
Bill Description: House Bill 752 would make it a crime to enter a restroom or changing room designated for the opposite sex in a government-owned building or a place of public accommodation, with certain narrow exceptions.
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NOTE: House Bill 752 deals with single-sex restrooms and changing rooms. It is a replacement for House Bill 606 (2026). House Bill 752 increases the potential incarceration time for a first offense from six months to one year. It also adds two additional exceptions.
Does it promote the breakdown of the traditional family or the deconstruction of societal norms? Examples include promoting or incentivizing degeneracy, violating parental rights, and compromising the innocence of children. Conversely, does it protect or uphold the structure, tenets, and traditional values of Western society?
House Bill 752 would create Section 18-4117, Idaho Code, to criminalize entering a restroom or changing room designated for the opposite sex in a government-owned building or a place of public accommodation, with certain exceptions.
A “place of public accommodation” is defined as “a business, accommodation, refreshment, entertainment, recreation, or transportation facility of any kind, whether licensed or not, whose goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages or accommodations are extended, offered, sold, or otherwise made available to the public.”
The bill would make exceptions under the following circumstances:
A first offense under this law would be a misdemeanor, carrying a penalty of up to one year of imprisonment in the county jail. A second offense within five years would be deemed a felony and carry a penalty of up to five years in state prison.
The bill is designed to protect the privacy and security of people (primarily women) to use single-sex restrooms and changing rooms without being confronted or embarrassed by someone of the opposite sex.
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