Thursday, January 23, 2025
16.0°F

Catching up on the news…

Betsy Russell | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 9 months AGO
by Betsy Russell
| March 30, 2020 6:00 AM

Well, I didn’t go far, but I did get some rest at home last week. Here’s a catchup on some of the recent news:

POSSIBLE PRIMARY ELECTION DELAY: Idaho Secretary of State Lawerence Denney sent a request to Gov. Brad Little on Friday to delay the May 19 primary election,and to close all polling locations, due to the COVID-19 outbreak. Denney's request comes after several meetings between his office and Idaho's 44 county clerks to find alternatives to in-person voting for the May 19 primary. Denney said in the letter that his office is requesting an order to delay the election to no earlier than June 16, giving registered voter the opportunity to request an absentee ballot.

"The recommendations by federal, state, and local public health authorities to limit public interactions makes the use of traditional polling places on Election Day extremely hazardous if not logistically impossible," Denney said in his letter to Little. You can read our full story here at idahopress.com (subscription required), or pick up Saturday’s edition of the Idaho Press.

MANY RENTERS OUT OF WORK AS RENT PAYMENTS LOOM: Idaho Press reporter Margaret Carmel has a report on renters in Boise, including restaurant workers, who’ve been forced out of work by business closures related to COVID-19, even as the April 1 deadline to pay their rent or mortgage payments looms. You can read Carmel’s full story here at idahopress.com (subscription required), or pick up Saturday’s edition of the Idaho Press.

INFECTIONS, DEATHS CONTINUE TO RISE: As of Sunday’s 5 p.m. update, the official state coronavirus website was reporting 310 confirmed cases of COVID-19 infection in Idaho and six deaths; that includes 113 cases and two deaths in Ada County, and 40 cases and one death in Canyon County. The average age of Idahoans infected is 48.9. The Idaho Department of Health & Welfare will offer a new COVID-19 hotline to answer Idahoans’ questions about the pandemic, Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., at 1-888-330-3010.

AMID STAY-AT-HOME ORDER, AMMON BUNDY CALLS MEETING: Idaho Press reporter Ryan Suppe has a full report online here on the Emmett resident’s actions, done in protest of the governor’s statewide stay-home order due to the coronavirus, or pick up Saturday’s edition of the Idaho Press; it’s on the front page.

LAWMAKERS END SESSION WITH MUCH UNSETTLED: Today’s Sunday/Monday edition of the Idaho Press features a roundup by Post Register reporter Nathan Brown of what did, and didn’t, come out of this year’s legislative session, along with sidebars from the AP and myself on bill-signings and vetoes thus far; you can read the full report here at idahopress.com (subscription required), or pick up today’s edition; it’s on the front page.

HOW STATE’S NEW 1% HOLDBACK AFFECTS SCHOOLS: Idaho Education News reporter Kevin Richert breaks down how the governor’s newly announced 1% budget holdback will affect Idaho K-12 public schools and higher education; you can read it here online at idahoednews.org, or pick up today’s Sunday/Monday edition of the Idaho Press; it’s on the front page.

THREE MOUNTAIN LION KITTENS FIND NEW HOME: Idaho Press reporter Thomas Plank reports that Idaho Fish & Game has rescued three orphaned mountain lion kittens and found new homes for them at zoos. The three female kittens were found without their mothers earlier this year, and were all between 3 and 4 months old. Two of the kittens will be sent to the San Diego Zoo while another will be sent to an accredited zoo in El Paso, Texas; you can read Plank’s full report here at idahopress.com (subscription required), or pick up today’s Sunday/Monday edition of the Idaho Press. And thanks to Idaho Fish & Game for providing the photo of the kittens shown at the top of this post; Fish & Game officials reported that the kittens are “sassy.”

MORE IMPORTED STORIES

Subscribe for digital access starting Monday
The Western News | Updated 6 years, 11 months ago
Gov. Little relaxes requirements for unemployment benefits
Coeur d'Alene Press | Updated 4 years, 9 months ago

ARTICLES BY BETSY RUSSELL

March 30, 2020 6:54 p.m.

Governor signs both HB 500 and HB 509, the anti-transgender bills

Here's a report from the Associated Press:

March 4, 2020 10:27 a.m.

Little holds press conference on coronavirus; no cases in Idaho yet, but they're expected...

Gov. Brad Little is holding a press conference this morning on Idaho’s response to the coronavirus. Though no cases have yet been documented in Idaho, they are expected, said Dr. Christine Hahn, state epidemiologist. “We’re very fortunate that we don’t have what’s going on in Washington state, our neighbor, right now, Hahn said. “But we are watching it very closely. ... Our public health goal in Idaho and across the nation is to slow this virus down. We probably can’t stop it. … It’s too late to stop it.” She added, “This is a virus that none of us have immunity to.”

March 30, 2020 2:28 p.m.

Primary election won't be delayed, but will go all-absentee; link to my full story

Idaho Secretary of State Lawerence Denney said this afternoon that the governor won't be delaying the May 19 primary election, but it'll go all-absentee due to the risk from coronavirus. “He is not going to delay it,” Denney told the Idaho Press. Denney said he anticipates a formal announcement probably on Wednesday. “We still have some things to iron out about exactly what we will be trying to do,” Denney said, “and I can tell you we’re going to push very, very hard for as much absentee as we can, so that we don’t have people having to be in contact with each other.”