In re Duran

Decision: In re Barbara Vanessa Duran, Case No. 14-41422-JDP (Bankr. D. Idaho, 26 Jun. 2017)
Judge: Honorable Jim D. Pappas, United States Bankruptcy Judge
Counsel for Debtor: Paul Ross, Idaho Bankruptcy Law, Paul, Idaho
Chapter 7 Trustee: Gary L. Rainsdon, Twin Falls, Idaho
Trustee’s Counsel: David W. Gadd, Worst, Fitzgerald & Stover, PLLC, Twin Falls, Idaho
Special Counsel for Trustee: Jeffrey J. Hepworth, Jeffrey J. Hepworth, P.A. & Associates, Boise, Idaho


Background

Barbara Vanessa Duran was the fifth of ten children of Enrique Duran and Alicia Rodriguez Serna. She was financially dependent on her parents until she moved out of the family home at age 19, approximately 2007.

On 24 January 2013, Duran and her mother were traveling together on Interstate 84 in Elmore County, Idaho, when their vehicle was struck by a semi tractor-trailer owned by DOT Transportation, Inc. and driven by Randolfo H. Gomez. Alicia Rodriguez Serna was killed. Barbara Duran was injured. The Duran family subsequently filed a civil action in state court against Elmore County, DOT Transportation, and Gomez, asserting claims for wrongful death and personal injuries.

On 29 December 2014, Duran filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. The Court authorized the Trustee to employ special counsel to pursue the estate’s interest in the state court litigation. The civil action was eventually settled. Although the settlement documents did not allocate the proceeds between the wrongful death claim and the personal injury claim, the parties stipulated that all of the bankruptcy estate’s portion of the settlement proceeds — $5,013.19 after attorneys’ fees and costs — was attributable to the wrongful death claim. The parties further stipulated that the full amount was reasonably necessary for the support of Duran and her dependents. There was no point in fighting over whether the Debtor could prove the need for $5,000+ in funds.

On her Schedule C, Duran claimed the settlement proceeds exempt under Idaho Code § 11-604(1)(c). The Trustee filed an objection, later superseded by an amended objection, contending that Duran did not qualify for the exemption.


The Trustee’s Objection

The Trustee’s objection turned on a single question of statutory interpretation: whether Duran qualified as a “dependent” of her mother for purposes of Idaho Code § 11-604(1)(c). That provision exempts proceeds of a settlement accruing as a result of “the wrongful death or bodily injury of another individual of whom the individual was or is a dependent.” The parties stipulated that Duran had not been a dependent of her mother — as that term is defined in Idaho Code § 11-601(2) as “an individual who derives support primarily from another individual” — since she left the family home at age 19, approximately six years before her mother’s death.

The Trustee argued through two rounds of briefing that this undisputed gap in dependency was fatal to the exemption claim. Relying on In re Hendrickson, 274 B.R. 138 (Bankr. W.D. Pa. 2002), which had construed an analogous federal exemption under 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(11)(B), the Trustee contended that three possible interpretations existed for the phrase “was or is a dependent”: the debtor must have been a dependent before the decedent’s death, at the time of death, or after the death. The Hendrickson court rejected the first alternative as “too broad and all-encompassing,” concluding that it would lead to absurd results — including allowing a 70-year-old to exempt wrongful death proceeds from the death of a 90-year-old parent despite having been independent for fifty years. The Trustee urged the Court to adopt the same reasoning and require that Duran have been a dependent of her mother at the time of or following her mother’s death. Because Duran conceded she met neither standard, the Trustee argued the exemption should be disallowed.

The Trustee also argued, in the alternative, that even if a petition-date standard governed, the result was the same: Duran was not a dependent of her mother on the date she filed her bankruptcy petition.


The Debtor’s Response

Debtor’s counsel filed both an initial response and a later memorandum in support of the exemption, arguing that the plain language of Idaho Code § 11-604(1)(c) compelled allowance of the claim.

