Idaho

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Monthly Archives: March 2012

Laid-Off INL Workers Will Get Help Through Federal Grant

Idaho National Laboratory

INL's Materials and Fuels Complex in southeastern Idaho.

The Idaho Department of Labor will receive a $1,045,000 federal grant to assist Idaho National Laboratory workers who lost their jobs late last year.  About 600 people were laid off by three INL contractors, according to Department of Labor spokesman Bob Fick.  The department estimates about 175 of those workers will seek help through its field offices.

The funding is provided by the U.S. Department of Labor through what’s called a National Emergency Grant.  The grant money can assist laid-off workers in many ways.  It can be used for education or on-the-job training, for example, or even for the cost of getting to an out-of-state interview.  “It depends on the people who take advantage of it,” Fick says.  “It will be tailored to them.”

This is the fifth National Emergency Grant the Idaho Department of Labor has received since the start of 2010.  Spending from those grants totals more than $5.5 million, so far.  Fick says INL workers have already begun to search out assistance through the state Department of Labor.

Most Direct Sellers Don’t Earn A Living Through Sales

Emilie Ritter Saunders / StateImpact Idaho

Maggie Clark talks with customers at a recent event in Nampa, Idaho.

Earlier today we introduced you to Maggie Clark, an independent salesperson for the wickless candle maker Scentsy.  Clark says she earns about $1,200 a month on her business.  That is well above the median income for someone in the direct selling industry.

The Direct Selling Association, an industry trade group, says the median annual income is $2,400.  That equals about $200 a month.

“There certainly are people who make the equivalent of a full-time income through direct selling,” says DSA spokesperson Amy Robinson.  “But by and large people are looking for supplemental income.”

Robinson says most people work less than ten hours a week at their direct selling business.

Scentsy Becomes A Multimillion Dollar Business

Emilie Ritter Saunders / StateImpact Idaho

Maggie Clark set up a booth to sell Scentsy at a recent cheerleading and dance competition in Nampa, Idaho.

Many Idaho companies issued a fair number of pink slips during the recession.  But Meridian-based Scentsy didn’t.

Instead, the wickless-candle maker grew.  It’s ranked among the country’s most promising companies by business magazines like Forbes and Inc.com.  In just seven years, Scentsy has become a multimillion dollar enterprise.

Selling Scentsy

Maggie Clark started selling Scentsy products three years ago, just as the company started taking off.  She recently set up a sales booth at a cheerleading and dance competition in Nampa. Continue Reading

Essential StateImpact: Top Five Posts Of The Week

JamesRDoe / Flickr

A throwback to the 1960s...any guesses why?

Here are the five posts that have gotten the most views, shares and comments this week.  Have you read them?  Tell us what you think!

Do Direct Sales Models Work Better In The West?

Direct Selling Association

Percent of sales by region in 2010.

When I started researching the direct sales industry and one of Idaho’s newest direct sales companies, Scentsy, I wanted to find out if that model of selling at parties and events does particularly well in Idaho.

The Direct Selling Association has this handy map that shows the percent of sales by region.  Idaho is part of the western region, which accounted for more than a quarter of direct sales in 2010.  That puts the western region in second place, behind the South, for percent of total sales.

So are people in the West and South just more likely to go to home parties?  Are we particularly drawn to certain products?  Yes and no.  Continue Reading

Idaho’s Jobless Rate Falls To 8.0 Percent

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

The Idaho Department of Labor reports February’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate has fallen for the seventh straight month to 8.0 percent.

The jobless rate has steadily ticked downward, mostly one-tenth of a percent at a time.  It’s the lowest monthly rate since September 2009.

Still, the department reports 62,500 Idahoans are still out of work.  That doesn’t include the number of people who’ve stopped looking for a job or who consider themselves underemployed. Continue Reading

Growth Industries Haven’t Heavily Affected Idaho

David McNew / Getty Images

The Queen Mary 2 sails toward Long Beach, California.

An Idaho economic consulting and modeling firm’s latest report details the five industries that have grown 40 percent or more since 2007.

Economic Modeling Specialists Inc., a Moscow-based firm, says the sector with the greatest rate of growth since 2007 was the cruise ship industry.  That growth focused heavily in coastal states, including Washington and California.

One industry listed that has impacted Idaho is translation and interpretation services.  According to EMSI, that industry more than doubled from 2007 to 2011.

Here’s EMSI’s list: Continue Reading

Elegy For A Car That Kept Running

Molly Messick / StateImpact Idaho

When StateImpact reporter Molly Messick traded in her old Toyota last fall, it had racked up more than 260,000 miles.

Until recently, my car was a 1994 Toyota Camry that my parents purchased second-hand when I was in high school.  By the time I was finished with it, its odometer had passed the 260,000 mile mark.  It had been broken into in D.C. and held its own on rutted out back roads all over Wyoming.  I probably would have kept driving it, had it not been for a couple of expensive repairs on the horizon.

All of that is to say that when I read this recent New York Times article that declares 200,000 miles the new 100,000, it touched a chord.  “[T]oday, as more owners drive their vehicles farther,” the article says, “some are learning that the imagined limits of vehicular endurance may not be real limits at all.” Continue Reading

Economist To Leave BSU’s Economic Research Center

Boise State University

Brian Greber has been the director of COBE since 2009.

The Idaho Business Review reports Economist Brian Greber is leaving Boise State University’s Center for Business Research and Economic Development.

Greber has directed COBE, part-time, since December 2009.  He told the Idaho Business Review he’s leaving the University to  do area consulting work.

“‘I wasn’t doing it for the money,” he said March 21. “It was starting to become work instead of fun.’

Greber’s last day at the center is March 30. He and a work-study student were the sole employees of the center, which is part of Boise State’s College of Business.

It could be hard to find another director of Greber’s caliber who is as inexpensive. Greber said he made about $600 a week for Boise State, with no benefits.” – Idaho Business Review

Greber told IBR.com he’ll continue to teach two classes at Boise State.

MTV’s ‘Teen Mom’ Cast Members Selling Scentsy

MTV

The direct selling industry isn’t just for Mary Kay or Tupperware consumers anymore.  It seems the younger demographic is getting on board.  The entertainment blog WetPaint and parenting blog Babble have recently posted that two women from the MTV reality show Teen Mom are selling Scentsy products.

Scentsy is the Meridian, Idaho-based wickless-candle and personal care products company. Continue Reading

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