TIAA-CREF, a New York City-based financial services company that provides retirement plans to employees in the academic, research, nonprofit, and medical sectors, has opened a Spokane office downtown in the Fernwell Building, at 505 W. now, the the
New study by insurance company rater indicates margins will be squeezed
September 9, 2010
Compliance with a key provision of the new health reform law could cost the nation's health insurers far more than most analysts expected, says a new study by Weiss Ratings, a Jupiter, Fla.-based provider of independent insurance company ratings.
In all, state has paid out $28 billion in benefits to 11 million-plus workers
September 9, 2010
The state of Washington has paid out $28 billion in unemployment benefits to more than 11 million workers since the unemployment-insurance system was created 75 years ago. On Aug. 14, 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law the the
Data show that problem to be larger than kids who have no insurance
September 9, 2010
More than 14 millionor 22.7 percentof U.S. children were underinsured in 2007, says a study published late last month in the New England Journal of Medicine. That was far higher than the 3.4 million children found to be without at of
Now only about 55 percent of Washington employers provide insurance benefit
September 9, 2010
Finding a job right now can be tough, and finding one that comes with medical benefits is even tougher.Washington employers offering medical insurance fell by 1.6 percentage points in 2009, from 56.5 percent to 54.9 percent, according to an this
Despite an increase in auto thefts in the Spokane area last year, auto insurance companies say drivers here most likely won't notice a difference in their premiums. Recent reports from the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB) list Spokane as a
Employers here say it's too early to know how coming provisions of national health-care reform will impact the insurance plans they offer to their employees, or their own bottom line, but insurance brokers say those impacts are starting to come has
It may be the last place you want to be judged on your looks, but in a court of law it pays to be attractive.A new Cornell University study has found that unattractive defendants are 22 percent more likely to be convicted, and tend to get hit an
In an effort to lower costs, U.S. law firms that responded to a survey by the New York-based National Law Journal said they cut staffing ratios for associates, paralegals, and support staff to one of the lowest levels seen since the 1980s.The of
A study by University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill researchers found that 31 radiologists who reviewed the CT scans used in a medical malpractice lawsuit didn't agree with the conclusions reached by four paid medical expert witnesses in the the