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Yearly Archives: 2012

Micron CEO Weighs In On Company’s Market Position, And Education In Idaho

Micron Technology

Mark Durcan, Micron CEO

Micron Technology CEO Mark Durcan spoke to a full house at the City Club of Boise today.

It was an opportunity to hear the new head of one of Boise’s most influential companies and largest employers discuss its market position and future.

Durcan stressed Micron’s strength in a notoriously volatile industry, and explained the strategic importance of acquiring bankrupt Japanese memory chip maker Elpida.  That deal should be finalized by this spring, he said, pending the approval of Elpida’s creditors and antitrust approval from several countries.

It was Durcan’s answer to a question about education that drew the most significant response from the audience.  Continue Reading

Commerce Director Says His Bankruptcy Was “On The Table” In Hiring Discussion

Molly Messick / StateImpact Idaho

Sayer says he's "not proud" of the financial difficulties he faced years before his appointment.

Idaho Commerce Department Director Jeff Sayer filed for personal bankruptcy in 2003, less than a decade before Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter appointed him to his current job.  That’s according to an Idaho Statesman report this weekend.

Director Sayer’s bankruptcy was not public knowledge ahead of his appointment last fall, but it was known to Gov. Otter and a number of lawmakers, including at least one Democrat.  Sayer today said he was deliberately forthcoming with those who vetted him for the Commerce Department’s top job.  “Had I been an elected official, clearly it would have needed to be a public discussion,” he says.  Continue Reading

Is Bonneville County A Solid Bet For Work? CNN Thinks So

Idaho National Laboratory

INL's Materials and Fuels Complex in southeastern Idaho.

CNN Money recently published a list of the 25 best counties in the country to find work.  At number 15, nestled between Houston County, Georgia and Cass County, North Dakota is Bonneville County, Idaho.  That includes Idaho Falls and part of one of Idaho’s biggest employers, the Idaho National Laboratory.  The lab is spread across a handful of southeastern Idaho counties.

CNN used Census data to find counties where jobs and population were increasing, and where the jobless rate was below the national average.  According to their list, CNN says Bonneville County saw a 28 percent increase in jobs between 2000 and 2011.  Continue Reading

Essential StateImpact: Top 5 Posts Of The Week (According To You)

Emilie Ritter Saunders / StateImpact

Here’s a look at the five stories numbers show are this week’s must-reads.  They’re the stories getting the most clicks, comments and shares.  Don’t miss out, and let us know what you think!

Has Idaho’s Doctor Shortage Affected You?

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

A 2011 study by the Association of American Medical Colleges ranks Idaho second to last when it comes to the number of physicians per capita.  By this measure, Idaho is short on doctors.

According to the report, there are 2,873 active physicians in Idaho.  That’s 184 doctors for every 100,000 people.  The only state with fewer doctors per 100,000 people is Mississippi.

Over the coming months, StateImpact will explore how we got here, and if the numbers are as dire as they seem.  But we need your help.  Have you had a hard time getting a doctor’s appointment?  Do you know someone who has?  We’d like to hear your stories.  Send an email to ersaunders@stateimpact.org with the subject line Doctor Shortage and we’ll be in touch.

Idaho Elected Officials, Multimillionaire Romney Backer VanderSloot Head To RNC

Mladen Antonov / AFP/Getty Images

Workers prepare the main stage ahead of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida.

Many prominent Idaho Republicans are packing their bags and heading to Tampa for the 2012 Republican National Convention.

The list of Idaho delegates includes Gov. C.L. “Butch”  and Lori Otter, Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Luna, and multimillionaire Romney backers Frank and Belinda VanderSloot.  The full list is available here.   Continue Reading

18 Idaho Companies Make Inc. Magazine’s Fastest-Growing List

Inc. Magazine

Click the image to enlarge

Inc. Magazine’s list of the 5,000 fastest-growing private companies was released this week, and 18 Idaho businesses made the cut.

To qualify, companies apply by providing relevant financials and a general description of their business.

Some familiar companies that frequent these kinds of rankings were again included.  Scentsy ranks 516, Balihoo ranks 853 and Pita Pit ranks 4,256.

Four newcomers to the list are based in Idaho.  Lucky Bums makes outdoor recreation gear for kids.  The Boise-based company made $3.4 million last year and is expected to grow by more than 600 percent in the next three years.  Husband-and-wife team Jeff and Julie Streeter founded the company in 2004.  It currently has 12 employees.

Jeff Streeter says he has often considered applying for the magazine’s annual ranking, but has never before made the cut.  “And to come that close to the top 500, we were really pleased with the results,” Streeter says.  Continue Reading

Idaho’s Foreclosure Problem: Better, But Still Here

Molly Messick / StateImpact Idaho

Craig Nolte is a Regional Manager for Community Development at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, one of the event's sponsors.

A foreclosure counseling event in downtown Boise Wednesday offered a window into how homeowners are faring, years after Idaho’s foreclosure rate began to climb.  The basic message was this: we’re not out of the woods yet.

In August 2011, Idaho’s foreclosure rate was the fifth highest in the nation, based on data from RealtyTrac.  But the last twelve months brought positive change.  Property values took a turn for the better, homebuilders reported rising demand, and the state’s foreclosure rate began to fall.

Still, the rate remains high, and that may not change soon.  Gavin Gee heads the Idaho Department of Finance, one of the foreclosure workshop’s sponsors.

“Our economy, I think, overall is getting better, but we still have a lot of challenges in the general economy and the overall broader economy, and as long as we have those challenges, I think we’re still going to have foreclosure issues,” he says. Continue Reading

Micron’s CEO To Address Boise City Club

Micron Technology

Mark Durcan, Micron CEO

Micron Technology CEO Mark Durcan is scheduled to speak at next week’s City Club of Boise luncheon.

Duran took over as CEO in February after longtime CEO Steve Appleton died in a plane crash.

Micron employs more than 5,000 people in Idaho, but has gone through a series of layoffs since 2005.  The company shuttered its solar panel venture this year, laying off 250 people. It’s also in the process of purchasing a bankrupt Japanese chip-maker, a move intended to strengthen its manufacturing capacity.

Durcan is expected to address key trends in the tech sector and explain how Micron plans to maintain its spot in the industry.

The luncheon takes place Tuesday, August 28 at 11:45 a.m. at The Grove Hotel in Boise.  The reservation deadline is Friday, August 24 by noon.

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