CISCA Monday Newsletter
 
Industry News
Construction Dive
Buildings have an evolving and lasting effect on the communities around them. As the global population grows, spaces and structures must keep up to accommodate the needs of future generations.
 
ForConstructionPros
While the President's executive order doesn't change existing laws, compliance has become more important than ever.
 
9Wood
People
When Barbara Kavovit tells you how she got her start as one of the most powerful women in the male-dominated field of construction management, she starts at the very beginning.
 
The Internet of Business
An autonomous robot under development at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) could provide the blueprint for construction projects of the future. The Digital Construction Platform (DCP) can effectively 3D print an entire building.
 
U.S. News & World Report
Missouri local governments would no longer be able to require union working conditions for public construction projects under a bill passed April 27 by the Republican-led Legislature.
 
WESTERN RESERVE ADVISES TECTUM, INC.
Western Reserve Partners
Western Reserve served as the exclusive financial advisor to Tectum, Inc. in its sale to Armstrong World Industries. For more information regarding this transaction or to learn more about our investment banking services and experience in the building products industry, please contact: Kevin Mayer, Managing Director at 216-574-2117 or email kmayer@wesrespartners.com.
www.wesrespartners.com
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Newsday
The value of contracts for future construction in the metropolitan area fell 43 percent in March compared with a year earlier as both nonresidential and residential activity dropped.
 
CNN Money
The proposal to slash tax on businesses to 15% would -- with one fell swoop -- give the United States the lowest headline corporate tax rate of any major economy in the world.
 
USA Today
For more than a decade, the U.S. economy has tended to ring in the new year meekly. This year was no different. Economic growth slowed in the first quarter to its slowest pace in three years as sluggish consumer spending and business stockpiling offset solid business investment. Yet many economists are writing off the weak performance as a byproduct of temporary blips and still expect healthy growth in 2017.
 
 

 

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