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Entrepreneurs

  • Worcester 300 trivia contest, part 1

    January 10, 2022

    As part of WBJ’s 2022 coverage of the 300th anniversary of Worcester’s founding, the publication has partnered with the Worcester Historical Museum to run a trivia contest. Those with the most correct answers at the end of the year will win a

    January 10, 2022
  • People to Meet in 2022: Derek Canton

    Sloane M. Perron December 20, 2021

    Canton has formed his career around the belief the purpose of financial technology, or fintech, is to address the needs of the community.

    Sloane M. Perron December 20, 2021
  • People to Meet in 2022: Aaron Birt

    Brad Kane Updated: December 20, 2021

    Beyond his business success, Aaron Birt is giving back to the community, helping to support the Central Mass. entrepreneurial ecosystem

    Brad Kane Updated: December 20, 2021
  • Here are 22 people you should meet in 2022

    December 20, 2021

    To help you navigate the ins and outs of the region's business community, WBJ has compiled a list for its Economic Forecast edition of 22 people who will have an outsized role in shaping those trends.

    December 20, 2021
  • People to Meet in 2022: Jon Weaver

    Monica Benevides Updated: December 20, 2021

    While it may seem like the biotech field is dominated by several big players, that’s far from the case in Central Massachusetts.

    Monica Benevides Updated: December 20, 2021
  • Worcester is seeing a resurgence of minority-owned small businesses

    Sloane M. Perron Updated: December 6, 2021

    To say the coronavirus pandemic impacted small businesses would be a serious understatement. Lockdowns, supply chain shortages, labor shortages, and inflation have hindered businesses and forced industries to quickly adapt or close up shop.

    Sloane M. Perron Updated: December 6, 2021
  • Cannabis regulators & local operators take up the fight for industry equity

    Monica Benevides Updated: September 13, 2021

    Inequalities in the industry persist, and large multistate operators continue to dominate the cannabis market, even in the face of several Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission programs designed to give certain groups of people a leg up in

    Monica Benevides Updated: September 13, 2021
  • Worcester’s colleges have fostered a startup ecosystem to help students become business owners

    Livia Gershon Updated: May 24, 2021

    When Becker College in Worcester announced it will be closing its doors in August, the Massachusetts Digital Games Institute had a big question to answer. The statewide center for video game entrepreneurship, known as MassDiGi, had been based at the

    Livia Gershon Updated: May 24, 2021
  • State cannabis regulators fear investors are exploiting minority entrepreneurs

    Chris Lisinski from State House News Service May 13, 2021

    Massachusetts marijuana regulators are concerned about a recent significant uptick in reports of potential industry investors who targeted economic empowerment and social equity program entrepreneurs with unfair contract terms.

    Chris Lisinski from State House News Service May 13, 2021
  • 2021 Power 50: Jon Weaver

    Updated: May 10, 2021

    Worcester has a cluster of colleges and population density unlike anything else in Massachusetts outside Boston and its immediate suburbs, so it’s only natural that Worcester’s been making a long push to build a life sciences-based startup culture

    Updated: May 10, 2021
  • Two Black Lives Matter-inspired startups aim to educate

    Monica Benevides Updated: February 22, 2021

    In summer of 2020, Price was spending time with those closest to him, watching the Black Lives Matter movement expand in the aftermath of George Floyd’s killing by Minneapolis police and trying to figure out what he should do next.

    Monica Benevides Updated: February 22, 2021
  • Leadership Worcester announces Class of 2021

    Monica Benevides August 27, 2020

    The Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce announced the 27 members of its upcoming Leadership Worcester class of 2021, on Wednesday. 

    Monica Benevides August 27, 2020
  • 40 Under Forty 2020: Zu Shen

    Monica Benevides Updated: August 17, 2020

    In 2018, Zu Shen joined MBI as vice president, counseling startup companies scientifically and advising them on commercializing their technologies.

    Monica Benevides Updated: August 17, 2020
  • WBJ announces the 40 Under Forty, Class of 2020

    Brad Kane Updated: August 17, 2020

    This year’s 40 Under Forty class is certainly like no other. Although full of the archetypal up-and-coming leaders of Central Massachusetts business organizations, each member of the Class of 2020 has found a way to thrive in the midst of an

    Brad Kane Updated: August 17, 2020
  • 40 Under Forty 2020: Dave Ryan

    Riley Garand Updated: August 17, 2020

    By the time Dave Ryan was 25, he was already a corporate controller of a $50-million manufacturing company, Superior Cake Products. Ryan impressively grew United Medical Waste from a startup to a multimillion dollar company in – wait for it – five

    Riley Garand Updated: August 17, 2020
  • 40 Under Forty 2020: Amanda Theinert

    Grant Welker Updated: August 17, 2020

    It is Becker’s master’s in fine arts program that houses the school’s renowned video game design program, and it’s Amanda Theinert who helped build the curriculum and get the new academic program running.

    Grant Welker Updated: August 17, 2020

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Today's Poll

Will the new lottery-based admissions systems for vocational-technical high schools make the economy better?
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Poll Description

Massachusetts is implementing a new lottery admissions system for vocational-technical high schools, starting with the 2026-2027 school year. Proposed by the Healey Administration, the new lottery system is an attempt to expand access to voc-tech schools, giving schools with more applicants than seats the choice of either a weighted lottery, which takes aspects like attendance and discipline records into account, or a non-weighted lottery, which does not take academic performance or discipline issues into consideration.

Education Secretary Patrick Tutwiler and supporters of the lottery have defended the change to a lottery system, saying it will make admissions more equitable while the state works to expand access to voc-tech schools. The lottery system has been criticized by business groups and educational leaders, who have said lotteries will water down admission standards and disrupt the pathway of top students into high-demand trades.