Idaho's most important elections are won in the primaries. If you want to have a say in how Jerome County is run, you have to vote in the primary.
Many residents have shared their experiences dealing with Jerome County government. Which set of rules applies often depends on who is seeking services, how much money they have, and who they know.
When the rules change depending on who is standing at the counter, the rules have stopped being rules. They have become favors.
Ranchers, small business owners, and homeowners report the same pattern: the process that is strict, slow, and unforgiving for them is quietly smooth, fast, and flexible for applicants who know the right people or bring the right budget.
Equal treatment under the law is not left or right. It is the floor beneath both. If a government hands out favors and penalties based on who you know, then “the law” is whatever happens to be politically convenient that day.
Under Idaho Code § 74-103, a public agency must respond to a records request within 3 working days. A “reasonable” extension is capped at 10 working days. When a request sits for weeks, that is the statute being ignored.
Permits, variances, records — a published step-by-step process. No side doors.
Staff log every request with dates and outcomes. Published quarterly.
Every condition of approval enforced on every applicant.
Unequal treatment gets reviewed outside the office that caused it.
Every claim on this page is grounded in public law, public records, or directly observable public conduct.
"If the rules only apply to some of us, they are not rules. They are favors."— Jerry Holton