After close to 39 years, the Richmond-based alternative weekly newspaper Style Weekly will shut down this week, Editor-in-Chief Brent Baldwin posted on Style’s Facebook page Tuesday.
The publication’s closing came three years after Norfolk-based Landmark Communications Inc. sold its Virginia newspapers — The Virginian-Pilot, Inside Business and Style Weekly — and their associated businesses for $34 million to Tribune Publishing Co. (then known as Tronc Inc.
More than $36K spent on Black business initiative | Local News | rockymounttelegram.com
The City of Rocky Mount paid more than $36,600 in bills submitted by the Black Business Matters Initiative, a spreadsheet of records the Telegram received from the municipality said.
The majority of the amount, $19,028, was paid to Black Business Matters for consultant fees and video production, the spreadsheet said.
New Business Formation Tells Of A Brighter Immediate Economic Outlook
New business formation nationwide certainly has its monthly ups and downs, almost as a mirror image of declines and jumps in covid infections, but on balance the data point to recovery and a bright immediate economic outlook.
The latest figures for July show just under 500,000 new business applications nationwide. That is up 1.2% from the June level.
AI as a service to solve your business problems? Guess again – TechCrunch
SaaS, PaaS – and now AIaaS: Entrepreneurial, forward-thinking companies will attempt to provide customers of all types with artificial intelligence-powered plug-and-play solutions for myriad business problems.
Industries of all types are embracing off-the-shelf AI solutions.
Upper Valley Arts Alliance merges into Upper Valley Business Alliance | Vermont Business Magazine
Vermont Business Magazine The Upper Valley Business Alliance (UVBA) and the Upper Valley Arts Alliance (UVAA) effective immediately have merged organizations under the UVBA umbrella.
"Since 2004, the Upper Valley Arts Alliance has been the driving force behind fostering a creative economy in the Upper Valley," says Tracy Hutchins, executive director of the Upper Valley Business Alliance.
Halfords says supply chain disruption affecting bike business | Reuters
Halfords, Britain's largest cycling retailer, said it expected the cycling supply chain issues, which include factory production constraints, raw material inflation, freight disruption and driver shortages, to continue for some time.
British retailers, cafes and restaurants are struggling to cope with a shortage of drivers, and in particular heavy goods vehicle (HGV) drivers, and food processing staff after COVID-19.
Business Lessons From Today's Sporting Legends
Despite the pandemic, 2021 had an incredible summer of sport. Highlights included the Tokyo Olympics, Paralympics, The British & Irish Lions Tour of South Africa and The UEFA European Football Championship.
While the world of business and sports don't often directly overlap, there are plenty of similarities. Both involve intense competition to be the best in a specific field, as well as necessary teamwork and collaboration. So what business lessons can we learn from today's sporting legends?
Pandemic led to IRS backlog of 8 million paper business tax returns
The Covid-19 pandemic caused a backlog of nearly 8 million paper-filed business tax returns at the IRS in 2020, according to a report issued Tuesday by a U.S. Treasury Department watchdog.
That represents a 3,230% increase relative to the end of 2019, when the IRS had about 239,000 paper returns waiting to be processed, according to the report, published by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration.
Aiming to gain ground in electric cars, Ford hires a former Apple and Tesla executive.
Ford Motor said on Tuesday that it had hired the senior executive who was leading Apple's secretive car project to help the automaker push further into electric vehicles.
The executive, Doug Field, will be responsible for turning Ford vehicles into software-driven products that can interact with customers and provide new types of services, something Ford and other car companies say will become more important. Mr.
Family-owned Euclid Heat Treating celebrates 75 years in business – News-Herald
This year marks a milestone anniversary for Euclid Heat Treating , which has now been a family-owned and -operated business for 75 years.
Founded in 1946 by the Vanas family, Euclid Heat Treating began out of a small garage a few doors down from its current location at 1408 E. 222nd St. in Euclid, with just a couple of salt pot furnaces, said second-generation owner John Vanas.
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