Latest news with #Boise-area
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
KB Home Announces the Grand Opening of Its Newest Community in a Prime Meridian, Idaho Location
Pivot Pointe offers personalized, new homes with mountain views, planned family friendly amenities and minutes to local schools, priced from the $380,000s. BOISE, Idaho, June 06, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KB Home (NYSE: KBH), one of the largest and most trusted homebuilders in the U.S., today announced the grand opening of Pivot Pointe, a new community in desirable Meridian, Idaho. The new homes are designed for the way people live today, with popular features like modern kitchens overlooking large great rooms, bedroom suites with walk-in closets, and ample storage space. Pivot Pointe's two-story floor plans feature up to five bedrooms and three baths. Homeowners will appreciate the community's mountain views, proximity to local schools, and planned amenities, which include a park with a pavilion, fire pit, children's playground and walking paths. What sets KB Home apart is the company's focus on building strong, personal relationships with every customer, so they have a real partner in the homebuying process. Every KB home is uniquely built for each customer, so no two KB homes are the same. Homebuyers have the ability to personalize their new home, from floor plans to exterior styles to where they live in the community. Their home comes to life in the KB Home Design Studio, a one-of-a-kind experience where customers get both expert advice and the opportunity to select from a wide range of design choices that fit their style and their budget. Reflecting the company's commitment to creating an exceptional homebuying experience, KB Home is the #1 customer-ranked national homebuilder based on homebuyer satisfaction surveys from a leading third-party review site. "We are pleased to offer Boise-area homebuyers spacious new homes in a prime Meridian location, close to schools," said Stan Katanic, President of KB Home's Boise division. "Homeowners will appreciate the community's mountain views and planned on-site amenities, which include a park with a pavilion, fire pit, children's playground and walking paths. At KB Home, we're here to help you achieve your dream with a personalized new home built uniquely for you and your life." Innovative design plays an essential role in every home KB builds. The company's floor plans inspire contemporary living, with a focus on roomy, light-filled spaces that have easy indoor/outdoor flow. KB homes are engineered to be highly energy and water efficient and include features that support healthier indoor environments. They are also designed to be ENERGY STAR® certified — a standard that fewer than 12% of new homes nationwide meet — offering greater comfort, well-being and utility cost savings than new homes without certification. Pivot Pointe is in a commuter-friendly location that offers homebuyers an exceptional lifestyle. The new community is situated at the corner of West Pine Avenue and South Black Cat Road, close to Interstate 84 and providing easy access to downtown Boise, the area's major employment centers and Boise Airport. The new neighborhood is also convenient to popular shopping, dining and entertainment at Ten Mile Crossing, Ford Idaho Center, The Village at Meridian and SCHEELS®. Pivot Pointe is minutes to Kleiner Park, Ridgecrest Golf Club and Meridian Community Swimming Pool and just a short drive to outdoor recreation at Lake Lowell Park, Lucky Peak State Park and Bogus Basin. The Pivot Pointe sales office and model homes are open for walk-in visits and private in-person tours by appointment. Homebuyers also have the flexibility to arrange a live video tour with a sales counselor. Pricing begins from the $380,000s. For more information on KB Home, call 888-KB-HOMES or visit About KB Home KB Home is one of the largest and most trusted homebuilders in the United States. We operate in 49 markets, have built nearly 700,000 quality homes in our more than 65-year history, and are honored to be the #1 customer-ranked national homebuilder based on third-party buyer surveys. What sets KB Home apart is building strong, personal relationships with every customer and creating an exceptional experience that offers our homebuyers the ability to personalize their home based on what they value at a price they can afford. As the industry leader in sustainability, KB Home has achieved one of the highest residential energy-efficiency ratings and delivered more ENERGY STAR® certified homes than any other builder, helping to lower the total cost of homeownership. For more information, visit View source version on Contacts For Further Information:Craig LeMessurier, KB Home925-580-1583clemessurier@ Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Business Wire
4 days ago
- Business
- Business Wire
KB Home Announces the Grand Opening of Its Newest Community in a Prime Meridian, Idaho Location
