Talen Energy is asking a U.S. appeals court to weigh in on a decision by federal regulators last year to reject a power agreement for an Amazon data center connected directly to Talen's Pennsylvania nuclear plant,
The lawsuit targets an order that blocked an Amazon data center from connecting to a Pennsylvania power plant.
The Amazon-owned grocery store brand says it's 'disappointed' in the employees' plan to join the United Food and Commercial Workers union.
The Whole Foods Market on Pennsylvania Avenue became the first of the Amazon-owned grocery chain's branches to unionize. Jim Donovan has your latest morning headlines with weather from Kate Bilo in our morning Digital Brief.
rejection of an amended interconnection agreement for an Amazon data center at its Pennsylvania nuclear plant, the company said on Monday. Talen Energy to appeal FERC's rejection of Amazon data ...
Whole Foods workers in Philadelphia are voting on whether to form the first union in the Amazon-owned chain. The company is pushing back.
Talen Energy ( NASDAQ: TLN) is asking the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals to review the decision by federal regulators to reject the company's power agreement for an Amazon data center connected directly to Talen's Pennsylvania nuclear plant, Reuters reported Tuesday, citing court filings this week.
Good afternoon and happy Wednesday, readers! All eyes were on the Senate as the upper chamber continued to consider a number of President Donald Trump’s cabinet picks, including former New York Congressman Lee Zeldin.
Whole Foods workers at the Spring Garden store have expressed frustration about low pay and want better health-care benefits.
Whole Foods workers at the Philadelphia flagship store in the city’s Art Museum area voted to unionize on Jan. 27, 2025. They are the first store in the Amazon-owned grocery chain to do so. Paul Clark,
Whole Foods workers at the Philadelphia flagship store in the Art Museum area voted to unionize on Jan. 27, 2025. They are the first store in the Amazon-owned grocery chain to do so. Paul Clark, a professor of labor and employment relations at Penn State University,