Extra Crunch Friday: 5 VCs on the future of Michigan's startup ecosystem

Extra Crunch Newsletter
Extra Crunch logo
Extra Crunch Roundup logo

Friday, August 07, 2020 By Walter Thompson

Welcome to Extra Crunch Friday

Welcome to Extra Crunch Friday image

A metonym is a figure of speech where, instead of calling something by its name, we use a word closely associated with it. “The White House” is a metonym for America’s executive branch, just as “Cupertino” stands in for Apple Inc. and “Redmond” signals Microsoft.

“Silicon Valley” evokes the San Francisco – San Jose corridor and its concentration of wealth, talent and innovation, but the COVID-19 pandemic is leading many investors and entrepreneurs to broaden their perspective. (In my San Francisco neighborhood, I’m seeing more moving vans and “for rent” signs than I have in years.)

We cover ecosystems around the world on an ongoing basis, but when Managing Editor Matt Burns offered to survey several Michigan-based VCs about the future of his state’s startup scene, I was eager to see what what he’d come back with.

According to the Michigan Venture Capital Association (MVCA), the state has 144 VC-backed startups, “an increase of 12% over the last five years,” Matt reports.

With a low cost of living and STEM-focused schools, the region is positioned well for remote workers. Several investors told Matt the pandemic is boosting growth in the state’s life science startups as well.

Here’s who he spoke to:

  • Chris Stallman, partner, Fontinalis Partners
  • Patricia Glaza, EVP and managing director, ID Ventures
  • Chris Rizik, CEO and fund manager, Renaissance Venture Capital
  • Tim Streit, partner, Grand Ventures
  • Turner Novak, general partner, Gelt VC

Thanks very much for reading Extra Crunch this week!

Walter Thompson
Senior Editor, TechCrunch
@yourprotagonist

Read more

As the world stays home, edtech's Q2 venture totals rose sharply

As the world stays home, edtech's Q2 venture totals rose sharply image

Image Credits: Nigel Sussman

In today’s column, Alex Wilhelm recapped Q2 2020 edtech funding, a once-quiet sector that’s seen renewed interest as parents, students (and investors) shelter in place.

Silicon Valley Bank reports that edtech venture funding shot up more than 60% between Q1 and Q2, “but there's some nuance to the data that should temper declamations that private edtech funding is forever changed,” Alex found.

One major round skewed the numbers.

Read more

Get 20% off a Crunchbase Pro subscription with Extra Crunch

Sponsored by TechCrunch

Just one of several deep discounts available exclusively for Extra Crunch subscribers.

Read more

More thoughts on growing podcasts

More thoughts on growing podcasts image

Image Credits: Halfpoint Images / Getty Images

In the latest Growth Report column:

  • Increasing referral incentives might not increase referrals
  • Mobile app ads to a landing page increases conversion
  • More thoughts on growing podcasts
  • How to monitor and fix Facebook/Instagram ad fatigue

Read more

Q3 2020 is primed to be an intense shopping season for VCs

Q3 2020 is primed to be an intense shopping season for VCs image

Image Credits: Sean Gladwell / Getty Images

DocSend co-founder and CEO Russ Heddleston wrote a guest post based on his company’s Pitch Deck Interest Metrics that may help founders take advantage of “an extremely active fundraising marketplace” through the end of 2020.

Two key findings: VCs are spending much less time reviewing pitch decks, and you need a “why now” slide that mentions COVID-19.

This post includes hard numbers about the optimal number of words/slide, and slides/deck, so if you’re working on your pitch — or know someone who is — click through.

Read more

The story behind Rent the Runway's first check

The story behind Rent the Runway's first check image

Image Credits: Rent The Runway

Natasha Mascarenhas interviewed Rent the Runway co-founders Jennifer Fleiss and Jennifer Hyman to find out how two Harvard Business Students connected with an investor who got them their first check.

In the years since, Scott Friend of Bain Capital Ventures has become a friend and senior advisor.

"I would just recommend that founders spend significant time with seed-stage investors — go to a meal together, take a walk, talk about your business, understand what makes that investor tick as a person and evaluate whether you connect with them," says Hyman.

Read more

Extra Crunch Live: Join Wealthfront CEO Andy Rachleff August 11 at 1pm EDT / 10am PDT about the future of investing and fintech

Extra Crunch Live: Join Wealthfront CEO Andy Rachleff August 11 at 1pm EDT / 10am PDT about the future of investing and fintech image

Andy Rachleff, CEO and co-founder of Wealthfront joins us for an upcoming episode of Extra Crunch Live next Tuesday to discuss the current fintech landscape and take your questions.