BOISE, Idaho--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KB Home (NYSE: KBH), one of the largest and most trusted homebuilders in the U.S., today announced the grand opening of Pivot Pointe, a new community in desirable Meridian, Idaho. The new homes are designed for the way people live today, with popular features like modern kitchens overlooking large great rooms, bedroom suites with walk-in closets, and ample storage space. Pivot Pointe's two-story floor plans feature up to five bedrooms and three baths. Homeowners will appreciate the community's mountain views, proximity to local schools, and planned amenities, which include a park with a pavilion, fire pit, children's playground and walking paths. What sets KB Home apart is the company's focus on building strong, personal relationships with every customer, so they have a real partner in the homebuying process. Every KB home is uniquely built for each customer, so no two KB homes are the same. Homebuyers have the ability to personalize their new home, from floor plans to exterior styles to where they live in the community. Their home comes to life in the KB Home Design Studio, a one-of-a-kind experience where customers get both expert advice and the opportunity to select from a wide range of design choices that fit their style and their budget. Reflecting the company's commitment to creating an exceptional homebuying experience, KB Home is the #1 customer-ranked national homebuilder based on homebuyer satisfaction surveys from a leading third-party review site. 'We are pleased to offer Boise-area homebuyers spacious new homes in a prime Meridian location, close to schools,' said Stan Katanic, President of KB Home's Boise division. 'Homeowners will appreciate the community's mountain views and planned on-site amenities, which include a park with a pavilion, fire pit, children's playground and walking paths. At KB Home, we're here to help you achieve your dream with a personalized new home built uniquely for you and your life.' Innovative design plays an essential role in every home KB builds. The company's floor plans inspire contemporary living, with a focus on roomy, light-filled spaces that have easy indoor/outdoor flow. KB homes are engineered to be highly energy and water efficient and include features that support healthier indoor environments. They are also designed to be ENERGY STAR ® certified — a standard that fewer than 12% of new homes nationwide meet — offering greater comfort, well-being and utility cost savings than new homes without certification. Pivot Pointe is in a commuter-friendly location that offers homebuyers an exceptional lifestyle. The new community is situated at the corner of West Pine Avenue and South Black Cat Road, close to Interstate 84 and providing easy access to downtown Boise, the area's major employment centers and Boise Airport. The new neighborhood is also convenient to popular shopping, dining and entertainment at Ten Mile Crossing, Ford Idaho Center, The Village at Meridian and SCHEELS ®. Pivot Pointe is minutes to Kleiner Park, Ridgecrest Golf Club and Meridian Community Swimming Pool and just a short drive to outdoor recreation at Lake Lowell Park, Lucky Peak State Park and Bogus Basin. The Pivot Pointe sales office and model homes are open for walk-in visits and private in-person tours by appointment. Homebuyers also have the flexibility to arrange a live video tour with a sales counselor. Pricing begins from the $380,000s. For more information on KB Home, call 888-KB-HOMES or visit About KB Home KB Home is one of the largest and most trusted homebuilders in the United States. We operate in 49 markets, have built nearly 700,000 quality homes in our more than 65-year history, and are honored to be the #1 customer-ranked national homebuilder based on third-party buyer surveys. What sets KB Home apart is building strong, personal relationships with every customer and creating an exceptional experience that offers our homebuyers the ability to personalize their home based on what they value at a price they can afford. As the industry leader in sustainability, KB Home has achieved one of the highest residential energy-efficiency ratings and delivered more ENERGY STAR ® certified homes than any other builder, helping to lower the total cost of homeownership. For more information, visit
Yahoo
21-05-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Here's who prevailed in Tuesday's Boise-area election, including library trustees
Not long after polls closed at 8 p.m. Tuesday, elections offices in Ada and Canyon counties began releasing results of the May consolidated election. The typically low-profile election included contentious library trustee races in Meridian and Ada County and a number of tax measures put forth by school, fire and ambulance districts seeking millions in taxpayer dollars. Ada County voted just 8% turnout, with 21,535 ballots cast. Here's what voters weighed in on and where results landed: Tuesday's election was the first for Boise-area library districts since a state law went into effect in July allowing patrons to challenge and even sue libraries if they fail to protect minors from 'harmful materials.' Fierce debate over the place of books with LGBTQ+ or other themes some deem inappropriate took center stage in trustee races in the Meridian Library and Ada Community Library districts. In a lopsided Meridian library race, incumbent Jeff Kohler and newcomer Garrett Castle breezed by two opponents, Phil Reynolds and Mike Hon, who were part of a group that tried to dissolve