Counsel argued that the statute means exactly what it says: the exemption is available to an individual who “was or is a dependent” of the decedent, with no temporal limitation on when that dependency must have existed. The word “was” is unqualified — nothing in the statute restricts it to dependency at the time of death, near the time of death, or at any particular moment. There was no question that Duran had been a dependent of her mother from birth through age 19, satisfying the “was” prong of the statute on its face.

Counsel further argued that the Hendrickson court’s conclusion that the broad reading produced an “absurd” result was not persuasive under Idaho law. Idaho’s wrongful death statute, Idaho Code § 5-311, permits any heir or personal representative to bring a wrongful death action without requiring dependency on the decedent at the time of death. Construing the parallel exemption statute with the same breadth was therefore not palpably absurd — it was consistent with the legislature’s evident intent to provide broad protection for wrongful death recoveries received by family members. An 80-year-old bringing a wrongful death action for the death of a 110-year-old ancestor under Idaho Code § 5-311 would not be considered an absurd result; the exemption for a former dependent receiving wrongful death proceeds should be treated no differently.

Counsel also distinguished the Trustee’s petition-date argument on structural grounds. Idaho Code § 11-604 is not limited to bankruptcy proceedings. Reading the word “was” as a reference to the bankruptcy filing date would impose a bankruptcy-specific limitation that the legislature did not write into the statute. Moreover, because wrongful death claims are captured under the bankruptcy estate only if they arose before filing under 11 U.S.C. § 541(a), the death will always precede the petition — meaning under the Trustee’s reading, the debtor could never currently be a dependent of a deceased person, rendering the exemption a nullity in every wrongful death case.

Finally, counsel invoked the Idaho Court’s own prior decision in In re Baldwin, 12-40060-JDP (Bankr. D. Idaho 2012), in which the Court had entertained the possibility that a divorced spouse might qualify as a former dependent under § 11-604(1)(c), and had not confined “was a dependent” to the time of the bodily injury.


The Court’s Ruling

Judge Pappas overruled the Trustee’s amended objection and allowed the exemption in full.

The Court began with the governing principles of Idaho statutory construction: the plain meaning of a statute controls, exemption statutes are to be liberally construed in favor of the debtor, and courts must give effect to all words of a statute rather than render any term superfluous. Beginning with the text of Idaho Code § 11-604(1)(c), the Court noted that the phrase “was or is a dependent” is not grammatically linked to any particular point in time. The use of both past and present tense reflects the legislature’s intent to cover both former and current dependents — nothing in the text restricts “was” to dependency at or near the time of the decedent’s death.

The Court drew on its own earlier decision in In re Baldwin, which had considered whether the past-tense “was” might be linked grammatically only to the wrongful death prong of the statute — i.e., applicable only when the injured person has died. The Court had declined to read that limitation into the statute in Baldwin, and declined to do so again here. Inserting punctuation or structural limitations that the legislature did not include would be judicial rewriting, not statutory interpretation.

The parties had stipulated that Duran was a dependent of her mother from birth until age 19. That was sufficient. The statute does not require that the dependency be recent, ongoing, or proximate in time to the decedent’s death. The Court acknowledged the Trustee’s concern that this reading might produce unfair results in extreme cases — such as a decades-removed former dependent claiming a windfall exemption — but observed that this was a question of legislative policy, not statutory interpretation. No contrary legislative purpose had been shown. And because the debtor must still demonstrate that the settlement funds are reasonably necessary for support — a requirement the parties had stipulated was met here — allowing a former dependent to claim the exemption cannot be characterized as an absurd result.

A separate order was entered the same day overruling the Trustee’s amended objection and allowing Debtor’s exemption claim in full.


