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Yearly Archives: 2012

Scentsy Launches Fondue Product Line, Could Create More Jobs

Scentsy

Scenty's fondue line 'Velata' will be available May 1, 2012

Scentsy, the Meridian, Idaho-based wickless candle company, launched into the world of fondue today.  The company announced its first food product line, called Velata.  The chocolate fondue kit will be available in May.  It comes with a microwaveable pouch of chocolate, a silicone dish and an electric warmer.

Scentsy has made some new hires in its corporate office related to the chocolate line.  Spokeswoman Stephanie Finch says if the company’s foray into food does well it will require additional corporate support.  Finch couldn’t give an estimate on the number of jobs Scentsy could potentially add.

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Essential StateImpact: Top Five Stories of the Week

MG Shelton / Flickr

If you were out playing in the snow (or shoveling) and missed a story at StateImpact Idaho, we put the best of the week all in one handy place.

Here’s a look at the five stories that got the most comments, clicks, shares and likes at StateImpact Idaho this week.

Idaho’s Jobless Rate Drops Slightly in December

Emilie Ritter Saunders / StateImpact Idaho

Job seekers speaking with potential employers at the Veteran's Job Fair in Boise in November.

Idaho’s unemployment rate is now at its lowest level in nearly three years.  The Department of Labor reports the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate ticked down one-tenth of a percent to 8.4 for the month of December.

Idaho’s jobless rate hit a record high of 9.7 percent in December 2010.  Those gains mark the largest year-over-year growth in total employment since before the recession officially began in mid-2007.

Still, there are 64,100 Idahoans without work.  The Conference board, a D.C.-based think tank estimates there are more than three unemployed Idahoans for every job post.

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Visual Aid: Idaho’s Food Stamp Use Nearly Triples in Four Years

Emilie Ritter Saunders / StateImpact Idaho

Food stamp money is now distributed on EBT (Electronic Benefit Transfer) cards.

Back in November, StateImpact Idaho reported on the growing number of people using SNAP benefits (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) commonly known as food stamps.  The program is in the news again this week after lawmakers were briefed on the data and Idaho grocery stores committed $100,000 to changing the way food stamps are distributed.

We know food stamp use is up across much of the country.  According to this study from the Urban Institute, Idaho saw its SNAP enrollment go up by 123 percent between 2007 and 2010, Nevada’s grew by 128 percent.  So what does this growth look like?  It’s pretty dramatic.

Here’s a chart showing the number of Idaho’s food stamp participants for the month of June since 2007.

Source: Idaho Department of Health and Welfare

This second chart shows the same data, but is plotted from zero.

Source: Idaho Department of Health and Welfare

Boise Housing Market Ended 2011 with Fewer Homes, Higher Prices

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images News

In the Boise area, the number of homes on the market fell by nearly 40 percent between the end of 2010 and the end of 2011.

One indicator of an improving housing market is declining inventory, and Idaho appears to be faring well on that score.  According to analysis by Realtor.com, Boise’s number of total listings fell by just over 39 percent from the end of 2010 until the end of 2011.  That’s greater than the national decrease of just over 22 percent.

Fewer homes for sale should lead to rising prices, and so far that logic is borne out in the local market. The median list price in Boise grew by more than 19 percent over the last year.  That’s compared to 5 percent growth nationally. Continue Reading

Super 1 Foods to Hire 80 for its Bonners Ferry, Idaho Store

Sandpoint.com

Super 1 Foods opened a new store in Sandpoint, Idaho back in 2010

The Idaho Business Review reports a small north Idaho town is getting a new grocery store and about 80 new jobs.  In November, Super 1 Foods broke ground on a 50,000 square foot grocery store that’s scheduled to open in Bonners Ferry in June.

IdahoBusinessReview.com reports the new store will lower Boundary County’s unemployment rate of 14.6 percent two points. Here’s more from the Business Review:

Ryan Wilson, Super 1 Store Director, said the Bonners Ferry store will include a pharmacy as well as a section of organic and gluten-free products. Continue Reading

At Medicaid Panel, A Personal Story And Calls For Change

Molly Messick / StateImpact Idaho

Medicaid recipient Krystal Esterline and her guardian Nikki Tangen spoke at today's Medicaid roundtable.

Medicaid recipients, their advocates and service providers want to drive home the point that cuts to the program have real effects for individuals and communities.  At a roundtable discussion this morning they called for a restoration of services that have been reduced in recent years.

At the heart of the broad-ranging discussion was an individual story.  Twenty-two-year-old Medicaid recipient Krystal Esterline talked about the effects of recent service cuts in her own life.  A year ago, she was forced to choose between one service that assists her with depression and anxiety, and another that helps her cope with developmental disabilities.  When she stopped receiving what’s known as psychosocial rehabilitation, she says, things changed.  “Life just went pretty much downhill,” she said.  “I was on a good path when I had my services, and when I lost part of them, I just wasn’t able to cope.”

At Medicaid Panel, A Personal Story And Calls For Change

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Defense Training Firm Moving Headquarters to Twin Falls, Idaho

LMS Defense Inc.

LMS Defense currently has 17 employees nationwide.

The Idaho Department of Commerce announced this morning a full service defensive training firm is relocating its Reno, Nevada corporate headquarters to Twin Falls, Idaho.

LMS Defense, Inc. specializes in counterterrorism training to the United States military, law enforcement and security professionals.  LMS Founder and CEO John Chapman says he’ll hire five people locally for administrative support at their new Twin Falls headquarters.  Chapman plans to hire between 15 and 20 additional people when a new training facility is built in late summer.

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Governor’s “New Normal” Means No Restored Funding for Health and Welfare Department

Darin Oswald / Idaho Statesman

Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter gave his address from the floor of the Idaho Senate.

One of the most prominent issues last legislative session was a nearly $100 million cut in combined state and federal Medicaid funding.  For many observing Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter’s State of the State and Budget Address last week, reinstated support for Medicaid was a key omission.  Restoring funding to health and human services programs that have undergone deep cuts over the last four years did not make the governor’s list of budget priorities.

“It sends a pretty clear message to people who rely on Medicaid,” said Katherine Hansen, Executive Director of Community Partnerships of Idaho, Inc., a Medicaid service provider. “It sends a clear message that people with disabilities are not as valued.” Continue Reading

Idaho Pro-Business Group Supports State Health Insurance Exchange, Eliminating the Personal Property Tax

Idaho Association of Commerce & Industry

Alex LaBeau has been president of IACI since 2006.

The Idaho Association of Commerce & Industry is a statewide public policy organization that works on behalf of Idaho businesses.  IACI is the result of a merger between the Idaho Chamber of Commerce and the Associated Industries of Idaho.  It’s one of the most powerful pro-business groups in the state.  It has about 300 members, including companies in agribusiness, technology, construction, health care and real estate.  Alex LaBeau is IACI’s president.  StateImpact spoke with LaBeau at the beginning in January to learn more about the groups’ legislative priorities.

Q: What are your priorities for the 2012 legislative session?

A: Our priorities are three-fold.  One, we want to deal with the state healthcare exchange issues, that we’re still trying to work through the nuances of the federal law, and some of the changes that keep coming at us from the feds resulting from different interpretations.  We’ll also be dealing with education reforms again.  But those education reforms will be largely looking at the recommendations that came out of the interim committees that worked on the issue last year.  So, we’ll be looking for fully funding those, as well as working through some adjustments that need to be made.  Finally, we’ll be looking at some issues surrounding the personal property tax, and how you define it, what it is, and hopefully setting the state on a pathway to eliminate the personal property tax eventually but that will be dependent on the reaction we get from the Senate committee.  Continue Reading

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