the library district in 2023. Unofficial results show Kohler with 40.6% of the vote, Castle with 39.4%, Hon with 10.3% and Reynolds with 9.7%. In 2023, Destinie Hart beat out an opponent also affiliated with Concerned Citizens of Meridian, the group that petitioned to dissolve the district, at a wide margins of roughly 68% to 32%. Unofficial results revealed a much tighter race for trustee seats for the Ada Community Library, where two pairs of candidates faced off for two seats. Suzette Moore, who was appointed to the board last month to fill a vacancy, teamed up with Rachel Moorhouse, with the support of trustee Steven Ricks, who served as the pair's treasurer and donated to their campaign. Moore and Moorhouse faced off against Johnathon Baldauf and Travis Worwood, who said they were running to 'protect our libraries' and continue the library district's work. Moorhouse and Moore beat Worwood and Baldauf, with all four falling in a 5 percentage point grouping. Totals were as follows: Moorhouse: 25.9%; Moore: 23.5%; Worwood: 22.9%; Baldauf: 20.8%. Two other names, Sabrina Napolitano and Lori Billaud, appeared on the ballot but they suspended their campaigns after the deadline. Napolitano and Billaud told the Statesman they threw their support behind Moore and Moorhouse. A total of 637 votes were cast for Napolitano or Billaud. The auditorium district 'is dedicated to promoting economic activity and growth in the Boise area,' according to its website. It raises most of its money from tourists and business visitors, rather than local residents, through a 5% tax on hotel rooms. On Tuesday, voters in Boise, Garden City and parts of Meridian and unincorporated Ada County were poised to select candidates for two seats with six-year terms. Incumbent Jim Walker (40.1%) and Sophie Sestero (36.7%) topped Danielle Horras (8.1%) and Aimee Pollard Tylor (15.2%) by wide margins. The new board will consider how to steward the tens of millions of dollars in reserves it has built up as the region grows and attracts visitors. A possible sports arena or an expansion of the Boise Centre, the downtown convention center, are on the table for the district. Property-tax payers in Canyon County passed a levy to support new paramedics and EMTs in the county's ambulance district. The district sought the $7.9 million-a-year levy that would expire after two years, after two previous levies failed. This one was estimated to cost taxpayers $18.62 a year per $100,000 of taxable assessed value. The levy required 50% plus one vote to pass. It passed Tuesday evening with the support of just over 58% of the almost 12,000 votes counted. The Star Fire Protection District and the Middleton Rural Fire District each asked voters for an additional $2.25 million a year in property tax revenue, but neither succeeded. In both rapidly growing districts, more voters supported the levies than opposed them, but it was not enough to meet the two-thirds threshold required for the measures to prevail. In Star, 54.7% of voters supported the levy, while in Middleton, 51.1% of voters were supportive. Money from the levy would have gone toward operating a new Star fire station on Floating Feather Road plus other staff and district expenses. The adjoining districts have an expense-sharing partnership and ran nearly identical levies on the ballot. However, the tax burden for homeowners was different for those in Middleton and Star, which has a larger property-tax base. The levy would have cost homeowners in Middleton an estimated $61.7 a year per $100,000 of taxable assessed value, compared to an estimated cost of $44.79 per year per $100,000 in Star. The Middleton School District's fifth attempt to pass a bond for a new elementary school failed, despite a much lower cost to taxpayers than previous endeavors. The $19.9 million school bond earned the support of 53.1% of voters — not the two-thirds majority it needed. The money would have gone toward building the district's first new school in 17 years, a 700-student elementary school that would have been part of a 300-acre development along the north side of Idaho 44 in Star. Developers even agreed to donate and prepare the land for the school. Superintendent Mark Gee told the Statesman last month that the district, now over capacity in two of its three elementary schools, first started looking for a site for a new school in 2015, and in 2018 ran a bond that failed three times. A fourth with an updated plan failed in 2022. This bond would have cost taxpayers about $34 per $100,000 of assessed value, much less than the estimated $161 per $100,000 in the last attempt in 2022. The Vallivue School District around Nampa and Caldwell sought to renew a $7 million yearly supplemental levy that voters previously approved and that is set to expire on June 30, 2026. The two-year renewal levy would help pay for transportation, teachers and other personnel and programs that state funding won't pay for, the Statesman reported ahead of the election. What's unique about this levy is it sought to decrease costs for taxpayers by $11 per $100,000 of taxable assessed value compared to the existing levy. Of the almost 12,000 who turned out, 62.2% of voters supported the levy, while 37.8% opposed it. As a supplemental levy, it needed