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How did your legislator do this session in protecting the well-being of Idaho kids?

Rep. Julianne Young, R-Blackfoot, at left, speaks with Rep. Ryan Kerby, R-New Plymouth, before the start of the House session in March. The results of this year’s Kids Matter Index have been released by the organization Idaho Children Are Primary, a measuring stick for how well legislators work to protect the interests of children.
Rep. Julianne Young, R-Blackfoot, at left, speaks with Rep. Ryan Kerby, R-New Plymouth, before the start of the House session in March. The results of this year’s Kids Matter Index have been released by the organization Idaho Children Are Primary, a measuring stick for how well legislators work to protect the interests of children. smiller@idahostatesman.com

As a retired pediatrician as well as a former Idaho House minority leader, I felt that the 2022 Idaho legislative session was a mixed bag for children and their families.

John Rusche
John Rusche

I am on the advisory board for Idaho Children Are Primary, a bipartisan organization that rates and tracks legislative bills. The board includes former First Lady Patricia Kempthorne, nationally recognized educator Cindy Wilson and pediatricians from across the state.

Our goal is to give Idahoans a view of how their elected representatives perform in helping Idaho’s youngest citizens and in their constitutional duties with regard to kids. Idaho Children Are Primary rated 23 bills that were introduced this session. Some of those bills we believe could help children’s health, education or well-being, and others that could cause significant harm.

We then tracked how each legislator voted on those bills. The Kids Matter Index shows the results of that tracking by creating individual scorecards. Voters can look up how much their legislator cared about children’s well-being by visiting www.idahochildrenareprimary.org.

Overall, 60% of legislators scored 80% or better on the index, which is a better performance than last year’s numbers.

In all, 90% of the Senate scored above 80%, while less than half (47%) of the House members did so. Thirty Idaho legislators (29% of the two chambers) scored 100% in agreement with the Kids Matter Index. More than half of Republican legislators overall scored better than 80%, but only 36% of GOP House members hit the 80% mark.

No senators scored below 50%, while 21 of the 70 House members failed to vote with kids even half of the time.

Fourteen of the 16 bills supported by Idaho Children Are Primary passed, and five of them passed unanimously. Both bills that Idaho Children Are Primary opposed failed to become law.

Idaho Children Are Primary appreciates the time and consideration of the senators and representatives who served this session to represent the interests of their constituents, especially those who kept Idaho kids and families foremost in their thoughts and deliberations.

Idaho is one of the youngest states in the nation; are we as parents and legislators caring for our kids?

The Kids Matter Index reminds voters as we prepare for the primary and general elections of how their legislators voted this session and prepares them to ask incumbents and challenger candidates an important question: “Are your policies good for Idaho kids?”

Let’s remind our politicians running for office this May and November that children’s interests will always be a “hot button” topic for Idahoans.

John Rusche is a pediatrician and a former minority leader in the Idaho House of Representatives. ICAP advisory board members are: Cindy Wilson, educator; Staci Darmody, children’s advocate; Patricia Kempthorne, former Idaho first lady; Alicia Lachiondo, doctor of pediatrics; Cristina Leon, doctor of pediatric cardiology; and Christopher Streeter, doctor of pediatric psychiatry.
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