Idaho

Bringing the Economy Home

Idaho’s Medicaid Workgroup Gets Briefed On Leavitt Report Thursday

Peter Foley / Bloomberg via Getty Images

Gov. Otter will decide whether Idaho will expand its Medicaid program and whether to create a state-based health insurance exchange.

Governor C.L. “Butch” Otter’s workgroup to study a possible Medicaid expansion meets tomorrow at the State Capitol.

The Governor has to decide by early November whether he’ll expand Medicaid eligibility for low-income adults earning up to 138 percent of the poverty line.  The expansion is a key element of the federal health care reform law.

Tomorrow’s meeting will include a presentation from Leavitt Partners, a Utah-based firm Idaho hired to study its Medicaid options.

The agenda also highlights three possible courses of action that will be discussed:  Continue Reading

Report: Idaho Ranks In The Top Ten For Migration From California

Emilie Ritter Saunders / StateImpact

Click on the map to enlarge and explore the data.

The Idaho Statesman reports Idaho is a top destination for Californians.

A report by the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research says Idaho ranks 7th for net migration from California.

“The main reasons for the Californian exodus are jobs, lower taxes and costs to employers such as utilities, the report said. Idaho was one of seven states whose right-to-work laws banning compulsory union membership have attracted some businesses, according to the Manhattan Institute, which is pro-free market. Real estate prices and regulations were among the other reasons Californians left for Idaho, the institute said.” – Idaho Statesman

Between 2000 and 2010 about 54,000 Californians moved to Idaho, according to the Statesman.  The report uses federal tax data, the same data StateImpact Idaho used to map migration in and out of Idaho.

According to our map, 10,000 Californians moved to Idaho between 2009 and 2010.

Education And Health Care Jobs On The Rise In Idaho

How do Idahoans spend their workaday lives? Data released by the U.S. Census Bureau last week offer one answer.

This is what working Idahoans did at work — broadly speaking, anyway — in 2011.

What Idahoans Do For Work

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

The construction sector has shifted in the opposite direction over the same time period, shrinking from 10.1 percent of employment to just 6.6.

The U.S. Census Bureau released its 2011 American Community Survey results last week.  We’re breaking out the findings in a series of posts here on the StateImpact site.

More Than 12,000 Idaho Borrowers Could Receive Mortgage Settlement Checks

Robyn Beck / AFP/Getty Images

An eviction notice hung in the window of a home Glendale, California last month.

The historic $25 billion national mortgage settlement reached in February could result in direct payments to more than 12,200 Idaho borrowers.  That’s how many Idahoans are eligible to share in nearly $10 million in direct payments from Bank of America, J.P. Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial.

The borrowers were on the receiving end of “loan servicing errors” that may have led them to lose their homes to foreclosure between 2008 and 2011, the Idaho Office of the Attorney General says.

Idaho’s total share of the mortgage settlement is just under $114 million.  The nearly $10 million that will be distributed directly to borrowers is part of that total amount.  Continue Reading

Why Idaho’s Food Stamp Use Has Continued To Grow

Last year, 13.5 percent of Idahoans received food stamps, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.  That works out to about 214,000 people. It’s an increase from 2010, when 12.5 percent of Idahoans were enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).

In fact, as shown in the graph below, Idaho’s rate of food stamp use has risen year after year since 2007, when it was 6.2 percent.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

Continue Reading

Idaho’s Poverty Rate Continues Its Rise

Idaho’s poverty rate continued its upward climb in 2011, rising to 16.5 percent.  That’s higher than the national rate of people living in poverty, which grew to 15.9 percent.

Put another way, more than 255,000 Idahoans lived below the federal poverty guideline last year.

The state’s poverty rate has climbed each year since 2007, when 12.1 percent of state residents lived below the poverty line.  While the rate grew by 1.4 percent from 2008 to 2009 and again from 2009 to 2010, it grew by less than a percentage point from 2010 to 2011.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

Continue Reading

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

Molly Messick / StateImpact

The first signs of fall. Photo taken near Stanley, Idaho.

Here’s a look at the five most-read posts of the week.  Check them out, share them, and let us know what you think.

Idaho’s Latest Good News-Bad News Unemployment Report

John Moore / Getty Images

Workers lined up at a job fair in June.

At first glance, it’s good news.  Idaho’s unemployment rate ticked down yet another tenth of a percentage point in August, falling to a three-year low of 7.4 percent.  That’s better than the national rate of 8.1.

But, like the nation as a whole, Idaho is now facing an unhappy trend: its labor force is also shrinking.

According to the state Department of Labor, there were 2,600 fewer people in the Idaho labor force in August as compared to July.  In other words, the unemployment rate isn’t falling because that many more people have jobs.  It’s falling because people have given up looking.  Continue Reading

After The Wind Boom, A Fight Over Idaho’s Energy Future

Molly Messick / StateImpact Idaho

The wind farm on Edith and Richard Kopp's land was completed last year.

If you look at a map of where wind development has taken off in Idaho, you’ll notice an area near American Falls. There, in the rolling agricultural land of southeast Idaho, Edith Kopp stands on a high hillside.  She gazes out with satisfaction at more than a dozen turbines, turning steadily.

“This is a pretty constant wind,” she says.  “They’re all going!”

Continue Reading

About StateImpact

StateImpact seeks to inform and engage local communities with broadcast and online news focused on how state government decisions affect your lives.
Learn More »

Economy
Education