DINING: Variety admirable at soup seller
Last in a month-long series of looks at new north-side restaurants.
Last in a month-long series of looks at new north-side restaurants.
Excluding investment gains and one-time charges, CNO’s operations generated $60.1 million, or 22 cents per share, in the fourth quarter, up 16 percent from the same period last year.
The ousted secretary of state claims Sen. Richard Lugar and former Sen. Evan Bayh vote from Indiana despite living near Washington, D.C. Lugar doesn't own a home in Indiana, and tea party activists want his candidacy disqualified as a result.
The friendly wait staff and artisan breakfasts could lead you to not care at all about the oversized shell that surrounds superior newcomer Eggshell Bistro.
In a filing earlier this month, the Midwest Independent Transmission System Operator Inc. told federal regulators that a mechanical failure in September contaminated the data center.
For-profit college operators such as Carmel-based ITT Educational Services Inc.would lose a financial incentive to enroll soldiers and veterans under U.S. Senate and House bills aimed at curbing what sponsors call aggressive marketing of subpar programs.
The star of “Song and Dance,” “A Little Night Music” and more didn’t need her Broadway best to shine.
The Indiana Health Information Exchange Inc., or IHIE, signed a collaboration agreement with Texas-based AT&T to use AT&T’s clinical message exchange system to help integrate new health care providers into IHIE’s database. The organizations think their collaboration could be used around the country. “Our vision is to establish a model of health information exchange for the nation,” said Harold J. Apple, CEO of IHIE, an Indianapolis-based not-for-profit . “We operate the most advanced system for connecting disparate health care IT systems in the nation, and AT&T is helping us take our efforts to the next level.” In fact, IHIE is launching a services organization to help other health information exchanges and large health care systems establish their own systems around the country. AT&T will also work with IHIE on that consulting effort. IHIE is the nation’s largest health information exchange. It has more than 80 hospital and long-term-care systems, more than 19,000 physicians and 10 million patients. IHIE’s services allow hospitals and doctors to exchange patient records electronically, as needed.
CHV Capital Inc., the venture capital arm of Indiana University Health, and Indianapolis-based Spring Mill Venture Partners participated in a $10.9 million investment in PerfectServe Inc. The Tennessee-based company provides communication software systems that route calls and messages to the right doctor on whatever platform they choose at a given moment: office phone, cell phone, text messaging, pager or e-mail. The “series C” funding round was led by PJC Capital LLC, the private equity arm of Minneapolis-based investment banking firm Piper Jaffray. PerfectServe already serves more than 17,500 physicians around the country, processing 30 million transactions each year.
A lawsuit contends that a Carmel-based health insurer ran a scheme to avoid paying in-home-care claims for potentially thousands of California's elderly, according to the Associated Press. Senior Health Insurance Company of Pennsylvania, or SHIP, had a claims process "designed to frustrate and confuse policyholders with needless demands for irrelevant information" in violation of its own policies and California law, according to the suit filed Feb. 4 in San Bernardino County Superior Court by the group Consumer Watchdog. The not-for-profit insurer is run by a trust created by the Pennsylvania Insurance Department. Senior Health Insurance operated as Conseco Senior Health Insurance until late 2008, but Carmel-based Conseco Inc. (now CNO Financial Group Inc.) transferred the unit to an independent trust based in Pennsylvania due to heavy losses. Conseco took a $1.2 billion charge to unload the unit. The new lawsuit claims that SHIP tried to avoid reimbursing policyholders for long-term care by ignoring or taking an unreasonably long time to respond to claims; requiring unnecessary paperwork and medical examinations, and requiring that the care givers have licenses in violation of company policy and California law. The suit, which seeks class-action status, was filed on behalf of Dr. William Hall, 78, of Upland. Hall, a retired chief of medicine at a California hospital, bought a long-term-care policy in 1994 and submitted claims in 2010. SHIP refused to reimburse all but 20 percent of his expenses, the lawsuit claims.
-Phoenix of Texas LLC leased 66,000 square feet of industrial space at Sugarland Business Park, 12630 West Airport Blvd. The tenant was represented by Rick Suja of Colliers International. The landlord, Cobalt Industrial REIT, was represented by Cobalt’s Gray Bouchillon.
-Respiratory Partners Inc. renewed its lease and expanded to 7,200 square feet at 2461 Directors Row in Park Fletcher Business Center. The landlord, American National Insurance Co., was represented by Don Wahle of Harshman Property Services. The tenant represented itself.
-Language Training Center renewed its lease for 5,932 square feet at 5750 Castle Creek Parkway. The tenant was represented by Graham Summers of Jones Lang LaSalle. The landlord, Friedman Real Estate Group Inc., was represented by Matt Langfeldt and Rich Forslund of Summit Realty Group.
-McAlister’s Deli leased 5,454 square feet at Cool Creek Commons, 2550 E. 146th St., Carmel. The tenant was represented by Bill Talbott of The Talbott Group. The landlord, Westfield One LLC, was represented by Andrew Hasbrook of Kite Realty Group.
