Uncertainty lingers for Jack’s Donuts franchisees
News of the corporate bankruptcy has led to questions for franchisees from their worried customers and employees over the past few weeks.
News of the corporate bankruptcy has led to questions for franchisees from their worried customers and employees over the past few weeks.
Business leaders say health insurance is causing heartburn among many small employers, forcing some to consider dropping coverage altogether.
Yet promising health tech companies still leave the state to raise growth capital.
The potential conflict between the state’s data infrastructure goals and local reluctance to house data centers is the newest chapter in the debate between municipalities and the Statehouse about home-rule matters.
For 90 years, a U.S. Supreme Court decision centered on the disputed firing of a Hoosier-born Federal Trade Commission member has protected the leaders of independent federal agencies from being dismissed by the president without cause. But that could change.
Brad Schwer, partner in charge at the Indianapolis office of Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, said he knew he wanted to work in mergers and acquisitions right out of the gate.
Plans call for the largest houses at Bradberry to be two-story homes sized between 3,000 to 3,500 square feet that would be priced between $700,000 and $900,000.
Indianapolis-based Roche Diagnostics said while the survey was conducted in Europe, its implications are global and reflect challenges in the United States.
Republican Indiana legislative leaders avoided taking questions Monday about the political pressure they are facing from President Donald Trump over congressional redistricting, while the governor accused GOP senators of “hiding behind closed doors.”
Thompson Thrift, the master developer of the 123-acre Fishers District, is set to tackle its first project in Westfield.
In addition to his responsibilities with the team, the new hire will serve as senior vice president for Keystone Group and as strategic adviser to owner Ersal Ozdemir.
Recent changes to Indiana’s property tax system will likely cut bills for most Hoosier homeowners, a new analysis has found.
Data from aviation analytics firm Cirium showed that fewer than 1% of all flights were canceled over the weekend.
To their surprise, they reside both in the pretty college town they craved and amid the kind of buzzy air available only from a stark-raving football powerhouse.
Dr. Michael Meneghini waited out a two-year noncompete clause after leaving Indiana University Health before opening the $35 million Indiana Orthopedic Institute early this year.
Sonny Beck, CEO of Atlanta-based Beck’s Hybrids, led the push to land a U.S. Customs and Border Protection office at Indianapolis Executive Airport.
New nonprofit Friends of Broad Ripple Village hopes to end a stagnant commercial era for the neighborhood.
The fledgling program is starting with 12 students, but Regional Opportunities Initiatives Inc. CEO Tina Peterson predicted that the training hub will become a crucial part of southern Indiana’s microelectronics and defense ecosystem.
Community leaders are advancing important efforts we can get behind.
The ACA was enacted to provide affordable health care for all people needing it. I have no idea how we lost sight of that vision.