2021 CFO of the Year: Brian Montminy
As chief financial officer at Lessonly, Brian Montminy helped negotiate and lead the deal in which the training software firm was acquired this year by global sales software giant Seismic.
As chief financial officer at Lessonly, Brian Montminy helped negotiate and lead the deal in which the training software firm was acquired this year by global sales software giant Seismic.
As part of Gaylor Electric’s senior strategic management team, Jim Crews manages the accounting and finance departments and provides financial resources and insights.
Norman Gould provides strategic insights to the leadership and ownership of IMMI, which designs, engineers, manufactures and markets safety solutions and products that protect millions of people around the world.
Dan Harmeyer’s primary responsibility is leading the finance team at Batesville Casket Co. and working with the executive management team to deliver on its mission of helping families honor the lives of those they love.
Todd Borgmann is responsible for finance, accounting, IT, crude oil trading, and economics and activities for Calumet Specialty Products Co., which produces nearly 3,400 unique specialty products, including various asphalts, oils, fuels and gels.
Since becoming CFO of First Financial Corp. in 2010, Rodger McHargue has helped First Financial double in size, from $2.5 billion in assets to $5 billion, and expand its footprint beyond Indiana and Illinois to include Kentucky and Tennessee.
Tehea Harding oversees EmployIndy’s fiscal and administrative functions, including human resources, accounting, grants and contracts, and IT facilities.
Jason Cadwell oversees finance, accounting, revenue cycle, human resources, information systems, property and facility management, and agency risk management for Four County Comprehensive Mental Health Center Inc., a not-for-profit community mental health center that serves 11 north-central Indiana counties.
As the number two executive at CICF, Jennifer Bartenbach leads the internal workings of the foundation—the financial operations, information technology, marketing and communications, donor services, and human resources.
With more than $1.25 billion coming in and the majority of it being redistributed on an annual basis, there is never a shortage of work for Heidi Babkowski to do at the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
Deanna Oware’s job as a member of the leadership team for the Indiana Department of Workforce Development is to ensure effective operation of the finance department’s procurement, accounting and payroll, budget, grant accounting, and analysis and reconciliation units. Finance
Policymakers say that without clear information from school districts, it is hard for the public to know if the money is benefiting students.
Dana Teasley’s job at Greater Education Opportunities Foundation is to leverage state, federal and philanthropic resources to create public K-12 schools that achieve K-14 results in low-income communities.
Indianapolis is moving ahead with the next two legs of its massive bus rapid transit project, after a messy legislative session and pandemic-related problems threw a wrench in the timeline.
The biggest problem is that Ikea’s growth is being crimped because the company can’t meet demand, its CFO said Wednesday.
Chosen Consulting LLC, which does business as Chosen Healthcare, alleges its former chief financial officer defrauded the company through a scheme to get double paychecks for more than a year and that she also improperly sent more than a half-million dollars to her own construction company.
Both carmakers said they had moved past the worst of the availability issues that have snarled production lines globally. Their views contrasted with those of Samsung Electronics.
A federal judge in Indianapolis has tossed out Community Health Network’s motion to dismiss a lawsuit by the U.S. Justice Department that alleges the hospital system engaged in a fraudulent scheme to keep patient referrals in its network.
After long-time Republican dominance, Democrats now hold a 20-5 supermajority on the City-County Council under maps drawn by Republicans in 2012. Now, it’s the Democrats’ turn to draw the maps.
One day a week, students work (and learn) at companies as close as a few minutes away, or as far as Carmel.