Why This Matters

  1. “Was or is a dependent” in Idaho Code § 11-604(1)(c) includes former dependents without temporal limitation. The Court’s holding is clear: a debtor who was ever a dependent of the decedent satisfies the dependency requirement of the exemption, regardless of how long ago that dependency existed. Idaho practitioners advising debtors with wrongful death claims should be aware that a childhood dependency relationship — even one that ended years or decades before the decedent’s death — is sufficient to invoke the exemption.

  2. Courts will not judicially insert temporal limitations the legislature did not write. Both the Trustee and the Court acknowledged that the broad reading might produce results that feel inequitable in extreme cases. The Court nevertheless refused to rewrite the statute. Where the Idaho legislature intended to impose a time-of-death dependency requirement, it knew how to do so — and it did not do so here. Practitioners should not assume that policy-based arguments about unintended windfalls will overcome unambiguous statutory text.

  3. The “reasonably necessary for support” requirement remains a meaningful check. The exemption under Idaho Code § 11-604(1)(c) is not unlimited. Even a qualifying former dependent must demonstrate that the settlement proceeds are reasonably necessary for the support of the debtor and dependents. In this case, the parties stipulated to that fact. Where facts are less favorable, the Trustee retains the ability to contest the support element even if dependency is conceded.

  4. Idaho’s wrongful death statute informs the scope of the parallel exemption. Counsel’s argument that Idaho Code § 5-311 permits any heir to bring a wrongful death action without proof of current dependency resonated with the Court’s broad reading of the exemption. Practitioners constructing arguments under Idaho Code § 11-604(1)(c) should consider the parallel scope of the underlying wrongful death statute when framing the legislative-intent analysis.

  5. A petition-date dependency standard would render the wrongful death exemption a nullity. Debtor’s counsel identified a decisive structural flaw in the Trustee’s petition-date argument: because a wrongful death claim only enters the bankruptcy estate if the death preceded the filing, the decedent will always already be dead by petition day — meaning the debtor can never currently be a dependent of the deceased person. Reading “is” out of the analysis and confining “was” to the petition date would effectively eliminate the wrongful death prong of the exemption entirely, producing an absurd result that courts must avoid.



Full Decision: Available on PACER, Case No. 14-41422-JDP, Doc. 78 (Bankr. D. Idaho 26 Jun. 2017)

2023 Inaugural Dinner

Standing (l-r) Scott & Sarah Erekson, Jolene Maloney, Anne Taylor, Teresa Molitor; Seated: Trish and Tony Geddes, Amanda and Paul Ross

This is an election year. All our Idaho Constitutional Officers are up for election again. I hope some great candidates will step forward to run.

Amanda and I were fortunate to attend the Inaugural Dinner in January 2023. Many who were working on the new Idaho State Public Defender legislation were invited to attend. It was an honor.

We also walked up to the Capitol afterward for some of the festivities there.

What will the inauguration in January 2027 look like?

Amanda and Paul Ross in the Idaho State Capitol – Boise, Idaho

Extra points for those who recognize my lapel pin…

Burley Idaho Temple Open House

The Burley Idaho Temple Open House ran 3 November 2025 to 22 November 2025. It was an amazing opportunity to invite the local and broader community to walk through a pinnacle of our worship. I attended 5 of the much more individual and personal tours on the 3rd through 5th with public leaders and distinguished guests. I wish everyone could attend these tours, which would often take 45 minutes to 60 minutes for the full tour. Some of these were guided by General Authorities, including Elders Steven R. Bangerter, Karl D. Hirst, and K. Brett Nattress.

On Thursday, the general public was welcome to attend open tours. Our first tour tried to do a small introduction in each room, but about half-way through that was abandoned to keep the lines moving. Every tour I attended afterward did not have any attempted presentations, other than to remind individuals to not take photos and to speak softly.

Amanda sneaked over and caught a personal tour on the 6th.

6 November 2025 – Amanda Ross attended individually

Amanda and I took our family on Friday 7 November 2025.

Saturday morning we attended with some friends. This was my 7th tour that first week!

