SUPPORT

SB 1318 — Refugee Resettlement Audit & Transparency Act

Shining Light on Refugee Resettlement Impacts in Idaho

✅ Requires annual audits of refugee resettlement services provided by Idaho-incorporated entities
✅ Reports how many refugees are served, where they are housed, and which communities are impacted
✅ Discloses housing unit usage tied to refugee resettlement

✅ Tracks language remediation outcomes and public health indicators
✅ Prohibits resettlement entities from aiding illegal aliens
✅ Provides the Legislature with data needed for informed policy decisions

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Sponsored by Sen. Brian Lenny

Awaiting hearing with Senate State Affairs

Bill Summary

SB 1318 establishes a statewide transparency requirement for refugee resettlement services operating in Idaho. Any Idaho-incorporated entity providing federally funded refugee resettlement services must submit an annual audit to the Legislature detailing the scope, location, and outcomes of those services.

The required audit includes the number of refugees served, demographic and language data, participation in language remediation programs, housing utilization, geographic distribution across counties and municipalities, and relevant public health statistics. The bill also prohibits resettlement entities from aiding illegal aliens and requires disclosure if such assistance has occurred.

This measure does not regulate refugee admissions or create new enforcement authority. Instead, it ensures Idaho lawmakers and the public have accurate, consistent information about the real-world impacts of refugee resettlement within the state.

Impact & Limitations

SB 1318 improves legislative oversight and public transparency around refugee resettlement activities. By standardizing reporting requirements, it equips policymakers with reliable data to evaluate community impacts, housing pressures, and program effectiveness.

The bill does not impose penalties, funding restrictions, or enforcement mechanisms. It does not alter federal refugee policy or directly address costs, labor impacts, or local government capacity. Its effect is informational rather than corrective.

Position

Secure Idaho supports SB 1318.

SB 1318 is a responsible transparency and accountability measure. Idaho cannot make sound immigration or resettlement policy decisions without accurate data. This bill brings clarity to a system that has largely operated without state-level visibility, while respecting constitutional boundaries and avoiding bureaucratic expansion.

SB 1318 is not a comprehensive solution but it is a necessary first step toward informed, accountable policymaking.

SB 1318 — Refugee Resettlement Audit

AN ACT
RELATING TO THE AUDIT OF REFUGEE RESETTLEMENT; AMENDING CHAPTER 4, TITLE 67, IDAHO CODE, BY THE ADDITION OF A NEW SECTION 67-467, IDAHO CODE, TO ESTABLISH PROVISIONS REGARDING AN AUDIT OF THE RESETTLEMENT OF REFUGEES; AND DECLARING AN EMERGENCY AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.

Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Idaho:

SECTION 1. That Chapter 4, Title 67, Idaho Code, be, and the same is hereby amended by the addition thereto of a NEW SECTION, to be known and designated as Section 67-467, Idaho Code, and to read as follows:

67-467. AUDIT OF REFUGEE RESETTLEMENT.

(1) As used in this section:

(a) “Entity” means any corporation and foreign corporation; business corporation and foreign business corporation; for-profit and nonprofit unincorporated association; corporation sole; business trust, estate, partnership, trust, and two (2) or more persons having a joint or common economic interest; and state, the United States, and foreign government.

(b) “Illegal alien” means a person who has overstayed the person’s visa or entered the United States without authorization irrespective of any temporary status the person may have been granted by the department of homeland security allowing the person to be present in the United States.

(c) “Refugee” means any person who is outside any country of such person’s nationality or, in the case of a person having no nationality, is outside any country in which such person last habitually resided, and who is unable or unwilling to return to, and is unable or unwilling to avail himself of the protection of, that country because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.

(d) “Resettlement services” means any service provided by an entity that entered into a grant, contract, or cooperative agreement with the United States department of state or other appropriate federal agency to provide for the reception and initial placement of refugees in the United States.

