Mortgage Blog
SBA rolls out changes to multibillion-dollar investment program
Several changes for the Small Business Investment Company program took effect on Aug. 17. Here's what is changing and what it means for businesses.
Kaiser Permanente and Hawaii Health Systems Corp. set four-year contract
According to an Aug. 17 announcement, both parties have reached agreement on rates, and over the next 60 days, will continue finalizing the remaining details for the agreement.
HPU appoints dean for new graduate college
HPU has appointed Tricia Catalino as the dean of the Graduate College of Health Sciences.
CVS Health to cut more than 100 corporate jobs at Scottsdale office
In an email to the Phoenix Business Journal, Rhode Island-based CVS confirmed that that the layoffs were related to an announcement the company made about corporate job reductions earlier this month.
3 questions with Michael Mishima of DTRIC Insurance on the Maui wildfires
“Our thoughts and prayers are with everyone on Maui during this very difficult time,” Michael Mishima, vice president and chief claims officer at DTRIC Insurance, told PBN.
More details — and questions — emerge around OHSU-Legacy proposed merger
The deal will face tough scrutiny from regulators.
Portland gets a badly needed new detox center as fentanyl overdoses mount
The new facility could serve about 1,200 people a year.
Alamo City Ticker: TaskUs reports Q2 7% year-over-year revenue decline
The decline was attributed to a direct loss in revenue from the organization's top 20 clients.
San Francisco’s Federal Home Loan Bank CEO to retire
Bazemore's tenure included the Covid-19 pandemic and this spring's banking crisis that saw the failure of Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic Bank.
Student loan repayments will hit economy; how hard depends on who’s being hit
WASHINGTON – When federal student loan payments resume this fall, they are expected to pull as much $71 billion in otherwise disposable income out of the economy every year, $5.3 billion of which will come from Arizona.
The economic pain could be very real for the 43 million borrowers – about 880,000 in Arizona – who will have to start paying back their student loans after a pause of more than three years that began as a pandemic-relief measure.
“We hear from borrowers, some even in Arizona,…