CredHub, a Spokane-based credit reporting startup, has hired a new executive, Michelle Flandreau, as chief revenue officer and is preparing to expand its operations and customer base in three western states this year, says Flandreau.
Leaders of Spokane Valley-based Numerica Credit Union and Liberty Lake-based STCU are helping grow and shape the influence of their respective financial institutions in the Inland Northwest.
Ezra Eckhardt, president and CEO of STCU, says that while the
Bankruptcy filings in 2022 continued the downward trend of the past several years in Eastern Washington, but bankruptcy attorneys here say filings are likely to climb this year.
In 2022, 436 bankruptcy cases were filed in Spokane County, according to d
AgWest Farm Credit, the newly formed agricultural lending association, will focus its resources to enhancing its agricultural customer-owners' access to technology, which will enable them to modernize their growing methods and deliver efficient and
St. Petersburg, Florida-based multinational investment bank and financial services company Raymond James Financial Inc. plans to establish a new office in Spokane.
The company is renovating a 3,000-square-foot space in an office building at
Lynn Ciani, chief risk officer and general counsel for Spokane Valley-based Numerica Credit Union, retired from a 40-year career in law and banking on Jan. 2.
Ciani grew up in Southern California and received a bachelor's degree in political science
Spokane-based Northwest Farm Credit Services and Rocklin, California-based Farm Credit West have completed their mergers and created a new financial cooperative association, AgWest Farm Credit.
The merger, finalized Jan. 1, completes a year-long
Businesses and nonprofits that implement diversity, equity, and inclusion practices should take steps to ensure that such principles are present throughout operations, some experts here say.
Blending DEI into every facet of an organization ensures that
November 2022 marked an important milestone in Washington Trust Bank's history: its 120th anniversary.
In many ways, banking in 1902 looked nothing like it does today-no debit or credit cards and no online or mobile access, for starters.
I'm not sure who has the superpower of predicting the future. I know it's not me.
The world has seen other pandemics, and there's nothing new about social, economic, and environmental upheaval. But the collision of seemingly unrelated events