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Local Links: Yuma printing company inks new business strategy

Local Links: Yuma printing company inks new business strategy The pandemic forced Fineline Printing 928 to redraft its plan - News 11 s Crystal Jimenez YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) - Fineline Printing 928 worried at the start of the pandemic it was going to lose customers. Since then the company said its customers were the ones who helped them stay afloat. Fineline Printing 928 is located out in the Foothills and owned by Dundee Dempsey who started the business from her home in 2012. While still operating out of Dempsey s home, she was able to still provide her services to her customers. However, at the start of the pandemic with schools closing and sports being cancelled, a large portion of her services dwindled.

Colorado Springs Philharmonic Orchestra enters arbitration in ongoing labor dispute

Colorado Springs Philharmonic Orchestra hornists (from right): Chandler Spoon, Michael Yopp and Jenny Doersch Mary Malizia Evans Famed musician Joe Strummer once sang, “If you have to get the honey, then you don’t go killing all the bees.” The lyrics of pro-union English punk icons like Strummer and Billy Bragg are coming back into style as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to strain the economy. The connection between labor and music, common themes in genres like folk and punk, is a new motif for symphonic music. An ongoing contract dispute between the Colorado Springs Philharmonic Orchestra (CSPO) and its musicians, represented in bargaining by the American Federation of Musicians (AFM), will proceed to an arbitration process, according to Sarah Wilson, CSPO cellist and president of the local AFM chapter. 

SHAREHOLDER ALERT: Halper Sadeh LLP Investigates CMD, TCF, ALSK, SMTX, ZAGG; Shareholders Are Encouraged to Contact the Firm

Second draw PPP loan rules arrive; banks await new applications

‘Second draw’ PPP loan rules arrive; banks await new applications Another $284.5 billion is up for grabs as small businesses hurt by the pandemic seek additional relief.     The U.S. Treasury Department building is viewed from the Washington Monument on Sept. 18, 2019. Late Wednesday, the Small Business Administration outlined new guidance for small businesses hoping for a first or second round of Paycheck Protection Program loans. [ PATRICK SEMANSKY | AP ] Updated Jan. 7 Another round of Paycheck Protection Program loans is getting closer. But small businesses seeking relief will have to wait a little longer. Late Wednesday, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and Small Business Administration unveiled new guidance for $284.5 billion worth of federally backed relief loans to small businesses harmed by the coronavirus pandemic. Many of the new transactions will be “second draw” loans from businesses that already got a loan last spring or summer.

Small business owners welcome news of second wave of stimulus funding

Small business owners welcome news of second wave of stimulus funding Small business owners welcome news of second wave of stimulus funding and last updated 2020-12-29 19:32:59-05 KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A small Kansas City business that saw operations shut down at the beginning of the pandemic in April says it s still standing today because the owners took advantage of all the help they could get. Upcyle Piano Craft in Midtown looks much different now than it did in the spring. Were we wearing masks yet? owner Stephen Wilson said. I don t think so. The then-emerging pandemic stopped Wilson and his partner, Anne Trinkl, in their tracks right as they were about to open the store.

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