Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Innovative Panhandle health boss to retire

Bock
From Staff Reports

Jeanne Bock, who has directed the Panhandle Health District since 2001, will retire this fall after 24 years of public health service in Idaho’s five northern counties.

The Board of Health accepted her retirement notice Thursday and plans to hire her successor by August.

Bock led the health district during a time in which it helped end a decades-old practice of residents discharging household waste directly into Shoshone County’s Canyon Creek. That achievement resulted from a collaborative effort by the health district, the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality, Shoshone County commissioners and Burke Canyon residents, a health district news release said.

She oversaw the creation of Idaho’s only aquifer protection district, proposed to protect drinking water. Also on her watch, the Panhandle Public Health Foundation, now called Project Health, was created with former director Kay Kindig. The foundation raises money to support programs that promote public health, the release said. This year, a benefit bike ride, called Pedalin’ for Project Health, is scheduled for June 5.

Bock is a Coeur d’Alene native who earned her master’s degree in nursing from Whitworth College. She joined the health district in 1986 as a home health nurse in Sandpoint. As director of the health district’s Family and Community Health Division, she was honored by the state in 1996 for her work raising immunization rates.

Bock will leave the district at the end of October.