Sun Valley: Archives

Topic: Business

Plum is the New Black

According to an article in the New York Times, for advertisers Plum may just be the new black. There is the new American Express Plum Card, plum-colored labels for products like Penta Water, fictional characters like Stephanie Plum created by the prolific author Janet Evanovich and of course, Plum TV. To read more about this new color trend, click here.

Sun Valley's Baird Gourlay

Baird Gourlay, the owner of PK's Ski and Sports, speaks to Plum about more than just the store. Baird is involved with the city council and bringing economic vitality to the community.
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Earth Bytes: Forget Snail Mail

cat opens mail

Want to cut down on your carbon footprint and save money? Try email over snail mail, especially if you are a business with a big old mailing list.

Here’s an example of how bad mass mailings can be on your pocket book and the environment. Let’s say you are an art gallery in Ketchum. For your show mailings, normally you have special glossy paper that has to be printed in California. Then those cards have to come back to Sun Valley for approval. Then they journey to Boise for a mail service to send it all over the country. According to a website the environmental cost of such mailings is devastating; before reaching its destination each card will have traveled around 2,000 miles only to end up in a landfill sooner than later.

So ditch the envelopes and the stamps and start working on that list of emails. You, your costumers and the earth will not be sorry for this new technological improvement.

Best of Sun Valley: Services

Best of Main Image

We have the winners!

Want to know who is the Valley's favorite plumber, cleaning service and best architect? It's all right here. Back to Main.

Architect:

Winner: Riscutto/Latham/Blanton

Runner Up: Susan Desko

 

Cleaning Service:

Winner: Sun Valley Cleaning Service

Runner Up: Cross Valley Cleaners

 

Construction:

Winner: Engelmann

Runner Up: Grabher Construction

 

Electric:

Winner: Jones Electric

Runner Up: Silver Creek Electric

 

Interior Design:

Winner: Red Door Design

Runner Up: Topnotch

 

Plumber:

Winner: Evans Plumbing

Runner Up: Thomas Plumbing

 

Earth Bytes: Turn Down the Heat

Heat Meter
Baby, it’s cold outside. And, while it’s nice to be all warm and cozy in your house, that heating bill can give you a serious headache come the end of the month. To help lower your monthly costs and to improve the environment, Hailey is launching its first ever HELP Hailey 2008 Challenge.

HELP Hailey 2008 is a citywide competition involving five homeowners and five business owners. Each of the contestants is looking for ways to cut his or her heating bills and carbon footprints. The challenge began February 1st with individual heating audits. The audits suggested a series of changes that could increase their warmth without breaking the bank.  Suggestions were as cheap as caulking small holes and cracks in their walls, to adding solar water preheating arrays on rooftops.

Over the past month, each contestant has worked to make some of these improvements before a second heat audit in March. The winner will be the individual or business that reduces their heating bill by the largest percentage from their average heating bills of the last three March billing periods.

But these 10 participants are not the only ones who can learn some money saving, environment loving tips. Hailey will hold a public workshop called The Heating Challenge on Tuesday, Mar. 4 from 6-7:30pm at the Hailey Library. Jim Mason from Idaho Power, Ingo Stroup from Energy Star and Dale Bates from Living Architecture will lead the meeting.

Sun Valley's International Village

River Run Lodge

New employees descend on Sun Valley each season from as near as Twin Falls, to as far away as Russia, with France, Argentina, and Romania in between. According to George Rutherford, the resort’s director of Human Resources, Sun Valley Resort hosts an international village of between 1300-1600 employees during peak season.

Sun Valley’s foreign employees use two different government visas, the J1 visa for college students on vacation, and the H2B visa for foreigners seeking career training in the United States.

Students on the J1 visa work for three to four months and then have 30 additional days to travel the country. The program allows them to earn some money, experience life in the United States, and, of course, practice their English. The H2B, on the other hand, allows for stays of up to 18 months, and Sun Valley tries to match these older, more experienced employees with their specific career interests and work experience.

