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Votes at a glance: House advances multiple bills; education recess bill fails

March 09, 2026 | Legislative, Idaho


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Votes at a glance: House advances multiple bills; education recess bill fails
The Idaho House recorded votes on a broad set of measures on March 9, 2026. Several bills were approved and sent toward enrollment or the Senate; one notable education bill failed on the floor.

Passed items (selected):
- House Bill 5-45: passed (licensure pathway for military chaplains; transcript roll call reported 52 yes, 17 no, 1 abstain/excused).
- House Bill 7-65: passed (allows partial fire-district boundary adjustments and related procedures; sponsor said it protects local appeal and voting processes and corrects tax-code treatment of certain boundary changes).
- House Bill 7-66 and House Bill 7-67: passed (streamline impact-fee collection and allow limited use of impact-fee funds for replacement costs; sponsors said the bills do not raise fees but create administrative efficiencies).
- House Bill 7-24: passed (foster-child safety provisions codifying certain protections and directing the Department of Health and Welfare to provide notice materials).
- House Bill 7-07: passed (narrow administrative process to split lots to facilitate financing for accessory dwelling projects).
- House Bill 800: passed (manufactured homes; sponsors said it maintains local control while removing barriers to use of manufactured housing).

Failed item:
- House Bill 8-33: failed (a bill to require daily recess for elementary students and unstructured activity for middle-school students). Supporters cited studies showing benefits for focus and behavior; opponents argued the bill limits schools’ disciplinary tools and could be counterproductive. The clerk recorded that the bill failed to pass the House in the floor proceedings.

Why this matters: The passed bills change administrative and local-government processes (fire-district boundaries and impact-fee collection), housing policy mechanics, and foster-care protections. The failed recess bill underscores disagreement about classroom discipline and statewide prescription of school procedures.

The House recessed to return later in the day and adjourned the legislative day with committee and caucus announcements.

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