8 November 2025 – Bud and Karen Marie Whiting, Amanda Ross, James Ross, Aliza Ross, Lea Pierucci Izama, Audra Hales, Aleah Hales, Anson Hales, Brad Hales, Paul Ross

The next weekend, Amanda had a bunch of family come to town and also attend. This Friday night was my 4th tour of the second week.

14 November 2025 – Hiram Ross, Amanda Ross, Lillian Ross, Rowan Hemsley, Margo Hemsley, Bryan Hemsley, Olivia Hemsley, Jill Hemsley, Jack Hemsley, James Ross, Paul Ross, Aliza Ross, Jordan Hemsley, Derek Hemsley

I also got to attend some more times the third week. But my 4th tour in the third week was with my sister and brother-in-law.

22 November 2025 – Paul Ross, Andra and Wes Herbst

That makes 15 trips through the temple for the open house. I was also privileged to do temple security on 5 different occasions, all for the 9:00 PM to 1:00 AM shift. Here are some photos from that opportunity.

4 November 2025
4 November 2025
5 November 2025 – Paul Ross and Kevin Mower for the graveyard shift
10 November 2025 – Paul Ross and Tyson Smith for the graveyard shift

Amanda also got to do a security shift, parking shift, and foot covering (booty) shift.

12 November 2025 – Amanda Ross Parking Shift
12 November 2025 – Amanda Ross Security Shift

Some of the late night security shifts were great opportunities to reflect on the blessings we are now achieving with the ease and access of a temple so close.

When I received my first temple recommend for my own endowment, Paul Idaho Stake President, M. Gene Hansen, invited me to make a commitment to attend the temple every month at a minimum. I took that commitment. I agreed.

In Hazelton, Idaho, it took me roughly 2 1/4 hours to get to the Boise Idaho Temple (speed limits have increased since then); Idaho Falls Idaho Temple was just under 2 hours; Logan Utah Temple was about 2 1/2 hours, and Ogden Utah Temple was 2 1/2 hours. I was endowed in Logan in September 1998 with my Dad. I attended Logan and Boise before going on the mission. But it was at least half a day planning to attend the temple before the mission.

Within the Manchester England Mission is found the Preston England Temple. Attending the temple in the mission required coordination with members as the temple isn’t near public transportation and we relied on members to take us. We could only go on Preparation Day, which was Tuesday. That took some work, but I was able to attend every month of the mission (except for some months where some missionaries had abused the privilege and all missionaries lost temple attendance options for three months). Getting to the temple was within 1 hour for every area in which I served.

I lived in Branson Missouri for a couple of years. Our closest temple for Branson was the St. Louis Missouri Temple. That drive was at least 4 hours one way, often 4 1/2 hours. That required an entire day to be set aside and planned to drive, attend, and return home. Never missed a month in Branson. I sealed my Jonas grandparents together in St. Louis Missouri Temple. The Bentonville Arkansas Temple has been constructed much closer at about 2 hours. The Springfield Missouri Temple will be less than an hour away from Branson.

Amanda and I lived in Richmond Virginia for a couple of years. Our closest temple for Richmond was the Washington D.C. Temple. That drive was between 4 and 5 hours away, depending on beltway traffic. We would often go up and spend Friday night with family, attend the temple that night or in the morning, and then make our way back home. Washington D.C. Temple was closed for a bit, so to make the monthly trip, we had to go to the Raleigh North Carolina Temple. That was almost a 4 hour drive one direction. The new Richmond Virginia Temple is just outside the first neighborhood we lived in and within 10 minutes of the second neighborhood we lived.

When we moved back to Idaho, the Twin Falls Idaho Temple had been dedicated. That dropped the 2 to 2 1/2 hour drive time for all those temples to less than an hour, usually between 50-60 minutes. But it still takes time and planning to ensure I get there every month. This is double now that we also have a commitment to see that Aliza and Hiram are able to attend at least monthly.

Now, with the dedication of the Burley Idaho Temple in January, the temple will be between 5 to 6 minutes away.

