
Magic Valley golfers have long enjoyed the convenient and affordable Twin Falls Municipal Golf Course. Though the city maintains the course, upgrades and amenities are funded through donations to TFCF, including an annual golf tournament. Donations are accepted for course maintenance, too.
A Twin Falls resident set out to honor her late husband, a firefighter, by building a needed engine house for the Jackpot Fire Department. She entrusted TFCF to provide financial management and controls for the challenging
$508,000 project.
Passionate about urban trails, a citizens group became the Magic Valley Trails Enhancement Committee (MaVTEC). The results of the group’s 16-year effort are the 6+ mile paved Canyon Rim Trail from N. Washington to Shoshone Falls and the Viki LeFevre Mountain Bike Skills Park. Donations are accepted for trail maintenance.
A simple update of a 1970s-era fountain and play area on a closed block of Hansen Street became the centerpiece for the City’s multimillion-dollar downtown renaissance. Now the open space beside City Hall is the central gathering place and outdoor art gallery for historic Main Avenue.
When citizens insisted that Twin Falls needed a welcoming downtown gateway with messaging capability, City Council agreed. They recruited a committee to coordinate design and fund-raising for the archway, the Perrine Bridge lookalike with digital reader boards, that now greets thousands of cars daily.

It was a simple idea: an off-leash playground for the fur babies and a social hub for their humans. Twin Falls’ dog park was born.

Auger Falls Heritage Park had just opened to the public for non-motorized access when a human-caused wildfire destroyed hundreds of acres of native vegetation. TFCF facilitated an
immediate community response to pay for reseeding.

A shared desire for healthy youth recreation powered the partnership that built the Viki Le Fevre Mountain Bike Skills Park in the Auger Falls Park.

Community leaders had long envisioned an enduring memorial to citizens who died for our country. When a clever design was proposed for a downtown honor wall, community fundraising commenced.

Twin Falls High School’s Lady Bruins softball field wasn’t as developed as the boys’ field. Fans and supporters banded together to add the needed upgrade

Joslin Field marked its 75th anniversary with a free-to-the-public air show, featuring stunt pilots, skydivers, and World War II bombers. With financial oversight by TFCF, generous community donors bankrolled the $150,000+ show.

When the Eaton family wanted to share Twin Falls Bank & Trust history, vintage equipment, and memorabilia, they turned to TFCF. A permanent museum display resulted.
They were off to a great start with an energetic board, a vision, and a workable plan. But the Children’s Museum needed an established fiscal agent to sponsor their first grant application. After that helping hand from TFCF, the group is well into its own non-profit programming.

Boy Scout Carson Bowman saw a need at Joslin Field and stepped up. For his Eagle project, he found donors, technical advice, materials, and the help he needed to build a new flagpole for the passenger terminal.
