Spokane real estate agent Mary Stanton worked part-time in real estate for decades before deciding late last year to make it her full-time profession.
Despite the arrival of COVID-19, the 51-year-old Stanton says she's busier in real estate now
Redevelopment has started at the former Atlas Mill site, located along the Spokane River in northeast Coeur d'Alene.
Hilary Anderson, community planning director with the city of Coeur d'Alene, says the first phase of
A clinic opening next month in Liberty Lake offers a type of breast cancer detection using ultrasound technology that has been approved as an adjunct to traditional mammography.
Dan Byrne is thoroughly a Spokane man. Born and raised in northwest Spokane, with a degree in accounting from Gonzaga University. Byrne started his career in the accounting world, at the now-defunct national firm Coopers & Lybrand LLP.
The city of Spokane Valley is planning a two-story, $10 million addition to the Spokane County Fair & Expo Center, with the goal of boosting tourism and retail spending.
Barring relief, some employers fear recently-implemented unemployment tax increases could be the final straw that puts them out of business permanently.
One of Spokane's swiftest and most visible business casualties of the COVID-19 pandemic also made for the Journal's most-read story of 2020.
And it wasn't really close, according to page-view data generated by Google Analytics, for SpokaneJournal.com.
The COVID-19 pandemic dominated news headlines in 2020 and served as the subtext for many of the significant business decisions made in the Spokane area during the year.
With that backdrop, the Inland Northwest business community experienced a number of
Spokane-based Jubilant HollisterStier LLC is planning to double its existing space and manufacturing capacity and add 400 employees during the next three years, says Amit Arora, president of the pharmaceutical manufacturing company.