails and roads.
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An organic seed company was distressed to learn it had marketed a GMO purple tomato by mistake. The incident raised alarm about the impact of new GMO plants.
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Fuller snowpacks than first predicted across much of southern Idaho have guides forecasting a typical rafting season this summer.
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An interview with Nathan Thrall, author of the new book, A Day in the Life of Abed Salama. The book tells the story of a deadly accident outside Jerusalem that unravels a tangle of lives, loves, and histories over the course of a single day.
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The data suggests the West is less impacted by the phenomenon than other regions, but a utility expert suggests the impact could still be quite significant.
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The $135 million will go towards building and maintaining residential solar installations on a number of reservations.
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The Biden administration has put out a beta version of what it calls the American Conservation and Stewardship Atlas, a massive mapping project that seeks to visualize conservation efforts across the country. It also is intended to show progress toward the administration’s goal of conserving or restoring 30% of American territory by 2030.
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The Idaho Center for Fiscal Policy shared their analysis of the potential economic impacts of legislation passed in the 2024 session by Idaho's lawmakers.
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Idahoans are spending more time exploring public lands as temperatures begin to warm, with officials saying to recreate with fire safety in mind.
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The original part of the current school building dates to the 1950s and sits on ground associated with high levels of cancer within the Shoshone-Paiute Tribes.