only a simple majority to pass. Unofficial results: Eagle Sewer District, 6-year term (two seats): James Gruber (incumbent): 24.9% John R. Bennett (incumbent): 20.8% (617) Angela Stoppello Russell: 20.8% (615) Deborah L. Kowalcyk: 19.6% Christopher Hadden: 13.8% Eagle Sewer District, 2-year term (one seat): Tillie Reed (incumbent): 56.4% Miguel DeLuna: 43.6% West Boise Sewer District, 6-year term (one seat): Gerald W. Bresina: 52.4% Logan J. Kimball: 47.7% For more information on each of these races, read the Statesman's pre-election roundup and Meridian Library District voter guide. Could Ada County budget get DOGE'd? Commissioner says Elon Musk sets good example Idaho teacher in classroom-sign furor quits. What she told school officials What does Idaho's new law say about pro-police flags? This town found out
Yahoo
01-05-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Who's running? Boise-area's first library election since ‘harmful materials' law
Libraries in Idaho have been a site for heated debate over what books minors should be able to access. Since July, a state law allows patrons to challenge and even sue libraries if they can prove a minor obtained 'harmful materials.' The debate is now on the ballot in two Ada County library districts. For the second time in two years, defenders of library collections face off against advocates of greater scrutiny over books available to children. The election on Tuesday, May 20, will determine library trustees in two of the three Boise-area districts in Ada County: Meridian and the Ada County Free Library District. Two incumbents in the third district, Kuna, are unopposed and will therefore be retained without an election. The new law has triggered dozens of book challenges — and two lawsuits contesting the law. In the Treasure Valley, 23 books were relocated this fall within the Eagle library, while requests to remove or relocate four books in Meridian were rebuffed in recent months. Library trustees in these independent districts, unlike those in city-run libraries like Eagle and Boise, are elected rather than appointed and can levy taxes on residents. Trustees are responsible for determining the district's budget, evaluating the library director, and establishing policies. Trustees serve either four-year or six-year terms, and voters cast votes for two trustees in elections every other year. And despite political contention surrounding libraries — Idaho's Republican lawmakers spent years trying to pass harmful materials legislation before the most recent, HB710, was signed last year — library trustees are nonpartisan seats. Two years ago, the last time library seats were up for grabs in Meridian, book restrictions were at center of the race. Two incumbents, Destinie Hart and Josh Cummings, faced challengers who said they wanted increased scrutiny over books accessible to minors. One challenger, Xavier Torres, had helped to found a community group that sought to dissolve the library district altogether — a petition that failed just two months before the election. Hart and Cummings handily held onto their seats, and the group, Concerned Citizens of Meridian, hasn't appeared to rear its head since. Now, another two key players in the 2023 effort to dissolve the district are running, this time against the board's chair, Jeff Kohler, and newcomer Garrett Castle. Phil Reynolds and Mike Hon were core members of Concerned Citizens of Meridian. Reynolds helped to found the group, and Hon often testified on its behalf. But their current stance on book restrictions — and the role of that issue in this year's race — is somewhat less clear than it was two years ago. Though the 2024 harmful-materials law has caused turmoil at some libraries, that hasn't exactly been the case in Meridian. At a board meeting in February, dozens of patrons appeared, largely supportive of protecting the library's collection. And no library legislation was voted on this session, suggesting that the Legislature's appetite to crack down on controversial books might have been sated. In candidates' responses to the Idaho Statesman, only Hon identified 'protect(ing) children from harmful content' as an aim of his campaign. Hon, who has made unsuccessful bids for Meridian mayor and City Council and the Idaho House of Representatives, has a background in electrical engineering, business and real estate. He told the Statesman that in addition to advocating for age-appropriate materials for children, he valued fiscal responsibility and adherence to state law. Hon said he believed the core issue of this race is 'unaccountable use of taxpayer funds and a heavy bias in the collection policy towards delivering inappropriate content to children in the district.' Reynolds went a different route, telling the Statesman he supported access to 'diverse materials' in libraries and stood 'firmly against censorship.' 