Some say a planned hotel could plug the city’s revenue shortfalls; others say it could destroy the face of a city that prides itself on its historic character.
Tourism
The electronics retailer is re-launching its iPhone trade-in program on Friday, and the promotion will run for nine days.
Twenty-five local, independent businesses are teaming up together to offer discounts and other incentives in July.
A German court ruled in favor of Tennant’s competitor, which claimed that some of Tennant’s advertising claims were misleading; Tennant is considering an appeal.
The CEO of the St. Cloud-based scrapbooking company said the additional cuts that were planned for June would not occur, although plans may change later down the road.
Kim Robert Calkins acknowledged failing to pay to more than $850,000 in taxes and was sentenced to a year in prison. His wife was previously sentenced to five-and-a-half years for bank fraud.
Best Buy has partnered with Microsoft to install small Windows stores in select locations, which will offer Windows-based PCs, tablets, accessories, and support from a Microsoft-trained staff.
Plans reportedly call for a 210-room Hampton Inn & Suites.
The new product line will be free of artificial flavors, colors, and preservatives, and roughly half of the items will be certified organic.
Select Comfort has developed a product under its Sleep Number brand that allows users to heat and cool individual sides of a bed with wireless remotes.
The proposed project, which will be called Broadway at Center, calls for a hotel, office space, apartments, and more.
Summit Hotel Properties, Inc., said it plans to spend roughly $3.6 million over the next year on improvements to the hotels, located in Eden Prairie and Minnetonka.
High expectations have left some Canadian shoppers disappointed with Target’s prices and selection; analysts say: Just give it time.
The retailer is placing beauty experts in select locations and designing its own dresses for brides, bridesmaids, and flower girls.
That’s according to a study commissioned by Meet Minneapolis, which also found that those 27.9 million visitors collectively spent $6.9 billion when they came in 2012.
The retailer said first-quarter profits were dragged down by soft sales in weather-sensitive categories, and it cut its full-year earnings outlook.
ValueVision Media, previously known for its ShopNBC brand, has rebranded its business and swung to a profit for the first time in years.
A group of retailers has opted out of a $7.2 billion settlement with the credit card companies and is now pursuing its own legal action.