40th anniversary: Indy’s cultural attractions grow, expand, flourish
Change is too small a word for what has happened on the dining and cultural scene in Indianapolis over the last 40 years.
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Change is too small a word for what has happened on the dining and cultural scene in Indianapolis over the last 40 years.
We can and we will do big things—if we commit ourselves to creating the collaboration and systems that are needed to accomplish such a task.
Indianapolis could expand the “Circle City” identity by complementing Monument Circle with additional urban halos marking important intersections and landmarks.
Central Indiana can become the most equitable metropolitan region in the United States—where disparities are minimal, power is shared, and human potential is nurtured and unleashed.
Rather than isolated behind a fence, neighborhood streets could be reconnected to the outside. Rather than spending $50 million on a deluxe swine barn, we could build parking garages along the planned Blue and Purple lines to drastically reduce the more than 100 acres of surface parking.
The path out of poverty includes moments of financial insecurity for so many. States like Illinois, Ohio, Massachusetts and New Mexico are already making great strides to support families in these situations.
Building more sidewalks, closing Monument Circle to traffic, and creating tiny-house villages are among the ideas readers submitted to improve Indianapolis.
Camp Mariposa is an addiction-prevention and mentoring program for youth affected by a family member’s substance use disorder.
It isn’t mandatory to have mountains or an ocean to have a fitness culture. You just decide to do it.
Community health workers build individual and community capacity by increasing self-sufficiency and health knowledge through activities such as outreach, community education, informal counseling, social support and advocacy.
Making mental health treatment a community priority, planting gardens at libraries and publicizing community health stats are ideas readers suggested for improving health in central Indiana.
Rather than “smart city” being used as a buzzword to generate grant dollars by businesses that need to win city contracts, what if the concept actually delivered on the promise of improving lives?
What’s at stake is both the health and well-being of our community and the economic prosperity of our workforce.
Incentivizing companies to pay for education, creating an Indiana program like AmeriCorps and mandatory preschool are among the ideas that readers submitted related to education and technology.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has allowed companies to mandate the flu and other vaccines, and has also indicated they can require COVID-19 vaccines.
Indianapolis-based Perez Realty Group acquired the 113-acre retail property on Dec. 18 for a yet-undisclosed price.
Pfizer’s vaccine was the first to gain approval from the Food and Drug Administration and initial shipments went to states last week.
In a video posted to Twitter, the president called the $600 checks authorized by the bill “ridiculously low” and complained about a list of provisions that he described as “wasteful spending and much more.”
HAND Inc.’s planned Cumberland Cottages could bring 11 affordable, for rent homes to the southwest corner of 141st Street and Cumberland Road. The estimated $2.5 million needs a rezone and state funding to be built by the end of 2022.
Indiana received 55,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine on Friday, and another 39,000 doses on Monday, which is a fraction of the state’s needs, officials say.