Weekly Poll: How Has COVID Changed Your Holidays?
The end of every year is typically a time for family gatherings but 2020 will likely prove to be very different.
The end of every year is typically a time for family gatherings but 2020 will likely prove to be very different.
Amid the uncertainty, do you think this most recent commercial real estate cycle is over? Take our poll and tell us!
We want to know: Is the election also influencing your business? Take our poll and tell us!
Between the state and federal eviction moratoriums, apartment landlords are in a tight spot.
The summer housing market was on fire in many parts of Massachusetts, with big jumps in the median single-family sale price and big drops in the number of homes sold.
Massachusetts’ economy has moved into a strange period. Where does the fractured landscape leave you? Are you more or less optimistic about the state’s near-term economic future?
Mall titan Simon Properties and Amazon are reportedly in negotiations to convert an unspecified number of anchor locations at malls across the country into distribution centers.
It’s one of the hottest topics on Beacon Hill and in Massachusetts communities today: Is it safe to go back to school?
After weeks of declining numbers of new COVID-19 cases, Massachusetts saw infection rates increase in recent days.
With a long-sought zoning reform finally gaining steam on Beacon Hill as the legislature enters the waning days of this session, it looks like state leaders may be poised to take one of their biggest steps yet to address Massachusetts’ dramatic housing shortage.
Looking to boost how new developments contribute to a more equitable Boston, city officials are developing new requirements that projects, including Suffolk Downs, address questions about displacement and fair housing.
Landlords, policymakers and housing activists nearly all agree: Massachusetts is likely going to face “tsunami” of evictions when the state’s freeze on non-essential evictions lapses Aug. 18.
With coronavirus cases spiking across many parts of the South and West in recent days as states come out of lockdown, America’s experience with COVID-19 appears far from over.
When the Paycheck Protection Program was supposed to end yesterday, June 30, it still had $130 billion in funds left over.
Housing advocates say data suggests as many as 178,000 renter households could be in need of some kind of housing assistance when the federal government’s enhanced unemployment payments run out at the end of July if unemployment figures don’t budge.
The death of George Floyd in Minneapolis on Memorial Day sparked massive protests around the country and around the world against racial injustice.
With millions of Americans and hundreds of thousands of Massachusetts residents out of work thanks to physical distancing restrictions, how should the government respond?
For some office workers, the sudden transition to working from home has been fantastic. For others, though, it’s been horrendous. Where do you sit?
With so many of us stuck inside all or nearly all of the time by the coronavirus pandemic, the four walls of our current homes are getting a bit boring, if not suffocating.
The coronavirus has injected all sorts of uncertainty into the national and local economy. So, how is your business responding?