Tag: legislative
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Becoming a Citizen Advocate for Health Freedom
It’s a fact of life that every decision that affects health freedom is a political decision. Our elected lawmakers at the State Capitol determine everything from a doctor’s ability to practice and prescribe supplements, children’s ability to attend schools and daycares without forced medical intervention, the ability of small farmers grow and sell produce free of chemicals and toxins. That’s why its important that individuals to be active and reach out to legislators about the issues and the bills and making sure your voice is heard.Legislators will be in their home town (unless campaigning) until the beginning of the Legislative session in January and will have more time to meet with you before the session starts. Then many stay in Boise during our 4 month Legislative session and are very busy at that this time.During the legislative session, HFI will send out Action Alerts requesting you contact your representative on proposed legislation. This will often involve a quick phone call or simple email. This shouldn’t be the only time you are in contact with your legislator. Taking time to develop a relationship with your elected official off season will allow you the opportunity develop an open line of communication based on mutual respect.
Below are some resources to help you become an effective advocate for your health freedom in Idaho:
- Four Ways to Communicate
- Twelve Tips Meeting your Legislator Face to Face
- How to Email /Write Your Legislator
- How to Phone Your Legislator
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Who Represents YOUR FAMILY at the Capitol?
Your elected representatives are the individuals you want to take time to get to know personally as they are the ones with the power to shape the laws that directly impact your life and your livelyhood.
Presently, the Idaho Legislature is composed of 35 Senators and 70 Representatives elected for two-year terms. The state is divided into 35 legislative districts, each represented by one Senator and two Representatives. This means that each voter has 2 State House Representatives and 1 State Senate per District.
Find out who your elected officials are by checking:
http://openstates.org/id/legislators/
Enter your home address and the three individuals who represent you on the State level will appear. Make sure to write down their contact information. Make an effort to meet them prior to the legislative session in January.These Legislators will be in their home town (unless campaigning) until the beginning of the Legislative session in January and will have more time to meet with you before the session starts. Then many stay in Boise during our 4 month Legislative session and are very busy at that this time.
During the legislative session, HFI will send out Action Alerts requesting you contact your representative on proposed legislation. This will often involve a quick phone call or simple email. This shouldn’t be the only time you are in contact with your legislator. Taking time to develop a relationship with your elected official off season will allow you the opportunity develop an open line of communication based on mutual respect.
It’s a fact of life that every decision that affects health freedom is a political decision. Our elected lawmakers at the State Capitol determine everything from a doctor’s ability to practice and prescribe supplements, children’s ability to attend schools and daycares without forced medical intervention, the ability of small farmers grow and sell produce free of chemicals and toxins. That’s why its important that individuals to be active and reach out to legislators about the issues and the bills and making sure your voice is heard.
Below are some resources to help you become an effective citizen lobbyist:- Four Ways to Communicate
- Twelve Tips Meeting your Legislator Face to Face
- How to Email /Write Your Legislator
- How to Phone Your Legislator
Get your voter registration form here.
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Not sure what district you’re in? Check the District 10 map here.Need to know where to vote? How about to check if you’re registered?
Want to make sure your absentee ballot was received? Click here! -

Effective Communication w State Legislators
FOUR EFFECTIVE WAYS TO COMMUNICATE WITH YOUR STATE LEGISLATORS
Each person has 2 State House Representatives and 1 State Senate per District.
A great resource to FIND OUT WHO your legislators are and their contact information:
http://openstates.org/id/legislators/These Legislators will be in their home town (unless campaigning) until the beginning of the Legislative session in January and will have more time to meet with you before the session starts. Then many stay in Boise during our 4 month Legislative session and are very busy at that this time.
During the legislative session, HFI will send out Action Alerts requesting you contact your representative on proposed legislation. This will often involve a quick phone call or simple email. This shouldn’t be the only time you are in contact with your legislator. Taking time to develop a relationship with your elected official off season will allow you the opportunity develop an open line of communication based on mutual respect.
