Marsh agrees to settle labor complaint
Marsh Supermarkets Inc. has agreed to pay a total of $42,500 to settle a National Labor Relations Board case accusing the grocery chain of interfering with workers’ attempts to unionize.
Marsh Supermarkets Inc. has agreed to pay a total of $42,500 to settle a National Labor Relations Board case accusing the grocery chain of interfering with workers’ attempts to unionize.
Pittsburgh-based Genco ATC is vacating its Brownsburg facility after failing to receive the contract to operate the warehouse at 901 Northfield Drive.
The $7.2 million project, to be financed with affordable-housing tax credits, involves retrofitting the three-story former Central Restaurant Products building to accommodate one- and two-bedroom apartments.
A Greenwood man was killed early Friday morning when he drove the wrong way on State Road 37 and hit another vehicle. Trent Schmidt, 35, was pronounced dead at the scene about 4 a.m. after he drove his Toyota Corolla into a Honda Accord near the Banta Road intersection. The 24-year-old Honda driver was taken to the hospital with minor injuries. Northbound lanes were closed for more than three hours after the accident.
Roche Diagnostics Corp. is expanding one of its Indianapolis manufacturing plants to keep up with growing sales of its leading brand of blood glucose monitors.
Indiana students as a group have been underperforming and schools as a group have been failing.
Credit cards and ATMs are rapidly becoming lucrative targets of hackers.
Leisure travelers could plug gap until additional conventions fill the expanded Indiana Convention Center.
More than 1,000 Indiana teachers swarmed the Indiana Statehouse Tuesday for a rowdy rally denouncing the sweeping education proposals moving through the Republican-dominated state House and Senate.
The House approved the proposal Tuesday on a 59-37 mostly party-line vote following hours of debate. Republicans say the bill would mean more options for families, while Democrats contend that it will erode funding for traditional schools.
Construction is in the blood of Mamon Powers III. In 1967, the eldest Mamon Powers, whose father had worked in construction, founded Powers & Sons Construction Co. Mamon Powers Jr., now the company’s CEO, joined four years later. And at 31, Mamon Powers III serves as vice president in charge of the Indianapolis office.
As a vice president at the nation’s largest health insurance company, 37-year-old Jennie Peterson focuses on the big picture that is health care.
Marco Moreno’s law career began years before he became a lawyer. As a college undergraduate, he worked as a clerk for a superior court judge in LaGrange County, where he learned his way around the court system. Now 37, he is a partner at Lewis & Kappes PC.
John Merriweather went from the Army at 18—he earned a Commendation Medal in Desert Storm—to a small company in Carmel where he learned all facets of the business, from warehousing to quality control to sales. Now 38, he runs his own firm.
Of Coca-Cola Enterprises’ 200 sales territories in the Midwest, three are managed by women. Melanie Jones, 37, is one of those managers.
As one of the top commercial real estate brokers in Indianapolis, 37-year-old Jenna Barnett has a strong instinct for matching the right businesses with the right properties.
Tracy Barnes started his IT consulting business because he felt he could deliver better service for clients by dealing with them directly. Now the 37-year-old runs Entap Inc., a multimillion-dollar technology consulting company.
Sales for the fourth quarter were $4.1 billion, up 22 percent from the same period in 2009. Quarterly profit of $362 million, or $1.84 per share, exceeded analyst expectations.