Julianne Young

Julianne Young is an American politician from Idaho. Young is a Republican member of Idaho House of Representatives from District 31 seat B.

Early life

Young's father is Richard Hill. Young grew up in Moreland, Idaho. At age 7, Young's family moved to Blackfoot, Idaho. Young graduated from Snake River High School.[1][2]

Education

Young earned an associate degree from Rick's College.[1] Young earned a bachelor's degree in Education from Idaho State University.[3]

Career

Young is a former certified teacher who became a home-school educator. Young is a Homemaker.[3][4]

On May 15, 2018, Young won the Idaho Primary election for District 31 seat B. Young defeated incumbent Julie VanOrden with 54.1% of the vote.[5] On November 6, 2018, Young won the election with no opponent and became a Republican member of Idaho House of Representatives for District 31 seat B.[3][6][1]

Young is a member of Environment, Energy, and Technology Committee, Judiciary, Rules, and Administration Committee, and State Affairs Committee.[3]

Personal life

Young's husband is Kevin Young. They have ten children. Young and her family live on a family farm in Blackfoot, Idaho.[3][4]

gollark: I'm sure Google has lots of spare GPU/TPU power. They have some ridiculous GPT-3-scale image/text model in development now, and use BERT-like entities for search parsing.
gollark: I'd think that it would be possible to detect it if you had a lot of samples of it versus real human text. And there was this demo highlighting differences between human and GPTous text, via highlighting low-probability-from-the-model words (which are often also the most important).
gollark: I wonder if Google/search engines generally can detect GPT-3ous content yet.
gollark: That sounds hard, actually.
gollark: What if we generate VAST quantities of novel and interesting content?

References

  1. "Rep. Julianne Young". legislature.idaho.gov. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  2. "Julianne Young". youngforidahohouse.com. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  3. "Representative Julianne Young's Biography". Vote Smart. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  4. Bodkin, Devin (May 23, 2018). "Young Looks Ahead Following Primary Stunner". idahoednews.org. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  5. "May 15, 2018 Primary Election Results". sos.idaho.gov. May 15, 2018. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  6. "November 6, 2018 General Election Results". sos.idaho.gov. November 6, 2018. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
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