Now I have to reevaluate. It seems the once a month commitment is not enough. I think that will remain the absolute minimum going forward for the rest of my life. It also seems I have no reason to not attend to at least one ordinance in the temple at least every week.

To show my gratitude to our Father and our Savior, I intend to attend the Burley Idaho Temple at least daily for the first 30 days it is open after dedication. Which isn’t as much as it seems if you consider it is not open on Sunday, Monday, or Thursday. Still working out what happens after the first 30 days.

For the last three weeks I have found myself regularly humming The Spirit of God and also muttering the Hosanna Shout under my breath. I am looking forward to the dedication of the Burley Idaho Temple on 11 January 2026!

Riverton Classical Academy moves forward with partnerships

William Andra Ordinations

Working through the family history book of Golden Andra that was given to me, I opened a page to scan some photos and found a surprise. Behind that photo were some ordination certificates. These are originals. I thought I better get them scanned and preserved. I also uploaded them to FamilySearch and got them linked with the names in the documents.

I think they are valuable for family history. They are also a peek into church history. This gives us the missionaries who baptized and confirmed my Great Grandfather in Germany. I have provided some limited biographies at the end.

Also an original Notification of Birth Registration for Robert Lee Andra, son of William and Mary, who died at birth. I am not sure why the United States Department of Commerce is issuing this Notification, or the Bureau of the Census. There is some history behind this I am not aware. Last, a copy of William’s obituary.

Priest Ordination Certificate (Front)
Priest Ordination Certificate (Back)
Elder Ordination Certificate (Front)
Elder Ordination Certificate (Back)
High Priest Ordination Certificate (Front)
High Priest Ordination Certificate (Back)
Robert Andra Birth Certificate

I had to do some history on individuals listed on the certificates. Some fascinating individuals, obviously some of them local church leaders.

James Richard Bodily – born 11 February 1872 in Hyde Park, Cache, Utah – died 12 April 1967 in Preston, Franklin, Idaho

Wilford Woodruff Emery – born 16 October 1880 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah – died 10 September 1954 in Salt Lake City.

John Edward Hanks – born 30 August 1877 in Salem, Utah, Utah – died 5 July 1970 in Salt Lake City.

William Gibson Palmer – born 16 July 1884 in Croydon, Morgan, Utah – died 15 May 1977 in Preston.

Henry Helaman Rawlings – born 8 April 1893 in Fairview, Oneida, Idaho – died 14 February 1984 in Fairview.

Adelbert Augustine Taylor – born 9 April 1883 in Springerville, Apache, Arizona – died 15 November 1948 in San Felipe de Híjar, San Sebastián del Oeste, Jalisco, Mexico.

Luther Hovey Twitchell – born 17 October 1878 in Salt Lake City – died 15 April 1962 in Bountiful, Davis, Utah.

Europe Trip – June 4-5

We have arrived in Belgium!  What a relief.  I cannot tell you.

British countryside flying to Heathrow

We flew out from the Boise airport.  We were fortunate to catch a non-stop flight, from Los Angeles!!  Boy, if there is anything near torture, try flying through the night in a very cramped space.  After 9.5 hours on the plane, we landed at London Heathrow.  We found our way through the Underground to Kings Cross Station. 

Excited to land and look for a pasty

Amanda went and found Platform 9 & 3/4 at Kings Cross Station of Harry Potter fame and took a few pictures.  We waited, checked in for Eurostar at St. Pancras Station, and enjoyed a Cornish Pasty.  A first for Amanda, a beloved memory for me.

We climbed aboard the Eurostar which treated us to a trip through the Chunnel.  France proved to have beautiful scenery.  We got off at Lille, France and switched trains. 

Lille, France, walking from one train station to another

We rode to Kortrijk, Belgium.  James met us at the station and now we are in our digs at Oostrozebeke, Belgium.

