For sale: IEDC land purchased for LEAP project, but never used
After buying thousands of acres in Boone County to develop a technology park, the Indiana Economic Development Corp. quietly listed two properties for sale a month ago.
After buying thousands of acres in Boone County to develop a technology park, the Indiana Economic Development Corp. quietly listed two properties for sale a month ago.
Gov. Mike Braun signed 243 bills into law during this year, including more than 60 on Tuesday. Here’s a rundown of some of the most significant pieces of legislation that made it through this year’s General Assembly.
Getting health and education to innovate and work together is tricky. While both fields inherently share mission and intent, they use vastly different approaches.
The nonstop route between Indianapolis International Airport and Dublin, Ireland, offers travelers a direct line to one of Indiana’s largest trade partners.
The state-affiliated nonprofit averaged more than $2 million in spending annually on travel and more.
Projects are in the pipeline, the climate is ripe, and our state’s chief executive has a lifetime of business experience and success from which to draw. The wind is at our backs, but our commitment must be unwavering.
Around 1:20 a.m. Friday, Indiana lawmakers approved the last bill of the session: the 2026-27 state budget. Here’s what happened with some of the bills we’ve watched this session.
In addition, IU LAB announced that its accelerator programs will now be called IU Health Incubator at IU LAB, thanks to a $4.5 million, three-year sponsorship deal with IU Health.
The major hurdle will be the budget, which is typically the last bill lawmakers approve before heading home.
Indiana Gov. Mike Braun is expected to sign the latest version of Senate Bill 1, which supporters say would provide more than $1.4 billion in property tax relief over three years. Critics of the bill say local governments will raise income taxes to make up the difference.
Cities and towns around central Indiana are preparing to move forward on projects that will receive funding through the second round of state-funded regional grants from the Indiana Economic Development Corp.
State lawmakers had their final (and for some, especially long) meetings this week as they returned to some of the last and thorniest bills left on their plates.
Chris Creighton began working for Marian University after his tenure with Gov. Eric Holcomb’s administration ended.
Jillian Turner describes her role at the Indiana University Launch Accelerator for Biosciences as “the convener.” I
Before Monday’s vote, more than two hours of committee testimony was dominated by medical students and professors from Indiana University and other Hoosier colleges.
Neighboring states offer much greater incentives to movie and TV producers than Indiana. And filmmakers aren’t entirely sold on modest and narrowly focused improvements under consideration by lawmakers.
Conexus wants to move its Catapult programming on-site with manufacturers that want to hire Catapult graduates. And it plans to reduce its own role in the program.
A bill that would tweak language from a 2022 law establishing a filmmaking tax credit might make the languishing credit more likely to attract productions and generate economic activity.
Several of the session’s most important pieces of legislation—including bills affecting the budget, property tax relief and health care transparency—will be heard, amended and passed out of committee next week.
Data center construction has been met with some apprehension, including the low number of jobs produced for the large tax incentives and utility burden these developments require.