Mayor McLean

Mayor McLean

Share

Our Social Media Terms of Use can be found here: http://bit.ly/2KPQSgn

06/08/2026

We are taking bold steps to address climate change with support from youth leaders. The Youth Climate Action Council imagines, strategizes and implements climate action projects with support from city staff. Applications for the 2026–27 term are open on the City of Boise website!

06/05/2026

The Boise Airport has been selected by the Federal Aviation Administration to receive nearly $9 million in federal grants for important infrastructure improvements, supporting two key projects.

The first is a $6 million investment in a new central utility plant that will expand the airport's electrical capacity and support future growth, including the planned Concourse A expansion. This project will also improve energy efficiency and provide more reliable heating and cooling throughout the terminal.

The second grant of $2.88 million will fund new elevators or escalators increase accessibility, improve passenger safety, and enhance the travel experience for everyone who uses our airport.

As Boise continues to grow, we must be intentional about investing in the infrastructure and services that keep our city moving and maintain the quality of life residents enjoy. That means making local dollars go further by pursuing grants, building strong partnerships, and leveraging every available resource to deliver a safe and welcoming city full of opportunity for generations to come.

06/05/2026

We recently opened the Bews Foundation Conservation and Education Center at Zoo Boise! This state-of-the-art space brings more opportunities for guests of all ages to connect with wildlife and support conservation through programs, camps and classes.

06/04/2026

This interactive day includes a Q&A session with leaders and a pitch contest in which teams of young people create dreams and ideas for Boise's continued development. It's also a great opportunity to use the Valley Regional Transit Youth Ride Free program - Main Street Station is just a block away! You can register here: https://www.cityofboise.org/events/city-council/2026/june/teen-town-hall/

06/03/2026

The Wassmuth Center for Human Rights demonstrates what it means to be a city for everyone - I deeply appreciate their commitment to inclusion and education.

For more than a decade, a Pride flag flew outside Boise City Hall. On March 31, Governor Brad Little signed HB 561, banning this flag from government property. Within minutes, the city lowered its flag. A week later, city workers wrapped the building’s three flagpoles — base to banner – in the colors of the Pride flag. Not flown. Wrapped. In full compliance with the letter of the law and full defiance of its spirit.

Pride is the opposite of shame. And shame depends on invisibility to do its work — every euphemism, every law written to make a community disappear. The people who first claimed the word pride for this fight knew that. On June 28, 1969, police raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Greenwich Village. Patrons were supposed to comply quietly, as they always had. This time, they refused. The uprising lasted days. One year later, thousands took to the same streets in the first Pride march. They chose the name because they demanded to be seen.

Fifty-seven years later, the distance between safety and danger remains staggering. The Equaldex Equality Index ranks 197 countries on a scale of 0 to 100, measuring legal protections alongside public attitudes towards LGBTQ+ people. Iceland sits at the top. Marriage equality, adoption rights, and hate crime protections — nearly every safeguard is in place. In a 2024 Gallup survey, 93 percent of Icelanders said their community was a good place for gay and le***an people to live. In 2009, the country elected Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir as prime minister, the world’s first openly gay head of government. Her sexuality was barely a headline. That is what arrival looks like: belonging that requires no announcement. Belonging that welcomes us for who we are.

Somalia, at number 197, is on the other end. Homosexuality is punishable by death. There are no protections of any kind. Equaldex lists no public opinion data; the questions cannot be asked safely. The United States sits at number 33, somewhere in the uneasy middle, where on issue after issue — housing, adoption, gender-affirming care — the entry reads the same way: varies by region. Sometimes law determines opinion. Sometimes culture leads law. But neither moves without someone willing to go first.

Idaho has been here before. In 1994, the Idaho Citizens Alliance placed Proposition 1 on the ballot. The measure would have barred LGBTQ+ people from anti-discrimination protections, restricted library materials, and prohibited schools from affirming that gay and le***an people are normal. It lost by 3,098 votes out of more than 450,000 cast. That margin was razor-thin, but it held. And the energy from that fight did not dissipate. A year later, a coalition of Idahoans came together to build something lasting. In 1996, they founded the Wassmuth Center for Human Rights. The conviction at the Center's core was simple: when exclusion rises, you answer it not just with opposition but with the long work of building a community where everyone belongs.

That work is not finished. HB 561 was written to remove a symbol. But you cannot legislate people out of sight — not in 1994, and not today. This June, the poles on Capitol Boulevard still stand tall, wrapped in every color the law tried to prohibit. They are not decoration. They are a promise that the people in this community will be seen, and safe, and ours to defend.

06/03/2026

The Boise Airport will receive two grants totaling $8.88 million from the Federal Aviation Administration for infrastructure improvements tied to the future development of Concourse A and to help the airport better serve its growing region.

06/02/2026

The Youth Climate Action Council members volunteered their time all school year to run a pilot defensible space volunteer program. Students cleared brush and fuels from homes of neighbors in the foothills while educating about the risks of wildfire. Their dedication to serving Boise is inspiring to see!

Applications for the 2026-27 school year are now open to high school students in Boise here: https://www.cityofboise.org/departments/mayor/youth-climate-action-council/

06/02/2026

A former care facility has been thoughtfully revitalized into a welcoming community designed to provide affordable housing for adults ages 55 and older. I’m proud to support the development of these new homes at Sycamore Commons and honored the city could support through incentives for adaptive reuse in the zoning code and dedicated project management.

06/02/2026

Fairview Park serves so many Boiseans, and it’s been exciting to see it busier than ever thanks to this new playground!

First Thursdays at JUMP — We the People: Becoming American | Event | City of Boise 06/01/2026

Join the City of Boise in celebrating First Thursday and America 250!

We're starting early with First Thursday Under the Tree at Cherie Buckner-Webb Park from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. and then moving along to First Thursday at JUMP from 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. 🇺🇸

First Thursdays at JUMP — We the People: Becoming American | Event | City of Boise Join us for an evening of live storytelling featuring the voices of Americans whose journey to the U.S. started with displacement.Explore Idaho's resettlement history, hear firsthand accounts from storytellers representing Ukraine, Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, and experience...

Want your business to be the top-listed Government Service in Boise?

Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Location

Address


Boise, ID
83701–83799