Funny thing, we knew we needed to get to Kortrijk but we forgot to bring James & Catherine’s phone number and address.  Meaning, when we arrived, we were totally at their mercy.  We couldn’t catch a taxi to their home, and we could not call them.  It is sure a good thing James showed up with his Toyota.

We find ourselves babysitting while James & Catherine are off to Branch Council.  We put the kids to bed in 15 minutes, took a shower, and crashed ourselves!  We are exhausted.

Aliza and Hiram at the Temple

I am afraid the Ross household are temple tourists. Anyone who knows me knows that I have a couple of quirks. One of which, I like to drive by temples. The more distant a location, the greater likelihood I will plan visiting a temple. Even if it is just to drive past and snap a picture. Now that my children are old enough to attend the temple, my unwritten goal is to attend various temples. In visiting with Aliza and Hiram, they have not been keeping much of a record. Here I am, trying to re-create a list of temples they both have attended 2022 to present. I can cheat because we often take a picture while there.

Aliza could start attending the temple in January 2022. We did not have any goals for attendance, usually just whenever our Burley 11 Ward would go to the temple.

12 February 2022 – Twin Falls Idaho Temple
6 March 2022 – Twin Falls Idaho Temple
16 April 2022 – Pocatello Idaho Temple – Bill Teal, Mary Lou Teal, Amanda Ross, Aliza Ross, Paul Ross, Eliza Hales, Brad Hales, Aleah Hales
14 May 2022 – Logan Utah Temple – Paul and Aliza Ross with Aleah, Brad, and Eliza Hales
31 December 2022 – Brigham City Utah Temple – Paul Ross, Aleah Hales, Eliza Hales, Brad Hales, Aliza Ross, Amanda Ross
28 April 2023 – Ogden Utah Temple
27 May 2023 – Bountiful Utah Temple – Paul and Aliza Ross, Brad, Aleah, and Eliza Hales, Marianne Christensen
19 August 2023 – Twin Falls Idaho Temple – Paul Ross, Brad Hales, Aliza Ross, Aleah Hales, Eliza Hales

Hiram could start attending the temple in January 2024. That year the Burley 8 Ward (we moved houses) asked that we set a goal of attending monthly in 2024. We fulfilled that goal.

12 January 2024 – Pocatello Idaho Temple – Amanda, Aliza, Milo, Hiram, and Paul Ross

17 February 2024 – Twin Falls Temple – Burley 8 Ward Temple Trip

8 March 2024 – Bountiful Utah Temple – Bryan Hemsley, Amanda Ross, Aliza Ross, Jill Hemsley, Hiram Ross, Paul Ross
27 March 2024 – Vernal Utah Temple

5 April 2024 – Twin Falls Idaho Temple – Burley 8 Ward Temple Trip

17 May 2024 – Ogden Utah Temple
5 July 2024 – Oquirrh Mountain Utah Temple
17 August 2024 – Logan Utah Temple
23 August 2024 – Meridian Idaho Temple – Aliza only
22 September 2024 – Layton Utah Temple – Amanda Ross, Aliza Ross, Hiram Ross, Brad Hales, Aleah Hales, Elise Hales, Rachel Hales, Eliza Hales, Paul Ross

Funny story, Layton was the first time I actually took a dead person to the temple. My Great Aunt June Streeter Stout. Ask me for the story.

4 October 2024 – Boise Idaho Temple

9 November 2024 – Twin Falls Temple – Burley 8 Ward Temple Trip

28 December 2024 – Bountiful Utah Temple – Burley 8 Ward Temple Trip

The Ward did not ask us to continue the monthly attendance for 2025, but as a family we have continued the monthly attendance goal.