'Libraries should offer a broad range of perspectives, trusting families to make choices for themselves while preserving access for everyone,' Reynolds said. Reynolds, a formerly elected member of the Santa Clara Republican Party Central Committee in San Jose, California, also said he was running on 'progressive values.' But as recently as Tuesday, April 29, Reynolds re-posted a Substack article on Facebook that described 'porn' and 'sex clubs for kids' as 'Just a few of the things your kids can learn to enjoy at the Meridian Library!' Reynolds did not respond to follow-up questions from the Statesman. Incumbent Kohler joined the board in 2019 and has served as chair since June 2024. Kohler works in asset management for a development company and told the Statesman that his campaign focuses on continuing the library district's work, including the Cherry Lane branch renovation. Kohler noted that in his time on the board, the district has opened three new branches, including the Pinnacle branch last fall. Kohler said he believes that patrons largely support allowing parents to choose what books their children can access in libraries. 'There's a book for everybody at the library,' Kohler said. 'The job of the library is to help people find the book that is right for them.' Asked about the harmful materials legislation, Kohler said, 'We follow the law, and we will continue to follow the law.' This is Castle's first campaign for a public office. Castle works in finance and accounting and has been involved in education-focused initiatives with Boise nonprofit Reclaim Idaho. He is also a district chair for the Ada County Democrats, who have offered to endorse him, though he said he has not officially accepted the endorsement because the race is nonpartisan. Castle said he became involved with the library when the petition to dissolve it first circulated, and he helped with Hart's successful bid for the trustee seat in 2023. He said his experience door-knocking for that campaign and now his has affirmed that 'the government shouldn't be in the business of deciding what you or your family reads.' He said his experience in accounting would help him steward taxpayer dollars if elected. The two seats on the ballot are Kohler's, whose six-year term is expiring; and Josi Christensen's. Christensen is not running for re-election. In the Ada County Free Library District, home of the Ada Community Library, five candidates will compete for two seats. Carol Mills, the board's chairman, has opted not to run for re-election. A second seat is held by Suzette Moore, an interim trustee as of April 15, who seeks election. The district, which encompasses unincorporated Ada County, Star, and parts of Boise, Meridian and Eagle, has not seen any book challenges since the harmful materials law went into effect, according to Trustee Mary Anne Saunders. But several candidates still identify protecting children or, conversely, safeguarding access to books, as key issues of their campaigns. Six names will appear on the ballot. One, Lori Billaud, told the Statesman in an email that she has suspended her campaign because of family health issues. Billaud put her support behind Moore and her running mate, Rachel Moorhouse. Moore and Moorhouse are substitute teachers in the West Ada School District who are running to 'keep libraries safe for children and teens,' according to a statement Moore sent to the Statesman. 'We believe that taxpayers, which include the parents, are the owners of our libraries,' she said. Their campaign website says parents are 'the rightful and legal decision-makers of what library materials their children can access at the library, and we will not, as the library, interfere with that relationship.' Steven Ricks, a trustee elected to serve on the board until 2027, is treasurer for Moore and Moorhouse's campaign. Moore joined the board in April after Melodie Huttash resigned before her term was scheduled to expire. Huttash did not immediately respond to an email from the Statesman. Also paired up for the race are Johnathon Baldauf and Travis Worwood. They are running to 'protect our libraries' and to 'continue to nurture the Ada Free Library District's connection with the people of Ada County,' according to Baldauf's campaign website. Baldauf is a criminal-defense and family-law attorney who ran for Ada County prosecutor in November and lost. He told the Statesman that he spent hours in libraries as a kid and wants 'to make sure that the current generation has access to the resources I had so they can learn to better communicate and be able to think critically.' Worwood is a physician's assistant who previously worked as a social worker, according to his campaign website. He told the Statesman he was encouraged by librarians in the district to run. 'I want children to be safe in the library and the library to be a comfortable, welcoming space for everyone,' he said. 