Archive for September 2022
Here are the new corporate names Patriots fans will see in Foxborough this season
Gillette Stadium has added more corporate partners in recent years, with a few new additions for this year’s Patriots season, as sports teams continue to seek branding opportunities at every turn. Read More
Read MoreA Boston startup is making a blood test for ovarian cancer
This new test will look at recently-discovered markers in a patient’s blood that could tell providers whether a patient is at high risk or low risk for ovarian cancer. Read More
Read MoreState auditor clears way for $3B in excess revenue to be returned to taxpayers
State Auditor Suzanne Bump announced Thursday that her office has determined that the state’s tax revenue last year exceeded the allowable limit by nearly $3 billion, confirming the estimate put forward by Gov. Charlie Baker and clearing the way for the money to be returned to taxpayers. Read More
Read MoreAnother Provincetown boutique hotel acquired by Newton firm
“It’s just done so well for us, this drive-to boutique market,” a principal at the firm said in an interview. Read More
Read MoreWill post-Labor Day return-to-office trends finally set the ‘new normal’ in office usage?
The week following Labor Day, for many major companies, marked a bigger return to the office for its employees, the latest chapter in the national RTO saga. Read More
Read MoreThe Petri Dish: bluebird loses another CFO; Imara sells drug to local startup
Gene therapy firm bluebird bio Inc. is losing its second chief financial officer this year. Read More
Read MoreCapital One to hire 100-plus tech workers for new Cambridge office
Capital One says the expansion follows "extensive exploration" of the Boston-area talent and real estate market. Read More
Read MoreHefty salaries aside, thousands of faculty cuts highlight financial vice squeezing US colleges and universities
Among private and nonprofit and for-profit schools analyzed by The Business Journals, the median salary per instructor was about the same at roughly $71,000. At public universities, the median was just over $76,000. Read More
Read MoreWhite House: ‘Tentative’ agreement reached to avert railroad strike
Biden praised former Boston mayor and current Labor Secretary Marty Walsh’s "tireless, around-the-clock efforts" in a statement announcing the the tentative agreement to avert a potentially economically devastating strike. Read More
Read MoreRight-to-repair debate, delayed in Massachusetts court, takes center stage on Capitol Hill
Advocates called on Congress to enact a federal right-to-repair law, but manufacturers say it jeopardizes safety & IP. Read More
Read More