4 January 2025 – Meridian Idaho Temple

1 February 2025 – Twin Falls Temple

26 March 2025 – Newport Beach California Temple
19 April 2025 – Pocatello Idaho Temple – Brad Hales, Janet Hales, Eliza Hales, Aliza Ross, Aleah Hales, Elise Hales, Paul Ross, Hiram Ross
19 April 2025 – Idaho Falls Idaho Temple
16 May 2025 – Brigham City Utah Temple
17 June 2025 – Twin Falls Idaho Temple
6 July 2025 – Twin Falls Idaho Temple – Derek Hemsley, Paul Ross, Hiram Ross, Aliza Ross, Olivia Hemsley
16 August 2025 – Logan Utah Temple – Paul, Aliza, and Hiram Ross
6 September 2025 – Twin Falls Temple – Paul, Aliza, and Hiram Ross
24 October 2025 – Twin Falls Temple – Paul, Aliza, and Hiram Ross
29 November 2025 – Orem Utah Temple – Paul Ross, Hiram Ross, Derek Hemsley, Olivia Hemsley, Jill Hemsley, Aliza Ross
19 December 2025 – Syracuse Utah Temple – Paul, Aliza, and Hiram Ross

In addition to attending the temple for ordinances for 2024-2025, we also attended some temple open houses.

26 May 2023 – Saratoga Springs Utah Temple – Front (l-r): Jordan Hemsley, Hiram Ross, Jill Hemsley; Standing: Amanda Ross, Aliza Ross, Rowan Hemsley, Derek Hemsley, Olivia Hemsley, Lillian Ross, Paul Ross, James Ross, Jack Hemsley, Bryan Hemsley
6 August 2023 – Moses Lake Washington Temple
3 November 2023 – St George Utah Temple
23 March 2024 – Manti Utah Temple – Amanda, Paul, Hiram, James, Lillie, and Aliza Ross with Jill Hemsley
17 May 2024 – Layton Utah Temple – Lillian Ross, Paul Ross, Amanda Ross, Aliza Ross, Bryan Hemsley, Jill Hemsley, James Ross, Hiram Ross
18 May 2024 – Taylorsville Utah Temple – Bryan Hemsley, James Ross, Jill Hemsley, Aliza Ross, Lillian Ross, Hiram Ross, Amanda Ross, Paul Ross
11 October 2024 – Deseret Peak Utah Temple – Paul Ross, James Ross, Amanda Ross, Hiram Ross, Aliza Ross, Jill Hemsley, Lillie Ross, Bryan Hemsley, Shanna Thompson
16 May 2025 – Syracuse Utah Temple
30 August 2025 – Elko Nevada Temple – Brad and Rachel Hales Family with Ross Family with Lea Pierucci Izama (exchange student from Germany, staying with Hales family)
8 November 2025 – Burley Idaho Temple, Amanda Ross, Brad Hales, Anson Hales, Aleah Hales, James Ross (front), Lea Pierucci Izama (back), Paul Ross, Audra Hales, Aliza Ross

This was a fun visit. Some of the kids commented about where under the temple, in the foundations, might their rocks be found? We all submitted rocks with thoughts and our names on them that were placed before the foundations were poured.

14 November 2025 – Burley Idaho Temple – Hiram Ross, Amanda Ross, Lillie Ross, Rowan Hemsley (arm around), Margo Hemsley, Bryan Hemsley, Olivia Hemsley, Jill Hemsley, Jack Hemsley, James Ross, Paul Ross, Aliza Ross, Jordan Hemsley, Derek Hemsley

And other drive by shootings related to temples in 2022-2025.

4 June 2022Burley Idaho Temple Groundbreaking
6 August 2023 – Columbia River Washington Temple
28 August 2023 – Los Angeles California Temple
1 September 2023 – San Diego California Temple
26 March 2025 – Los Angeles California Temple
29 March 2025 – Oakland California Temple
29 November 2025 – Provo City Utah Temple – Paul, Aliza, and Hiram Ross with Jill Hemsley
23 December 2025 – Laie Hawaii Temple – Amanda and Paul Ross

This is only a record of attending the temple for Aliza and Hiram. Many know I have had my own personal goal for monthly attending the temple from September 1998 to the present.