Top Stories
Micron has committed to building a $25 billion production facility in Boise, which could create 6,500 jobs.
Recent News
-
An interview with Dana Stevens, author of Camera Man: Buster Keaton, The Dawn of Cinema and the Invention of the Twentieth Century. In the book, Stevens places acclaimed filmmaker Buster Keaton’s unique creative genius in the context of his time.
-
Today is Tax Day, and the Idaho State Tax Commission has tips to make sure your taxes are filed properly, including what to do if you need an extension.
-
Not all soundbites make it on air, but some don’t deserve to be left on the cutting room floor either. Here’s a few we thought you might enjoy.
-
The group's youth organization, the Idaho Climate Justice League, plans to march from the Idaho State Capitol to Boise City Hall and read letters to the city, urging it to advance clean energy programs.
-
The Idaho Supreme Court ruled Idaho’s new voting laws, which removed student ID cards as an acceptable form of identification at the polls and put restrictions on proof of residency, were not unconstitutional.
-
For the first time, the federal government is putting limits on “forever chemicals” called PFAS in the nation’s drinking water – a move that will protect communities across the Mountain West.
-
The Pocatello translator K298BE is off air.
-
At the State of the City's address on Wednesday, Mayor Jarom Wagoner said Caldwell’s partnerships with new businesses were crucial to the city’s development.
-
Gov. Brad Little has signed legislation restricting which books a minor can access at public and private libraries in Idaho one year after vetoing a similar bill.
-
About eight cows on a Cassia County dairy farm got sick after the farm imported cattle from a Texas operation, where animals later tested positive for bird flu.
-
Gov. Brad Little has signed several bills shortly before lawmakers return to Boise Wednesday in the hopes of gaveling out for the year.
-
The company planning to resurrect gold and antimony mining in Valley County’s historic Stibnite district could get most of its operation start-up costs covered by financing from the government-backed Export-Import Bank (EXIM).