(2) Any entity incorporated under the laws of the state of Idaho providing resettlement services for refugees shall provide the legislature an annual audit of such services in accordance with the provisions of sections 67-466 and 67-705, Idaho Code.

(3) Such audit shall detail the following:

(a) The total number of refugees served;

(b) The nationality and gender of refugees served;

(c) The language abilities of refugees served;

(d) The successful rate of participation in language remediation programming for refugees served;

(e) The counties and municipalities where refugees served are housed;

(f) The housing units taken by refugees served; and

(g) The vital statistics, including the rates of communicable disease, among refugees served.

(4) Any entity incorporated under the laws of the state of Idaho providing resettlement services for refugees is prohibited from aiding illegal aliens or released aliens awaiting removal.

(5) Any entity providing refugee resettlement services that has provided assistance to illegal aliens shall account for the names and identifying demographics of such aliens for the purposes of providing a catalog of names that may be matched against federal immigration databases at the department of homeland security, department of health and human services, and department of state.

SECTION 2. An emergency existing therefor, which emergency is hereby declared to exist, this act shall be in full force and effect on and after July 1, 2026.

How Secure Idaho Scored this Bill

We created a scorecard to quickly show how well each bill protects Idaho's sovereignty, jobs, families, limited government, and the freedom of Idaho citizens -priorities that match what 80% of Idahoans tell us in surveys: unchecked immigration threatens our resources, wages, and values. Yet, special interests like BigAg and the Idaho Association of Commerce & Industry (IACI) often block enforcement to prioritize cheap labor over voter priorities. Our scoring flips this by building pressure through data, tracking, and county-level mobilization ahead of the 2026 session. Here's the basic system in plain English:

1) Category Criteria and Scores: Alignment with Secure Idaho's Vision

We evaluate bills against 9 key categories that embody Idaho's core values: State Sovereignty (securing independence from federal encroachment), State Culture (protecting moral values and community cohesion), Constitutional Principles (upholding separation of powers), Government Accountability (ensuring transparency), Government Size (limiting government), Government Efficiency (fighting waste), Family Success (prioritizing families), Small Business Success (supporting the American Dream), and Individual Liberty (safeguarding personal freedoms).

For each category, we ask targeted sub-questions based on bill text, data, and potential impacts:

  • Does it strengthen/enhance/improve the goal? → +1 point

  • Does it diminish/undermine/hurt the goal? → -1 point

  • Neutral or no effect? → 0 points

We average the sub-questions per category (equal weighting), then sum the 9 averages for an Overall Raw score (-9 to +9). This is converted to a 0–100 Secure Idaho Alignment Score: (Raw + 9) ÷ 18 × 100. Higher scores mean stronger alignment with protecting Idaho from unchecked immigration strains.

2) Impact Rating: The 5 Levels of Real-World Effect

Beyond alignment, we rate the bill's potential impact on a 1–5 scale, considering scope (statewide vs. limited), enforcement (penalties vs. voluntary), projected effects (e.g., reducing job/housing/welfare strains per data), blockability (vulnerable to BigAg amendments/exemptions), and precedent.

  • 1: Symbolic/Minimal (e.g., resolutions, studies - no enforcement; limited to one program/county; no teeth; easily blocked; minimal precedent). Low pressure on special interests.

  • 2: Narrow/Limited (e.g., one-sector restrictions; easy exemptions; voluntary compliance; some data tracking but weak follow-through; moderate block risk). Incremental but not transformative.

  • 3: Moderate (e.g., partial mandates with penalties; metrics for review; affects multiple sectors but with gaps; builds some precedent; medium risk of weakening). Builds momentum for county mobilization.

  • 4: Significant (e.g., statewide mandates with real penalties; direct protections for jobs/resources; hard to exempt; strong data-driven effects; counters BigAg influence). High advocacy value.

  • 5: Transformative (e.g., full E-Verify/sanctuary bans; blocks federal/H-2A overreach systemically; robust enforcement; statewide scope; sets major precedent for 2026 flips). Game-changer for sovereignty.

