Medica will use payment technology designed by a local tech company to provide its members discounts on healthy food from a variety of local grocery stores.
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Minnesota’s per capita personal income rose 3.74 percent to $46,227 in 2012, outpacing the nation as a whole and all but three states.
Edina-based clean energy developer Geronimo Energy recently announced that it has acquired Midwest Wind Energy’s development portfolio.
The company is building a platform that will help consumers control offers they receive from retailers based on their genetic makeup.
We asked to see the numbers.
The company also looks to even out distribution.
The deal has been under scrutiny from federal regulators due to antitrust concerns, and Ecolab said that it continues to have “productive discussions” with the U.S. Department of Justice.
Governor Dayton chose DFL attorney David Lillehaug to replace Justice Paul Anderson on the Minnesota Supreme Court.
In an attempt to meet the increasing demand for faster Internet, Comcast will boost the speeds on three of its plans starting Tuesday.
A study performed by IBM compares Minnesota’s efficiency in the areas of human resources, finance, payroll, and procurement to the performance of leading private- and public-sector organizations.
The company, which is much smaller after having just divested five grocery chains, is eliminating about 22 percent of its Minnesota office jobs.
The Senate voted last week to repeal the tax, which is expected to cost Medtronic up to $175 million annually, but there are major hurdles yet to overcome and the company acknowledged that a repeal would be “an uphill battle.”
After dropping its frozen pizza manufacturing sector, Austin Packaging will reportedly cut 125 employees from its staff of 250.
Two Minnesota lawmakers are among those examining the possibility of establishing “a new organization to host a world‐class chamber orchestra in St. Paul.”
Fairview Health Services is in discussions about being taken over by South Dakota-based Sanford Health; Attorney General Lori Swanson has concerns and is holding public hearings on the issue.
Businessman Maury Rosenberg, who won a $6.1 million jury award, claims that U.S. Bank is using involuntary bankruptcy as a collection tool, which is illegal; the bank, meanwhile, claims it hasn’t done anything wrong and is appropriately pursuing a litigious businessman who owes money.