WeVote

Bill

Bill

H 212

An Act to promote employment for people with disabilities

194th Legislature (2025-2026) Introduced by Mike Day

Idaho H 212 raises the petition threshold to form a public library district from 50 signatures to 20% of qualified electors in the district, effective July 1, 2025.

Hearing scheduled for 06/10/2025 from 01:00 PM-05:00 PM in A-1
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · H 212

Summary: Idaho House Bill 212 (H 212) – Public Library Districts

Purpose and scope

H 212 amends Idaho Code § 33-2704 to revise the petitioning process for proposing a public library district. The primary change expands the initial citizen petition requirement to establish a library district from 50 signatures to a percentage-based threshold, and preserves existing petition-verification, notice, and hearing procedures.

Key provisions and changes

  • Signature threshold increased:

    • New requirement: A petition to propose a library district must be signed by not less than 20% of the qualified electors residing within the boundaries of the proposed district.
    • Previously: The petition required at least 50 signatures.
  • Petition content and verification unchanged (with modification anchored by new threshold):

    • Petition must name the proposed district, describe its boundaries (including a map prepared in a draftsmanlike manner), and petition for establishment of the district.
    • At least one qualified elector must verify the petition, stating knowledge that all signatories are qualified electors and that signatures were witnessed.
  • Notice and hearing requirements preserved:

    • County commissioners must set a hearing date no less than 3 weeks and no more than 6 weeks after filing.
    • Notice must be published weekly for two weeks in a general-circulation newspaper within the county, stating the proposed district’s name and boundaries and that residents may appear to be heard on various aspects (form of petition, signature genuineness, legality, etc.).
  • Concurrently notified library bodies:

    • The governing body of any tax-supported library within the proposed boundaries must be notified in writing. If such a library body does not wish to be included, it must submit a resolution to the county commissioners at least one week before the hearing.
  • County commission decision timeline:

    • Within 10 days after the hearing, the county commissioners must issue an order either granting or denying the petition (with or without modification) and fix the district’s boundaries and name.
  • Boundaries become final:

    • The boundaries established in the order will govern the district upon completion of the establishment process.
  • Effective date and emergency status:

    • The act declares an emergency and provides an effective date of July 1, 2025, meaning the new petition standard applies upon that date.

Affected parties and potential impact

  • Proponents and residents within proposed districts:

    • A higher threshold (20% of qualified electors) may require broader local support to initiate district formation, potentially affecting the frequency of new library districts being proposed.
  • Public libraries within proposed boundaries:

    • Libraries within the district area must be notified; libraries may opt out of inclusion by resolution.
  • County clerks and commissioners:

    • They administer the petition process, hearing, and final establishment order under the updated standard.

Fiscal impact

  • Based on the fiscal note accompanying the bill, there is no anticipated change in state or local revenues or expenditures as a result of the act.

Legislative status and timeline

  • Introduced: February 11, 2025
  • Passage and signing: Reported and signed by the Governor on April 2, 2025
  • ** enacted as:** Session Law Chapter 255
  • Effective date: July 1, 2025 (emergency provisions apply accordingly)

This summary reflects the bill as enacted and provides the essential provisions, affected entities, and procedural timelines.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.