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Idaho Capital Sun wins 13 Idaho Press Club awards at annual banquet
Idaho Capital Sun wins 13 Idaho Press Club awards at annual banquet

Yahoo

time04-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Idaho Capital Sun wins 13 Idaho Press Club awards at annual banquet

The Idaho Capital Sun staff at the Idaho Capitol Building in Boise. From left to right are reporter Mia Maldonado, editor-in-chief Christina Lords, reporter Kyle Pfannenstiel and senior reporter Clark Corbin. (Pat Sutphin for the Idaho Capital Sun) The Idaho Capital Sun took home 13 awards — including four first-place finishes — in the Idaho Press Club's Best of 2024 Awards contest. The winners were announced at the press club's annual banquet, held Saturday at the Boise Centre. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Idaho Capital Sun reporter Mia Maldonado took home two first place awards: one for her Spanish-language news coverage as well one award in the serious feature report category. Idaho Capital Sun editor-in-chief Christina Lords took home first place awards in the editorial writing category as well as the best newsletter category for The Sunrise. Reporter Kyle Pfannenstiel took home second place in the competitive reporter of the year-publication category. In addition, Kelcie Moseley Morris, a reporter for the Idaho Capital Sun's parent nonprofit States Newsroom, took home two awards. The Sun, part of the nonprofit States Newsroom network with news outlets and news partnerships to cover state government in all 50 U.S. states, celebrated its four-year anniversary on March 31. To sign up for the Capital Sun's free morning newsletter, go to or to donate to continue to support its award-winning work, go to Here is the full rundown of the Idaho Capital Sun and States Newsroom awards: Christina Lords, Best Newsletter – All Media category: The Sunrise Christina Lords, Editorial – Daily category: 717 bills have been drafted. Not one fixes the disenfranchisement of thousands of Idaho voters Mia Maldonado, Series Feature Report – Daily category: Idaho librarians contemplate leaving work — and the state — as a result of proposed legislation Mia Maldonado, Best Spanish-Language Media Award – Publication category: Various stories Clark Corbin, Series – Daily category: State of Idaho's Luma business system transition Christina Lords, Special Purpose Publication – Online Only category: 2024 Voter Guide Mia Maldonado, Elections Report – Daily category: Hundreds of thousands spent in support and opposition of Idaho's Proposition 1 Mia Maldonado, Kyle Pfannenstiel, Political Report – Daily category: 'We are not getting rid of books': How libraries across Idaho are implementing new materials law Kelcie Moseley-Morris, General News Story – Daily category: Idaho's pregnant patients airlifted to other states without EMTALA protection Kyle Pfannenstiel, Reporter of the Year – Publication, All Media category Kyle Pfannenstiel, Health/Medical Report – Daily category: Idaho removed 185,000 people from Medicaid. Over a fifth have re-enrolled Becca Renk, Opinion – Daily category: In Idaho, education spending falls short. Here are lessons we can learn from Nicaragua Heath Druzin, Religion Report – Daily category: Trump's Defense secretary nominee has close ties to Idaho Christian nationalists Mia Maldonado, Education Report – Daily category: Federal grants offer Idaho prison students a second chance at college education Kelcie Moseley-Morris, Serious Feature Report – Daily category: U.S. Supreme Court urged to protect ER abortions ahead of arguments Staff, Best Website – All Media category: SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Alaska Senate asks Congress to honor Hmong Vietnam War veterans
Alaska Senate asks Congress to honor Hmong Vietnam War veterans

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Alaska Senate asks Congress to honor Hmong Vietnam War veterans

Visitors walk by the The Three Servicemen statue at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Christina Lords/Idaho Capital Sun) The Alaska Senate is asking Congress to revive a stalled effort that would honor ethnic Hmong people who aided the United States during the Vietnam War. In a 17-0 vote on Monday, the Senate approved Senate Joint Resolution 10, which requests that Congress award the Congressional Gold Medal to Hmong veterans of the Vietnam War. During that war, Hmong residents of Laos and Vietnam helped American soldiers and CIA spies, but because they were not American citizens, their work was not generally recognized. After the United States lost the war, thousands of Hmong immigrated to the country, and Alaska has about 5,000 Hmong residents, including about two dozen Vietnam War veterans. Congress has previously authorized the Congressional Gold Medal for other allied veterans, including Filipino World War II veterans, but a bill honoring the Hmong has not yet advanced. Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, sponsored SJR 10. 'Hmong veterans deserve this honor,' he said Monday. 'Alaska has the third-highest Hmong population per capita in the nation. This resolution urges the United States Congress to grant these Hmong soldiers the recognition that they have deserved.' Senate Minority Leader Mike Shower, R-Wasilla and a U.S. Air Force veteran, spoke in support of Wielechowski's proposal. 'It sounds like a small thing to many people. 'Oh, you give them a medal? Big deal.' But it means something,' Shower said. 'Because for many people that serve, that's all they want — a thank you and an acknowledgement for the sacrifices that they made.' SJR 10 advances to the House for further consideration. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

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