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A look at some of Idaho's new laws

Kimberlee Kruesi | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years, 4 months AGO
by Kimberlee Kruesi
| June 28, 2015 9:00 PM

BOISE - Summer in Idaho brings not only plenty of outdoor cookouts and floats down the river, but also state laws ready to go into effect.

Wednesday marks the start of a new fiscal year in Idaho, meaning the state will begin implementing a new budget and plenty of new policies.

The biggest new laws focus solely on education and transportation and allowing concealed weapons outside city limits without a permit.

Gov. Butch Otter signed 342 pieces of legislation this year, while lawmakers amended 660 different sections of Idaho law.

What did Idaho get? Here's a look at the key laws you may notice.

- TRANSPORTATION: Lawmakers passed a $95 million transportation plan designed to help repair Idaho's crumbling bridges and roads. This means vehicle-registration fees are going up $21 and Idaho residents will pay 7 cents more per gallon for gas. However, the new plan falls short of the $262 million funding shortfall the state has faced each year since 2010 to maintain upkeep on its transportation infrastructure.

- EDUCATION: Rookie teacher salaries will increase by almost $1,000 up to $32,700 per year in July. At the end of the next five years, if lawmakers continue to allocate funding, first-year teachers will make $37,000 a year. For more experienced teachers, the plan includes a two-tiered ladder to move up to earn more and includes $4,000 bonuses at the very top.

- CONCEALED CARRY: Lawmakers approved a broad rewrite of the state's weapons laws, including allowing Idahoans to carry concealed weapons outside city limits without a permit. Lawmakers declined, however, to remove a provision that lets lawmakers carry concealed weapons without a permit.

- TELEMEDICINE ABORTION RESTRICTIONS: The practice wasn't even offered in Idaho before lawmakers began debating it this year. But starting July 1, Republican lawmakers made sure doctors would be banned from prescribing abortion-inducing drugs via telemedicine. The law also requires doctors to attempt to make follow-up visits with women after administering the abortion drugs.

- PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY: Lawmakers passed a $2 million plan to move Idaho's presidential primary into March. Proponents say the plan will give the state more influence in the 2016 presidential primary elections. But Democrats objected, saying that taxpayers shouldn't pay for political party events.

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