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Energy Dept. aims to speed up permits for power lines

The Biden administration on Thursday finalized a rule meant to speed up federal permits for major transmission lines, part of a broader push to expand America’s electric grids.

Key solar panel ingredient is made in the USA again

The revival of the factory, which is owned by REC Silicon, could help achieve a long-standing goal of many US lawmakers and energy executives to reestablish a complete domestic supply chain for solar panels and reduce the world’s reliance on plants in China and Southeast Asia.

EPA severely limits pollution from coal-burning power plants

The Biden administration on Thursday placed the final cornerstone of its plan to tackle climate change: a regulation that would force the nation’s coal-fired power plants to virtually eliminate the planet-warming pollution they release into the air or shut down.

TALKING POINTS

As planes fill and tastes change, Southwest Airlines mulls assigned seating

Stories you may have missed from the world of business.

Larry Edelman | Trendlines

Among Mass. independent voters, the economy is a high hurdle for Biden

Independents are less likely to share Democrats’ rosy take on the state’s economy, but they are nowhere near as gloomy as Republicans, according to a new Suffolk University/Boston Globe poll.

Economy cooled off in first quarter, growing at 1.6 percent rate

The U.S. economy continued to grow early this year, but at a sharply slower rate as strong consumer spending was offset by higher prices and pockets of weakness in other sectors.

WBUR layoffs: Read the letter to staff from CEO Margaret Low

Thirty-one employees at WBUR, roughly 14 percent of the station’s staff, are leaving the company through layoffs and buyouts.

Inside the crisis at NPR

Internal documents reviewed by The New York Times and interviews with more than two dozen current and former public radio executives show how profoundly the nonprofit is struggling to succeed in the fast-changing media industry.


COLUMN | DAN MCGOWAN

‘He understood it was a spectacle’: Before Trump faced a judge, there was the corruption trial of Buddy Cianci

For those who covered the former Providence mayor’s corruption trial, the memories have never faded.

This part of Massachusetts ranked as the third most competitive rental market in the country. It’s not the Boston area.

At less than 2 percent, the metro area had the second-lowest rental vacancy rate in the country, a study has found.

THE FINE PRINT

Lunch with friends at a Chinatown restaurant? Not for a young blind woman who showed up with her service dog.

Joicee Gordillo said she regularly encounters restaurants that are hesitant to allow her and her service dog, Junie, in. But her experience at Jade Garden was the first time she was outright denied service.

TALKING POINTS

Boston Real Estate Board readies campaign against transfer fees

Stories you may have missed from the world of business.

State officials are bracing for Steward Health Care to possibly file for bankruptcy and change top management

A bankruptcy filing by Steward could allow the hospitals to continue running while Steward worked with creditors to turn them over to new operators.

Unilever ice cream sale won’t change us, says Ben & Jerry’s

There is a “firmly established framework” that will “remain intact” to protect the integrity of a brand known for promoting progressive causes, said the independent board of Ben & Jerry’s.

TikTok ban in US looms as Biden kicks off 270-day countdown

Legislation requiring the social media app’s Chinese owners to divest sailed through Congress, capped by Senate passage late Tuesday as part of a larger foreign-aid package.

Billionaire Ellison is moving Oracle to Nashville from Texas

The move comes after the company has been making major advances into the heath care system.