This rating ensures we prioritize bills with teeth over feel-good measures.

3) Bill Tier: How Alignment + Impact Determine Priority and Legislator Impact

We combine the Alignment Score (0–100) and Impact Rating (1–5) to assign a Tier (1–3), which sets a multiplier for how much the bill affects legislator scores on our dashboard. Higher alignment + higher impact = higher tier. For example: Strong alignment (80+) with transformative impact (5) might earn Tier 1; moderate alignment (50–69) with narrow impact (2) might be Tier 3.

  • Tier 1 (Multiplier: 4x – High Impact): Top priority—strong alignment, significant/transformative effects. These bills (e.g., mandatory E-Verify) heavily influence legislator scores; supporting them boosts a rep's grade, while blocking tanks it. We rally hard (petitions, rallies, county task force posts).

  • Tier 2 (Multiplier: 2.5x – Medium Impact): Solid alignment, moderate/significant effects. Worth backing but monitored for amendments (e.g., sanctuary bans). Medium weight on scores—encourages flips without overwhelming.

  • Tier 3 (Multiplier: 1.5x – Limited Impact): Weaker alignment or lower impact (e.g., studies or partial restrictions). Low weight on legislator scores—doesn't make or break a grade but tracks patterns (e.g., repeated BigAg ties). We watch/expose rather than lead advocacy.

  • Tier 4 (1x multiplier – Minimal Impact): Low alignment + symbolic/narrow impact. Mostly feel-good or toothless measures that don’t meaningfully protect Idahoans from immigration strains. Minimal or no weight on legislator scores - we note them for patterns but focus energy elsewhere (e.g., stronger bills).

Why tiers matter: They ensure high-stakes bills count more toward legislator accountability. A vote on a Tier 1 bill could swing a score by 40–80 points; Tier 3 by just 15–30. This pressures reps to prioritize voter demands over lobby donors (see our Follow the Money dashboard for BigAg PAC ties).

SB 1318 scores 66 because it is a transparency and accountability measure rather than a direct enforcement bill. The legislation requires Idaho-incorporated refugee resettlement entities to submit annual audits to the Legislature detailing the scope, location, and outcomes of refugee resettlement activity within the state. Required disclosures include the number of refugees served, demographic and language data, housing utilization, geographic distribution across counties and municipalities, and selected public health indicators. This reporting provides lawmakers with a clearer and more consistent picture of how federally directed refugee resettlement programs affect Idaho communities, housing markets, and local resources - areas where reliable statewide data has historically been fragmented or unavailable.

While SB 1318 does not alter federal refugee admissions, expand state immigration enforcement authority, or impose penalties for program outcomes, it meaningfully improves legislative oversight by conditioning participation in resettlement activity on recurring disclosure. The bill also prohibits Idaho-incorporated resettlement entities from aiding illegal aliens and requires accounting if such assistance has occurred, reinforcing baseline compliance expectations without creating new enforcement mechanisms.

SB 1318 relies on self-reported audit data and includes no verification regime, funding consequences, or automatic policy triggers, which limits its immediate behavioral or fiscal impact. However, by mandating annual reporting to the Legislature and standardizing previously opaque information, the bill establishes a factual baseline for evaluating community impacts, housing pressures, and long-term resource planning associated with refugee resettlement. Although it does not itself reduce illegal settlement or federal cost-shifting, SB 1318 strengthens transparency and accountability in an area where state policymakers have historically been asked to govern without data. As such, it represents a modest but necessary step toward informed oversight, even as it falls short of the enforcement tools required for structural immigration reform.

Impact Rating = 2 (2: Narrow/limited scope (e.g., one-sector reporting, easy exemptions). Tier = 3 (2.5x multiplier).

Want the full breakdown? Scroll down for the category table (every sub-question, score, average), impact notes, and tier rationale.