Business

This Boise candy store employed people with disabilities. Now it will close

Sweet Zola’s is closing.

The nonprofit candy shop, which hires people with developmental disabilities to give them job experience and help them learn other skills, announced Thursday that it would close on Dec. 31 after nearly seven years in business.

Owner Cyndy Radovich said in a video posted to Sweet Zola’s Facebook page that the store at 7172 Fairview Ave. in Boise has employed over 70 people since it was founded.

“We have really, really, really had a good run,” Radovich said.

Candyland characters decorated the parking lot at Sweet Zola’s in 2023.
Candyland characters decorated the parking lot at Sweet Zola’s in 2023. Sarah A. Miller Sarah A. Miller

But Radovich said she had no choice but to close the store. The candy shop was unable to pay its rent last month and this month. In the video, Radovich said she went into debt trying to keep the store afloat.

“I’ve put myself into debt doing this amazing and beautiful thing ... and now they’re collecting,” she said. “I can’t put money into the candy shop anymore, because I owe so much money. And now I’m drowning. I’m so sorry to my employees. I love you guys so much, and it has been a pleasure.”

Sweet Zola’s originally opened at 917 N. Main St. in Meridian.

The Idaho Statesman reported in 2019 that Radovich also ran her own company, Autism and Developmental Consultation, and had been writing behavioral assessments that train families and therapists how to work with people with special needs when she was inspired to open the candy shop.

Radovich named the shop Sweet Zola’s after her daughter.
Radovich named the shop Sweet Zola’s after her daughter. Sarah A. Miller Sarah A. Miller

Through her work, she watched as teen and young-adult clients with autism and other behavioral health diagnoses lost jobs as quickly as they were hired.

With Sweet Zola’s closing, she pledged to help find all of her employees find new employment.

“It’s really hard for me personally because I’ve been through a lot, and I have fought a lot,” Radovich said. “And now I’m letting down a lot of people — I’m letting down my employees most of all. I want to tell you guys that this is not the end of it for you.”

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Angela Palermo
Idaho Statesman
Angela Palermo covers business and public health for the Idaho Statesman. She grew up in Hagerman and graduated from the University of Idaho, where she studied journalism and business. Angela previously covered education for the Lewiston Tribune and Moscow-Pullman Daily News.  Support my work with a digital subscription
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