Janitor uprising highlights tensions over outsourcing
Nearly 650 Indianapolis-area janitors represented by the Service Employees International Union work for just eight firms that clean downtown office buildings.
Nearly 650 Indianapolis-area janitors represented by the Service Employees International Union work for just eight firms that clean downtown office buildings.
Planning for the project is still in the early stages but it’s likely to cost tens of millions of dollars.
Indianapolis-based alternative newspaper Nuvo has been cranking out a print edition every week since 1990. That is due to change beginning this month.
Check here throughout the evening for results, news, comments, photos and more from the biggest races around Indiana.
The project is slated for an odd triangular parcel along one of Fountain Square’s main arteries as the neighborhood’s resurgence continues.
Executives and directors of the West Lafayette-based biotech hold nearly 9 percent of Endocyte stock, worth about $177 million, based on the deal price of $24 a share.
Amazon is approaching its end-of-year deadline for deciding where it will locate the $5 billion campus, and two national newspapers reported over the weekend that an area in northern Virginia is far along in negotiations.
Such a decision would leave Indianapolis and 18 other finalists out of the running for the giant economic development prize.
Rabbis Dennis and Sandy Sasso discuss the local impact of the massacre at a Pittsburgh synagogue, what it might mean for proposed hate-crimes legislation in Indiana, and why they continually return to the question of proper leadership.
Voters said in a new poll that the biggest issues on their minds right now are health care, the economy and immigration, which means Trump was on point during his Friday night event at Southport High School.
Melissa St. John’s company specializes in corporate moves and has a long list of prominent clients, but the awards she’s received have as much to do with corporate citizenship as with the bottom line.
Overseeing Eli Lilly and Co.’s philanthropic work in the United States, Kenya and Mexico, Courtney Roberts also leads a pilot program to address barriers to diabetes care in three local neighborhoods.
Andi Metzel tried her first legal case before she even graduated from law school. Now a partner at Taft, she is also president of the Indiana State Bar Association and its board of governors, leading the largest legal organization in the state. Affiliations: In addition to her role with the Indiana State Bar Association and its foundation, […]
A former state lawmaker and utility regulator, Carolene Mays-Medley has overseen a rapidly increasing event lineup as well as an infrastructure overhaul at White River State Park, including an upcoming upgrade of the Lawn concert facility.
Christine Hayes Hickey worked her way up from paralegal, landed her law degree from the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law in the evenings and became an associate, then partner, then managing partner and president of Rubin & Levin PC.
Redevelopment projects are dramatically reshaping several blocks along the Monon Trail in Carmel—and an end to construction isn’t in sight for the Midtown area.
A journeyman, a coach and a team player—World Series winners now—all spent time at Victory Field.
The U.S. economy is expected to remain strong next year, with Indiana outperforming the nation, according to the annual Business Outlook forecast released Thursday by Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business.
The funds are expected to help the neighborhood and its partners invest in upgrades to the area’s local park and improve the infrastructure of South Meridian Street, as well as build several hundred new units of affordable housing.
The candidates—Joe Donnelly, Mike Braun and Lucy Brenton—were asked about foreign policy, climate change, sexual assault and immigration, but health care seemed to be the main topic Donnelly and Braun wanted to address.