Article published May 6, 2005
'The Secret Is Out' And Forbes Agrees: Boise is No. 1!
Magazine rates city as top draw for talented workers
Boise continues to get rave reviews as one of the best spots in
the nation to do business.
Forbes magazine's May 9 edition ranks the Boise metro area No.
1 on its annual Best Places for Business and Careers list, which
rates 150 cities nationwide on their cost of doing business and
ability to attract talented workers.
It's the second accolade for Boise in as many months. In April,
the metro area finished second in Inc. magazine's annual list of "Best
Cities to Do Business in America." Experts said the Forbes
ranking confirmed that the local economy continues to grow, attracting
new businesses and residents to the Treasure Valley.
Some residents reacted enthusiastically to news of Boise's first-place
finish on the Forbes list. "Finally, the secret is out that
Boise is so good," said Dr. Po Y. Huang, 35, chairman and
medical director of the emergency department at St. Alphonsus Regional
Medical Center. "I hope it won't become too popular."
Huang said he conducted their own extensive research into communities
throughout the Intermountain West before settling on Boise five
years ago. "I was looking for outdoor activities and lifestyle
as well as a great place to be a physician," said Huang, an
avid mountain biker, kayaker and fly fisher.
He said he points out these advantages when recruiting medical
staff for the hospital. "It's not hard to sell Boise," Huang
said. Eric E. Mott, 29, a long-time area resident, said he was
thrilled with the recognition. "It is 99 percent positive
for Boise and for Idaho," he said. "Boise has a lot to
offer in business development, especially in tech."
The top rating will "make recruiting easier and bring more
(job) candidates to our attention," according to Mott, operations
director for Stellar Technologies in Boise, a private investment
group. Mott added that media attention highlighting Boise's quality
of life was especially useful to business development and growth. "It's
very beautiful, with a low crime rate, relatively low living costs
and a wholesome and inviting family atmosphere," Mott said.
State officials said the valley's improving economy is reflected
in Idaho tax collections in April that were 37.7 percent ahead
of a year ago. That was more than double the previous one-year
record of 18.8 percent set in 1996.
"We're accustomed to getting high marks for our economic
performance, and the underlying economic conditions. But this reinforces
that business is coming up roses in Idaho," said Idaho chief
economist Mike Ferguson. Shirl Boyce, vice president with the Boise
Economic Development Council, noted that the Boise area has been
in the Top 10 on Forbes' annual list each of the last five years.
"But it's important to note that you don't live and die on
these kind of things," Boyce said. "A company isn't going
to see this and decide to move here. But it will pique their interest
enough to make them call us and see if we can fill their needs." Moreover,
he said, Economy .com, a Pennsylvania research outfit, ranked the
Boise metro area 228 out of 358 communities in its Cost of Doing
Business Index in March.
"And that's good," Boyce said. "If you're No. 1
on that list it means you have the highest costs of doing business."
Janell Hyer, labor economist with state's Department of Commerce
and Labor, agreed with Forbes' assessment that the Treasure Valley
is benefiting from a five-year population boom that has seen 39,000
new residents move into the metropolitan area. She said the magazine's
projection of 2.4 percent income growth is likely tied to almost
7,000 new jobs created in 2004, which include an estimated 1,100
high-tech jobs added by Micron to replace a comparable number of
workers laid off in 2003.
"That's pretty good, considering what we've been through," Hyer
said. However, Forbes' assessment of a "steady decline" in
the Boise area cost of living confused state economic experts.
The March Wells Fargo Cost of Living Report showed consumer prices
up 1.1 percent, or nearly double the national average.
"But regardless, whatever happens with inflation, it's still
less expensive to live in Boise," said Don Holley, professor
of economics at Boise State University.
Not everybody agrees that strong business growth is good for the
Boise metro area. Boise State University professor Todd Shallat
said he worries about "unrestricted growth." Shallat,
director of the university's Center for Idaho History and Politics,
called Boise "a great place to move" and said he is hopeful
that any growth will be intelligently controlled.
We "should welcome people" who come here for work, but
zoning should be enforced to avoid leapfrog growth, he said. "What
I worry about is people escaping their own suburban sprawl and
creating more of it here," Shallat said. |