A new study released by the Association of Washington Business shows Washington is the eighth-most regulated state in the country, and those regulations come at an economic cost.
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, in partnership with two national organizations, is repurposing waste materials to be used for medical radioisotope production.
Washington’s U.S. Senate delegation has joined an effort by U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon to halt a pilot program using AI to make care coverage decisions for Medicare patients.
If you were planning to hit the new Pasco Aquatics Center as soon as school got out for the summer, you’re going to need to wait to put on your swimsuit.
A Wenatchee-based private equity firm with an office in the Tri-Cities is now in receivership after state regulators allege its officers misappropriated investments through actions including making Ponzi-like payments and its founder using nearly $780,000 to pay for items such as a boat slip and down payments on a vehicle and private home.
If you’re a Pasco resident looking to install a new furnace or just move a sink in your kitchen or a bathroom, you no longer need to visit city hall to get the necessary permits.
The Tri-Cities Area Journal of Business earned two gold awards and one silver award at the Alliance of Area Business Publishers’ 2026 Editorial Excellence Awards program on May 19 in Wilmington, North Carolina. Additionally, reporter Ty Beaver earned a Journalist of the Year award.
Federal lawmakers, including U.S. Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Washington, passed a proposal to fund many U.S. Department of Energy projects out of committee on Wednesday, and the bill has bad news and good news for the thousands of Tri-City workers at the Hanford site and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
Findings by the U.S. Government Accountability Office warns that the U.S. Department of Energy may struggle to maintain safe operations at its cleanup sites around the country after losing hundreds of staff members and struggle to fill those roles.