Archive for April 2022
2022 Corporate Citizenship Awards: SAFE Credit Union
We're introducing honorees of this year's Corporate Citizenship Awards, which recognize organizations and community members working to make the Sacramento area a better place.
2022 Corporate Citizenship Awards: Kaplan Solutions
We're introducing honorees of this year's Corporate Citizenship Awards, which recognize organizations and community members working to make the Sacramento area a better place.
Wealth tax bill will not move forward in California Assembly this year
A controversial bill that would have imposed a wealth tax on the richest Californians will not move forward, after missing a critical deadline in the state Assembly.
Could the East Bay’s office market soon have an inventory shortage on its hands?
Mounting demand for certain kinds of office space coupled with the absence of office projects under construction could potentially yield a future supply-demand imbalance, observers say.
High-speed rail chugs forward with San Jose-to-Merced approval, by way of Gilroy
The San Jose-to-Merced segment clears another hurdle as the board for the California High-Speed Rail Authority approves the environment impact report for the route.
Migraine patch developer Zosano Pharma suspends program, cutting more jobs
The East Bay company has struggled to win approval of its migraine patch, using a system of micro-needles to deliver the generic drug zolmitriptan.
It’s official: DivcoWest closes on former Old Navy HQ
The office building will serve life science companies in its next life.
These 20 Bay Area cities had the highest median sales price in Q1
San Francisco fell outside the most expensive areas in the region.
2022 Corporate Citizenship Awards: Consolidated Communications
We're introducing honorees of this year's Corporate Citizenship Awards, which recognize organizations and community members working to make the Sacramento area a better place.
Bank of the West economist on Bay Area’s severe population loss during Covid: ‘It’s just scary’
"The data came in from the Census Bureau and it was even worse than we imagined," Bank of the West Chief Economist Scott Anderson said.