Telecommunications companies push bill to defend turf from state network
The new law would prevent the I-Light data network from straying beyond its stated mission of serving the state’s colleges and universities.
The new law would prevent the I-Light data network from straying beyond its stated mission of serving the state’s colleges and universities.
Today, we hear an endless drumbeat about job creation and use that as a metric to judge government incentives. What we really want is “wealth creation” through innovations that satisfy customers.
The Indianapolis Parks Foundation will start looking this week for a replacement for President Cindy Porteous, who plans to retire after 12 years at the not-for-profit.
Eli Lilly and Co. will freeze base pay for most of its 38,000 workers this year, as the October 2011 patent expiration on its former best-seller Zyprexa has hammered finances. Lilly already eliminated 5,500 jobs in preparation for the generic competition to Zyprexa, an antipsychotic pill. But the pay freeze is the company’s next move to try to weather the storm caused by a string of patent expirations on five of its best-selling drugs, including the looming loss of its new best-seller, the antidepressant Cymbalta, at the end of 2013. The pay freeze also applies to top executives, Lilly disclosed in its preliminary proxy statement, filed Feb. 3. Overall compensation for Lilly’s top five executives fell slightly in 2011, the company disclosed. CEO John Lechleiter earned a salary of $1.5 million, unchanged from 2010, and total compensation of $16.4 million, down slightly from the previous year. Lechleiter has resisted buying another large company to mask Lilly’s looming sales loss, instead betting on the company’s research team to deliver new blockbusters. Also, Lilly has made several smaller acquisitions, and is currently rumored to be vying with five other rivals to acquire the Turkish drugmaker Mustafa Nevzat Ilac Sanayii.
Indianapolis-based Home Health Depot Inc. has acquired a majority stake in Iowa-based Advanced Rehab Technologies LLC, a provider of rehabilitation equipment. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. The three owners of the company will continue to manage it under Home Health Depot’s oversight. Advanced Rehab was founded 10 years ago. Home Health Depot had 2010 revenue of $13.8 million, according to IBJ research, ranking it the fifth-fastest-growing private company in the Indianapolis area. Home Health Depot also ranked last year as No. 736 on Inc. magazine’s list of the nation’s fastest growing companies.
Warsaw-based Symmetry Medical Inc.’s former CEO will return $450,000 in pay and stock proceeds to resolve U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission claims that he profited from accounting fraud by a United Kingdom unit, according to Bloomberg News. Brian S. Moore received the compensation based on financial results that were inflated by a scheme in which employees inflated financial results in 2005 and 2006 at Symmetry’s Thornton Precision Components Ltd. subsidiary, the SEC said in a complaint filed Jan. 30 in federal court in South Bend. The agency also settled claims against Symmetry Chief Financial Officer Fred L. Hite, who will pay $210,000. “It is important to emphasize that the SEC did not accuse Mr. Moore of any wrongdoing,” Russell G. Ryan, an attorney for Moore at King & Spaulding LLP, said in an e-mail statement. “He is glad to have put the matter behind him.”
Indianapolis-based Dow AgroSciences LLC reported record fourth quarter and annual revenue on strong sales of new products and above-average growing seasons. Fourth-quarter revenue grew 5 percent, to more than $1.3 billion, compared with the same period in 2010. For the entire year, sales increased to $5.7 billion. Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization were $145 million in the quarter ended Dec. 31, a fourth-quarter record and double the $72 million reported for the 2010 period. The company, a unit of Midland, Mich.-based Dow Chemical Co., reported sales and volume gains in all geographic areas, led by Latin America.
Roche Diagnostics Corp.’s North American business, which is headquartered in Indianapolis, posted a 4-percent boost in sales last year on the strength of its fluid analyzer business unit, even though its diabetes sales fell.
Indiana companies landed just $14.1 million in venture funding last year, the lowest amount of capital flowing to the state’s health care sector since BioEnterprises began tracking such deals in 2005.
There’s no doubt the Super Bowl crowds showered Indianapolis with cash all week. The question is, how much of it will stick after the big game is over? And how much will it mean to Indianapolis’ economy?
Two DePauw University graduates are launching a website they hope will preserve the world’s memories, through a virtual bank of shared experiences.
After years of failed attempts to create a viable Web presence, Stout’s Shoes has finally plunged into cyberspace using the route experts say many small companies follow: giving the job to a young, tech-savvy family member with an aptitude for social media.
Justin Ohlemiller, 33, made his name in government, working his way up from writing letters and proclamations for Mayor Bart Peterson to become his deputy chief of staff.
Kathleen Spears, 37, came to Indianapolis four years ago, a health services executive on a mission.
The achievements of Bryan Schneider, 38, in breast cancer research continue to build on each other.
Ryan Kitchell, 38, didn’t expect to be overseeing health plans for Indiana University Health and its 80,000 members. But he’s found himself in unexpected places before, with good results.
When Scott Brenton, 39, became chief operating officer of Angie’s List 12 years ago, he was a sort of jack-of-all trades.
Living and working in Japan for seven years opened the eyes of Jenny Massey, 38, to the possibilities of cross-cultural business relationships.
We have seen the federal government use “crony capitalism” to save businesses that should have otherwise failed.
Why would people who have spent their careers in politics know more about investing than people who have spent their careers as investors?
Republicans are about to lose a whole generation of potential voters.
If you are going to go after an incumbent who already has online traction, then the order of the day is “Tweet early, tweet often.”