Newstral
Article
oregonlive.com on 2020-11-11 00:55
Portland’s procurement officer resigns after criticism over city’s failure to award more construction contracts to minority- and women-owned firms
Related news
- Portland’s elected auditor, the city’s watchdog, won’t seek third termoregonlive.com
- Akron releases plan for awarding more city contracts to minority-owned businessescleveland.com
- Akron filling new position to oversee awarding more city contracts to minority-owned businessescleveland.com
- All of Portland’s employee unions demand right to negotiate over city’s COVID-19 vaccine mandateoregonlive.com
- Jobenomics: Baltimore City’s Minority-Owned Business Planafro.com
- Reforming the City’s broken procurement systemafro.com
- Roadblocks Inherent To The Public Procurement Process For Minority-Owned Businesses (Guide 1 Of 4)jdsupra.com
- After Cuyahoga County disparity study, group urges minority-owned businesses to apply for contractsThe Plain Dealer
- Akron to award more city contracts to minority-owned businesses with help from new hirecleveland.com
- Pittsburgh to gauge level of city contracts going to minority, women-, veteran-owned businessestriblive.com
- Asian-owned businesses hit in more than a dozen acts of vandalism in Portland’s Jade Districtoregonlive.com
- Do minority-owned businesses have the same opportunities? | Opinionnj.com
- Third Eye Books, Portland’s only Black-owned bookstore, has a new home – and a new followingoregonlive.com
- Businesses in Portland’s Central Eastside say city’s attention to crime, safety is overdueoregonlive.com
- Support minority-owned small businesses: Jon Kozesky (Opinion)cleveland.com
- N.J. considering diversity fund to boost minority-owned businessesnj.com
- Ohio lanches loan programs for women- and minority-owned businessescleveland.com
- Man killed in NE Portland’s North Tabor neighborhood; city’s 10th homicide of 2022oregonlive.com
- Public Procurement & Government Contracts 2020: USAjdsupra.com
- Black-owned firm sues after N.J. official allegedly says state is ‘not a fan’ of investing with minority-owned companiesNew Jersey Local News