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.
A county commissioner’s job is bigger than the weekly meeting packet. It includes oversight of sheriff’s office contracts and policy, prosecutor appointments, open records and open meetings, and the conflicts of interest that ride alongside all of them.
Oversight is not something that happens only when something goes wrong. It is the everyday discipline of reading the record, asking the question before the vote, and insisting that what you just approved actually gets implemented.
In the last eight years, Jerome County has seen:
None of those items was a surprise to the people paying attention. The question is whether the commissioners were paying attention, whether they asked the questions, and whether they documented the answers. That is oversight.
Each of the following pages drills into a single issue with sources and a specific commissioner-level remedy:
The Flock situation, the prosecutor situation, the SWIP-N situation, and the ordinance amendments are not unrelated. They share a common factor: a commission that has not consistently required disclosure, documentation, or follow-through. Fix that one underlying discipline and every downstream issue gets easier to manage.
The 2026 Idaho Republican Primary is Tuesday, May 19, 2026. Oversight is the job. I intend to do it.
Every packet, every staff report, every legal citation. Before the meeting.
If it’s worth raising, it’s in the minutes. Not in the parking lot.
Supporting documents accompany every appointment, contract, or audit item on the agenda.
Staff reports back at a noticed meeting on what the commission voted for and what actually got done.
Every claim on this page is grounded in public law, public records, or directly observable public conduct.
"Oversight is not the loud part of the job. It is the boring, careful, weekly discipline that keeps the rest of it from going wrong."— Jerry Holton