Letters
Personal letters that state your views on how the proposed legislation will affect your profession, family, or community are the individual’s basic communications tools. Timing of such communication is vital. The Legislative session begins in January for four months. Click here for more hints on effective written communications.E-mails
When speed is desirable because of imminent action on a piece of legislation, emails may be sent to a legislator. Tips to emailing the Idaho Legislator. We include copy paste lists for ease of use.Telephone Calls
Several hints for phone contact with your legislator can be found in the “How To Phone” your legislator document. In addition, here are a few quick notes to keep in mind. This form of communication is particularly effective when the person making the call worked in the campaign of the legislator or has established a personal relationship with the legislator. Direct contact with the legislator is not always possible, but messages can be left with aides or secretaries. It would not be appropriate to use this communication method exclusively.Meeting with Legislators
The most effective communication, naturally, is that which takes place face to face. You should plan to meet with your legislator as frequently as possible. Opportunities for such meetings come between sessions and during recesses. 12 tips for face-to-face meetings with legislators.At campaign time, incumbents are generally eager to meet with groups of constituents. These meetings must be planned with care or else they will become merely platforms for political speeches by the Representative or Senator. To guard against this, tell the legislator that the purpose of the meeting is to give constituents the opportunity to express their views on legislation and to ask specific major issues. It may be helpful to get together beforehand and role-play these sessions to gain understanding of the issues and dynamics of the parties involved.
Meetings with newly elected Representatives and Senators and re-elected incumbents are particularly desirable. Such meetings should be held as soon as convenient after the November elections.
In addition to personal or small group meetings with your legislators, you may want to plan at least one meeting a year at which the legislator meets with a larger group. Here again the meeting should be structured to give constituents the opportunity to ask meaningful questions on which they have been briefed.EFFECTIVE ACTION ALERT COMMUNICATION ON SPECIFIC LEGISLATION


It’s a fact of life that every decision that affects health freedom is a political decision. Our elected lawmakers at the State Capitol determine everything from a doctor’s ability to practice and prescribe supplements, children’s ability to attend schools and daycares without forced medical intervention, the ability of small farmers grow and sell produce free of chemicals and toxins. That’s why its important that individuals to be active and reach out to legislators about the issues and the bills and making sure your voice is heard.
Below are some resources to help you become an effective citizen lobbyist:- Four Ways to Communicate
- Twelve Tips Meeting your Legislator Face to Face
- How to Email /Write Your Legislator
- How to Phone Your Legislator
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Simple Steps to Writing Your Legislator
During the legislative session, HFI will send out Action Alerts requesting you contact your representative on proposed legislation. This will often involve a quick phone call or simple email. This shouldn’t be the only time you are in contact with your legislator. Taking time to develop a relationship with your elected official off season will allow you the opportunity develop an open line of communication based on mutual respect.
How to Write Your Legislator
Elected officials care what their mail says. A logical, courteous letter carries weight; it can change a legislator’s mind, particularly when the legislator is wavering on an issue. It is important that your message be written as effectively as possible.
Here are a few points:- Keep it brief. Be as brief as possible, but don’t sacrifice clarity and completeness. Two pages is a maximum but one page is best. While form letters tend to be easy to use it better to use your own words. HFI will always present you with key ideas and a sample letter to help you create a personalized letter.
- Identify yourself. Let your legislators know that you live and/or work in their district.
- Keep it focused. Limit the correspondence to one subject. Otherwise, you decrease the force of your argument and complicate your legislator’s efforts to act.
- Get to the point. State your purpose at the outset and use the remainder of the letter to expand your views. Create a simple bullet pointed list within the first paragraph of the reasons you are for/against proposed legislation. Be constructive suggesting alternatives or better solutions, if possible. Use a simple bulleted pointed list to make it easy for the legislator to identify your points. A few strong, well thought out points will be more influential than a long laundry list of reasons.
- Use facts. Issues you write about may be emotion-laden, but beware of the nonfactual argument. It will make your legislator less willing to consider your point next time, too.
- Relate it to home. Emphasize the effect of the legislation in question on your legislator’s own constituency districts. Give facts and illustrations – use your own knowledge and experience to inform the legislator. Legislators seldom change their decisions because of a philosophical argument but well-reasoned examples carry tremendous weight.
- Provide background as needed. Don’t assume that a legislator is as well informed as you about a problem. A legislator can’t keep abreast of everything. Explain the situation, what you think and why.
- Make specific recommendations.
- Keep it positive. Your attitude is important. A polite, positive-sounding letter is more likely to impress than one that is negative, rude, or threatening. Avoid being antagonistic. Point out the benefits of your position.
- Close with a friendly appeal, regardless of the action you urge. Thank them for their help and consideration. “Sincerely,” is an appropriate closing.
