The Spokesman-Review is offering voluntary buyouts to employees, with the intent of reducing its staff size by 5 percent, or 17 to 18 people, by the end of this year, the newspaper said this afternoon in a press release.
The Spokesman-Review currently
Lee & Hayes PLLC, a Spokane-based intellectual property law firm, announced today that it has acquired Atlanta-based Hope & Baldauff LLC.
The Georgia patent-law firm has 11 attorneys, two patent agents, and six support staff members, all of whom have j
The minimum wage in Washington state will increase to $9.47 an hour beginning Jan. 1, up 15 cents from the current hourly rate, the Washington state Department of Labor and Industries announced today.
The change reflects a 1.59 percent increase in the
An investor has bought one of two downtown buildings collectively known as the Spokane Entrepreneurial Center, and a commercial real estate broker involved in the transaction says he expects to close a sale shortly in which another investor plans to buy t
The Spokane Home Builders Association will hold its 10th annual Fall Festival of Homes during the next two three-day weekends.
This year's festival will feature 36 homes constructed by 17 Spokane-area builders.
An old railroad right-of-way is being converted into a bicycle-and-pedestrian path in Spokane Valley, to be called Appleway Trail. Construction started late this summer, and by the end of the year-weather permitting-bicyclists, rollerbladers, dog walk
Initiative 1351, which would reduce K-12 class sizes in Washington and is one of three statewide propositions on the upcoming general election ballot, is an unfunded mandate that simply would cost too much to implement, particularly given that its educati
The Spokane Area Workforce Development Council has received $3.2 million-down $150,000 from last year-in state workforce development money for the summer-2014-to-summer-2015 funding period. The reduced funding isn't necessarily a bad thing, though,