“As to the question of being good business, the state should want for-profit business any day over a non-profit” Mark Robbins is a Missouri Breaks rancher from Roy.
Last week’s New York Times columns by Paul Krugman and David Brooks offer textbook examples of the unhelpful frames that define our conversation about rural America.
This week’s tech roundup includes some of the latest, advanced sensor technologies available at the moment. All of them are opportunities for entrepreneurs and businesses to license, develop, and bring to market.
This is the first app that allows management crews to do “on-the-fly” monitoring, taking tree spatial patterns into consideration. Intentionally diversifying these spatial patterns during forest management helps to promote biodiversity and forest health.
In this episode of the McKinsey Podcast, Simon London speaks with McKinsey senior partner Katy George and partner Enno de Boer about the future of manufacturing—think digital and advanced analytics, not robots.
Little says increasing starting salaries for teachers sends a clear signal to teachers and potential teachers that the state appreciates and values them.
There are the insurance companies — which one Casper doctor called a “bloated sucking worm,” but other officials said lacked the power here to dictate pricing, and one insurer said are critical to delivering care to Wyomingites.
Why not reuse these computers for students who can’t afford them? That started Project REBOOT, or Refurbished Electronics Bring Out Opportunities Together through St. Vincent de Paul.
The Governors Highway Safety Association estimated, based on data from the first half of the year, that 6,227 pedestrians were killed in traffic accidents in 2018. This would be a whopping 50 percent more than were killed in 2009.
Vehicle titles, birth and death certificates, tax credits and vehicle tags are the focus of four subsidiaries under Ownum, a holding company trying to make paperless blockchain solutions for government processes.