- Allow for follow-up. Include contact information and offer to act as a resource should the legislator (or staff) have questions or need additional information. Include your full name, address, your district (find your district here – https://legislature.idaho.gov/who’smylegislator.htm), Where appropriate, indicate in the letter that you will follow up with a phone call.
SENDING YOUR EMAILS:
- Our email lists are alphabetical and broken down into alphabetical group to avoid spam filters. Copy and paste your personalized letter to all legislators sending them in batches using the BCC (blind carbon copy) for each list. By using the BCC option the person receiving the email can’t see who else it was sent to. ( in order to find this option first click on “To:” then choose “Bcc:”)
- Make sure to address the legislator correctly: Follow etiquette. Addressing correspondence to legislators requires particular etiquette. Every legislator is called “Honorable” on the envelope and inside address. In the salutation, address house members as “Dear Representative _________” while senators are called “Senator ________.” Spell the name correctly. During a legislative session, send correspondence to their office, otherwise send to home or business.
- Groups 1H – 6H (House members) should be addressed “Dear Representative”.
- Groups 1S to 3S (Senators) , make sure you switch the opening to “Dear Senator”.
CUT AND PASTE EMAIL LIST
CONTACT LISTS
(please send 1 EMAIL to each group below. (we use small groups to avoid triggering their spam filter)
Address these individuals as Representative
HOUSE
GROUP 1Hranderst@house.idaho.gov armstrong@house.idaho.gov vbar@house.idaho.gov mblanksma@house.idaho.gov jboyle@house.idaho.gov vburtenshaw@house.idaho.gov gchaney@house.idaho.gov dcheatham@house.idaho.gov lclow@house.idaho.gov gcollins@house.idaho.gov bcrane@house.idaho.gov tdayley@house.idaho.gov gdemordaunt@house.idaho.gov sdixon@house.idaho.gov jgannon@house.idaho.gov tgestrin@house.idaho.gov pgiddings@house.idaho.gov khanks@house.idaho.gov GROUP 2H
sharris@house.idaho.gov shartgen@house.idaho.gov jholtzclaw@house.idaho.gov pjordan@house.idaho.gov rkerby@house.idaho.gov mkingsley@house.idaho.gov lluker@house.idaho.gov dmanwaring@house.idaho.gov pmcdonald@house.idaho.gov rmendive@house.idaho.gov jmonks@house.idaho.gov dmoon@house.idaho.gov mmoyle@house.idaho.gov nater@house.idaho.gov jpalmer@house.idaho.gov hscott@house.idaho.gov GROUP 3H
pshepherd@house.idaho.gov tsevenson@house. idaho.gov ssyme@house.idaho.gov jthompson@house.idaho.gov cntroy@house.idaho.gov jtrujillo@house.idaho.gov jvanorden@house.idaho.gov czito@house.idaho.gov bzollinger@house.idaho.gov pamador@house.idaho.ogv nanderson@house.idaho.gov sbedke@house.idaho.gov mbell@house.idaho.gov schew@house.idaho.gov merpelding@house.idaho.gov mgibbs@house.idaho.gov bhixon@house.idaho.gov WendyHorman@house.idaho.gov ckauffman@house.idaho.gov GROUP 4H
pking@house.idaho.gov hkloc@house.idaho.gov tloertscher@house.idaho.gov lmalek@house.idaho.gov jmccrostie@house.idaho.gov smiller@house.idaho.gov kpacker@house.idaho.gov cperry@house.idaho.gov draybould@house.idaho.gov eredman@house.idaho.gov irubel@house.idaho.gov esmith@house.idaho.gov stoone@house.idaho.gov jvanorden@house.idaho.gov mwintrow@house.idaho.gov fwood@house.idaho.gov ryoungblood@house.idaho.gov Senators
Please address these lists below as SENATORGROUP 1S
cwinder@senate.idaho.gov cbayer@senate.idaho.gov ldenhartog@senate.idaho.gov bbrackett@senate.idaho.gov lheider@senate.idaho.gov jpatrick@senate.idaho.gov mstennett@senate.idaho.gov kanthon@senate.idaho.gov jguthrie@senate.idaho.gov mnye@senate.idaho.gov dmortimer@senate.idaho.gov sbair@senate.idaho.gov mharris@senate.idaho.gov bmdavis@senate.idaho.gov bhill@senate.idaho.gov jsiddoway@senate.idaho.gov GROUP 2S
bmdavis@senate.idaho.govbhill@senate.idaho.gov
jsiddoway@senate.idaho.gov
palodge@senate.idaho.gov
tlakey@senate.idaho.gov
jagenbroad@senate.idaho.gov
mhagedorn@senate.idaho.gov
fmartin@senate.idaho.gov
gburgoyne@senate.idaho.gov
mjordan@senate.idaho.gov
jwardengelking@senate.idaho.gov
cbucknerwebb@senate.idaho.gov
GROUP 3S
skeough@senate.idaho.gov sjvick@senate.idaho.gov bnonini@senate.idaho.gov msouza@senate.idaho.gov dforeman@senate.idaho.gov djohnson@senate.idaho.gov ccrabtree@senate.idaho.gov sthayn@senate.idaho.gov alee@senate.idaho.gov jrice@senate.idaho.gov -

A Review of Last Legislative Session
HEALTH FREEDOM IDAHO tracked the votes of our legislators in relations to FIVE bills in the 2015/2016 session.