With more than $200 million in venture capital, Wealthfront helps customers optimize and manage spending, savings and investments. It’s also branched out into other banking services as it becomes a broader financial services platform.

If you have questions about wealth management or the fintech world at large, add this event to your calendar.

Read more

Eight trends accelerating the age of commercial-ready quantum computing

Eight trends accelerating the age of commercial-ready quantum computing image

Image Credits: CIPhotos / Getty Images

The discovery curve for quantum computing has bent noticeably in the last year or so, which means QC may be nearing readiness for the commercial market.

Venrock investor Ethan Batraski believes these breakthroughs “may be able to deliver capabilities that surpass those of classical computers.”

In a guest post for Extra Crunch, he compiles several predictions and emerging trends suggesting that we are about to leave “Moore’s Law in the dust.”

Read more

Can learning pods scale, or are they widening edtech's digital divide?

Can learning pods scale, or are they widening edtech's digital divide? image

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

Wealthy families around the U.S. are forming “learning pods” — clusters of school-aged children paired with a private teacher — to keep their kids’ education on track. But keeping a tutor on retainer can cost thousands of dollars each month, which limits the number of families that can participate.

Before the pandemic, Swing Education helped connect schools with substitute teachers, but it’s since pivoted to creating learning pods.

"I think that pods are actually a thing that have cropped up all of a sudden because of inequity," said founder Mike Teng. "And they definitely don't make inequity go away, but we are hoping to be able to close some gap given that pods are a reality right now."

Read more

A look inside Gmail's product development process

A look inside Gmail's product development process image

Image Credits: S3studio/Getty Images / Getty Images

Megan Rose Dickey interviewed Gmnail Design Lead Jeroen Jillissen to get his three basic principles for product design: “ease of use, helpfulness and flexibility.”

In a wide-ranging conversation, they discussed the evolution of Google’s email, its process for making major design changes and the ongoing fight to add functionality while minimizing clutter.

“It is a constant ebb and flow,” Jillissen said.

Read more

Read more stories on TechCrunch.com

Divider
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Flipboard

View this email online in your browser

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Unsubscribe

© 2020 Verizon Media. All rights reserved. 110 5th St, San Francisco, CA 94103

Playbook PM: How far apart are the Covid relief negotiators? This far.

Presented by Facebook: POLITICO's must-read briefing on what's driving the afternoon in Washington
Aug 07, 2020 View in browser
 
POLITICO Playbook PM

By Anna Palmer, Jake Sherman, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross

Presented by Facebook

THE LAST GASP? … SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI is hosting Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER, White House COS MARK MEADOWS and Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN to the Capitol today for another shot at striking a Covid relief deal. The meeting begins at 1:30 p.m.

THE WHITE HOUSE wants President DONALD TRUMP to sign his executive orders as early as this evening to attempt to stop collecting the payroll tax, extend enhanced unemployment benefits, halt student loan payments and put in place an eviction moratorium. So progress needs to be made quickly to head that off.

PELOSI said at a noontime news conference that Democrats offered Thursday to decrease their ask by $1 trillion -- it's currently in the $3 trillion neighborhood -- if Republicans increased theirs by $1 trillion to roughly $2 trillion. The administration said no. PELOSI positioned this as the central question going into today's meeting.

WANT TO KNOW HOW CLOSE A COVID RELIEF DEAL WAS/IS? … WHEN MNUCHIN and MEADOWS left PELOSI'S office Thursday night, they suggested that they were mighty close on the small elements of a Covid relief bill, but miles apart on agreeing to the big elements like enhanced unemployment and state and local funding.

SO, THIS GOT US THINKING: How close are the two sides, really? Here's what the negotiators told us this morning -- and it does illustrate that there is a bunch of overlap:

BIG AREAS OF DISAGREEMENT …

-- UNEMPLOYMENT: Republicans were at $400 for 20 weeks or 70% of wage replacement with a $600 cap. Dems were at $600.

-- HOUSING: Not really all too close. Dems were pushing for rental assistance, and Republicans asked for the cost. The GOP offered an eviction moratorium.

-- ELECTION FUNDING: Dream on. They were nowhere. Republicans were in the $400 million-$500 million neighborhood, and Democrats wanted $3.6 billion.

