This Week's Issue

The state government is deferring to technology and health care companies for a much larger role in the development of the Pennsylvania Health Information Exchange.
Townships in York County and elsewhere in the midstate might look increasingly to municipal cooperation to keep taxes in check while maintaining a certain levels of public safety coverage for residents and businesses.
Groups in York are banding together to pay a full-time retail recruiter to assist in filling vacant storefronts downtown and help guide prospects to specific parts of its burgeoning central business district.
Gov. Tom Corbett on Tuesday proposed a $27.3 billion 2011-12 state budget that is business friendly and would cut spending by 3 percent compared with last year’s budget.
A leaner, more automated manufacturing sector. A greener construction industry. A health care industry dramatically reshaped by reform whose ultimate effect is far from clear.
With all the bad news surrounding Harrisburg’s fiscal crisis, it wouldn’t be hard to imagine businesses choosing different parts of the midstate to open shop. That isn’t the case, however.
For much of his life, Scott Peterson has paid taxes the same way most consumers do.
Sitting in his company’s brick-building headquarters in York, Jerry Crouse said he felt like a rock star while exhibiting at home furnishings trade shows in China.
The Hershey Trust Co.’s past dealings are under a microscope in part because of a tell-all court filing from former president of the trust, Robert Reese, who alleges its directors and management breached their fiduciary duties to its charity, the Milton Hershey School.
Big things are happening in Lancaster, according to Mayor Rick Gray. He just can’t talk about all of them yet.

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