Here is a brief description of the bill as it relates to health freedom, parental authority and privacy.
To see how YOUR senator and representative voted find your district.
Download the voters guide (PDF FILE) that provides a complete overview of Idaho’s legislator votes.THE BILLS Health Freedom Idaho Tracked Last Legislative Session:HO181 – FAILED
Topic: NATUROPATHIC MEDICAL PHYSICIANS
Adds to existing law to provide the Naturopathic Medical Physicians Licensing Act. This law would only allow Naturopaths from a few specific Naturopathic Schools to be licensed as Naturopaths. This number accounts for approximately 20% Naturopathss in Idaho, leaving the other 80% who would then need to warn their clients with a signed statement stating that they are not Naturopaths or leaving them to face misdemeanor charges. This would exclude people that have gained their Naturopathic training elsewhere such as Germany, the birthplace of Naturopathy. Causing Idaho to lose a lot of rich traditions of Naturopathy.SB1121 – PASSED
TOPIC: ELIMINATES PRIVACY; REMOVES CONSENT IN SHARING OF HEALTHCARE DATA.
This law poses a threat to our privacy and rights. Introduced and passed in 2015, allows Immunization Registry sharing of information with the Idaho Health Data Exchange without consent. Opt-out options do not address concerns about previously shared data released to third parties.
SB 1294 – PASSED
TOPIC: VACCINE ADMINISTRATION BY PHARMACISTS: REDUCES LEGAL AGE OF VACCINE ADMINISTRATION TO 6.
This bill allows pharmacists to prescribe and administer vaccines for person 6 years or older. Like all pharmaceutical products, Vaccines may cause reaction in some individuals. Pharmacists do not know patient’s medical history, do not have access to their records, may never see a patient again so are unaware of reactions. Pharmacists have no liability for adverse reactions in the vaccines they administer.
SB 1231 – held over
TOPIC: RELATES TO CHIROPRACTORS: AMENDS EXISTING LAW & ELIMINATES OPPORTUNITIES TO PROVIDE ADVANCED NUTRITION TO PATIENTS.
Amends existing law to revise restrictions on prescribing, dispensing, independently administering, distributing, directing or suggesting to patients certain drugs, substances or products. Prevents chiropractors from administering IV supplements and providing advanced nutrition to their patients.
HB 113 – PASSED
TOPIC: PARENTAL RIGHTS: FURTHER DEFINED AND PROTECTED.
This Bill was introduced and passed into law. It adds to existing law to provide the parental right to direct the care, custody and control of children; to provide the parental right to direct the education of children; to restrict interference with fundamental parental rights and to provide that this act shall not invalidate the Child Protective Act, to authorize a claim, defense and appropriate relief and to provide for attorney’s fees. The original form of this bill was positive for parental rights, however, it passed with amendments that were of concern to parental rights advocacy groups.
Become an educated voter- SIMPLY.
1. Do you know your district? Do you know your legislators?
Easily Check: http://openstates.org/id/legislators/
2. learn about their voting, their sponsers, their promises/commitments:
Health Freedom’s Voter’s Guide
VOTESMART.org
IdahoFreedom.org
Republican Liberty Caucus
Ballotpedia.org

