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Throughout the Aug. 25 edition of WBJ, you’ll read about the best of what humanity can be, personified through WBJ’s 40 Under Forty, Class of 2025. The winners are executives, entrepreneurs, and advocates who are making their marks on our lives and…
After playing professional baseball for the Oakland Athletics minor league organization, Jeff Bercume rapidly ascended at Laddawn, a packaging manufacturer in Devens, rising to lead sales, marketing, and product management.
Joseph Heelan has scaled Powders on Demand from zero revenue to $5+ million annually in under five years while establishing the company as a key supplier for additive manufacturing and cold spray technologies.
Christal Brown has grown GFA's marketing approach and community presence for the $720-million financial institution serving more than 33,000 members across 10 locations.
This year's judges were Kola Akindele, Jenessa Burks, and Lauren Howe.
Andrew DeChristopher is providing digital equity in Fitchburg through his vision of affordable, community-focused internet access.
Three years ago, Joann Marsili stepped into her role at Fidelity Bank. Since then, she has led a marketing strategy designed to connect and support the 67,000 small businesses across Central Massachusetts.
Nicholas Rocheleau combines technical expertise with visionary leadership as director of engineering at the fourth-generation family business that bears his name.
A 36,977-square-foot industrial building in Sterling has been sold, part of a sale-leaseback deal which will see its former owner remain at the site.
Even with the increases compared to 2024, buyers are likely to find lower prices now that the peak homebuying month of June has passed.
In an effort to increase the pace of new housing development in Massachusetts, Gov. Maura Healey has proposed streamlining the environmental review process for certain new housing projects, with the goal of reducing the time spent on the process from about one year to 30 days. Environmental reviews are a hallmark of community planning, to ensure new development doesn't negatively impact surrounding properties or natural resources, even though the process does add significant time and often cost to projects. Healey's proposal comes after Massachusetts fell behind the national average in new housing production, despite adding 90,000 new units since she became governor in 2023.
New England already averages the longest timeline in the nation to build a single-family home once the developer has been giving the authorization to move forward with construction, according to U.S. Census statistics compiled by the National Association of Home Builders. In 2023, single-family homes in New England averaged 13.9 months from permit to completion. The South Atlantic states have the lowest average of 8.9 months while the region that includes Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana is the second quickest at 9.4 months. The second-longest average after New England is the New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania region, which takes 13.2 months.
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SubscribeWorcester Business Journal presents a special commemorative edition celebrating the 300th anniversary of the city of Worcester. This landmark publication covers the city and region’s rich history of growth and innovation.
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Worcester Business Journal provides the top coverage of news, trends, data, politics and personalities of the Central Mass business community. Get the news and information you need from the award-winning writers at WBJ. Don’t miss out - subscribe today.
Worcester Business Journal presents a special commemorative edition celebrating the 300th anniversary of the city of Worcester. This landmark publication covers the city and region’s rich history of growth and innovation.
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