© 2024 KLCC

KLCC
136 W 8th Ave
Eugene OR 97401
541-463-6000
klcc@klcc.org

Contact Us

FCC Applications
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Tough Choices Ahead For Coldwater Creek Workers

The Coldwater Creek store in Kennewick, Wash.
Anna King
/
Northwest News Network
The Coldwater Creek store in Kennewick, Wash.

The Idaho Department of Labor is holding a session this week to help hundreds of people in north Idaho who will lose their jobs when Coldwater Creek goes out of business.

The Coldwater Creek store in Kennewick, Wash.
Credit Anna King / Northwest News Network
/
Northwest News Network
The Coldwater Creek store in Kennewick, Wash.

The Sandpoint-based retailer is going bankrupt after years of declining sales. And it will be hard for workers to find new jobs in the region.

Coldwater Creek became famous for their catalogs featuring woodsy, Northwest clothes. But aggressive expansion and attempts to offer trendier lines proved too much.

The bankruptcy announced this month means 350 people at the corporate headquarters in Sandpoint and another 110 in Coeur d'Alene will be out of work.

Bridgette Bradshaw-Fleer, manager of the state Department of Labor office in Sandpoint, says many people will have to uproot.

“In some cases, not just one family member is involved, but two family members are working at Coldwater Creek," says Bradshaw-Fleer. "So that's a bigger decision -- if they want to be mobile right a way or wait until their kids are out of school. It's a difficult decision for all of them.”

Bradshaw-Fleer says it will also be a hit to Sandpoint, a town of about 7,400, to lose one of the top employers.

Retail staff elsewhere in the Northwest will lose their jobs when shops close up. That includes Coldwater Creek stores in Kennewick and Tacoma, Wash., Portland, Eugene and Medford, Ore., and Boise.

The Idaho Department of Labor's Sandpoint office will host a meeting for workers on Thursday, May 1 at 2 p.m.

Copyright 2014 Northwest News Network

Jessica Robinson
Jessica Robinson reported for four years from the Northwest News Network's bureau in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho as the network's Inland Northwest Correspondent. From the politics of wolves to mining regulation to small town gay rights movements, Jessica covered the economic, demographic and environmental trends that have shaped places east of the Cascades. Jessica left the Northwest News Network in 2015 for a move to Norway.