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It’s Friday, which means it's time for our Reporter Roundtable when Idaho Matters gets you up-to-date on all the news that made headlines this past week.
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Just like water managers here in Idaho, officials in the seven states that use the Colorado River are turning their eyes to the mountains to get a sense of the summer water supply.
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Three local non profit organizations focused on social services are hosting the event.
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Months after wolves were reintroduced to the Colorado landscape, they’re expanding their range and generating buzz.
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Federal officials suspect the virus spreads through cows’ milk, but Leibsle highlighted uncertainties like which species of birds might be infecting cattle, the duration of the illness in animals and the length of virus shedding.
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A lawsuit over the Idaho Department of Fish and Game’s killing of three grizzly bears in Eastern Idaho has settled, and it could have implications beyond the state’s borders.
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Talks and exhibits are scheduled about geology, history, art, scientific research and the night sky.
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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 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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It’s Friday, which means it's time for our Reporter Roundtable when Idaho Matters gets you up-to-date on all the news that made headlines this past week.
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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.