Where do they work? The largest department is Food and Beverage as the Sun Valley Company operates as many as 14 restaurants at a time. Drawing heavily from French culinary schools, the resort may have as many as 80-90 trainees in the department at one time, including chefs, restaurant managers, and servers. Foreign employees also work the front desk of the Lodge, the ski slopes, and in accounting.

In addition to wages, Sun Valley also offers all of its employees dormitory housing. These 540 beds, says Rutherford are a “big selling point,” since affordable housing is otherwise difficult to find in the area. In the winter, most of Sun Valley’s employees come from South America, where November through March is summer and therefore their summer vacation. In the summer, the trend reverses and most new employees come from across the Atlantic, filling the Valley with Russians, Ukrainians, Poles and even Kazakhstanis.

With a national limit of only 66,000 H2B visas each year, competition for these workers is stiff, says Rutherford, and much to Sun Valley’s dismay, the H2B quota for the summer has already been filled. So, any locals looking for resort work might take note: job applications are available. For more information contact George Rutherford by email or phone (208-622-2061).

Danny Spangler: The Ice Whisperer

Sun Ice Sculpture
Ice sculptures. Chances are you’ve seen these creations at most formal shindigs, like weddings and anniversary parties. They are usually indoors, in a vat of ice, on the end of a buffet table. But at Sun Valley, ice sculptures take on a whole new form; they are larger than life snow creations like polar bears, sleighs, and singing quartets. The man behind the jaw dropping works of snow is none other than Boise native and master of the ice, Danny Spangler.

Plum recently chatted with Spangler while he is up in McCall working on snow sculptures for the city’s annual Winter Carnival. This year, Spangler has been commissioned to do six pieces in the theme “The Wild, Wild West.” His creations? A mountain man pulling a sled through a mountain pass, a large cougar head, a miner panning for gold whose nose is a whopping eight feet tall, and a large helicopter for Life Flight with cowboy boots and spurs where the runners would normally be.

When he’s not off competing in ice contests, Spangler spends most of the year in Boise working with clear ice, making swans, vases and other more conventional glasswork. His snow sculptures are a recent development, and instead of ice they are made from wet, packed snow. They can be several feet tall and wide and cost multiple thousands of dollars, depending on size and the time it takes to build

His biggest client is, of course, Sun Valley. If you’ve been around Sun Valley Village at all this winter, his work is not hard to miss. Spangler’s favorite project, however, was for Kipp Nelson’s New Year’s Eve party two years ago. The theme was ice so Spangler, along with a friend from back east, built ice bars, ice cocktail tables, ice coffee tables and ice sculptures galore. Picture a yard full of Greek gods and goddesses, as well as an ice replica of Michelangelo’s David standing tall outside Nelson’s front door.  Not a bad entrance.

Spangler spent the first twenty years of his life as a chef in Boise. It was not until a friend who owned the business, Ice-Is-Nice, invited him over for dinner and ice carving one winter night. The first thing Spangler carved was a swan with a chainsaw. He was, in the words of his friend, “a natural with a chainsaw.” Slowly, he started doing more and eventually became the owner of Ice-Is-Nice. Eleven years later, he’s still blowing people away with his ice work. As for cooking professionally, he has never looked back.

Shopping Around: Sun Valley Village

Whether you’re staying at the Lodge or live in Hailey, spending the day at Sun Valley Village is a must. You just can’t afford to miss the kid-friendly restaurants, fancy clothing shops, and souvenirs. Check out Plum's best Sun Valley finds.
Photo Gallery
These fancy martini glasses run for $25 a glass at Sun Valley Gifts.
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Steve Florio on Open Exchange

Former Conde Nast CEO, Steve Florio, recently passed away at the end of 2007. Plum remembers him in this video with Jonathan Tisch on Plum's Open Exchange. Our thoughts go to his family and friends.

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Why Sun Valley

Local business people tell Plum why they love living in Sun Valley, and how they got here and never left.
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