Tuesday, 30 January 2018

Idaho lawmakers introduce $200M tax cut plan

MGN Online

BOISE, Idaho (AP) – Idaho lawmakers have ushered in a $200 million tax cut plan as the first tax relief proposal of the 2018 legislative session.

House Majority Leader Mike Moyle said Tuesday the proposal is one of the largest tax reduction bills ever proposed in Idaho’s history.

The legislation is designed to offset the Republican tax overhaul that President Donald Trump signed into law last month.

If approved, the plan would reduce personal income and corporate tax rates and create a $130 Idaho child tax credit.

Idaho lawmakers are feeling pressure to pass some sort of sweeping tax relief plan this year because currently taxpayers are estimated to pay roughly $100 million more in taxes due to the federal tax plan’s changes.

The House Revenue and Taxation Committee introduced the bill Tuesday. It must now pass a full hearing.

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Wednesday, 24 January 2018

Boise restaurant to close after 36 years, meaning a California chain is leaving Idaho

Tons of restaurant chains expand into Boise to get their piece of the pie.

But the pie will all be gone soon — at least on Fairview Avenue.

Marie Callender’s Restaurant & Bakery, 8574 W. Fairview, will close this Friday, Jan. 26.

There are no plans to relocate the restaurant, according to Katie Chalmers, account executive at Murphy O’Brien Public Relations, which represents the Orange County-based restaurant chain.

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That means Marie Callender’s hasn’t just left the building — it’s left the Gem State. Boise had the only Marie Callender’s location in Idaho.

While the exit might trigger applause among locavores and California-loathing Idahoans, it’s hard not to ponder ol’ Marie Callender’s with nostalgia.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said Karen Downey, a shift manager, who has worked at the restaurant for 28 years. “I’m going to miss my customers. I’ve got people I waited on when they were kids, and now they’re adults and they bring their kids in. I’ve been through people getting married and divorced, the husband dying and the wife dying, graduation parties and holidays with these people.”

Marie Callender began selling her pies in Orange County in the 1940s and opened her first pie shop in the city of Orange in 1964. Five years later, the shops began offering a full restaurant menu. The chain had 156 restaurants in 1998, the Orange County Register reported. Today, 50 are left, most in California, with a handful in Nevada and Utah.

The Boise restaurant opened in 1982. A Marie Callender Ala Carte restaurant at the Boise Towne Square mall closed in 1998. In 2007, voters in the Idaho Statesman’s annual Best of Treasure Valley competition gave Marie Callender’s the award for best brunch.

Marie Callender’s merged with Perkins Family Restaurants, another bakery-cafe chain that formerly operated in Boise, in 2006. But it struggled to compete with fast-casual restaurants, which make meals to order without table service. In 2011, the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. A restructuring led to the closure of 31 Marie Callender’s restaurants in eight states, the Register reported.

In 2017, sales dropped 5.7 percent to $139.8 million, according to Technomic, a market research firm in Chicago.

Downey blamed rising rent for the closure. The property is owned by Bews Apple Pie, operated by a trust set up for the survivors of Edward L. Bews, who died in 2016. The Statesman was unable to reach a representative for the trust.

A 30-day suspension of the restaurant’s liquor license played no role in the closure, Downey said. The license was suspended after Boise police found that the restaurant sold alcohol to an underage buyer. It was the second time the restaurant had been cited in the past three years, said Capt. Brad Doty of the Idaho State Police’s Alcohol Beverage Control division.

The license was reinstated Sunday. Marie Callender’s will have 90 days after closing to lease or sell the license to another establishment, Doty said. The going rate in Boise, where there are 144 licenses, is $175,000, Doty said.

The Boise restaurant has 26 employees. Other restaurants have reached out to notify workers of openings. Downey said she’s not sure what she’ll do.

“I’m on for bigger and better things,” Downey said. “I’ve been in the restaurant business for a long time, and it’s time for me to step back and just get something a little bit easier on my body.”

If you’re one of those meanies celebrating the closing, have some pie. You’ve got until Friday.

“I’m not sure of the exact time,” Downey said. “They said maybe 4 o’clock — before the dinner rush and after the lunch rush.”

• • •

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Thursday, 4 January 2018

One of Boise’s best-known breweries just got sold. Garden City will get a new taproom

Crooked Fence Brewing Co. is going straight — straight back to its roots.

The brewery, which opened in Garden City in 2012 before relocating to Eagle in 2014, has been sold. The new owners plan to bring Crooked Fence back to Garden City and open a taproom there by spring.

Known for eye-catching artwork on its beer cans and bottles, Crooked Fence helped jumpstart the wave of local breweries that flooded the Treasure Valley over the past several years. In 2017, Crooked Fence owners Kris Price and Travis Krawl sold their Eagle property and brewpub at 3705 Idaho 16 in Eagle but continued to brew on site. Last week, they sold the Crooked Fence business and its equipment, Price says.

New owners Jeff and Maerene Cutler plan to relocate Crooked Fence’s 15-barrel brewhouse to a 4,000-square-foot space at 5220 N. Sawyer Ave. — about a block away from Crooked Fence’s original Garden City location.

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Head brewer Jeff Winn will make the transition to the new spot, Jeff Cutler says. Fans of Crooked Fence shouldn’t notice any changes to the beers, he adds.

“We’re going to continue the Crooked Fence Brewing name,” Cutler says.

The new Crooked Fence taproom, which will be about 1,500 square feet, should open around April 1, Cutler says.

In 2016, Crooked Fence Brewing’s production ranked fourth in the Treasure Valley behind Payette, Sockeye and Mother Earth Brew Co. Crooked Fence brewed about 3,200 barrels in 2017, Price says.

Online: crookedfencebrewing.com.

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