Hamilton County and the Bengals accused each other of violating their lease agreement for Paycor Stadium, in a series of ...
CINCINNATI — The Bengals accused Hamilton County of being in default of their 1997 stadium agreement according to the ...
Negotiations between the county and Bengals on a new lease for the county-owned Paycor Stadium appear to have hit a major ...
Hamilton County finalizes the purchase of prime riverfront land near Paycor Stadium, planning to demolish the Hilltop Basic ...
It is stunning that Hamilton County not only refuses to maintain the stadium but actually restrains us from doing so." “It is very clear that we are talking past one another." ...
On Tuesday, Rochester-based Paychex announced it would acquire the Norwood human resources software company in a deal ...
After the announcement that Paycor Corp. would acquired comes news that it's committed to its Downtown office and the stadium ...
While both sides say negotiations are continuing toward a lease extension, the documents raise new questions about the team's ...
Paychex plans to operate Paycor as a standalone unit, but the $4.1B deal still means Cincinnati loses another public company.
The team and the county have been talking about what the future agreement over the use of Paycor Stadium looks like.
After negotiations that were called “useless,” the Bengals and Hamilton County commissioners are back at the table working toward a deal on the old lease and a new stadium renovation plan.
Paycor officials said Thursday they intend to honor the company's stadium naming rights agreement with the Cincinnati Bengals and its commitment to moving to downtown Cincinnati. The naming rights ...