Carmel home has a room for everything
Rich and Renee Ackley’s home live both large and small, large because of its 10,000 square feet, and small because of its “fairy garden.”
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Rich and Renee Ackley’s home live both large and small, large because of its 10,000 square feet, and small because of its “fairy garden.”
Out-of-state builders scooped up lots during the housing downturn, and now are watching their gambles pay off as they become major local players.
Business owners told members of the Indiana General Assembly’s Small Business Caucus that there’s a problem: They can’t compete with public assistance programs.
The daily flights, which are expected to begin on Jan. 7, will fulfill a longtime wish of local tech firms eager for more direct access to the West Coast and Silicon Valley.
Two firefighters suffered minor burns Tuesday afternoon during a fire that destroyed three homes in Fishers. The fire in the Sandstone Village neighborhood, near 116th Street and Brooks School Road, broke out in one home and quickly spread to the houses on each side. The cause is under investigation.
A 42-year-old woman suffered smoke inhalation during a house fire north of the Indiana State Fairgrounds at about 3:30 Wednesday morning. The fire in the 2000 block of East 44th Street was called suspicious by investigators. The residence, a duplex, suffered slight damage. The woman’s injuries were thought to be non-life-threatening. Five other adults and four dogs escaped unharmed.
Blood tests showing an Indianapolis police officer was legally drunk hours after a fatal crash can be used against him in his trial, a judge ruled Wednesday morning. Allen County Judge John Surbeck, Jr. dismissed a defense motion seeking to suppress the blood evidence in David Bisard's trial. Bisard's attorneys contend the samples were improperly handled by police. Bisard is charged with reckless homicide and drunken driving in a 2010 crash that killed one motorcyclist and badly injured two others.
IndyCar Series officials are talking about launching a winter mini-series as early as 2015, while one of the sport's most popular drivers is having trouble finding a ride for the 2014 regular season.
The rules, announced Tuesday by the U.S. Labor Department, will require most government contractors to set a goal of having disabled workers make up at least 7 percent of their employees. The benchmark for veterans would be 8 percent.
Subaru, which employs about 3,600 people in Lafayette, is taking measured steps to expand its production capacity, but today it is worried about running out of cars.
The release of the results of ISTEP tests taken by Indiana students this spring is being delayed further.
High net farm income, low interest rates and high farmland demand with supply combined to increase land values upward by 14.7 percent to 19.1 percent, depending on productivity, according to the study.
Thirty-nine protectors of pronghorn antelope, sea turtles, jaguars, ibis, puffin and other endangered species have been named as nominees for the Indianapolis Prize.
Let Rand Paul have his epic filibuster and Ted Cruz his scowling threats to shut down the government. Let Chris Christie thunder to a second term as the governor of New Jersey, his hubris flowering as his ultimate designs on the White House take shape.
The only commonly accepted facts about the immigration debate in Washington and at every other political level in America are these:
What is it about our Republican political stars here in Indiana that they are constantly underestimated and under-rated? The reason, of course, is politics.
They will call it Northern Colorado if they can get the job done. Ten counties in the rich area north of Denver produce almost all the agriculture and most of the gas and oil that comes from the Mountain State. Its residents pay well over half the taxes but garner a fraction of the representation in the Democratic-controlled Legislature.
A realization struck recently as I was sitting in the shade of an umbrella stuck into the white sand that rims Thunder Bay in northeast Michigan, a copy of “The Last Policeman” across my lap.
Which of our leaders ever talks with us about a good book she or he has recently read?
Brookings Institute researchers recently published a book called “Confronting Suburban Poverty in America” that profiles how quickly poverty is migrating from many urban centers to their surrounding suburbs. Metro-area poverty has grown fastest in the suburbs over the past 30 years—experiencing a 64-percent increase versus 29-percent growth in urban centers.