-- EDUCATION: Lots of work remained here. Dems wanted $175 billion for K-12. They were discussing private school assistance, and were close to a deal on that, as well. Republicans were at $75 billion, which they calculated at $1,200 per student. There are also disagreements between the two parties on how it may be used.

-- STATE AND LOCAL: Republicans were at $150 billion for a year and flexibility on the $112 billion that was unspent from the CARES Act. Dems have demanded $900 billion for two years, and PELOSI floated the idea of $500 billion per year. This is a new formulation.

-- NATIONAL SERVICE: There had been some discussion about a new national service program for Covid tracers. Republicans are opposed.

AND ON THE REST …

-- USPS FUNDING: This was pretty much buttoned up: $10 billion over two years. They are still awaiting language.

-- COVID TESTING: They were quite close on point-of-care testing funding. MEADOWS said he would work with Democrats to provide 3 million point-of-care tests per day. No details yet on how or cost.

-- OSHA: MNUCHIN said that he would be willing to talk about changes to OSHA, and MEADOWS said he had talked to Labor Secretary EUGENE SCALIA about enforcement. PELOSI likened SCALIA to DEBORAH BIRX: "He was appointed because he doesn't believe in OSHA -- he's the same category as Birx," PELOSI said.

-- FOOD ASSISTANCE: They had all but agreed on 15% increase in SNAP funding through the end of the year, and Dems were open to negotiating on the rest of the funding.

-- BROADBAND: The two sides were close to agreeing to $12 billion, and had shown interest in Sen. JOE MANCHIN'S (D-W.Va.) rural broadband plan. There is some resistance to this among Senate Republicans.

-- PENSIONS: There is more work to do on this front.

-- AIRLINES: It's not entirely clear where both sides are on the airline money issue. It's up in the air, no pun intended.

 

A message from Facebook:

It's time for updated internet regulations to prevent election interference. We've more than tripled our security and safety teams to 35,000 people, added 5-step political ad verification and partnered with security researchers, other tech companies and law enforcement to combat foreign election interference. What's next? We support updated internet regulations.

 

WE'VE ALL BEEN IGNORING THE REALLY TOUGH QUESTION HERE: Would a deal of this magnitude stand a chance of getting any decent Republican support in the Senate? And, if it doesn't, will TRUMP sign it? POLITICO ledeall from Marianne LeVine and John BresnahanPelosi's Dear Colleague

THE UPSHOT: "Why Black Workers Will Hurt the Most if Congress Doesn't Extend Jobless Benefits," by Emily Badger, Alicia Parlapiano and Quoctrung Bui: "Black workers disproportionately live in states with the lowest benefit levels and the highest barriers to receiving them. Without the $600 federal payments, the most an unemployed worker in Florida or Alabama can receive is $275 a week." NYT

THE ECONOMIC PICTURE -- "U.S. adds 1.8 million jobs in a sign that hiring has slowed," by AP's Christopher Rugaber: "At any other time, hiring at that level would be seen as a blowout gain. But after employers shed a staggering 22 million jobs in March and April, much larger increases are needed to heal the job market. The hiring of the past three months has recovered only 42% of the jobs lost to the pandemic-induced recession, according to the Labor Department's jobs report released Friday.

"Though the unemployment rate fell last month from 11.1% to 10.2%, that level still exceeds the highest rate during the 2008-2009 Great Recession." AP

Happy Friday afternoon.

IN MEMORIAM … AP: "Ford, Bush presidential adviser Brent Scowcroft dies at 95," by Douglass Daniel: "Brent Scowcroft, who played a prominent role in American foreign policy as national security adviser to Presidents Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush and was a Republican voice against the 2003 invasion of Iraq, has died. He was 95. Scowcroft died Thursday of natural causes at his home in Falls Church, Virginia, Bush spokesperson Jim McGrath said.

"Scowcroft was the only person to serve as national security adviser to two different administrations. His appointment by Ford in 1975 came as Scowcroft retired from the Air Force with the rank of lieutenant general. He advised Bush, by then a close friend, during the four years of the Bush administration, 1989-93."

THE REOPENING -- NEW YORK GOV. ANDREW CUOMO said he will allow schools to reopen in the fall.

HOOVER BUILDING READING -- "Democrats turn up the heat on Wray over foreign campaign interference," by Natasha Bertrand: "In a letter sent to Wray on Friday and obtained by POLITICO, Senator Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), the ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee; Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.); and Jack Reed (D-R.I.), ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, expressed 'growing concerns that foreign actors continue to target the November 2020 election,' citing recent briefings from the FBI and intelligence community. …

"The senators' Friday letter to Wray seemed implicitly directed at [Sen. Ron] Johnson and his investigation. … Democratic lawmakers remain unsatisfied with how little has been made public." POLITICO

-- "U.S. Postmaster DeJoy says election mail will not be slowed down," by CNN's Jessica Dean, Caroline Kelly and Cat Gloria: "Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said that the US Postal Service is not 'slowing down' election-related or other mail and will undergo an 'organizational realignment' after the agency often criticized by President Donald Trump as a money-losing venture has faced doubts over its capacity to handle anticipated high numbers of mail-in ballots. … DeJoy also stressed that he would not act 'based on any partisanship.'" CNN

 

POLITICO'S "FUTURE PULSE" - THE COLLISION OF HEALTH CARE AND TECHNOLOGY : As the United States remains stuck in a screening crisis, a worldwide competition has been launched to find the top Covid-19 rapid testing solutions. The contest aims to find a system with a painless sample and quick turnaround for results. When will a breakthrough come? From Congress and the White House, to state legislatures and Silicon Valley, Future Pulse spotlights the politics, policies and technologies driving long-term change on the most personal issue for voters: Their health. SUBSCRIBE NOW.

 
 

FOR THOSE KEEPING TRACK … JOSH GERSTEIN and KYLE CHENEY: "Appeals court rules McGahn must testify": "A federal appeals court has upheld a House subpoena for testimony from President Donald Trump's former White House counsel Don McGahn.

"The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled Friday, 7-2, that McGahn must appear and testify, but the court left open the question of what questions the former close adviser to Trump will be required to answer from House Judiciary Committee lawmakers. The Trump administration could ask the Supreme Court to step in to put the ruling on hold, which would head off the political spectacle of McGahn being called before a Democrat-led Congressional panel before the November election."

THE LATEST IN HONG KONG -- "U.S. Sanctions Hong Kong's Carrie Lam Over China Crackdown," by Bloomberg's Jennifer Jacobs, Nick Wadhams, Jenny Leonard and Saleha Mohsin: "The U.S. is placing sanctions on 11 top Chinese officials and their allies in Hong Kong, including Chief Executive Carrie Lam, over their role in curtailing political freedoms in the former U.K. colony, the Treasury Department said Friday. …

"Lam was sanctioned because she is 'directly responsible for implementing Beijing's policies of suppression of freedom and democratic processes,' the agency said. The 11 sanctioned individuals will have any property and assets in the U.S. frozen." Bloomberg

TIKTOK FIRES BACK … MARTIN MATISHAK: "TikTok threatens legal action against Trump executive order": "'We will pursue all remedies available to us in order to ensure that the rule of law is not discarded and that our company and our users are treated fairly — if not by the Administration, then by the U.S. courts,' the company said." The blog post

HMM -- "U.S. Government Contractor Embedded Software in Apps to Track Phones," by WSJ's Byron Tau: "A small U.S. company with ties to the U.S. defense and intelligence communities has embedded its software in numerous mobile apps, allowing it to track the movements of hundreds of millions of mobile phones world-wide …

"Anomaly Six LLC, a Virginia-based company founded by two U.S. military veterans with a background in intelligence, said in marketing material it is able to draw location data from more than 500 mobile applications, in part through its own software development kit." WSJ

PANDEMIC FALLOUT -- "Children Vulnerable to Abuse Are Imperiled as Caseworkers Stay Home," by Garrett Therolf, Daniel Lempres and Aksaule Alzhan for the NYT in Tollhouse, Calif.: "As the virus continues to rage across the country, it is vital for child welfare workers to have regular in-person contact with at-risk children, those who study child abuse say. The pandemic has cut many children off from routine interactions with teachers, counselors and doctors who are required by law to report signs of abuse or neglect. …

"Now many vulnerable children are largely out of sight, many of them cooped up in crowded apartments, often cared for by parents reeling from job loss and all the other stresses brought on by a pandemic with no discernible end. Yet many child welfare workers … have stopped performing a broad range of essential duties that typically require in-person visits. The shift has been encouraged by the Trump administration." NYT

