The federal tax filing deadline extension has created additional stress for Spokane accountants.
As the new July 15 deadline approaches, many clients have put off filing until the last minute, and some CPAs here say that has created a bottleneck of work
As a financial adviser, I have obtained a variety of industry licenses and designations. However, before becoming an adviser, I earned a master's degree in history from Eastern Washington University.
In a time like this, the value of the nonprofit Craft3 can't be underestimated, claim two of the organization's Spokane employees.
Craft3 specializes in lending to businesses and people who can't secure funding from conventional sources.
With banks limiting contact between employees and their customers, the use of digital and mobile banking tools that the institutions have been investing in for years have seen sudden, dramatic spikes, Spokane-area financial industry representatives say.
Inland Northwest bankers say they're frustrated by a lack of federal guidance regarding particulars of the Paycheck Protection Program.
Some say they and their customers are confused about some aspects of the program.
This isn't the Great Recession for Inland Nortwest bankers.
And that's a good thing, executives here say.
While the pandemic has brought a host of challenges, leaders at some banks and credit unions say financial institutions are in a much better
Though money for research has risen steadily in recent years at Washington State University Health Sciences Spokane, officials are concerned a prolonged global pandemic could have a compromising effect on future funding.
Residents from 42 states have committed to spending more than $1 million at struggling small businesses in their respective communities through an initiative co-founded by a young professional in Spokane.
Fueled by nationwide consumer demand in toilet paper, Spokane-based Clearwater Paper Corp. was the lone publicly traded company in the region to experience an increase in market capitalization in the first quarter of 2020, according to an analysis by Hart
Nearly $7 billion of the total $348 billion in Paycheck Protection Program loans offered by the U.S. Small Business Administration have gone to businesses in Washington, including a number of employers in the Spokane area.