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A bill banning public drag shows and other performances deemed sexually explicit is heading to the Senate.
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This Thursday, Feb. 2 the Fettucine Forum will be hosting an event that looks at the history of queer space throughout Idaho.
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Idaho's Attorney General is scrutinizing a policy proposal drafted by the Caldwell School Board which outlines best practices for LGBTQ+ students. This comes a few weeks after a board meeting discussing the policy ended in chaos.
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The mid-October arrest of a Boise man, accused of assault including the use of his vehicle as a weapon, garnered plenty of media attention. A short time later, he was also accused of burning a Pride flag that had been flying outside a Boise home. But what was not widely known at the time of the arrest of Matthew Lehigh, was that his first alleged assault was on a transgender woman at her workplace – the Boise Downtown Public Library.
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Earlier this month, far-right activists and the Idaho Republican Party banded together to shut down a youth drag show planned during Boise’s Pride Festival, claiming it was "sexualizing" children.
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Among survey respondents across the eight states that make up the Mountain West, about 67% support policies that protect trans individuals from discrimination in jobs, housing or in public spaces. That's compared to 64% nationwide.
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The ban has been in place for almost 20 years. This new legislation would recognize all marriages, and impacts spousal property rights and employee benefits.
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The arrest of 31 members of a white supremacist group allegedly on their way to riot at a North Idaho gay Pride celebration shocked people across the country. But it didn’t come out of nowhere.
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On the last day of Pride month, people gathered in Nampa to celebrate its first Latinx Pride.
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Idaho has been in the national news quite a bit this past week for attacks against the LGBTQ community and all this attention has the internet asking: What is Idaho known for? Is Idaho racist? Why is Idaho so conservative? To understand how we got here today and what steps we can take to be a more inclusive and equitable place for everyone means, we’ve got to take a critical look at our past.