The latest Central Massachusetts business news
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Thursday, February 22, 2018
Telegram parent buys Worcester Magazine, five others
New York-based GateHouse Media, the parent company of the Worcester Telegram & Gazette, is acquiring a small Central Massachusetts media company, which owns Worcester Magazine.
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Atlantic Union College in Lancaster to close
Atlantic Union College, a small Christian school in Lancaster struggling with finances and a lack of accreditation, will effectively close after the spring semester.
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Worcester Sun halts publication
The Worcester Sun, an online local news website which just two months ago began a weekly print edition, has temporarily ceased publication.
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Wachusett Brewing partners with former Guinness brewer
Wachusett Brewing Co. in Westminster has partnered with a renowned Irish beermaker to release a New England-style stout, his first partnership with a U.S. craft brewer.
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Ameresco inks $7.5M energy deal for Virginia school district
Framingham-based Ameresco announced Thursday a contract with a Virginia school district for a $7.5-million energy savings project to upgrade infrastructure in 22 schools.
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WPI granted $1.6M to develop wound-care app
A team of researchers at Worcester Polytechnic Institute have received a $1.6-million grant from the National Institutes of Health to develop an app for tracking chronic wounds.
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Saint-Gobain strives for a happy workplace
Building materials manufacturer Saint-Gobain has been recognized as a top employer in North America by the Top Employers Institute for the third consecutive year for its workplace and employee benefits.
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Regional Roundup
Question of the Week
Tuesday we asked: In the United States, 16.6 percent of corporate board members in the United States are female, putting the U.S. behind Western counterparts, including Norway and France, which double the American rate. New laws in those two countries require public companies to have women in 40 percent or more of their board positions, while other countries including Belgium, Germany and Italy, require a 30-percent threshold.
Should Massachusetts or the U.S. have a law requiring public companies to have a certain percentage of women on their boards?
  • If corporations are not forced to increase number of seats held by females they will continue to have the majority of board members comprises of males.
  • PASSING "LAWS"
  • Why are we insisting on making women into men? If you want to destroy American one way is to destroy the family unit. If mother's are working all the time who is raising the children, a computer or TV?
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