State-Level Institutional Capacity Assessment
ID · Gov. Brad Little (R) · federal installation dependent
Population
2.0M
GSP
$105B
Total Budget
$13B
Budget / capita
$6,566
Legal Regime
Home Rule
Binding Constraint
Anchor-Dependent · Primary constraint
Aligning Idaho state government's institutional strategy with INL (DOE nuclear lab) capacity rather than competing — and absorbing 20%+ population growth pressure on housing/services without a digital service team or CDO. ID has CIO Gonzalez + ITS shared services + Aaa bond rating + 89% pension funded — but with 2 innovation markers, no innovation office, and no CDO, institutional capacity is thin. Cluster C work positions the state to channel INL R&D partnerships and federal-land payments into state-level capacity rather than building from scratch.
6-Dimension Assessment
Idaho's economy concentrates around Boise (Micron Technology HQ, HP printer division, Albertsons HQ, financial services) and the I-84 corridor. Eastern Idaho is dominated by Idaho National Laboratory (INL) — DOE's flagship nuclear research lab, ~5,300 employees, $1.4B annual budget — making Idaho Falls effectively a federal-anchor town. Northern Idaho operates on timber + tourism (Coeur d'Alene). Agriculture (potatoes, dairy) and federal-land grazing dominate the rural economy. Federal land is 62% of Idaho's surface — among the highest in US. The combination of INL anchor + federal-land share drives federal-grants dependency (36.4%) despite strong state fiscal management (Aaa/AA+/AAA, 89% pension funded). Population growth (rapid in-migration from CA/WA) strains housing + services.
Peer States
Montana
Systematizationrural low density
Wyoming
Anchor-Dependentresource extraction dependent
Utah
Strategic Executionhigh growth western
Peer states share structural profile (cluster, scale, archetype). Peer match is intra-level — states match states.
Innovation Pathway Recommendations
Establishing and resourcing a state-level digital service team (NJ OOI, CA ODI, GA Technology Authority, MN IT Services, UT OOI, FL Digital Service) to modernize benefits delivery, citizen-facing portals, and inter-agency data exchange. Draws on the USDS / Code for America playbook applied at state scale, the Beeck Center's Digital Government Network (formerly Digital Service Network, merged early 2026), and Bloomberg's What Works Cities adaptation.
For Cluster C (Anchor-Dependent)
For Cluster C states, leverage the anchor institution's technical capacity — military bases have IT infrastructure, federal labs have engineers, research universities have CS programs willing to partner.
H1 absorption pattern: 'state digital transformation' becomes a multi-year ERP procurement that ports paper processes to PDFs without changing the underlying service experience. Healthcare.gov pre-rescue is the canonical case at federal level; CMS-funded MITA Medicaid IT projects are the state equivalent. The H2+ test is whether the state is building durable internal digital service capacity or just procuring vendor-led platforms.
Restructuring how state government hires, classifies, pays, retains, and advances its workforce. Draws on the federal CHCO Council reform agenda, Recoding America Fund priorities, Beeck Center research on state digital service workforce, and the 30+ states (Maryland, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Georgia, Tennessee, others) that have removed degree requirements for state jobs.
For Cluster C (Anchor-Dependent)
For Cluster C states, leverage the anchor institution (federal lab, military base, research university) as a talent pipeline — joint hiring authorities, fellowships, and rotating assignments expand the candidate pool.
H1 absorption pattern: civil service 'modernization' becomes a fellowship program that brings in technologists for 2 years, then loses them all to private sector and reverts. The H2+ test is whether the underlying classifications, pay schedules, and protections have actually changed for the permanent workforce — not just a graft-on accelerator that the agency culture rejects when grant funding ends.
State Community Context
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Data as of Compiled May 2026; USAFacts FY2023 · high confidence
Sources · Data as of Compiled May 2026; USAFacts FY2023 · high confidence
The Civic Infrastructure Diagnostic Framework’s structural elements — the four cluster labels, the six capacity dimensions, and the binding-constraint framing — are licensed under CC BY 4.0. Anyone may use or adapt them with attribution. Tool implementation and full article text © 2026 JTV Advisory LLC.