Spokane Valley-based snack maker BumbleBar has launched a business-to-business division with the establishment of Clean Copack.
Clean Copack processes 'clean labelâ€--minimal ingredient, naturally flavored--snacks, such as energy bars, cookies
Liberty Lake-based Itron Inc. has secured a contract with Bangor, Maine-based electric utility Versant Power to upgrade the utility's metering infrastructure and network.
The COVID-19 pandemic dominated news headlines in 2020 and served as the subtext for many of the significant business decisions made in the Spokane area during the year.
With that backdrop, the Inland Northwest business community experienced a number of
Spokane-based Jubilant HollisterStier LLC is planning to double its existing space and manufacturing capacity and add 400 employees during the next three years, says Amit Arora, president of the pharmaceutical manufacturing company.
Liberty Lake-based Itron Inc. has signed a contract with East Coast utility Nation Grid to help that company with its meter reading capabilities.
Based in London and doing business in three northeastern U.S. states-New York, Massachusetts, and Rhode
Sandpoint, Idaho-based airplane winglet maker Tamarack Aerospace Group Inc. has opened an installation center in Aiken, South Carolina, marking its third expansion this year.
The new space, which was developed through a partnership with Aiken-based
A year marked by high demand, supply constraints, and mercurial commodities pricing likely will lead to continued volatility for at least the first half of 2021, some wood products industry observers say.
Joel White, executive officer of the Spokane Home
Tim Loucks and Tyler Cossey have never met, but the two Eastern Washington University business school alums have something in common: They're trying to find their riches in beer.
Loucks, 42, is looking to innovate keg storage of brews, and Cossey
The Deer Park Business & Industrial Center is on track to more than double its developed space within the next three years, and further growth is envisioned within five years.
The notion that two of the Inland Northwest's publicly-traded companies, one that manufactures wood products and the other that makes paper products, would see a surge in demand during a pandemic may once have seemed hard to fathom.