http://idahofallsprojects.wordpress.com, who posted it last Thursday after looking through permit applications in the Bonneville County Planning and Zoning office.
A Georgia-based steel company called Cives Steel Co., intends to build a new fabrication plant in the Idaho Falls area. A 54,000-square-foot building will house its fabrication area and offices, and there will also be five more outbuildings, just under 5,000 square feet between them. The project will be completed in three stages.
It is estimated that the project could add up to 175 new local jobs. Cives Steel says it will be the company's first plant west of the Mississippi.
Cives Vice President John Donovan told Marissa Bodnar of Local News 8 that after nearly three years of scouting out locations in the Northwest and Southwest, they settled on Idaho Falls, largely because of the local work force and its reputation.
Cives Steel Company created the steel that supports the Hearst building in New York City and the Boston Red Sox training field in Fort Myers. For a look at all the projects they have been involved in, follow this link: http://www.civessteel.com/portfolio.
Donovan said told Bodnar the new plant will most likely go up on Yellowstone Highway near the Ucon city limit. Initially he said they expect to hire about 75 people. He said Cives is hoping to have land and permit approvals by mid-September and the foundation poured by mid-October. If the weather cooperates, they could be producing steel by the first of the year, he said.
Here is a link to the video from Local News 8: http://www.localnews8.com/news/Steel-plant-to-bring-150-plus-jobs-to-eastern-Idaho/-/308662/16203446/-/13kcsbs/-/index.html
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
SpeedConnect LLC names managers
Donna Nims |
Tom Carey |
Carey is technical operations manager for the state. His background includes extended tenures at DigitalBridge Communications and Teton Wireless, where he led teams to construct more than 65 WiMAX transmission sites in 15 markets, as well as developing standardized processes for site selection and construction. He is heading up SpeedConnect's efforts in Idaho for mission critical network operations, centralized warehouse systems, and technician recruitment, training and management, in addition to new technology deployments and network expansion.
Nims is the general manager for Idaho. She has years of experience in the wireless broadband industry, beginning with the launch of Wavepath in the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1990s. She has also worked in sales, marketing, product management and web technologies, with a special focus on channel development at Concentric Network and DigitalBridge Communications.
SpeedConnect has been in the high-speed wireless Internet business since 2001, providing services in Iowa, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska and South Dakota.
Monday, August 20, 2012
Eastern Idaho joblessness continues to decline
The employment news for Idaho from July was about the best in the nation -- only Idaho and Rhode Island posted declines in their jobless rates -- and eastern Idaho's numbers were even better.
The state's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate dropped another two-tenths of a percentage point, falling to a three-year low of 7.5 percent. In the Idaho Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area the rate dropped from 6.7 in June to 6.2 percent, down from 7.3 percent in July 2011. Rexburg posted a jobless rate in July of 5.3 percent, down from 6 percent in June and 6.5 percent in July 2011.
Idaho’s rate, which has been lower than the national rate since September 2001, has fallen dramatically during the past year from a post-recession high of 8.9 percent in July 2011. Despite employment slipping slightly, there were still over 19,000 more Idahoans at work in July than a year earlier while the number out of work dropped again to 58,600 – 9,700 fewer than in July 2011 and the lowest number of unemployed in three years.
New hires were at their highest rate for a July since 2007, although these new hires overwhelmingly filled jobs that had been held by people who retired or left for some other reason. The replacement factor in the jobs picture will increase as more and more baby-boomers decide to take their pensions.
The Conference Board, a Washington, D.C. business think tank, estimated fewer than five unemployed workers for every two posted job openings in Idaho, the first time that ratio has been that low since late 2008. At the peak of the recession in late 2009, there were nine unemployed workers for every two posted job openings in the state.
Only 10 rural counties recorded double-digit unemployment rates in July, unchanged from June but down from 17 in July 2011. The highest rate was 17.3 percent in resource-dependent Adams County, up over a point from June but over two points lower than in July 2011.
Here's a breakdown of July 2012 unemployment for all eastern Idaho counties:
Bingham: 6.2 percent
Bonneville: 6.2 percent
Butte: 5.8 percent
Clark: 7.0 percent
Custer: 7.1 percent
Fremont: 6.5 percent
Jefferson: 6.3 percent
Lemhi: 10.3 percent
Madison: 4.9 percent
Teton: 6.5 percent
The state's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate dropped another two-tenths of a percentage point, falling to a three-year low of 7.5 percent. In the Idaho Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area the rate dropped from 6.7 in June to 6.2 percent, down from 7.3 percent in July 2011. Rexburg posted a jobless rate in July of 5.3 percent, down from 6 percent in June and 6.5 percent in July 2011.
