Worcester Business Journal Special Editions

WBJ 25th Anniversary Issue

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62 Worcester Business Journal • www.wbjournal.com 25 YEARS: IN REVIEW The right lighting and comfort levels can make a real difference for your business, resulting in increased sales and improvements in employee satisfaction. Not to mention reducing your energy costs by up to 30%. Prism Energy Services is working with National Grid's Small Business Program to make it easy for you to make energy efficiency improvements to your business. National Grid will pay 70% of the total installation cost of select energy efficiency upgrades and offers on-bill repayment up to 24 months. Alex Manassah 617-328-9896 x125 alexm@prismenergyservices.com www.prismenergyservices.com Look aT your BuSiNESS iN a whoLE NEw LiGhT. BrouGhT To you By 978-632-6600 mwcc.edu AA/EEO Institution | IP198-01 to choose from & certificates degrees providing quality & affordable education for 45 + F UR campuses convenient and online FACULTY OVER 50 YEARS top notch 4 online courses 100 OVER To learn more about all of MWCC's academic programs and gainful employment information, visit mwcc.edu/programs. WORCESTER BUSINESS JOURNAL on 25 years of excellence MWCC congratulates the Learn about yourself and find your career path at Mount Wachusett Community College: $$$$$ 100 + annual scholarship opportunities upgrade community health centers, and more than 650 such centers will use the funds to purchase new equip- ment or IT systems, according to the federal Department of Health and Human Services. As many as 400 will use the money to either adopt or expand the use of electronic health records. Unum, the Tennessee-based benefits provider with hundreds of employees in downtown Worcester, signs a 17-year lease agreement to be part of the CitySquare development, finalizing the company's commitment to the project. Unum's plans call for a 216,000-square-foot office building at the site. The Massachusetts Port Authority (Massport) buys Worcester Regional Airport from the city in June for more than $15 million. As part of what Lt. Gov. Timothy Murray labels an "inte- grated" approach to transportation, the state takes the airport off the city's hands. The purchase price covers cap- ital and operating costs the city had incurred over the previous seven years of ownership, along with debt on the airport's terminal, and costs associated with airport employees. Before the transfer, the airport had been running an annual deficit of about $3 million. IBM opens its largest software develop- ment lab in the U.S. in Littleton. The IBM Mass Lab, a collection of sites in both Littleton and Westford, employs 3,400 of the company's top software designers. The lab is one of 70 IBM software labs around the world. The facility was built with enough space to allow for future growth. Marlborough benefits and compensa- tion services company Workscape announces in July that it will be acquired by payroll giant ADP of Roseland, N.J. Financial terms were not released. Boston-based NStar and Northeast Utilities of Hartford, Conn., approve a merger to create a $17.5 billion gas and electric firm that will serve 3.5 million customers in three states. It would be an all-stock deal in which NStar shareholders get 1.3 common shares of Northeast stock for each NStar share they hold for a total equi- ty value of $9.5 million, the compa- nies said in a statement. 2010

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