November 22, 2010
Longtime economist Morton Marcus says the objective truth is that Indiana is in decline. He also insists the solution is a
change in the culture, not just job creation.
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November 15, 2010
Indiana University's James Madison is "marginally optimistic" Americans have the fortitude to tackle what could grow to become
an emergency ranking with the Civil War, the Great Depression and World War II.
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November 11, 2010
Imagine a future in which Indiana school districts bid up salaries for star teachers to $100,000 or more to develop a district
specialty in a field like science or math, and cause students to excel.
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November 4, 2010
Billboard companies spiked the cancer ad. But Citizens Gas or WellPoint might have gotten a different result.
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November 3, 2010
Bill Styring, whose long, wonkish career includes analyzing health reform for Mike Pence, cried last night.
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October 11, 2010
Indiana's system collects mixed reviews as candidates for governor in other states criticize their public agencies.
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September 29, 2010
A company that's taking over library systems draws fire from patrons and employees, but claims to cut costs.
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September 16, 2010
A survey reveals Indiana newspaper execs chipping in to campaign war chests.
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September 14, 2010
Terms Daniels uses a lot—"statism" and "adult conversation"—could be revealing about his intentions.
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September 13, 2010
Noting banking reform already has limited the pool of investors for private placements, Jeremy Hill expects regulators to
tighten restrictions even more.
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September 8, 2010
All nine Republicans—count 'em—have signed a pledge. What is that telling us?
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September 7, 2010
Marion County Democratic chief Ed Treacy expects an announcement after the first of the year.
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August 31, 2010
The local NAACP president tells an out-of-town newspaper that service has deteriorated under merged police and sheriff's
departments.
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August 25, 2010
The Indianapolis Marion County Public Library no longer "fines" patrons for overdue books. Are you feeling better?
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August 25, 2010
State has a dire future if Business Facilities' latest lists are any indication.
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August 13, 2010
Inconsistencies make comparisons a heavy lift.
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August 12, 2010
Boston University’s Kotlikoff warns the U.S. is actually in worse shape than Greece.
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July 30, 2010
The number of notary publics, a group that proudly dates its services back a couple of thousand years or more, is in free
fall.
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July 28, 2010
The congressman was the only one from the Indiana delegation to vote for cap and trade. Now, with the Senate having gotten
cold feet on the legislation, Hill might have been left to twist in the wind.
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July 26, 2010
With just about all the meat gnawed off the bones, lawmakers might turn on each other in the upcoming General Assembly.
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July 23, 2010
Bank reform wouldn’t have been so heavy-handed had small- and medium-sized banks gotten their act together, Mark Hills
says.
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July 16, 2010
Politicians are beginning to tepidly make the case to head off disaster.
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July 13, 2010
They're some of the most stable people in the state, a new study shows.
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July 8, 2010
Legendary former judge would prefer that three women—and a man—go to Daniels for a final choice.
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July 7, 2010
An economic development observer questions what will happen after the feds turn off the tap.
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"And the success of the Indiana GOP to not allow an expansion of Medicaid had nothing to do with Indiana hospitals' financial woes? Fixed that for you; editorial bias rebalanced. Seriously, there are so many things wrong with Obamacare that the only way one can view it as a success is to assume that it was designed to fail our way into a government single payor healthcare system. The system is complex, creates huge regulatory burdens and overhead and yet still does not have adequate means to control escalating health care costs. But then when you elect a 10th grade math drop out with no quantitative reasoning skills to be President of one of the world's most important economies in troubled times, you can't really be surprised by blatant stupidity.
No NIMBYs here to chase off a decent development. We don't need tons of parking and we'd happily play the role of host to a downtown Whole Foods.
Whatever you do, don't change a single thing about Broad Ripple. I want it to look just like it did in the late '70s, with 30% of the north side of Broad Ripple Avenue burned out and plenty of places to park. That's right Broad Ripple, NEVER CHANGE. Let the world pass you by, don't improve your empty, abandoned lots full of weeds. Someday someone will want to film a zombie movie here.
Hollywood could step in and make a movie about the history about this forlorn series. It could be a full celebrity cast of characters. WOW. http://www.advanceindiana.blogspot.com/2013/02/indiana-taxpayers-forced-to-pay-for.html
This shouldn't come as a shock to many. Austin is a great city, and Indy needs to take some notes. Austin invests in decent transit options, has a highly educated workforce, embraces a creative class, and --despite being the state capital-- is not micromanaged by rural and suburban legislators. Want Indy to grow? Invest in the city (i.e. spend money). Raise taxes a bit, and use the money to improve education. And keep the state legislature out of Indy the other 9 months of the year.