Latest news with #IdahoStateCapitol
Yahoo
21-03-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Boise faith leaders unite in opposition to Senate Bills 1141 and 1166
The Idaho State Capitol building in Boise on March 20, 2021. (Otto Kitsinger for Idaho Capital Sun) One of the strands that unite our diverse faith traditions is the ritual of fasting. Indeed in this very season, Islamic communities are celebrating the month of Ramadan, Christians are observing Lent, and Jews are preparing for Passover — all of which prominently feature some version of this ancient practice. We fast to remind ourselves that the true measure of any society is how it treats its most vulnerable citizens. As the prophet Isaiah challenged his listeners almost 3,000 years ago: Is not this the fast that I choose: to loosen the bonds of injustice, to undo the straps of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free and to break every chain? Is it not to share your bread with the hungry and to bring the homeless poor into your house? Alas, our state Legislature is failing Isaiah's test. In a time marked by deep economic uncertainty and a serious shortage of affordable housing, they have put forward two bills — Senate Bill 1141 and Senate Bill 1166 — that callously leave Boise's unhoused citizens with no place to go. The former criminalizes camping on our city streets, while the latter prohibits the building or expansion of any shelter within three hundred feet of a residential zone. It is cruelly designed to shut down Interfaith Sanctuary, our city's only non-sectarian, low barrier shelter. Taken together, these two pieces of bad legislation effectively tell the homeless they can't sleep outside — and we won't shelter you inside. This message — 'there's no room at the inn' is both immoral and unwise. It is well worth noting that criminalizing homelessness doesn't solve the problem — it makes it worse. When our communities are free to focus on shelter and supportive services, they spend less on emergency health care, policing, and incarceration. Investing in caring for the unhoused is not just compassionate — it's fiscally responsible. Time and again, our state Legislature decries federal mandates as big government overreach. Yet here, they are doing to the city exactly what they long complained about as a limitation of freedom. If Senate Bill 1166 were to pass, any church, synagogue, mosque or other faith community in a residential zone would be banned from providing shelter to the hungry and homeless. This is bad policy when those services are dearly needed. It is also a gross denial of religious freedom, as Senate Bill 1166 doesn't just limit Boise's ability to help the homeless — it actively interferes with the ability of faith communities to practice what they preach. By prohibiting shelters in our neighborhoods, the state is preventing places of worship from following our sacred calling to care for those in need. Signed, Rabbi Dan Fink Dr. Joe Bankard Pastor Buddy Gharring- Hillview UMC Pete Schroeder, Director of Local Missions, Cathedral of the Rockies The Rev Dr. Duane A Anders-Cathedral of the Rockies, Boise FUMC The Rev. Ed Keener The Rev. Jenny Willison Hirst-Outreach Minister, Collister UMC Debbie Mallis, Interfaith Equality Coalition The Rev. Bruce D. Ervin-Retired Pastor, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) The Rev. Tracia Deal-Senior Minister, Red Rock Christian Church The Rev. Dr. Andrew Kukla -First Presbyterian Church, Boise The Rev Josh Lee, Boise First United Church of Christ Jim Sonnenburg- Connection Pastor, True Hope Church Downtown The Rev Brenda Sene, Rupert United Methodist Church The Rev. Dr. Steven Tollefson, Pastor Emeritus, Cathedral of the Rockies The Rev. Adam Briddell Amity Campus Pastor, Cathedral of the Rockies SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Yahoo
12-03-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
Idaho House Health and Welfare Committee advances bill cutting services to unauthorized immigrants
The Idaho State Capitol building in Boise as seen on Jan. 11, 2023. (Otto Kitsinger for Idaho Capital Sun) This story was first published by Idaho Reports on March 11, 2025. The Idaho House Health and Welfare Committee on Tuesday advanced a bill that would eliminate services such as prenatal care and food support for unauthorized immigrants in Idaho. The committee voted 10-5 to pass House Bill 135, sponsored by Rep. Jordan Redman, R-Coeur d'Alene. Undocumented people are not eligible for Medicaid or Medicare in Idaho. However, all low-income people are eligible for medical care such as crisis counseling, prenatal care, postnatal care, immunizations and public health treatment of communicable diseases. The bill would exclude people from receiving those services without verification of legal residence. It does leave a provision for treatment 'of an emergency medical condition.' The bill also eliminates access to some short-term shelter, and food assistance programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, as well as soup kitchens and food pantry programs that accept state funds. Food assistance is currently available to qualifying families with children. Redman said he sees the bill as a deterrent, incentivizing people without legal status to leave Idaho because neighboring states offer these programs to undocumented people. Rep. Megan Egbert, D-Boise, asked Redman what happens if an undocumented immigrant went to an emergency room for a non-emergency illness. In that case, Redman said, the hospital would likely treat the person but the state would not pay for it. Several legislators argued that undocumented immigrants do pay income tax. 'I don't know that we should be sending taxpayer funds to pay for welfare benefits to pay for people who have already broken the law to be here,' Redman said. President and CEO Randy Ford of the Idaho Foodbank testified against the bill. He said he believes charitable food banks cannot replace the government-funded food programs, as only 5% of the Idaho Foodbank's food comes from government programs while most is from charitable donations. 'What we do see is an increase in food insecurity has detrimental effects, especially with children,' Ford said. 'So, as you cut away at some benefits children would have, it puts more strain on what we do, churches do and other partners across the state.' House Minority Leader Ilana Rubel, D-Boise, made a substitute motion to hold the bill in committee. She took issue with the bill not having any exemptions for children of undocumented parents who were born in the U.S., making them American citizens. Additionally, she argued that prenatal care being eliminated takes away services from a potential future U.S. citizen who needs care in utero. 'If we take that care we are potentially dooming a future U.S. citizen,' Rubel said. '… Frankly both the fetus and baby didn't choose to be here.' She also took issue with removing care for people with contagious diseases. 'A person with a contagious disease is going to give to other people in the community, likely American citizens in the community,' Rubel said. Reps. Lori McCann, R-Lewiston; Josh Wheeler, R-Ammon; and Ben Fuhriman, R-Shelley, sided with the two Democrats on the committee in opposing the legislation. The bill now heads to the full House of Representatives for a vote. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX