Anderson University cuts staff, majors as enrollment drops
After suffering a 7-percent dip in enrollment, Anderson University, a Christian liberal arts college, plans to cut 4 percent of its workforce.
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After suffering a 7-percent dip in enrollment, Anderson University, a Christian liberal arts college, plans to cut 4 percent of its workforce.
Soupremacy is set to take space just off Monument Circle vacated by Teapots n Treasures, which moved a couple of blocks away, while Ambrosia settles into new digs in Broad Ripple.
U.S. lawmakers, influenced by companies including Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co., Cisco Systems Inc. and Qualcomm Inc., are considering the second set of patent-law changes in three years as the courts try to race ahead of Congress.
Fishers’ Town Council is convening a special meeting next week to hear what residents think of a proposal to raise the food-and-beverage tax by 1 percent to fund economic development projects.
Ruble became interim commissioner in September after Sean Keefer moved to the governor's office to serve as Pence's chief lobbyist.
Edgeworth Laskey Properties LLC, which has developed three buildings within Allison Pointe Park, bought the 10.5-acre parcel along Interstate 465 from a suburban Chicago company.
The 2012 Indiana Judicial Service and Probation Report, released Monday, provide details about court operations at the county and appellate level.
If picked by Democrats at their convention next year, Marion County Clerk Beth White would likely face incumbent Republican Secretary of State Connie Lawson.
Indiana officials don’t expect HealthCare.gov to be able to share individual account information with the state’s Medicaid computer systems until the end of the year.
Dr. Amy Schmidt, a pathologist, has joined Wishard-Eskenazi Health. She did her medical training and received a doctoral degree at Saint Louis University School of Medicine.
Dr. Frank Messina, an emergency medicine physician, has been named medical director of the Wishard-Eskenazi Health Transition Support Department. Messina earned a bachelor’s degree from Columbia University and did his medical training at Mount Sinai School of Medicine of the City University of New York in 1987.
Keith Jewell has been picked to be the next president of St. Mary’s Health, an Evansville hospital that is part of Indianapolis-based St. Vincent Health. Jewell, currently chief operating officer of the Franciscan St. Francis Health hospital system in Indianapolis, will assume his new role in mid-December. An Evansville native, Jewell earned a bachelor’s degree in accounting and an MBA at the University of Southern Indiana. He began his health care career at Evansville’s Deaconess Hospital. He joined Franciscan in 1993.
Dr. Jillian Erb, a family physician, recently joined Sheridan Family Medicine. She earned a bachelor’s degree at Indiana University in Bloomington and her medical degree at the Indiana University School of Medicine.
Faced with huge debt payments next year, San Francisco-based Genstar Capital is exploring a sale of Indianapolis-based Harlan Laboratories, the world’s second-biggest provider of lab animals. Genstar, which acquired Harlan in a leveraged buyout in 2005, faces long odds on refinancing $280 million in debt that comes due in July 2014. That’s because Harlan has experienced “double-digit revenue contraction” after sales reached $326 million in 2012, according to a report by Standard & Poor’s. Harlan has been losing ground in its contract research work, analysts say, because pharmaceutical companies have scaled back early-stage research. Harlan employs about 330 people in the Indianapolis area.
The state of Indiana will extend its high-risk insurance pool through the end of January to accommodate Hoosiers who have been unable to enroll in coverage through the federal marketplace, according to TheStatehouseFile.com. The Indiana Comprehensive Health Insurance Association–often called ICHIA–provides coverage for roughly 6,800 individuals with significant medical needs and costs the state about $6.3 million per month. The program was scheduled to shut down at the end of the year. The state created its high-risk insurance pool in 1982 to provide health care options for seriously ill Hoosiers who did not have access to coverage in the private market. Its users tend to have problems including cancer, hemophilia, HIV/AIDS or organ failure. Last spring, the General Assembly passed a law dissolving the program because the patients would become eligible to purchase coverage through the federal marketplace. But state officials now worry those patients won’t be able to sign up in time.
In an attempt to improve public health planning and efforts, researchers at IUPUI have received a $200,000 grant to study whether they can use electronic medical records to measure health outcomes by neighborhood or census block. The two-year study will try to establish a valid method for integrating data from the medical records with other community health indicators such as parks, health care facilities and grocery stores selling fresh produce. “When there is a limited budget for, say, preventing diabetes, the county health department has to determine how to spend its resources,” said Brian Dixon, an informatics professor and researcher at Indianapolis-based Regenstrief Institute Inc., who is leading the study. “One choice is to evenly divide the money across all communities within the county, some of which probably don’t have as much need as others. A second choice is to identify specific areas within the county that might need intervention the most.” The grant was awarded by the National Network of Public Health Institutes with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Edward Sadler, 51, died Sunday when the passenger van he was driving for Jesus House of Light Temple was struck by an alleged drunk driver at 46th Street and Emerson Avenue just before 8 p.m. More than a dozen of the van’s 17 passengers were taken to the hospital, but only a 7-year-old remained there Monday morning. Brandon Collins, 26, was charged with running a red light resulting in death and driving while intoxicated.
Two 16-year-old boys who fled from a rehabilitation facility in McLean County, Ill., in a stolen Pontiac Sunfire crashed into an Indianapolis firehouse Monday at 4:30 a.m., killing one of the teens and injuring the other. The boys were being chased by Brownsburg police, who tried to stop the vehicle for a broken light. Nobody in Station 12, in the 2100 block of Kessler Boulevard West Drive, was injured. The crash started a natural gas leak, forcing road closures near Michigan Road and Kessler.
Judge John Surbeck dismissed a juror in suspended cop David Bisard's trial on Monday for looking up information about blood-alcohol tests on the Internet. Two other jurors had previously been excused, leaving no alternates in the reckless homicide trial. If one more juror is dismissed, a mistrial would be declared. Bisard’s patrol car crashed into two motorcycles stopped at an Indianapolis traffic light in August 2010, killing a man and seriously injuring two other people. Prosecutors say Bisard was intoxicated.
Obamacare put an end to health insurers’ worst methods for avoiding risk. But that doesn’t mean insurers have ended their risk-shifting ways. Not at all.
They plan to spend $14 million to build the 542,000-square-foot warehouse on 33 acres on the city’s west side. One condition of the tax abatement is finding a user that would create at least 50 jobs by 2018.
Federal authorities suffered a near-complete defeat in their efforts to prosecute the players in an unusual real estate deal in Elkhart, a setback that ultimately scuttled an ambitious public-corruption case targeting former Marion County prosecutor Carl Brizzi.
Dallas-based Specialty Bakery LLC plans to build a 226,778-square-foot production and distribution facility in southwest Indianapolis that would create 241 jobs by 2018.
DePauw University and Wabash College have joined Freedom Indiana, a newly formed organization opposed to Indiana’s proposed same-sex marriage amendment.
Attorney and real estate developer Paul J. Page will serve two years of probation and pay a $10,000 fine for concealing the source of a $362,000 down payment on his purchase of a state-leased office building in Elkhart.