New Idaho Legislative Committee Aims to Identify Barriers – And Solutions – to Housing Issues

BOISE, ID – The Idaho Legislature’s Interim Land Use and Housing Study Committee began discussing housing inventory, prices, building codes, permitting and zoning at its first meeting held Wednesday at the Idaho State Capitol in Boise.

Sen. Ali Rabe, D-Boise, pushed for the creation of the housing study committee during the recent 2025 legislative session by co-sponsoring Senate Concurrent Resolution 103.

“Housing is one of the most important topics Idahoans across the state recognized as something they want to see addressed,” Rabe said.

The purpose of the committee is to undertake a study of state and local land use regulations and how they impact the housing supply.

In addition to the study, the committee can make recommendations to the Idaho Legislature during the 2026 legislative session.

 

Residents ‘can’t afford a house in our community,’ Star mayor says

 

Committee members did not make any recommendations on Wednesday.
Instead, members received briefings on affordable housing issues in the Gem State.

The committee identified some of the barriers and problems, including high costs of mortgages and rent, a low inventory of housing that doesn’t meet demand, vacation homes and short-term rentals, infrastructure needs like water and sewer, emergency services and more.

Committee may discuss economic incentives, zoning changes or streamlining permits as potential solutions to Idaho’s housing affordability crisis

Without affordable housing available, more Idahoans are living on public lands, living in unsafe spaces that aren’t designed to be homes or moving elsewhere, housing and development experts told the committee Wednesday.

Without getting into specific proposals, committee members began discussing potential solutions to discuss at future meetings, including economic and tax incentives, streamlining approval and permitting processes, zoning or density changes, infrastructure upgrades and the potential use of a local option tax or resort tax to incentivize housing construction.

After adjourning Wednesday, the housing study committee plans to meet three more times around the state before the 2026 legislative session begins in January.

Future meeting dates include June 27 in Idaho Falls, Aug. 14 in Sandpoint and Sept. 26 in Boise.

Members of the Idaho Legislature’s Land Use and Housing Study Committee

 

Sen. Jim Woodward, R-Sagle, committee co-chair

Rep. Jordan Redman, R-Coeur d’Alene, co-chair

Sen. Ben Toews, R-Coeur d’Alene

Sen. Ali Rabe, D-Boise

Rep. Kyle Harris, R-Lewiston

Rep. Todd Achilles, D-Boise

Ad hoc (non legislative) members of the Land Use and Housing Study Committee
Jason Blais, City of Boise

Bobbi Jo Meuleman, Boise Metro Chamber of Commerce

Ken Burgess, Idaho Home N=Builders Association

Max Pond, Idaho REALTORS

Star Mayor Trevor Chadwick, Association of Idaho Cities

Caleb Roope, Pacific Co.

Andy Erstad, American Institute of Architects

Sean Schupack, Idaho Association of General Contractors

Sandpoint Mayor Jeremy Grimm

Jonathan Spendlove, American Planning Association

Jerri Henry, Idaho Department of Environmental Quality

Valley County Commissioner Sherry Maupin, Idaho Association of Counties

Idaho Capital Sun is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Idaho Capital Sun maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Christina Lords for questions: info@idahocapitalsun.com.

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