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N.C. revenue picture improving
Collections of the state’s key economy-based taxes advanced through the first half of the current fiscal year, 2011, as the overall economic rebound chugged to achieve traction. Income withholding taxes collected by the N.C. Department of Revenue hit $4.87 billion from July through December, up 0.9 percent from the prior year, according to a report released Friday by the State Controller’s Office. The Business Journal
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

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Funding finalized for Pontotoc, Miss. plant
PONTOTOC, Miss. – Pending environmental permits by the state, Enerkem Corp. is poised to begin building its $100 million ethanol plant near the Three Rivers Solid Waste Management Authority landfill. Read more: NEMS360.com
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

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First-time jobless claims fell 23 percent last week in Louisiana
First-time jobless claims fell 23 percent in Louisiana last week after a runup during the first week of the new year. According to the Louisiana Workforce Commission, there were 4,999 initial claims for the week ending Jan. 15, down from 6,503 the previous week. Times-Picayune
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

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Memphis' bioscience future bright
Memphis’ biotech industry is well-positioned to be a player in the growing personalized medicine industry, mainly due to the city’s logistical industry. Memphis Business Journal
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

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Memphis-Shelby County, Tenn. Port Commission busy with prospects
The Memphis-Shelby County Port Commission had a full plate Jan. 20, from authorizing revenue bonds to setting land prices for a potential new business at Frank C. Pidgeon Industrial Park. The commission set a price of $12,500 an acre for a company considering operations at the park. Memphis Business Journal
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

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JAXPort's Anderson says he has funding ideas
The new Jacksonville Port Authority CEO said he has “a few cards up his sleeve” in terms of getting funding from the federal government’s shrunken coffers. Jacksonville Business Journal
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

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Chattanooga, the new home of Porsche?
Porsche is considering manufacturing cars in North America. If it happens, Chattanooga's new Volkswagen factory would be a likely choice. The luxury German automaker is in the process of merging with Volkswagen. The Chattanooga Times Free Press reports that Porsche CEO Matthias Mueller told a German news magazine that the company is exploring options for production, and is also considering manufacturing cars in Asia. Chattanooga Times Free Press
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

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Genetics lab sizing up Tampa for a new facility
TAMPA - A Maine genetics lab may know more about its plans for a Florida campus in a month, including the chance it may build in Tampa, an executive from The Jackson Laboratory said Thursday. Tampa Tribune
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

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High unemployment rate in Tampa area just won't budge
TAMPA - Florida's unemployment rate is staying stubbornly high, coming in at 12 percent in December for the second straight month, new state figures show. Tampa Tribune
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

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Florida's jobless rate steady at 12 percent
Florida's unemployment rate in December was 12 percent, unchanged from November, according to a state report released today. While the state's number was flat, the jobless rate in Metro Orlando dropped to 11.3 percent, down from 12 percent in November and 11.8 percent in October. Orlando Sentinel
Submitted 1 years 118 days ago

 

 

Features & Opinion

 
OPINION
By Dennis Cuneo
 

Much has been written about the need to expand and diversify our energy base. With the recent spike in gasoline prices and the Iranian threat to disrupt global oil supplies, some are calling for the equivalent of a Manhattan Project to develop alternative energy sources. Others say that renewables are still too expensive and that we shouldn’t encourage them at the expense of fossil fuels. The highly publicized failure of Solyndra has called into question whether the federal government should continue the U.S. Department of Energy loan program, initiated under the Bush Administration, to provide funding for alternative energy projects. Supporters of the program say that without government funding, we risk ceding leadership of the alternative energy market to China.

 

 

 FEATURE  
By Glenn McCullough, Jr.
 
On February 9 the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission did something it has not done in 34 years: approve a license (two in fact) to build two advanced nuclear reactors. For a consortium of utilities constructing two advanced nuclear reactors at Plant Vogtle on the Georgia-South Carolina border, this means major strides generating 2,200 megawatts of new electricity, enough for approximately one million homes and businesses.
 
 
FEATURE  
By Dan Juneau
 
National, state, and local business groups from around the country opposed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (aka “ObamaCare”) when it was being debated in Congress last year.
Many trade association representatives (including this writer) went to Washington to express business community concerns about the legislation and to request votes against it. History records that the legislation (all 2700 pages of nearly incomprehensible jargon) was finally enacted on party line votes in both chambers and signed into law by President Obama.
 
 
by Mike Randle
 
The headline above is of a great song from the '70s. It was by The Outlaws and was recorded in 1975 (go straight to You Tube to listen to it and bring the entire staff into your C-suite and rock on). I was a student but more like the starting shortstop for the University of Tampa Spartans baseball team in 1975.
 


 

 


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