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Springfield, MO
The medical examiner office led by Dr. Deiter Duff is one of two in Missouri accredited by The National Association of Medical Examiners.
The $6.5M project in Bolivar is expected to wrap by spring 2025.
Newsmakers in the areas of architecture, banking & finance, government, health care, law and media.
Springfield also anticipates nearly $25M in funding for trail completion.
Officials expect $16M project to conclude by end of 2025.
The leader of the Springfield municipality is one of four being considered for the job in Manhattan.
Operations resume at the Harold K. Bengsch Building at the end of this month.
The low-interest loan is earmarked for upgrades to the city's wastewater treatment system.
A series of public meetings are being held this summer.
Together with announcement of trails grant, the bridge projects represent U.S. Department of Transportation funding of $27.7 million.
Scott Fitzpatrick's office is seeking to uncover potential financial irregularities.
While Gov. Mike Parson’s fiscal 2025 budget has statewide cuts of around $1 billion, myriad Springfield projects are among those poised to receive funding with the stroke of the governor’s pen and legislative backing.
The Decision-Makers’ Outlook publication explores themes such as business outlook and growth, operations planning, inflation impacts, cost of business factors and business owner exit strategies.
All of the state's MSAs record month-to-month increases in latest data.
An online survey is available through July 15.
Approvals with local impacts include money for Alliance for Healthcare Education.
Missouri House Speaker Dean Plocher says tax cuts have been good for the state's bottom line.
A popular Missouri low-interest loan program that primarily benefits small businesses and farmers is expected to reopen for applications later this summer after sitting dormant for most of the year.
Bids off estimate by 30% or more ‘not normal.'
The city of Springfield is poised to grow, and its Forward SGF 20-year comprehensive plan puts annexation as a top priority. But outside of the city, the leaders of Greene County’s rural fire protection districts – agencies that rely on property tax revenue for their funding – are worried.
Angel Animal Hospital relocated; Great Dave’s Coffee Co. expanded with a brick-and-mortar shop in downtown Monett; and the Missouri Job Center began moved.