HOWEY: Republicans scald selves with critique
It was lunchtime reading unlike any other Craig Dunn had seen.
It was lunchtime reading unlike any other Craig Dunn had seen.
City-county councilors have a nasty tradition of agreeing with one another to blackball developments within their individual districts.
High-end grocery chain Whole Foods Market Inc. wants to triple the number of stores it operates, but the company has bagged plans for a location on 116th Street in Fishers.
Eli Lilly and Co. granted larger bonuses to its top five executives early this year, which boosted the value of their compensation packages 3 percent to 8 percent. John Lechleiter, CEO of the Indianapolis-based drugmaker, saw his overall compensation reduced 10.7 percent because the calculated value of his pension fell. But excluding that on-paper reduction, the actual compensation Lechleiter received for 2012 rose 3.6 percent to $10.2 million. His salary and stock award were unchanged from 2011, but his bonus rose 13.6 percent to nearly $3 million. Chief Financial Officer Derica Rice received a modest increase in salary and a larger bonus. His overall compensation, excluding the pension adjustment, rose 3.3 percent to $5.2 million. Jan Lundberg, the president of Lilly Research Laboratories, enjoyed increases in his salary, stock award and bonus, which boosted his overall pay 8.3 percent to $4.5 million, excluding any pension adjustment.
Hospital officials praised Indiana's medical savings accounts but some consumer advocates panned them March 20 during a public hearing on Gov. Mike Pence’s plan to use the Healthy Indiana Plan to expand Medicaid in Indiana, according to the Associate Press. The Indiana Hospital Association and officials from hospitals around the state said the Healthy Indiana Plan would reduce the amount of indigent care they must provide to uninsured patients. But critics noted HIP isn't available to everyone, and even when it is, it can prove too costly for some low-income Indiana residents needing medical care. "I do not believe it will do what we need to do to cover people," said Rep. Sue Errington, D-Muncie. Pence has proposed using HIP to complete a Medicaid expansion for Indiana residents earning up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level. That's a sliding scale that includes $15,856 for a single individual or $32,499 for a household of four. If the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services approves Pence's proposal, it could provide coverage for as many as 400,000 low-income residents. If CMS rejects it, it could end coverage for about 40,000 residents already enrolled in HIP. A decision must to be made by June, six months before the state's current waiver expires. Also, Pence has said he might not sign off on the expansion using HIP even if CMS approves it.
Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH and Eli Lilly and Co. filed for FDA approval of a new anti-diabetes medicine, the two companies announced Monday. The drug, empagliflozin, is known as an SGLT2 inhibitor and fights Type 2 diabetes by removing excess glucose through a patient’s urine by blocking the re-absorption of glucose in the kidney. Several large pharmaceutical companies are trying to bring an SLGT2 inhibitor drug to market. In January, New Jersey-based Johnson & Johnson, won the backing of an FDA advisory panel for its drug, called canagliflozin. Other companies in the SGLT2 race are New York-based Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and United Kingdom-based AstraZeneca plc. Lilly is helping to develop and commercialize empagliflozin, which was discovered by Germany-based Boehringer Ingelheim. The drug is one of five that Lilly hopes to submit to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration this year.
Madison County officials say the proposed Mounds Lake Reservoir in Anderson would improve flood control, create prime real estate and boost economic development.
The Bloomington City Council voted 6-3 in favor of the downtown parking plan, which was revised following opposition from local business owners.
The two groups most likely to benefit from changes made by Indiana House Republicans to the state budget asked Thursday that the Senate Appropriations Committee maintain new funding for roads and schools, and maybe find a little more.
We’re just a few short weeks from the mid-April revenue forecast, the critical non-political, non-policy factor that will shape the fiscal 2014-2015 budget—and a handful of other big-buck key bills.
Investors may be undervaluing Biglari Holdings Inc., which owns Steak n Shake outright and holds 20 percent of Cracker Barrel.
A central Indiana county has given the go-ahead to a proposed $300 million wind farm while also approving restrictions that address concerns about the project's impact on property values.
Greenwood has proposed fining property owners $50 if police make repeated runs for false alarms or false 911 calls. Chief John Laut said he proposed the fine after a review showed the city’s police spend about $100,000 each year responding to false alarms, but only about $500 responding to alarms where a crime actually took place.
Hospital officials praised Indiana's medical savings accounts but some consumer advocates panned them Wednesday during a public hearing as Gov. Mike Pence seeks federal approval to use the Healthy Indiana Plan to expand Medicaid in this state.
A proposal to expand Indiana's private school voucher program was denounced during a Statehouse rally on Tuesday as a step that would take millions of dollars away from the state's public schools.
An Indiana Senate committee on Tuesday approved House Bill 1441, which would make it illegal to sell air-conditioner coils or catalytic converters without proof of ownership.
Indiana's Department of Homeland Security and several divisions of the Department of Natural Resources would have to review the 2,000-acre reservoir proposal, as would the Army Corps of Engineers and the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Members of the Indiana Association of Cities and Towns say they would rather see money poured into road repairs.
The Indianapolis developer said the bankruptcy filings are intended to prevent lender Bank of America from forcing the sale of RiverPlace Shops in Fishers, Raceway Market Shops in Indianapolis and Greenwood Crossing in Greenwood.
Economic development officials are proposing a $300 million reservoir on the White River about 50 miles northeast of Indianapolis that would be a catalyst for new investments and jobs and would include marinas, boat docks and restaurants.
The gambling industry spent more than $19 million lobbying at the Indiana Statehouse from 2000-2012, according to reports filed online by the Indiana Lobby Registration Commission.
The fate of a proposal to expand Indiana's private school voucher program by making kindergartners and some other students immediately eligible could come down to something that no one seems to know — how much it will cost.