-Best Buy Co. Inc. renewed its lease for 4,700 square feet of office space at Intech 11, 6625 Network Way. The tenant was represented by Ralph Balber of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar. The landlord, Network Way Properties LLC, was represented by Matt Langfeldt and Rich Forslund of Summit Realty Group.
-Watermark leased 4,410 square feet at 5875 Castle Creek Parkway. The tenant was represented by Chris Carmen of Carmen Commercial Real Estate. The landlord, Friedman Real Estate Group Inc., was represented by Matt Langfeldt and Rich Forslund of Summit Realty Group.
-Radiology Associates of Indianapolis leased 3,402 square feet at Indiana American 2, 533 E. County Line Road. The tenant was represented by Mike Napariu of REI Real Estate Services. The landlord, Legan Property Management Inc., was represented by Tim Norton and Jeff Merritt of Summit Realty Group.
-Designer Floors of Indiana leased 3,200 square feet at Avon Station, 8100 E. US 36, Avon. The landlord, Cranfill Development, was represented by Michael Cranfill of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The tenant represented itself.
-Physiotherapy Associates Inc. renewed its lease for 3,054 square feet at Indiana American 4, 549 E. County Line Road. The landlord, Legan Property Management Inc. was represented by Tim Norton and Jeff Merritt of Summit Realty Group. The tenant represented itself.
-Starmaker Studio for Performing Arts leased 2,100 square feet of retail space at Decatur Depot, 5021 S. Kentucky Ave. The landlord, KLC Realty LLC, was represented by Greg Smith and Joe Tarpey of Colliers International. The tenant represented itself.
-American General leased 2,081 square feet of office space at 8604 Allisonville Road. The tenant was represented by Matt Langfeldt and Rich Forslund of Summit Realty Group. The landlord, Citimark Management Co. Inc. was represented by Citimark’s Brian Fitzgerald.
-Evita Salon & Spa leased 1,956 square feet at Hamilton Crossing Centre, 12201 N. Meridian St. The landlord, KRG Hamilton Crossing LLC, was represented by Andrew Hasbrook of Kite Realty Group. The tenant represented itself.
-Phoenix Personnel leased 1,600 square feet of retail space at Eagle Creek Shoppes, 4930 Lafayette Road. The tenant was represented by Joe Tarpey of Colliers International. The landlord, Eagle Creek Shoppes Property Trust, was represented by Greg Smith of Colliers International.
-Marco’s Pizza leased 1,400 square feet at Green Street Square, 1521 N Green St., Brownsburg. The tenant was represented by Andrew Clifford of Clifford Realty. The landlord, Cranfill Development, was represented by Michael Cranfill of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-Sports Clips leased 1,293 square feet at Hamilton Crossing Centre, 12201 N. Meridian St. The tenant was represented by Jeff Hubley of Midland Atlantic Properties. The landlord, KRG Hamilton Crossing LLC, was represented by Andrew Hasbrook of Kite Realty Group.
-Shani’s Beauty & Eyebrow Arch leased 1,200 square feet of retail space at Eagle Creek Shoppes, 4930 Lafayette Road. The landlord, Eagle Creek Shoppes Property Trust, was represented by Greg Smith and Joe Tarpey of Colliers International. The tenant represented itself.
Carmel-based ChaCha Search Inc., a question-and-answer service for mobile phone and online users, is apologizing for providing what it calls "inflammatory answers to questions asked about sensitive subjects.”
Indiana will take advantage of a federal waiver on provisions of the No Child Left Behind act to create better education for students, State School Superintendent Tony Bennett said.
As one commentator said, Indianapolis “crushed it.”
Wheaton World Wide Moving is buying the nation’s oldest and one of its largest household movers, Bekins Van Lines. The deal is expected to bring 38 jobs to Wheaton’s northeast-side headquarters.
Allison Melangton and her Super Bowl Host Committee staff helped turn a one-day football game into a 10-day celebration that attracted 1.1 million people downtown and millions in visitor spending. But with the game over, Melangton, doesn’t know where her own career path will lead.
A Carmel-based health insurer once owned by Conseco Inc. is being sued for refusing to pay claims for in-home care submitted by California senior citizens.
Outlying communities say they saw steady ridership on free shuttles heading to and from downtown Indianapolis, but the sites received fewer Super Bowl visitors than expected.
-Capitol Construction has completed a 14,700-square-foot event space for Serendipity and Hendricks County Convention & Visitors Bureau at 2499 Futura Parkway, Plainfield.
-Capitol Construction has completed a 1,700-square-foot office build-out for Platinum Financial at 11350 N. Meridian St., Carmel.
The Indiana Democratic Party on Monday asked the state appeals court to replace convicted Republican Secretary of State Charlie White with the Democratic candidate White defeated in the 2010 election.