Steve Jagler, for BizTimes Media
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Steve Jagler, former BizTimes Milwaukee editor.
Experts share insights about corporate wellness
Companies interested in starting or improving a corporate wellness plan for their employees are invited to attend the second annual BizTimes Wellness Summit.
Corporate survival in ‘The Creative Age’
How do companies foster the creativity needed to produce their next great business idea, product or service?
Josh Linkner believes he has the answers to that question.
Milwaukee employers optimistic about 2nd quarter
Continuing improvement is expected in the southeastern Wisconsin economy in the second quarter, according to the latest Business Outlook Survey conducted by the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce (MMAC).
Optimism rising among Wisconsin technology executives
Wisconsin technology executives who responded to the most recent WisBusiness.com Tech Leaders Survey expressed considerably more optimism about the state's economy than those a year ago.
MATC needs to cut costs
The next state biennial budget will cut funding to the Milwaukee Area Technical College by $7.5 million each year, on top of a $5 million budget cut for 2010 that it was handed in October, according to Michael Burke, president of MATC.
Budget provides historical opportunity
The Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce has supported Walker's plan to cut public spending and hold the line on taxes.
Manufacturers are bullish
Southeastern Wisconsin manufacturers are overwhelmingly supportive of Walker's proposed budget, says Jeff Hoffman, vice president of Pewaukee-based commercial real estate brokerage firm Judson & Associates. Hoffman, the former president of the Independent Business Association of Wisconsin, primarily handles industrial real estate deals.
City needs more ‘tools’ to handle crisis
Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett issued the following statement as his response to this report about the impact of the new state budget:
More jobs will drive real estate demand
Milwaukee's commercial real estate professionals are enthusiastic about Walker's "Wisconsin is open for business" agenda and are glad to see that he is trying to balance the budget without raising taxes, according to Jim Villa, president and chief executive officer of the Commercial Association of Realtors Wisconsin (CARW).
What now, Milwaukee?
Gov. Scott Walker’s two-year state budget plan will have significant impact on every man, woman and child in Wisconsin.
It will affect the roads you drive on. It will affect the schools your children attend. It will affect the colleges your future employees are studying in. It will affect the services you receive from your city and county. It will affect the buses your employees or perhaps your customers ride on. It will affect the charities that assist your community.
As Walker prepares to close a projected $3.6 billion state deficit by cutting annual local shared revenues by $1 billion, a new normal will be felt by city and county governments, school districts and social agencies.
It will affect the roads you drive on. It will affect the schools your children attend. It will affect the colleges your future employees are studying in. It will affect the services you receive from your city and county. It will affect the buses your employees or perhaps your customers ride on. It will affect the charities that assist your community.
As Walker prepares to close a projected $3.6 billion state deficit by cutting annual local shared revenues by $1 billion, a new normal will be felt by city and county governments, school districts and social agencies.
Transit cuts will restrict workforce availibility
Walker's budget repair bill and proposed state budget would result in a decrease in funding for local transit systems in the state, which will likely prompt service cuts and fare increases, said Kerry Thomas, executive director of Transit Now, an advocacy group for mass transit in southeastern Wisconsin.
‘Hoppy Hours’ to fight leukemia & lymphoma
Beginning on Thursday March 24, and repeating for nine consecutive Thursdays, until May 19, Best Place at the Historic Pabst Brewery will raise...