Target said that a recently announced interchange fee settlement “would perpetuate a broken system, restrict retailers from any future legal action, and offer no long-term relief for retailers or consumers.”
Author’s archive
Medina-based Polaris Industries and New Delhi-based Eicher Motors Limited will together form a company and invest about $50 million over the next three years to develop a new line of vehicles for India and other emerging markets.
The venue, which is now called Mill City Nights, said that it has renovated the club to create a “smaller, more intimate venue that is certain to deliver on customer expectations.”
The company, Flagstone Foods, is hiring for more than 30 positions at its new headquarters building.
The supermarket chain’s board of directors has approved issuing non-qualified stock options and retention agreements to CEO Craig Herkert, Chief Financial Officer Sherry Smith, and Executive Vice Presidents Janel Haugarth and Andrew Herring; the options and retention payments vest over time.
Business is good for Kramarczuk’s, thanks to three summers of exposure at Target Field.
A tale of two tilapia farms, right here in River City.
A $20 million renovation seeks to restore the mall’s grandeur and commercial mojo before year’s end.
Jon Charles Salon is taking the mobile services trend to hair-raising heights.
How two of the North Shore’s biggest resorts compete in a tight tourism market.
Carmichael Lynch’s after-work creativity squad is turning heads around town.
Companies are turning to workers for ideas on how boost sustainability—and many are seeing cost savings and other benefits, too.
IT firm Atomic Data has boomed by helping clients avoid meltdowns.
How new trends in space utilization anticipate the needs of office workers.
Former Wells Fargo banker Fawsiyo Hassan Farah reportedly received a 33-month prison sentence—and Michael Kweku Asibu, who worked as a personal banker at Bremer Bank and Associated Bank, reportedly received 42 months in prison.
The Uptown Minneapolis eatery that closed in 2009 will reopen as Figlio 2.0 at The Shops at West End in St. Louis Park.
The move will not result in any job reductions in the Twin Cities, and the firm intends to hire between 300 and 500 new employees in Chicago.
Buyer Ardagh Group says the glass container maker’s annual sales total about $800 million and it employs roughly 2,700.