Here is the latest Idaho news from The Associated Press at 9:40 p.m. MST


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BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Two Idaho Department of Corrections inmates who walked away from the South Boise Women’s Correctional Center early Wednesday evening are back in custody. KBOI reports Kesha Kandler and Whitney Wickwire went missing just after 5:30 p.m. The Ada County Sheriff's Office found the women at about 9 p.m.

SEATTLE (AP) — British Columbia's government has announced it will no longer allow timber sales in the Skagit River's headwaters. The Seattle Times reports the decision could intensify pressure over a Canadian company's pending permit to start exploratory mining in the area, which conservationists see as a bigger threat to the river's ecology. Loggers last year built roads and clear-cut several large swaths of forest in the headwaters, which drain into the Skagit River and eventually flow through Washington state to Puget Sound. Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan wrote to B.C. officials with “grave concern” about water quality and environmental degradation.

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Idaho Gov. Brad Little says he's cut or simplified 75% of Idaho's administrative rules and made Idaho the least-regulated state in the U.S. Little said Wednesday that he's eliminated more than 30,000 restrictions and some 1,800 pages of regulations this year. State officials say they base the state's least-regulated status on information collected by George Mason University. The Republican governor had sweeping authority this year to eliminate thousands of rules after state lawmakers fought over the administrative rules process and failed to renew them before adjourning in April. Little says the cuts to regulations won't make Idahoans less safe.

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — The Democratic minority leader in the Idaho House announced that he is resigning and joining the Boise Metro Chamber of Commerce as vice president of government relations. Lawmaker Mat Erpelding was an articulate spokesman for his party and found areas where he could work with Republicans. However, he did not shy from confrontations. Democrats will offer three possible replacements for Republican Gov. Brad Little to choose from to serve the rest of Erpelding's term in the next legislative session that begins in January. He is resigning effective Friday,

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