What I’m reading: Linda Navarro
Linda Navarro, President and CEO of Oregon Bankers Association, shares what she’s reading.
Linda Navarro, President and CEO of Oregon Bankers Association, shares what she’s reading.
Skip Rung, President of Oregon Nanoscience and Microtechnologies Institute, shares what he’s been reading.
Marie Osmunson, CEO of Chez Gourmet, shares what she’s reading.
Eight athletes, executives and innovators who are boosting the profile of Oregon sports.
Neglected eastside neighborhoods begin to attract political attention and grow new community-based business models.
Efforts to balance logging and environmental issues move forward in eastern Oregon as gridlock continues in the west.
Looking out the sixth-floor windows of the David Evans and Associates building in downtown Portland, a visitor sees numerous engineering projects the company has either helped build or rebuild.
After shelling out for acreage, machinery, landscaping, labor costs, bottling and marketing, budding vintners would be lucky to start a standard winery in the Willamette Valley for anything less than several hundred thousand dollars. But in Portland, another business model for wineries is sprouting that’s more like founding Facebook than starting a farm.
For the next four years, a niche bike apparel company with its U.S. headquarters in Portland will outfit the top-ranked pro-cycling team in the world. The London-based company Rapha announced in January its sponsorship of the British Team Sky, which claims 2012 Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins and several national champions among its ranks.
The state and local governments extend hundreds of millions of dollars each year in property tax waivers, corporate income tax credits, rebates and loans. Yet the question remains: Do tax credits and incentives actually create jobs?