For every white Twin Cities resident who was unemployed in 2011, more than three blacks were unemployed, according to a recent study.
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Accretive Health moved to dismiss an amended lawsuit filed last month, which accuses the company of overly-aggressive debt-collection tactics and includes sworn statements from hospital patients.
A company spokesman said that the cuts, which will be implemented “over the next several weeks,” are part of a restructuring of the grocer’s marketing team.
The company, which was accused of manipulating customers’ transactions to generate excess overdraft fees, said it has made changes to the way it handles customers’ accounts.
With Target’s stock up about 130 percent since 2009, five executives—including CEO Gregg Steinhafel—reaped millions by selling shares.
What Minnesotans are doing to put returning soldiers to work.
Many contracts have implications for your intellectual property—or for whether you'll be on the hook in somebody else's infringement suit.
Savor summer alfresco—on restaurant patios and rooftops.
The best opportunities for networking this month.
More than 300 musicians are booked for the Twin Cities Jazz Festival in 15
Blood Sweat & Tears plays the Dakota.
Opera under the stars.
Art, love and politics in the 1980s.
The retailer’s new “Hexapillar” gift card features a robotic caterpillar that becomes a butterfly that can actually fly.
The health insurer will provide a $100 annual credit to individuals who meet four health goals.
Some of the hospital system’s inpatient nursing units will grow and some will shrink as part of a “rebalancing” act that aims to ensure that each shift is at the optimal staffing level—but the reorganization is predicted to result in a net gain of 40 to 50 positions.