Idaho Legislature's DOGE panel to work on repealing state laws, wading through public input
At its second meeting Monday, the
The task force plans to review state laws to repeal, based on feedback from agencies required under a new state law to clean up state laws. The panel also plans to look into hundreds of tips from the public on government inefficiencies submitted to its online portal, which the task force announced a month ago at its first meeting.
And
After years of the Legislature not acting to fix a health insurance assistance gap, in 2018 nearly 61% of
Sen.
"I think jumping into that area would be good again," replied Rep.
In April,
Should Medicaid expansion be repealed or reduced?
The DOGE panel didn't discuss how
But next year, the Legislature might consider more cuts to state government — potentially even extending the governor's temporary cuts, Tanner told the Sun in an interview Monday.
"If we can continue to do these hold backs, as the economy gets better, we'd like to see the money go back into taxpayers' pockets," he said.
Instead of fully repealing Medicaid expansion, one potential cut could be capping costs at a set amount, Tanner said.
"There's a lot of different things that we can continually look at. … This may not be the perfect solution, but this is a really good solution for the state to help with cost containment aspects," Tanner told the Sun.
The
Idaho DOGE to review ideas for Idaho Code Clean Up Act
Under the Idaho Code Clean Up Act, passed into law this year through House Bill 14, state agencies must review state laws to identify any parts that are "outdated," obsolete" or "unnecessary."
By
The office's goal is to provide the DOGE task force with weekly summaries of state agencies' submissions, and the office's assessment of how risky it is to repeal parts of or entire sections of state law,
Then the DOGE task force could review suggestions for repeals, which could lead to efforts to repeal laws in the Legislature next year.
The DOGE task force plans to meet again



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