- Relevance
- Date
- Any time
- Past 24 hours
- Past week
- Past month
- Past year
Sort By
Date
All results /
Big news coming from Tiny Town
The childcare facility in Pinehurst is in the midst of an expansion that will give them more than 4,000-square feet of new space.
MY TURN: Mega floods, massive basalt flows and monarch butterflies
Twenty years ago Bill Buley of the Coeur d’Alene Press wrote an article titled, “Noah Next Door” (2004). The article was on worldwide catastrophism and geological methods.
OPINION: The cluster caucus referendum on the Idaho GOP
Goal of fewer people voting was reached.
OPINION: Caucus saboteurs
Last Saturday, thanks to efforts by the Idaho Republican Party, nearly 40,000 Idaho Republicans were able to cast their vote for their preferred Presidential Candidate. This could not have happened without the Republican Party acting after the Secretary of State, the legislature and the Governor all agreed to cancel the March Presidential Primary.
OPINION: They’ve sold out your vote
Dorothy Moon, Chair of the Idaho State Republican Party (IDGOP), cares much more about the national spotlight than she does about the votes of Idaho’s registered Republicans. She is excited to change our primary voting system to an early caucus which she thinks might attract visits from presidential candidates. Dorothy wants national media attention on her leadership of the IDGOP and does not seem to care about Idaho’s Republican voter turnout.
Cd'A Charter's 'Drowsy Chaperone' opens tonight
Show runs through March 16
Coeur d'Alene Charter Academy Drama's production of "The Drowsy Chaperone" opens at 7 tonight in the school's multipurpose room.
Hagfest returns April 5 to Lake City Center
Hagfest Northwest, a new local tradition, will return April 5 to Lake City Center in Coeur d'Alene.
Silver Valley food instability issues aided by local partnerships
The turnout for the Wallace Food Bank has kept steady since the dramatic increase they experienced this past fall.
ARTICLE: Unfair shots at law enforcers
The front-page article titled “Blind Woman Shot 9 Times” is extremely misleading and does our excellent local law enforcement a huge disservice. We quickly learn the shooter is an officer, the woman committed no crimes, and she died — all on the front page. A clear implication law enforcement executed a blind woman. It’s only upon reading the rest of the buried article that we get the REAL story.
OPINION: Budget amendment no easy sell
Elected officials weigh pros, cons of Constitutional Convention
Orchard expansion in Canada's wine country stirs fears a key wildlife corridor will be harmed
Terbasket and other experts worry man-made barriers are already hurting the corridor's habitat connectivity, further threatening at-risk species and jeopardizing the area’s biodiversity.
Why are clocks set forward in the spring? Thank wars, confusion and a hunger for sunlight
here's been plenty of debate over the practice, but about 70 countries — about 40% of those across the globe — currently use what Americans call daylight saving time.
OPINION: Attorney General Labrador has no business meddling in election security
House Bill 470 would create an “Office of Election Crimes and Security” in Raul Labrador’s office. That would certainly be a waste of taxpayer dollars. The office staff would have little to do because Idaho elections have historically been fair and honest. The Attorney General’s sidekick, Dorothy Moon, who now chairs the extremist branch of the GOP, was never able to prove her wild claims that Canadians were coming over the border to vote in Idaho elections. The fraud claims of their friend, the My Pillow guy, were proven false. Where is the need for this new office?
Local karate team wins international tournament
“Our Idaho team competed against larger international teams with more experienced competitors and won in multiple divisions," Siegfried said. "They represented themselves, their families, and the state of Idaho by performing with skill, poise under pressure, dignity and respect. I could not be prouder of them.”
Drink is the Bee's Knees
Hayden whiskey bar wins Bartender's Ball that benefits animals
The Bee’s Knees Whiskey Bar out of Hayden came away from the 12th annual Bartender’s Ball as champions. This year the ball was held at the Coeur d’Alene Casino on March 2. The ball also brings donations together for Help Every Little Paw, a local non-profit that helps area animals.
MY TURN: How to empower social workers
Social workers tackle some of society's toughest problems
Backcountry Veterans set banquet
Idaho Backcountry Veterans Sportsman's banquet on March 23
Idaho student victims’ families decry ‘delay game'
Court appeal could pause murder case
Prosecutors intend to seek the death penalty for Kohberger if he is convicted
Trump has become the last Republican standing in the 2024 primary
Here's how he bulldozed the field
Youth Sports March 6, 2024
Scores, news, highlights, etc., from local youth teams, leagues, et al ...