VEEPSTAKES -- "Progressives alarmed by Rice's vast financial investments," by Marc Caputo and Chris Cadelago: "They say her extensive past holdings in an array of industries at odds with liberal causes — particularly the Keystone [Pipeline] investment — could make her ill-suited to be vice president in a Democratic administration. …

"Progressive activists have started circulating dossiers among themselves that raise concerns about Rice's holdings and foreign policy record. Left-wing Democrats — many of whom favor Rep. Karen Bass for VP — also said in interviews this week that they worried about the toll of recent critical stories examining the California congresswoman's statements and record and complained that Rice had yet to face similar scrutiny." POLITICO

-- HOLLY OTTERBEIN: "More than 300 delegates to the Democratic National Convention and members of the Democratic National Committee have signed on to a statement pushing Joe Biden to choose Rep. Karen Bass as a 'unity' vice presidential pick, POLITICO has learned."

WAPO FACT CHECKER: "Trump campaign ad manipulates three images to put Biden in a 'basement,'" by Glenn Kessler

 

BECOME A CHINA WATCHER : Tensions between the U.S. and China continue to rise following the shuttering of China's consulate in Houston. Is it possible for the two countries to hit the "reset" button or is that just a pipe dream? Join the conversation and gain expert insight from informed and influential voices in government, business, law, tech and academia. China Watcher is as much of a platform as it is a newsletter. Subscribe today.

 
 

IMMIGRATION FILES -- "DHS staffers say Trump appointees Wolf, Cuccinelli ignoring input on protests, immigration policy," by NBC's Julia Ainsley and Laura Strickler: "The sidelining by the Trump appointees is felt acutely in the agency's Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, or CRCL, where employees hired to field complaints about DHS and review new policies believe they are not being heard …

"In recent months, CRCL has raised concerns about the development of a new use-of-force policy for Customs and Border Protection, the two current officials said, including concerns about the use of chemical deterrents against people trying to damage the wall on the southern U.S. border. But after raising those concerns, the office has yet to hear back." NBC

-- ICYMI … BETSY WOODRUFF SWAN: "Cuccinelli relaxed oversight of DHS intel office"

RACIAL RECKONING -- "Black Lives Matter movement sparks 'collective awakening' on marijuana policies," by Natalie Fertig: "Since protests began in early June, many states and municipalities have adopted new cannabis regulations. Nashville, Tenn., stopped prosecuting minor marijuana possession cases. Portland, Ore., redirected all cannabis tax revenue away from the Portland Police Bureau. Colorado's Legislature passed a long-stalled proposal to address social equity and scrap old marijuana convictions, and Sonoma County, Calif., and New York state expanded their programs to erase cannabis criminal records." POLITICO

-- NYT: "Abolish the Police? Those Who Survived the Chaos in Seattle Aren't So Sure," by Nellie Bowles in Seattle: "Some even call for 'abolishing the police' altogether and closing down precincts, which is what happened in Seattle. That has left small-business owners as lonely voices in progressive areas, arguing that police officers are necessary and that cities cannot function without a robust public safety presence.

"In Minneapolis, Seattle and Portland, Ore., many of those business owners consider themselves progressive, and in interviews they express support for the Black Lives Matter movement. But they also worry that their businesses, already debilitated by the coronavirus pandemic, will struggle to survive if police departments and city governments cannot protect them." NYT

CLIMATE FILES -- "This giant climate hot spot is robbing the West of its water," by WaPo's Juliet Eilperin in Orchard City, Colo.: "A 20-year drought is stealing the water that sustains this region, and climate change is making it worse. … This cluster of counties on Colorado's Western Slope — along with three counties just across the border in eastern Utah — has warmed more than 2 degrees Celsius, double the global average. Spanning more than 30,000 square miles, it is the largest 2C hot spot in the Lower 48, a Washington Post analysis found. …

"In Colorado, the rising temperature is forcing a reckoning in this conservative community. The Colorado River supplies water to 40 million people across the West and in Mexico." WaPo

AFTERNOON READ ... GABBY ORR: "The Wedge Issue That's Dividing Trumpworld": "Next week, [the American Principles Project] will debut two ads in battleground Michigan that accuse former Vice President Joe Biden, who has generally used his platform to promote protections for LGBTQ youth, of endorsing 'gender change treatments for minors,' including surgery and hormone therapies for transgender youth. …

"[Terry] Schilling is hoping that stoking anxieties of suburban women and independents about gender nonconforming adolescents will persuade President Donald Trump to add one more front to his culture war reelection strategy. …

"But there is an enormous gulf inside Trump's circle of campaign advisers and closest allies over whether, even at this fraught juncture, injecting transgender issues into the campaign is a potential key to victory or an act of self-destruction. A cohort of establishment Republicans, social libertarians and new GOP converts oppose the strategy. Among them are Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner and his wife, Ivanka."

