Spokane-based bar president says helping poor get legal services is priority
March 24, 2016
Washington State Bar Association President Bill Hyslop says a lot of the work he's done as WSBA president during the first half of his year-long term has been exploring how to make the justice system more affordable to low-income individuals and familie
Overriding a mayoral veto, the Spokane City Council on Jan. 25 passed an ordinance requiring employers to provide employees earned sick and safe leave. Spokane joins an increasing number of localities and states that mandate such paid leave.
Mark and Elisabeth Michaelis, owners of IntelliTect Corp., a high-end software architecture and development company based in Spokane Valley, have made philanthropy-and particularly the fight against injustice and extreme poverty-a key element of their
Leaving a legacy to a charity can be a complex endeavor best accomplished through planned-giving strategies formed jointly by the donor, financial professionals, and fundraisers, says Kjirstin Graham, president of the Inland Northwest Planned Giving Counc
Company's new managing partner says demand for financial help is high
March 10, 2016
In an effort to meet rising customer demands for its products and services here, Northwestern Mutual-Inland Northwest expects to add 30 new advisers and 30 interns this year across its nine regional offices, managing partner Paul Hanson says.
'Consumer
The Smith-Barbieri Progressive Fund last year made 54 grants totaling more than $360,000 to 36 direct service providers in the Inland Northwest.
The charitable foundation's founders, Don Barbieri and Sharon Smith, say it's a drop in the bucket, howe
Spokane-based information technology company Nuvodia LLC, having separated geographically from its parent company Inland Imaging last year, is expanding into other areas of medicine and strengthening its newfound foothold in the energy sector.
Last June
Spokane nonprofit Beyond Pink is advocating for breast thermography as an early-screening method for breast cancer-and having success in getting more women to take the test.
While the American Medical Association and others have yet to embrace the tec
Inland Northwest Health Services' rebranded information-technology division, called Engage, has expanded its national footprint and accelerated its growth.
The 15-year-old, information-management concern needed an upgrade, says new Engage chief execut
Dr. John Tomkowiak, Washington State University's inaugural dean for the Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, is carrying on the legacy of the medical school's namesake by implementing a few innovative ideas of his own.
Tomkowiak, whose medical backgr