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According to the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics data, Iowa and Nebraska saw gains in union membership while Kansas and Missouri unions saw slight declines.
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Farmers say Title One — a farm bill program that sends money when crop prices or harvests get low enough — isn’t working as a buffer against tough years. Yet others argue the nearly 100-year-old safety net is costing billions of dollars with few strings attached.
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On Friday, some Kansas City bars reopened for the first time in two months. But there weren't many patrons to go around.
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Business owners hope the return of dine-in eating will bring much-needed foot traffic back to Kansas City's most prominent retail center.
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Loews is set to open its downtown Kansas City hotel despite canceled conventions.
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From 30,000 federal workers to T-Mobile to thousands who work at two engineering firms, managers are waiting until workspaces are modified and sanitized to bring workers back to their offices.
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If the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic is as bad at the 2008 financial crisis, furloughs and layoffs could be widespread, a new report says.
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U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley’s proposes that the federal government help pay employee’s wages at companies affected by the COVID-19 crisis.
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AMC has been forced to shutter its theaters around the world in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and its market capitalization has plunged 50%.
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Tens of thousands of Kansas are eager to go back to work as businesses closed by COVID-19 gradually reopen. But for some, it could mean choosing between a paycheck and their health.
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Restaurateurs try to keep staff and customers safe, while also grappling with supply chain disruptions, social distancing measures, and increased sanitation requirements.
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Rural grocery stores have struggled to survive in recent years, but they've suddenly gotten a boost from shoppers desperate for supplies during the coronavirus outbreak.
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Kansans have flocked to tech schools to get trained for high-demand aviation jobs. Those jobs have disappeared with the Boeing 737 Max's grounding and the wilting economy.
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Streets remain relatively quiet and patronage is slow as parts of Cass, Clay and Platte counties allow businesses to reopen Monday.