Angie’s List poised to cut 230 jobs following merger
The company said the cuts will take place after its merger with HomeAdvisor and will target redundant roles. The merger could happen as soon as this month.
The company said the cuts will take place after its merger with HomeAdvisor and will target redundant roles. The merger could happen as soon as this month.
No particular industry sector appears safe from the impact, as the county’s unemployment rate falls below 3 percent. Companies in health care, information technology, advanced manufacturing and construction are all struggling to find workers.
The Indianapolis Colts will pay Westfield for using Grand Park and let the sports complex keep revenue from parking fees and food and beverage sales. But there are costs associated with hosting the training camp.
Word of the training camp’s move to Westfield leaked out Tuesday night, but further details were added by the NFL team and city officials at a Wednesday morning press conference at the Grand Park Events Center.
In 21st century Indiana, is there any limit to what government can do as long as “economic development” is the justification?
The $20 million, 120-room hotel is expected to open in mid-September, when guests can bask in decor that pays homage to the nation’s industrial roots.
Trains might be permanently stalled on the Nickel Plate Railroad in southern Hamilton County, but officials in the northern communities are embracing the idea of getting passenger trains moving.
Corporex, which announced earlier this month that the fitness club would close on Sept. 30, is shopping the site as an opportunity for an office redevelopment.
The Indianapolis-based firm has proposed a $3.5 million retail development along the 116th Street corridor expected to be a major draw for furniture and food fans.
The more than 500,000-square-foot facility is expected to accommodate training or play for 31 sports on six turf fields, 12 hard-surface courts and in a baseball training center.
The National Hot Rod Association is experiencing significant increases in every metric that matters—and doing so at a time many sports, especially motorsports, are struggling to hold onto fans.
Hotels in Carmel could soon have an unexpected competitor—the city itself.
Former gymnasts are calling or several members of the Indianapolis-based USA Gymnastics board of directors to resign, insisting the organization needs to make a clean break from its past before it can begin moving forward.
The proposals include work space for startups and a city visitors center, as Indianapolis officials search for a new strategy for reusing the stately, 107-year-old building.
An unscientific survey shows that Gen Con visitors take advantage of attractions well beyond the convention center and downtown restaurants.
The Fishers Sports Pavilion project was first introduced in April 2015, but construction never started. Now, a modified proposal with a $75 million price tag is heading to Fishers officials for consideration.
The money will be used to move an electric transmission line that runs through the property, as well as to activate insurance policies that should cover environmental remediation costs.
DineEquity Inc., the parent company of Applebee’s Neighborhood Bar & Grill and IHOP, is planning to eliminate as many as 160 of the restaurants, the company said Thursday.
The Carmel City Council spent hours discussing a multimillion-dollar antique carousel and a proposed City Center hotel Monday night.
U.S. employers added 209,000 jobs in July, a second straight month of robust gains.