Bill eases path for utilities to boost rates
An 11-page utility bill in the Indiana Senate that a consumer group likens to “a money grab” would hasten and expand a utility’s ability to recover additional costs from customers.
An 11-page utility bill in the Indiana Senate that a consumer group likens to “a money grab” would hasten and expand a utility’s ability to recover additional costs from customers.
Many Indianapolis developers know the feeling. In good times, few industries generate an adrenalin rush like real estate development. But it’s a highly leveraged business built upon certain assumptions that proved flimsy when the financial crisis hit.
Mayor Greg Ballard is expected on Jan. 30 to lay out plans for a cross-county economic development area anchored by Indianapolis International Airport that promises to quell political divisions and clear the way for investment.
Well, that certainly didn't take long. As a result of last November's elections, the General Assembly is firmly in the hands of the Republicans, who enjoy super-majorities in both the House and Senate.
Two years ago, executives at AIT Laboratories “took their eye off the ball,” and watched the company’s business plummet 29 percent in value. Now, after two years of turmoil, the drug-testing lab says it’s poised to return to the double-digit rates of growth that made it a local star.
…Of course, you often heard the same refrain during the ’70s, ’80s, ’90s and into the new millennium.
Announcements Brad Banks, J.D. and Adam Brower, J.D. have opened their legal practice, Banks & Brower LLC, in northwest Indianapolis, specializing in the practice areas of criminal, DUI, family law, business law, construction law, and education/school law. Phone: 870-0019; Email: [email protected]. Weston Sponseller has launched Crossroads Chem-Dry®, providing Chem-Dry services to all of Marion County, […]
Cause.it, founded by students from I.U. and Purdue, was awarded $500,000 by Innovate Indiana.
The Republican leaders of Indiana's General Assembly said Thursday they have not decided whether to take up a constitutional ban on gay marriage, one day after a pair of House lawmakers filed separate proposals to place the ban before voters in 2014.
The Indianapolis City-County Council is poised to approve a huge increase in ticket taxes on professional sports, and one council member wants to make sure those voting on the hike disclose the freebies they get for Pacers and Colts games.
Marian University’s College of Osteopathic Medicine—only the second medical school in Indiana—will enroll 162 students this fall, about 8 percent more than it planned.
The federal fraud trial of Indianapolis real estate broker John M. Bales and a partner began Monday morning in South Bend with a jury-selection process that may not have run as smoothly if it took place in central Indiana.
Ever since moving from Wabash to Indianapolis to attend Butler University, Linda Broadfoot has focused on ways to make Indianapolis better.
Frank Dale has spent most of his career in the entrepreneurial world. Happily.
From frat boy to fundraiser to faculty—that’s how Matthew Holley describes his career trajectory.
Hannah Joseph has a fondness for small businesses—the one she owns with her husband, Brent—King David Dogs—and the 150 or so that are her clients at law firm Katz & Korin.
Doran Moreland discovered political science at Indiana University. After graduating in 2000, his real education in politics began, working for Indianapolis Mayor Bart Peterson, then U.S. Sen. Evan Bayh.
Una Osili has one foot in the global community and the other in Indianapolis. A renowned researcher on philanthropic trends, she also is a wife and mother who serves on St. Richard’s Episcopal School board and helped her husband, Vop Osili, campaign for public office.
Interior designer Nikki Sutton has her fingers in many artsy pies around town. She has designed spaces for noteworthy projects such as Indy Reads Books on Mass Ave., The Speak Easy in Broad Ripple and companies such as ExactTarget.