Floor sponsor: Rep. Jon O. Weber (R-Rexburg) · Referred to Senate Local Gov & Taxation · Do Pass March 19
H 760 amends Idaho Code 63-602GG — a 2002 law that allowed county commissioners to waive property taxes on affordable housing from nonprofit developers. That original law was rarely used because its requirements were too narrow to deploy in practice.
This bill expands the exemption in two key ways: it opens eligibility to for-profit developers who partner with a nonprofit organization, and it standardizes the affordability threshold at 60% of area median income (AMI) — meaning average rents must be affordable to households earning 60% or less of the county's median income. Developers must verify rent compliance annually with the county assessor.
County commissioners retain discretion — they are not required to grant exemptions. The decision stays local.
- Idaho has a documented affordable housing shortage. Tax incentives spur supply without direct state spending.
- The original 2002 law never worked — the nonprofit-only restriction was too narrow. For-profit capital is needed to build at scale.
- County commissioners retain full discretion — no mandate. Local communities decide.
- The 60% AMI requirement is a real affordability standard. Annual rent verification provides accountability.
- Nonprofit partnership requirement preserves a public-interest check on for-profit participation.
- Property tax exemptions shift the burden to other taxpayers — homeowners, small businesses — who make up the difference.
- The fiscal impact was not fully quantified. Rep. John Gannon (D-Boise) voted to print but said he could not support final passage without a concrete cost estimate.
- For-profit developers benefit from public tax relief while retaining profits. The nonprofit partnership requirement is minimal — a structural fig leaf.
- Dominium — a national housing developer — had a lobbyist testify in support. Critics question whether this serves Idaho communities or out-of-state corporate interests.
- 60% AMI is not the lowest end of affordability. In some Idaho counties, households at 60% AMI are not the most housing-insecure residents.
H 760 does not exist in isolation. It is moving through the same legislature that — in the same session — killed HB 659, which would have required Idaho sheriffs to participate in federal ICE immigration enforcement (the 287(g) program). HB 659 died 4-5 in the Senate State Affairs Committee in March 2026. A separate immigration bill, S 1260, passed the Senate 29-6 and is now on the House floor.
The connection matters because of who lives and works in Idaho's affordable housing — and who employs them.
In February 2026 — as immigration enforcement bills were moving through the legislature — the Idaho Dairymen's Association, Idaho Farm Bureau Federation, Idaho Home Builders Association, and commercial developer Ahlquist funded and released a joint economic study arguing that enforcement of immigration law would devastate Idaho's economy. The Idaho Alliance for a Legal Workforce, which represents employers dependent on immigrant labor, backed the report.
Those same industries also opposed E-Verify requirements and other state-level immigration enforcement measures. Idaho Farm Bureau CEO Zak Miller argued that "this is a federal issue" — echoing arguments that helped stall enforcement bills in the legislature.
"We are dependent on an unauthorized workforce," Idaho Dairymen's Association CEO Rick Naerebout told the Idaho Capital Sun.
H 760 — the affordable housing tax exemption — would extend tax breaks for the type of dense, lower-cost housing that is disproportionately occupied by the workforce the same industries say they need. That is a fact. What it means is for Idaho voters to decide.
The bill passed with a bipartisan YES coalition that included most House Democrats and a bloc of moderate Republicans. The NO coalition was anchored by the more conservative House Republicans. Notable: the 28-member NO bloc included several legislators who voted YES on immigration enforcement bills.
YES (39): Alfieri, Berch, Bingham, Bruce, Cannon, Cheatum, Church, Cornilles, Dygert, Egbert, Erickson, Fuhriman, Furniss, Galaviz, Gannon, Garner, Hall, Handy, Haws, Healey, Holtzclaw, Mathias, Mendive, Mickelsen, Miller, Mitchell, Nelsen, Petzke, Pohanka, Raybould, Raymond, Redman, Rubel, Sauter, Shepherd, Shirts, Veile, Weber, Wheeler
NO (28): Barbieri, Beiswenger, Boyle, Burgoyne, Cayler, Crane (12), Crane (13), Ehardt, Ehlers, Harris, Hawkins, Hill, Hostetler, Leavitt, Marmon, Monks, Palmer, Pickett, Price, Rasor, Scott, Skaug, Tanner (13), Tanner (14), Thompson, Vander Woude, Wisniewski, Mr. Speaker