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Commissioners narrow property-tax exemptions, approve Old Town Pocatello waiver

Bannock County Board of County Commissioners · May 1, 2026
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Summary

After debate about fairness and government funding, the board authorized exemptions for Olde Town Pocatello and directed staff to identify parcel percentages for partial exemptions on other sites; commissioners signaled denials for some properties and agreed to memorialize allocations on the consent agenda once percentages are provided.

The Bannock County board considered three pending property-tax exemption requests for parcels in Olde Town Pocatello, South 11th/7th Avenue and South 15th Street and gave staff direction to approve limited, parcel-specific exemptions while denying others.

Anita Heimas, Bannock County assessor, reviewed supplemental information provided by nonprofits and forwarded materials to county staff for review. Commissioners discussed the statutory standard for exemption and whether properties that house physicians or receive Medicaid or other government funds should qualify. One commissioner said services that serve pregnant mothers and other vulnerable clients made him wary of denying support, while another argued the board must be fair and follow statutory criteria.

A motion proposed denying the PHT exemption generally but allowing exemptions for portions identified in the legal analysis — including open/common-area percentages and nonprofit-occupied spaces in the South 15th and South 11th districts, and the crisis center and Pocatello Free Clinic on 7th — passed after discussion. Board members asked staff to calculate exact parcel percentages; commissioners agreed to include the percentage breakdowns and memorialize the final decisions in the consent agenda once those figures are supplied.

Commissioners said they want a clearer application process going forward so staff can evaluate public-benefit criteria consistently and avoid the perception of arbitrary outcome; several members asked staff to refine the exemption checklist and provide better documentation for future requests.

Next steps: staff will circulate parcel percentages and proposed exemption language to the assessor and comptroller for inclusion on the consent agenda, and the board intends to adopt the final exemptions after those figures are confirmed.