Idaho’s rate, which has been lower than the national rate since September 2001, has fallen dramatically during the past year from a post-recession high of 8.9 percent in July 2011. Despite employment slipping slightly, there were still over 19,000 more Idahoans at work in July than a year earlier while the number out of work dropped again to 58,600 – 9,700 fewer than in July 2011 and the lowest number of unemployed in three years.
New hires were at their highest rate for a July since 2007, although these new hires overwhelmingly filled jobs that had been held by people who retired or left for some other reason. The replacement factor in the jobs picture will increase as more and more baby-boomers decide to take their pensions.
The Conference Board, a Washington, D.C. business think tank, estimated fewer than five unemployed workers for every two posted job openings in Idaho, the first time that ratio has been that low since late 2008. At the peak of the recession in late 2009, there were nine unemployed workers for every two posted job openings in the state.
Only 10 rural counties recorded double-digit unemployment rates in July, unchanged from June but down from 17 in July 2011. The highest rate was 17.3 percent in resource-dependent Adams County, up over a point from June but over two points lower than in July 2011.
Here's a breakdown of July 2012 unemployment for all eastern Idaho counties:
Bingham: 6.2 percent
Bonneville: 6.2 percent
Butte: 5.8 percent
Clark: 7.0 percent
Custer: 7.1 percent
Fremont: 6.5 percent
Jefferson: 6.3 percent
Lemhi: 10.3 percent
Madison: 4.9 percent
Teton: 6.5 percent
Friday, August 17, 2012
Idaho Falls to start free text, e-mail service to public
Starting Monday, the city of Idaho Falls will begin offering free 24 hour city news alerts, designed to keep citizens informed and up to date.
“(This) is just another example where Idaho Falls is leading the way in governmental transparency and accountability," said Mayor Jared Fuhriman.
The new subscriber service will allow anyone interested to receive daily city updates and press releases, city calendar events, emergency notifications and weekly newsletters, delivered directly to their e-mail in-box or text-capable devices.
To subscribe, one needs only to forward their phone number (for texts) or e-mail (for e-mail alerts) or both to the Idaho Falls Public Information Office. They can be reached by calling 208-612-8122 or by e-mail at bhuerta@idahofallsidaho.gov.
“(This) is just another example where Idaho Falls is leading the way in governmental transparency and accountability," said Mayor Jared Fuhriman.
The new subscriber service will allow anyone interested to receive daily city updates and press releases, city calendar events, emergency notifications and weekly newsletters, delivered directly to their e-mail in-box or text-capable devices.
To subscribe, one needs only to forward their phone number (for texts) or e-mail (for e-mail alerts) or both to the Idaho Falls Public Information Office. They can be reached by calling 208-612-8122 or by e-mail at bhuerta@idahofallsidaho.gov.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
'Hey, I saw you on TV ... "
In case you missed me Monday night on Local News 8 doing my best impression of an informed observer of local business development, here's a link: http://www.localnews8.com/news/Idaho-Falls-Ammon-see-upswing-in-retail-development/-/308662/16099336/-/agoffh/-/index.html.
It is worth noting that after this aired on the 10 o'clock news, my number of pageviews on Tuesday was more than double its previous high. Even though I'm an old print dog, I've learned to be "platform agnostic." I'm willing to take a story to print, web, radio or TV. It's pretty obvious that TV packs a lot of clout.
Thanks to Marissa Bodnar, who called me about doing an interview. Considering the number of eyeballs that little segment brought to this blog, let me quote the Marvelettes' "Beechwood 4-5789" and say, "You can call me up and have a date any old time."
It is worth noting that after this aired on the 10 o'clock news, my number of pageviews on Tuesday was more than double its previous high. Even though I'm an old print dog, I've learned to be "platform agnostic." I'm willing to take a story to print, web, radio or TV. It's pretty obvious that TV packs a lot of clout.
Thanks to Marissa Bodnar, who called me about doing an interview. Considering the number of eyeballs that little segment brought to this blog, let me quote the Marvelettes' "Beechwood 4-5789" and say, "You can call me up and have a date any old time."
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