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The Idaho Department of Water Resources surpassed its annual target for replenishing the Eastern Snake River Plain Aquifer.
Recent News
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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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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.
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Micron has committed to building a $25 billion production facility in Boise, which could create 6,500 jobs.
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At issue is a clash between federal and state law about how pregnant women must be treated in the emergency room.
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Both herds detected for with virus are in Cassia County. But the second one is not linked to any cows that were shipped from another state with a positive case.
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As the U.S. Supreme Court is set to weigh in on whether Idaho's Abortion bans conflict with federal mandates regarding emergency care, St Lukes' Hospitals see sharp increase in pregnant patients emergency transfers to states where abortions are legal.
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Polling from the Coalition group shows the majority of Idahoans support abortion cases in “some or most cases.”
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The Supreme Court will consider the question: Should doctors treating pregnancy complications follow state or federal law if the laws conflict? Here's how the case could affect women and doctors.
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Boise’s zone (7a) didn’t change this time compared to the USDA’s last map in 2012, but a lot of Idaho did. The Treasure Valley west of Caldwell, and Kuna east to Mountain Home, for example, shifted up one five-degree zone. Hailey shifted two zones warmer.