State of Idaho Executive Residence

The State of Idaho Executive Residence, also known as the Governor's House or Idaho House, is the official residence of the governor of Idaho, located in Boise, the state capital.

Located at 4000 Simplot Lane on the top of a prominent hill in the Highlands area of North Boise, the house is the former residence of billionaire potato and agribusiness magnate J. R. (Jack) Simplot and wife Esther Simplot. Simplot donated the house to the State of Idaho in November 2005 as a residence for future governors on the sole condition that a massive American flag continue to fly above the home. The property, located north of Hill Road off of Bogus Basin Road, covers 37.749 acres and includes the house (7,370 ft²) and garages (1,151 ft²). The main level of the home consists of two bedrooms, two and a half bathrooms, a library, a main kitchen and caterer's kitchen, and a boardroom/dining room, while the upper level consists of an office, bathroom, entertainment area and great room/formal dining room.

The Governor's Housing Committee and Residence Fund were created by statute (Idaho Code 67-455) in 1995, with the Fund being established "for the purpose of providing a Governor's housing allowance and/or the acquisition, construction, remodel, furnishing, equipping, or maintaining a Governor's residence". In 1999, the Legislature amended Idaho law (Idaho Code 67-455A) to allow the Governor's Housing Committee to accept grants, gifts, or donations related to a governor's residence.

The Mediterranean-style villa was built by Simplot in 1979. The house is visible for miles and was dubbed "Fort Simplot" by neighbors who said it resembled a Boy Scout camp. The flag pole that carries the 30-foot-by-50-foot flag was erected in 1980. Neighbors soon complained that the noise from the flag disturbed their sleep at night; Simplot responded by raising the flag pole to 100 feet. A 1983 mudslide from the slopes of the hill caused $20,000 in damage to an adjacent home. In the 2006 gubernatorial election, Otter's Democratic opponent, Jerry Brady, called the house "too gaudy for a governor". Some state legislators have suggested selling the home, using the proceeds to build a new mansion on state-owned residential property nearby.

Dirk Kempthorne, who was governor at the time of the donation, accepted the $2.1 million property in 2004 and launched a $3 million private fund raising effort to renovate the interior. He also planned to sell naming rights to various rooms to make the house a showcase for Idaho industry, but Kempthorne resigned to become Secretary of the Interior and the plans were never implemented under his successor, Jim Risch. The state's current governor, Butch Otter, is a former executive with the Simplot Company; he divorced the Simplots' daughter, Gay, in 1993 and refuses to live in the mansion that his former father-in-law owned. In January 2009, it was reported that a fund-raising campaign for the mansion had "sputtered" and that the cost of maintaining the lawn, $100,000 a year, was depleting funds. Otter and his current wife, Lori, live on their ranch west of the city near Star and receive a state housing allowance of $58,000 per year, causing controversy; the Idaho Statesman editorialized that "It is ridiculous to subsidize his living expenses." Otter said he would stop taking the allowance once the state finishes minimal renovations, but would still not live there.

Famous quotes containing the words state of, state, executive and/or residence:

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    Samuel Richardson (1689–1761)

    Chippenhook was the home of Judge Theophilus Harrington, known for his trenchant reply to an irate slave-owner in a runaway slave case. Judge Harrington declared that the owner’s claim to the slave was defective. The owner indignantly demanded to know what was lacking in his legally sound claim. The Judge exploded, ‘A bill of sale, sir, from God Almighty!’
    —For the State of Vermont, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    She isn’t harassed. She’s busy, and it’s glamorous to be busy. Indeed, the image of the on- the-go working mother is very like the glamorous image of the busy top executive. The scarcity of the working mother’s time seems like the scarcity of the top executive’s time.... The analogy between the busy working mother and the busy top executive obscures the wage gap between them at work, and their different amounts of backstage support at home.
    Arlie Hochschild (20th century)

    My residence was more favorable, not only to thought, but to serious reading, than a university; and though I was beyond the range of the ordinary circulating library, I had more than ever come within the influence of those books which circulate round the world, whose sentences were first written on bark, and are now merely copied from time to time on to linen paper.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)