The Greater Idaho Falls Chamber of Commerce, Eastern Idaho Technical College and the law firm of Hawley Troxell are sponsoring a seminar June 12 called "What Employers Need to Know About Health Care Reform."
With 2014 only six months away, the clock is ticking for Idaho employers to bring themselves into compliance with the Affordable Care Act. Larger employers are looking at penalties if they do not provide minimum health coverage, but even before implementation employers are going to have to comply with new rules, fees and reporting requirements.
The program will be from 9 to 11 a.m. in the EITC Health Care Education Building, Rooms 6163 and 6164. Breakfast will be provided. To secure a seat, RSVP by 5 p.m. Friday using this link: Health Care Seminar Reservation.
The speakers will be Tom Mortell, Kara Heikkila and Bret Clark of Hawley Troxell, who will walk employers through a timeline for compliance and provide background information to make sense of the law. Topics will include compliance deadlines and how to properly classify employees and independent contractors to avoid or minimize penalties.
For more information, email jswenson@hawleytroxell.com or call (208) 388-4919.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
D is for "demolish"
Teton Cancer Institute readies for opening, plans June 20 open house
The entrance to the Teton Cancer Institute, which should be open in the next few weeks. |
Located in the shell of the old Idaho Falls Recovery Center, the practice will offer a new place for Idaho Falls cancer patients to get chemotherapy and treatment in relative comfort. The new facility will have 20 infusion pods and a special pediatric room.
The new facility will have four doctors from two different practices: Drs. Christian T. Shull and Nathan D. Adams of Snake River Oncology and Drs. Jeffrey D. Hancock and Dane J. Dixon of Teton Oncology.
Overall, the project will cover 175,767 square feet, with parking for 98 vehicles. The practice is being given a new address, 1957 East 17th Street.
IFSC Partners, a Portland, Ore.-based company, had building permits issued late last year for remodels of both the Idaho Falls Surgical Center and the Idaho Falls Recovery Center. Valuation of the first remodel was estimated at $1.31 million and the second at $1.47 million. When finished the two buildings will be connected by a common corridor.
The architect on the project is Ankrom Moisan Associated, a Portland firm. The contractor is Bateman-Hall of Idaho Falls.
Cortney Liddiard, CEO of Ball Ventures, and James Adamson, president and CEO of Mountain View Hospital, are listed on the building plans as the principals involved in IFSC Partners.
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
I.F. Power crews begin work on Northgate Mile
Idaho Falls Power crews will be replacing power poles and restringing overhead conductor cable along Northgate Mile over the coming weeks.
The work began Monday with replacement of a pole near the intersection of Northgate Mile and Elva Street and will continue south to Lomax Street.
Motorists are advised to take caution around the work sites. In most cases, the crews will be able to keep their vehicles off the road. On some days, though, vehicles could block a southbound lane of traffic. Signs and orange cones will be in place to alert motorists.
The work is needed to maintain the electrical infrastructure in this section of the city, some of which dates to the 1940s and '50s. The Northgate Mile project is expected to take at least a month and could continue into mid-July. Personnel will be on site daily from 7:30 a.m. until 3 p.m.
Idaho ranks fourth in nation in housing price resurgence
Stock prices jumped sharply this morning on the news that U.S. home prices had jumped 10.9 percent in March compared to a year ago, the biggest surge since April 2006.
At the end of the first quarter, prices across the nation rose 6.7 percent, with Nevada, Arizona and California leading the charge, and Idaho coming in fourth, largely due to a big rebound in the Boise-Nampa Metropolitan Statistical Area.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency reported prices of existing single-family homes in Idaho rose 15 percent in the past year, the fourth-highest rate of appreciation from the first quarter of 2012 to the first quarter of 2013.
At the end of the first quarter, prices across the nation rose 6.7 percent, with Nevada, Arizona and California leading the charge, and Idaho coming in fourth, largely due to a big rebound in the Boise-Nampa Metropolitan Statistical Area.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency reported prices of existing single-family homes in Idaho rose 15 percent in the past year, the fourth-highest rate of appreciation from the first quarter of 2012 to the first quarter of 2013.
While Boise/Nampa posted the state's biggest yearly upturn -- 10.17 percent -- ranking fifth in the nation, Idaho Falls was not so dramatic, showing an uptick of .57 percent, and Pocatello home prices rose a modest Pocatello, 1.23 percent.
Before anyone in this part of the state gets too jealous, consider this:
- If you bought a $150,000 home in Boise in the first quarter of 2006, it would be worth $118,550 today.
A line graph indexing Boise home prices from 2006 to 2013 - If you bought a $150,000 home in Idaho Falls in the first quarter of 2006, it would be worth $150,705 today.
A line graph indexing Idaho Falls home prices from 2006 to 2013
I learned this by using the FHFA's Housing Price Index calculator, which can be found here: Housing Price Index Calculator.
The FHFA House Price Index is calculated using the purchase prices of homes with mortgages that have been sold to or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. "The FHFA index further reinforces that Idaho's economy and housing markets have stabilized and are improving," said Gerald M. Hunter, president of the Idaho Housing and Finance Association, in a press release.
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