Developer buys burned-out site at Chicago and Lake for redevelopment startribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from startribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Nonprofits + Philanthropy | U.S. Bank Taps Minnesota Nonprofits to Distribute ‘Microbusiness’ Grants Women of color make up the fastest-growing segment of entrepreneurs, but they’re also among the “least funded,” U.S. Bank’s Reba Dominski says. Photo courtesy of U.S. Bank
U.S. Bank Taps Minnesota Nonprofits to Distribute ‘Microbusiness’ Grants The Minneapolis-based bank is providing a share of a $25 million funding package to three Minnesota nonprofits, which will in turn distribute the money to small businesses owned by women of color.
Three Minnesota nonprofits are among the beneficiaries of a new wave of small business funding from Minneapolis-based U.S. Bank.
Wells Fargo seems to be getting its Minnesota mojo back Bank investing in businesses, nonprofits in the home of its roots. April 18, 2021 2:00pm Text size Copy shortlink:
Wells Fargo may be getting its mojo back, nationally and in the Twin Cities.
Minnesota is no longer the organizational heart that it was after former Norwest CEO Dick Kovacevich moved from Minneapolis to San Francisco in 1999 to become CEO of the merged bank-holding company that took the Wells Fargo name and California headquarters.
Wells Fargo, under its third CEO in five years, seems to have put behind it billions in fines and years of damage to its reputation that dimmed its star and capped growth and left Minnesota a declining regional hub.
Renderings of rebuilt Minnehaha Lake Liquor revealed, 10 other businesses to receive grants fox9.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fox9.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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The U.S. Small Business Administration launched the third wave of its Paycheck Protection Program forgivable-loan initiative, starting with a three-day exclusive outreach through U.S. Treasury-certified Community Development Financial Institutions that chiefly aid minority-owned businesses.
The first two rounds of the program were criticized for disproportionately favoring larger, white-owned businesses. But the new round, which began Monday and will distribute up to $284 billion to U.S. businesses, will see applications through Wednesday from businesses that typically lack traditional relationships with banks. We appreciate SBA providing increased access to the capital BIPOC businesses need, Alfredo Martel, chief executive of Meda, said, using the acronym for Black, Indigenous and people of color.