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Occupational license reform will help the trades in Idaho
The trades, electrical, plumbing, and HVAC (Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning), face a growing concern surrounding what could most accurately be labeled a retirement crisis. Some estimates say that for every five journeyman who retire from the trades , only two apprentices from a younger generation will replace them. Licensure raises the price of entry into the trades’ labor market, artificially limiting the number of people who can enter it. Given the ever-importan

Luke Hill
2 days ago3 min read


MSPC provides digital safety keynote address at Idaho Department of Education conference
On October 24 th , 2025, I was honored to be a keynote speaker at the Idaho Department of Education’s 10th Annual Family and Community Engagement Conference in Sun Valley, ID. Over 300 teachers, principals, and community leaders came together for this year's event, giving a state-wide perspective on all the things we should be doing to better equip our parents and students with what they need to succeed in educating their youth. The keynote addressed my most recent research p

Sebastian Griffin
5 days ago2 min read


This bipartisan proposal is a logical step to improve Medicare solvency
The federal Medicare health insurance program for seniors has been overbudget since its inception in 1965. By 1990, the plan was at least nine times over the original budget as determined by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). Eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse in the program would seem to be a noncontroversial first step to decrease the financial burden on taxpayers and guarantee that future generations of seniors have access to Medicare. A bipartisan bill, The No UPCOD

Dr. Roger Stark
6 days ago2 min read


Legislators should end judicial deference to state agencies
The U.S. Supreme Court’s 2024 decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo  is reshaping federal land use in Wyoming and policy throughout the United States. The ruling reversed decades of precedent requiring courts to defer to a U.S. agency’s interpretation of laws. This meant that federal judges were required to favor the government over individual taxpayers or businesses, regardless of how far off base an agency's interpretation strayed from common sense or a plain re

Marta Mossburg
6 days ago3 min read


Oh, the absurdity: Government-run grocery stores are laughable
When politicians start promising cheaper milk and lettuce, it’s time to check your wallet—and your common sense.

Chris Cargill
Nov 12 min read
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