YOUR BUSINESS AUTHORITY
Springfield, MO
Half of cannabis retailers did not remit voter-approved sales tax in first two months.
A ribbon-cutting event marks the ceremonial opening of the 251 Champagne Blvd. facility.
The submission by Branco came after the city pushed back the deadline for bids twice.
The manufacturer reports a 41% drop in first-quarter profits.
Springfield Business Journal’s annual Day in the Life feature is back, this time taking you into the day of a health care leader, school district superintendent and brewery owner.
City officials expect new turf fields will be economic driver.
Evergreen Hair House opened; the Ozark Chamber of Commerce moved to a new home; and Dirk’s Tavern LLC got its start on C-Street.
After discovering a niche for vintage typewriters, Laura Prather quickly grew a home-based typewriter sale and service business.
Arvest Bank has named a new president and CEO to lead its mortgage division.
Americold Realty Trust broke ground this week on a $127 million development in Kansas City.
Liberty Hospital in Missouri has finalized a planned merger agreement with The University of Kansas Health System.
The chair and CEO of Little Rock-based Encore Bank has resigned.
Peloton has announced that its CEO will exit and the company will conduct layoffs.
Subway has finalized its sale to Roark Capital.
U.S. job openings dropped to a three-year low in March, according to Labor Department data released this week.
The Federal Reserve has held its key interest rate steady.
The Kansas Legislature adjourned Tuesday night without passing legislation designed to lure the Chiefs and Royals across state lines.
Bus company First Student is laying off 105 employees in Jefferson City.