'I will never use my personal cultural or religious values to remove material from the library that another member of the community would benefit from.' Sabrina Napolitano, also on the ballot, did not respond to the Statesman's requests for comment and appears to have no campaign website or dedicated social-media pages. The Kuna Library District's two available seats will not appear on the ballot, because the race is uncontested, according to a spokesperson for the Ada County Clerk's Office. Trustees Joan Gidney and Marie Leavitt will retain their seats. The Idaho League of Women Voters is hosting candidate forums for the two contested races ahead of Election Day. In these forums, candidates can introduce themselves and answer questions from the public, said Jean Henscheid, the league's co-president. The first forum, for the Ada Community Library took place Wednesday evening in Star, with Baldauf and Worwood attending. Henscheid told the Statesman that Moore and Moorhouse decided shortly before the forum not to participate because it was not 'in their campaign plans.' Napolitano did not attend. The Meridian Library District forum will run from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 7, at the library's Cherry Lane Branch at 1326 W. Cherry Lane in Meridian. Henscheid said Reynolds, Kohler and Castle planned to participate. The forums will be recorded and posted to the League's website, she said. Early voting opens on Monday, May 5 and runs until Friday, May 16. For early voting, voters can go to any of following sites from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ada County Elections Office: 400 N. Benjamin Lane in Boise. Boise City Hall: 150 N. Capitol Boulevard in Boise. Eagle Public Library: 100 N. Siterman Way in Eagle. Garden City City Hall: 6015 N. Glenwood St. in Garden City. Meridian City Hall: 33 E. Broadway Avenue in Meridian. Library! at Bown Crossing: 2153 E. Riverwalk Drive in Boise. Star City Hall: 10769 W. State St. in Boise. On Election Day, voters must go to their assigned precinct, which you can find at the Ada County Elections website. The window for preregistration has closed, but voters can still register in person on Election Day. Voting hours are 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. ID bill would let cities fire library directors. City behind it says that's not the point Teachers, parents give West Ada school board an earful over classroom sign A Boise-area city council wants the power to fire its library director. It may get it
Yahoo
30-03-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
‘Natural next step': Boise Co-op considers 5 areas for expansion. Where it may build next
A decade after the Boise Co-op opened its second store at The Village at Meridian, the local grocery cooperative is hoping to spread its organic, fair-trade products to even more people in the Treasure Valley. Expanding into a third store is on the horizon for the Boise business, according to the nonprofit's director of marketing — but only at the 'right place, right time.' 'We don't want to rush it,' Tyler Schnur told the Idaho Statesman by phone. The marketing director said he's been hearing from customers that they want more of what the store has to offer, and that the co-op has been looking into ways to grow. 'We've been getting that feedback for quite a few years now, more and more, especially in the last six months, that our Village store is kind of bursting at the seams,' Schnur said. 'We have a lot of people that drive pretty long treks just to shop at the Village location, which is awesome ... It just seems like that's kind of like the most-natural next step for us. The co-op, which has more than 32,000 members, is setting its sights on a few different areas for expanding, including Southeast Boise, South Meridian, Kuna and Star, Schnur said. One location has stood out so far as potentially 'a really great fit.' According to preliminary application documents filed with the city of Meridian, the co-op is considering developing a vacant 5-acre piece of land on the northwest corner of Black Cat Road and Chinden Boulevard. Preliminary documents show three buildings that could go up on the site, including a roughly 25,000-square-foot building for a Boise Co-op store, as well as two other smaller buildings that Schnur said would be 'built to suit' other potential tenants that would not be part of the co-op. The early-stage plans also show 211 parking spaces. Plans are subject to change. The preliminary plans were designed by Boise architecture firm Rodney Evans and Partners. According to the Ada County Assessor's Office, the land the co-op is eyeing is owned by HBU Investments LLC, an Los Angeles-based home-building company, and is valued at nearly $657,000. Schnur emphasized that no lease has been signed and that 'nothing's official.' He said he's 'hopeful' that a store on Black Cat could move forward, but that 'if it doesn't work out, we will be looking for other opportunities.' Still, he said an 'extensive market analysis,' 'site visits,' and 'some good old-fashioned cold-calling' have generated interest in the Black Cat location. Schnur said he hopes a new store would cut down on driving times for customers in the fast-growing Boise-area suburbs and provide more employment opportunities. If a lease is secured, the co-op's next step would be to submit an official application with the city. In addition to the Village location, the co-op also has its original grocery store at 888 W. Fort St. in Boise, as well as a wine shop and pet-supply store across the parking lot from the grocery store. The co-op is known for offering local and fair-trade ingredients and goods, membership discounts, and health-conscious prepared foods like sandwiches, salads, and pizza. Mural at Boise Co-op's Meridian store has a 'cool' story. Local artist happy to share it 2 Idaho brothers to open Meridian store. A magazine calls their products the sport's best Boise business responds to West Ada poster removal: 'One sign comes down, 1,000s go up'