Columbia learning center fights to keep state license
The Mary Lee Johnston Community Learning Center in Columbia is working to keep its license and government subsidies.
Continue ReadingThe Mary Lee Johnston Community Learning Center in Columbia is working to keep its license and government subsidies.
Continue ReadingTrue/False Film Festival is expected to bring more than 10,000 people to Columbia, and downtown specifically this weekend.
Continue ReadingThe BBB says consumers should be on the lookout for fake cures, phony prevention measures and other coronavirus cons.
Continue ReadingNatural Grocers is recalling peanut clusters and almond clusters due to undeclared allergens.
Continue ReadingFlooding in the Spring of 2019 caused hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage and forced some people to evacuate their homes.
Continue ReadingColumbia Regional Airport received a grant for $800,000 from the U.S. Department of Transportation Small Community Air Service Development Program.
Continue ReadingA popular water bottle brand is pulling millions of children’s water bottles from shelves and carmaker Honda announced a recall for thousands of minivans.
Continue ReadingA decade after a business deal combusted, the city of Moberly plans to bring another company to the community promising scores of new jobs.
Continue ReadingThe Columbia City Council unanimously approved a construction extension for the Broadway Hotel at its meeting on Monday.
Continue ReadingA meat packaging company plans to build a facility in Moberly that would create hundreds of new jobs.
Continue ReadingGiddy investors in stocks have shrugged off worries about the impact of the coronavirus outbreak on the global financial markets. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq both closed at new all-time highs Friday. But bond investors are far from euphoric. Yields on long-term bonds have been falling as of late. The 10-year US Treasury yield is
Continue ReadingMid-Missouri has had above average amounts of snowfall this winter, with more than 16 inches of snow.
Continue ReadingThe FDA issued a recall for a popular insulin pump and Ford Motors is recalling thousands of vehicles.
Continue ReadingCall it a tale of two economies. Two new studies paint a contradictory picture of Americans’ personal finances. One found that tens of millions of Americans can’t afford their medical bills, just as news dropped that 401(k), IRA and 403 (b) balances reached a record high last year. The stock market is undeniably on fire.
Continue ReadingThe overnight warming center at Wabash Bus Station in downtown Columbia will be open Wednesday night. The bus station provides a place for people to get out of the cold overnight.
Continue ReadingMultiple restaurants recently appeared on the food delivery app Grubhub without notice, according to multiple business owners.
Continue ReadingThe idea that Britain can leave the European Union and maintain frictionless trade with the bloc of 27 countries is officially dead. Cabinet minister Michael Gove warned UK businesses on Monday that the government will subject goods from the European Union to border controls starting at the end of this year, acknowledging the end of
Continue ReadingMobile payment apps come with a lot of conveniences, but their popularity also makes them targets for scammers.
Continue ReadingAldi has recalled two pasta sauces because they contain peanuts, which are not a listed ingredient on the product.
Continue ReadingBlackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman committed to giving the majority of his wealth to philanthropy by signing The Giving Pledge on Wednesday. The Giving Pledge is a movement that was started by Bill Gates, Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett in 2010. Targeting billionaires across the world, the pledge encourages people with a net worth of $1
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