Worcester Business Journal

January 12, 2026

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wbjournal.com | January 12, 2026 | Worcester Business Journal 3 Worcester Business Journal (ISSN#1063-6595) is published bi- weekly, 24x per year, including 4 special issues in May, September, October, and December by New England Business Media, 446 Main St, Suite 201, Worcester, MA 01608. Periodicals postage paid at Worcester, MA. Copyright 2026. All rights reserved. Postmaster: Please send address changes to: Worcester Business Journal, 446 Main St, Suite 201, Worcester, MA 01608. Subscriptions: Annual subscriptions are available for $100.00. For more information, please email circulation@nebusinessmedia.com or contact our circulation department at 508-755-8004 x242. Advertising: For advertising information, please call Kris Prosser at 508-755-8004 ext. 286. Worcester Business Journal accepts no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or materials and in general does not return them to the sender. Worcester Business Journal 446 Main St, Suite 201, Worcester, MA 01608 508-755-8004 tel. • www.wbjournal.com Worcester Business Journal WBJ A division of: Editor, Brad Kane, bkane@wbjournal.com Managing Editor, Eric Casey, ecasey@wbjournal.com (real estate, banking & finance) Staff Writer Mica Kanner-Mascolo, mkannermascolo@wbjournal.com (manufacturing, health care, education) Contributors Sloane M. Perron, Sara Bedigian, Emily Micucci, Livia Gershon Photographers Matt Wright, Edd Cote, Christine Peterson Research Director, Stephanie Meagher, smeagher@nebusinessmedia.com Research Assistant, Heide Martin, hmartin@nebusinessmedia.com Production Director, Kira Beaudoin, kbeaudoin@wbjournal.com General Manager Kris Prosser, kprosser@wbjournal.com Senior Accounts Manager Christine Juetten, cjuetten@wbjournal.com Accounts Manager Timothy Doyle tdoyle@wbjournal.com Special Product Manager Regina Stillings rstillings@nebusinessmedia.com Human Resources Manager, Tracy Rodwill, trodwill@nebusinessmedia.com Director of Finance, Sara Ward, sward@nebusinessmedia.com Accounting Clerk, Rae Rogers, rrogers@nebusinessmedia.com Event Coordinator, Patty Harris, pattyh@wbjournal.com Director of Audience Development and Operations, Leah Allen, lallen@nebusinessmedia.com Business Office Assistant, Nicole Dunn, ndunn@nebusinessmedia.com Publisher, Peter Stanton pstanton@nebusinessmedia.com Chief Operating Officer, Andrea Tetzlaff atetzlaff@mainebiz.biz President & CEO, Tom Curtin tcurtin@hartfordbusinessjournal.com The Future of Rent Collection & Escrow Management ZRent and ZEscrow from Cornerstone Bank. Fast | Efficient | Convenient | Cost-Effective Scan QR code to connect with us. Member FDIC | Member DIF 774-745-8698 cornerstonebank.com TA B L E O F C O N T E N T S 4 Central Mass. In Brief 11 Focus on Best of Business awards 30 List: Largest labor unions 31 Advice 32 Movers & Shakers 33 Opinion 34 Shop Talk: The Ground Round 4 Devens firm's AI megadeal Commonwealth Fusion is teaming up with the world's most valuable company to develop an AI model to advance fusion technology. 31 Why most business podcasts fail, and how to beat the odds Advice columnist Julia Becker Collins, chief operating officer of Vision, details the ways business podcasts can have staying power and feed into companies' bottom lines. P ublic documents hold so many secrets, it's hard to tell all their stories. is edition's cover story is based on a public records request WBJ Managing Editor Eric Casey made of the Massachusetts Division of Capital Asset Management and Main- tenance. Aer news broke last year of a Marlborough-based bid beating out more than a dozen others to develop the State Police's coveted $200-million crime lab project, Casey was curious why DCAMM chose that one, especially aer Worcester officials cried foul when one based in the city wasn't selected. Casey's public records request became his "Marlborough's $200M win" story on page 6. is in-depth story is largely cen- tered on the strengths of the Marlborough proposal and how the project and its 300 life sciences jobs will bolster the city, while touching on some of the flaws in the other proposals. Aside from this main narra- tive, the DCAMM document and Casey's reporting tells many more stories. From just studying the large chart on page 7, you can see all the developers and large properties champing at the bit to land a project like this. Most of them cen- ter around existing buildings, and you can see the office vacancies created by EMC Corp.'s slow exit from the region is causing a problem. e former Westborough head- quarters of BJ's Wholesale Club was most recently approved for a 715,000-square- foot, four building life sciences develop- ment, but that property owner was now looking to the crime lab for the land instead. You can see the inherent chal- lenges an urban area like Worcester faces compared to the more suburban Marlbor- ough, as one of the Worcester-based bids struggled to identify enough affordable parking spaces for the crime lab's workers. Moreover, Casey's story shows the intense outside interest the Central Massachusetts economy is generating, as developers from Virginia, New York City, Boston, and Lex- ington all saw potential money to be made e treasurers hidden in public documents I N T H I S I S S U E in the region. Producing well-research stories based on public documents has been a hallmark of journalism and WBJ for a long time now, and there are many more to come. For now, flip to page 6 and read the many stories the State Police crime lab bid is telling. – Brad Kane, editor W

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