The management company of the LaFontaine Automotive Group in Metro Detroit has agreed to pay $1.5 million to settle an alleged Paycheck Protection Program loan fraud.
Federal prosecutors alleged the company falsely certified eligibility for a $1 million COVID relief loan in 2020 despite franchise status making it ineligible.
A federal court ordered the Federal Emergency Management Agency Thursday to restore a program that helps protect the infrastructure of North Carolina and other states, court documents show.
Organizations that have relied on Michigan state agency work project funding said Thursday that the House Republican vote to ...
New Orleans officials are pressing ahead with more than $50 million in new street contracts even as the federal funding they ...
The Colorado Department of Agriculture is seeking experts in their respective fields to fill vacancies on several advisory committees that give input to the Department on ...
The Deal Sheet is a weekly compilation of Greater London and beyond's biggest leases, sales, financing deals, construction ...
The Trump administration outlined management plans for implementing its priorities Monday in a brief agenda focused on ...
Another leadership shakeup at the Office of Cannabis Management took place as growers lament rollout of a seed-to-sale tracing system ...
LaFontaine Automotive Group’s management company will pay $1.5 million to settle allegations it fraudulently obtained a ...
Timucuan Asset Management Inc. will lease about 7,034 square feet of space on the top floor of One Tower Court, the ...
The Troy office redevelopment converted an 88,000-square-foot office building into 62 apartments, while construction is currently underway on a new five-story adjacent building that will add 94 ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results