Airbnb has been under growing pressure to clamp down on parties since 2019, when a Halloween house party in a San Francisco suburb ended with 5 people dead in a shooting.
Business
Business news and information from the Portland Press Herald.
Inflation Reduction Act may have little impact on inflation
Lower deficits usually lower inflation but the Congressional Budget Office determined this month that the changes would have a ‘negligible’ impact this year and next.
Russia’s economy gets boost from wartime grain shipments
The United Nations and Turkey brokered two deals last month: one protects ships carrying Ukrainian grain through the Black Sea and the other keeps Russia’s food and fertilizer from being sanctioned.
What’s in big Biden bill? Health, climate goals become law
The package, an election year turnaround after loftier versions collapsed, will touch countless American lives and secure longtime party goals.
U.S. cancels $3.9 billion in ITT Tech students’ loan debt
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona says the for-profit college ‘misled students about the quality of their programs.’
GM recalls 484,000 big SUVs to fix problem with third-row seat belts
The recall covers Chevrolet Suburbans and Tahoes, Cadillac Escalades and GMC Yukons from the 2021 and 2022 model years.
Companies facing 1st ever tax on stock buybacks in Biden bill
Investors, including pension and retirement funds, like the buybacks. But critics of big corporations call the practice ‘paper manipulation’ to enrich executives and big shareholders.
Portland’s bike-share program finally gets rolling
The city and Tandem Mobility, which is running the program, expect to have 200 bicycles available for rent at 40 locations on the Portland peninsula by Sept. 1.
Amazon workers walk off job at major West Coast air hub
A walkout in Southern California over pay and heat safety shows how labor organizing has spread to yet another division of the e-commerce behemoth’s business.
Delayed raises and renovations: Small businesses face new uncertainties
They’re being barraged by diverging economic messages that have many wondering what to do next. The U.S. economy shrank for a second quarter in a row, reviving fears that the country might be entering a recession.