TRANSITIONS -- Deshundra Jefferson is joining the Credit Union National Association as chief comms officer. She previously was traveling press secretary for Deval Patrick's presidential campaign. … Lisa Steelman is joining the Association for Accessible Medicines as VP for state government affairs. She previously was SVP for alliance development and government relations at the Association of Dental Support Organizations.

 

Advertisement Image

 
 

Follow us on Twitter

Anna Palmer @apalmerdc

Jake Sherman @JakeSherman

Eli Okun @eliokun

Garrett Ross @garrett_ross

 

Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook family

Playbook  |  Playbook PM  |  California Playbook  |  Florida Playbook  |  Illinois Playbook  |  Massachusetts Playbook  |  New Jersey Playbook  |  New York Playbook  |  Brussels Playbook  |  London Playbook

View all our politics and policy newsletters

Follow us

Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Listen on Apple Podcast
 

To change your alert settings, please log in at https://login.politico.com/_login?base=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.politico.com

This email was sent to ateebhassan000.ravian@blogger.com by: POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA

Please click here and follow the steps to unsubscribe.

Holidaymakers warned of travelling risks

15 new Covid-19 cases detected
 
 
     
   
     
  Aug 7, 2020  
     
 
Good afternoon
 

The Department of Health today announced that another 15 people have tested positive for Covid-19. Down from yesterday's figure of 43 this number shows that the virus is still very much active in the community.

 
Although the Department recorded no deaths in the last 24 hours the latest figures from the Northern Ireland Statistical Research agency showed that one person had lost their life to the virus in the period from the 25th to 31st July. The NISRA Covid-19 related death toll now stands at 855. 

In a change to legislation First Minister Arlene Foster announced that the mandatory use of face-covering was to be implemented. The NI Direct website states that 'From 10 August it will be mandatory to wear a face covering in a shop or shopping centre, or any indoor public space where it is not possible to maintain social distancing'. Stiff fines will be put in place for those that fail to follow the requirement.
 
At the same time it was revealed that schools will reopen at the start of the term but that pubs would not be able to start serving on August 10 as originally hoped. 
 
Stay safe and have a good weekend
 
Michael Cousins
Deputy digital editor
 
Want total access to all of our online content? You can subscribe to our website, newsletter.co.uk for just £1 a month for 3 months - and it couldn't be easier.

Signing up will get you faster-loading articles, fewer adverts and access to exclusive content and events when we run them. To learn more, visit our Subscriptions page here.

 
 
     
  15 new cases of COVID-19 detected in Northern Ireland  
     
  The Department of Health has said 15 new cases of COVID-19 have been detected in Northern Ireland in the last 24 hours.  
     
{$escapedtitle}
     
   
     
 
Article Image
Holidaymakers warned of travelling risks amid fears France could be added to quarantine list
 
Chancellor Rishi Sunak has warned holidaymakers of the risk of travelling abroad during the coronavirus crisis amid concerns France may be the next nation to be added to the quarantine list.
 
     
 
Article Image
Larne company confirms 18 redundancies
 
A Larne-based company is to make 18 redundancies in response to a downturn as a result of the Covid pandemic.
 
     
 
Article Image
Eighty workers at food plant test positive for coronavirus
 
A food production plant in Co Kildare has suspended operations after 80 workers tested positive for coronavirus.
 
     
 
Article Image
New Trader Support Service to help NI businesses avoid Brexit red tape
 
Up to £355 million of taxpayers' money will be used to help businesses in Northern Ireland cope with additional bureaucracy caused by Brexit.
 
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
   
 
 
   
 
You have received this email as you have an account on the News Letter, published by JPIMedia Publishing Ltd. To manage your individual newsletter preferences with us, please click here and log in to your account.
 
 
Alternatively you can update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive from JPIMedia Publishing Ltd, or unsubscribe from all future emails.

 
 
JPIMedia Publishing Ltd, a company registered in England and Wales with registered number 11499982, having its registered address at 1, King Street, London, England, EC2V 8AU, United Kingdom.

We will process your personal data in accordance with our privacy policy.