Jan. 10 / Council approves Wheelabrator contract, rejects car-tab fee The Spokane City Council approved a three-year, $25 million contract with Wheelabrator Spokane Inc., a subsidiary of Houston-based Waste Management Inc., to to the
Meetings & Events LaunchPad Inland Northwest will hold a reception at its new training center and work space, at 120 N. Stevens, on Thursday, Jan. 13, from 4 to 7 p.m. RSVP for this event at www.launchpadinw.com. The Inland chapter
The wood products industry anticipates some market improvement next year, continuing a recent month-to-month trend, but expects the gains to be small, compared with the depth of the trough from which companies in that sector are trying to normal be
A drought a continent away and an ideal growing season here last spring contributed to continued strong wheat prices for Inland Northwest farmers in 2010 and a likelihood that 2011 could be strong as well. Other regional crops also had yields and a
The retail sector should see modest improvement in 2011, but that's from a depressed baseline pushed down by the poor economy, and observers here say it could be some time before the industry recovers fully."We are cautiously optimistic about of
After what tourism officials here say was a banner 2010, with a number of big-impact events, convention activity in the Inland Northwest is expected to undergo a dip next year."Spokane has had, from a convention standpoint, with a large number a
The health-care sector here faces major hurdles and uncertainty in the coming year, due partly to eroding patient volumes, pressure on government funding sources, and the continuing consolidation of hospitals and physician groups."I think it be
In a mixed outlook for 2011, Kootenai County executives say tourism and manufacturing likely will begin to lead the economy there out of its downturn. Meanwhile, they're hoping that residential home sales will at least maintain their higher level a
This year has been better than 2009, and 2011 should be better than 2010, but the economy won't completely turn around until 2012, bankers here believe."We anticipate that 2012 will be the turnaround year for the economy," says Jack Heath, and a
While many industries expect to plod through another year of a still-slogging economy, the mining industry expects a repeat of what has been a stellar 2010.Metals prices continued to be strong this year, and in some cases jumped significantly, a