Businesses Are Attracted By Boise's
Quality of Life
Major Players, as well as small businesses, continue
to add jobs.
By Tracy Loew :: The Idaho Statesman
The Treasure Valley boasts close to a dozen large corporate
head-quarters, making it unique for a community its size.
The area also is home to a growing number of small and startup
companies.
Like business communities across the country, though, mergers,
acquisitions and consolidations are shaking things up.
Boise-based Albertson's Inc. recently merged with competitor
American Stores Co., more than doubling in size and adding
hundreds of employees here. It's now the nation's second-largest
super-market chain.
Relative newcomer Micron Technology Inc. has weathered several
years of lagging profits in the computer chip industry , growing
into a global concern. And Extended Systerns Inc., which develops
products that help mobile phones, hand-held computers and other
devices talk to one another, recently went public.
After 31 years as one of Idaho's signature companies, the Ore-Ida
Foods Co. headquarters was moved in 1999 to Pittsburgh by parent
company H.J. Heinz Inc.
Boise's banking industry was shaken up by a wave of mergers,
which swallowed up Boise-based West One and resulted in layoffs
at U.S. Bank.
Businesses are attracted to the Treasure Valley by a skilled
work force, relatively low utility and tax rates and the area's
famed quality of life.
Those factors have attracted a number of new call centers to
the area -including centers for Sears, Micron Electronics,
TCI Primestar , MCI/Worldcom and Airborne Ex- press -creating
jobs for close to 5,000 residents. The centers take calls from
all over the country to take orders, answer billing questions
or make travel arrangements.
And the area quickly is becoming a regional health-care center. "The
evolution of the economy is a very dynamic kind of process," state
economist Mike Ferguson said. "There's a certain amount of
luck in the draw."
Other major players in the local economy include electronics
company Hewlett-Packard Co., construction contractor Morrison
Knudsen Corp., forest-products company Boise Cascade Corp.,
agribusiness giant J .R. Simplot Co. and computer manufacturer
Micron Electronics Inc. Still, the bulk of the area's jobs
are provided by small companies across several industries.
Companies large and small report their biggest challenge is
finding and retaining workers, especially on the lower end
of the pay scale.
The Treasure Valley's unemployment rate has remained around
3 percent for the past few years, com- pared with about 5 percent
statewide and 4.4 percent nation- wide.
Employers are responding by raising wages, adding training
and benefits programs and stepping up recruitment efforts.
Population growth, which fueled much of this decade's economic
expansion, is expected to slow this year. But the area will
continue to ad d jobs, Ferguson said. Many of those jobs are
being created in some surprising sectors - recreational vehicle
manufacturing, publishing and education, to name a few.
More residents work in retail sales than in any other sector.
And, although many of the area's traditional resource-based
manufacturing jobs are dwindling, they are being replaced by
other goods-producing jobs, said Derek Santos, an economist
for the Idaho Division of Financial Management.
The Division expects employment to grow between 2 percent and
2.7 percent each of the next three years.
That compares with growth between 2.6 percent to 3.2 percent
the previous three years. Last year , U .S. job growth was
1 percent.
About 42,000 people work in downtown Boise.
1. Micron Technology Inc. 9,151
2. Mountain Home Air Force Base 4,824
3. Albertson's Inc. 4, 100
4. Hewlett-Packard Co. 4,000
5. Boise School District 3,000
6. St. Luke's Regional Medical Center 2,973
7. Saint Alphonsus RMC 2,540
8. Micron Electronics Inc. 2,515
9. J.R. Simplot Co. 2,480
10. Boise State University 2,400
Source: Figures provided by each employer. |