Organic food company closes in Cambridge City
Really Cool Foods, which once planned to have 1,000 workers in eastern Indiana, ceased operations Monday, costing 131 employees their jobs.
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Really Cool Foods, which once planned to have 1,000 workers in eastern Indiana, ceased operations Monday, costing 131 employees their jobs.
Ryan Kitchell will replace Alex Slabosky as the head of Indiana University Health Plans. Slabosky, who is retiring, oversaw the parent company of the M-Plan HMO, of which Indianapolis-based IU Health owned about 87 percent. More recently, Slabosky had pitched IU Health Plans as a health plan other employers could join or as a provider of services that would help employers with their worker health benefits. Kitchell came to IU Health in 2009 after serving as Gov. Mitch Daniels’ director of the Office of Management and Budget. In addition to running IU Health Plans, Kitchell will continue his management of IU Health’s treasury and real estate departments.
The CEO of Fishers-based Positron Corp., which plans to build a $55 million cyclotron in Noblesville for medical isotopes, faces a lawsuit from the U.S. Secruities and Exchange Commission, alleging he defrauded investors of a hedge fund he operates by secretly investing their money into Positron. CEO Patrick G. Rooney also is founder and managing partner of Oakbrook, Ill.-based Solaris Management. IBJ reported in September that Positron lost $10.9 million last year and at year-end had an accumulated deficit of $102.3 million. Earlier this year, Positron’s accounting firm issued a going-concern warning about the company. The SEC alleges Rooney and Solaris between 2005 and 2008 invested more than $3.6 million of the fund's money in Positron through both private transactions and market purchases of Positron’s common stock. The fund now owns over 1.1 billion shares of Positron, or more than 60 percent of the company. Rooney “hid” the Positron investment and his affiliation with the Fishers company until March 2009, according to the SEC’s lawsuit. At that time “he lied in telling them that he became chairman to safeguard the Solaris Funds’ investment,” the suit states. Rooney could not be immediately reached for comment about the SEC complaint.
Community Health Network plans to move its inpatient rehabilitation facility from its east-side hospital to a new, $23 million facility in the Castleton neighborhood, the Indianapolis-based hospital system announced Monday. The new facility, which will include 60 beds in 63,000 square feet of space, is scheduled to open in the second quarter of 2013. Construction on or near the Community Hospital North campus will begin next year. Community is partnering with Nashville-based Centerre Healthcare on the new facility, which will provide care for neurological, stroke and traumatic injury patients. Community’s inpatient rehabilitation program, called Hook Rehabilitation, will move its services and staff to the new facility when it opens and close the 42-bed unit located in Community Hospital East. Community, which acquired Westview Hospital earlier this year, is also moving ahead with plans to build a Communtiy Westview medical facility in Speedway. According to the Speedway Redevelopment Commission, the 40,000-square-foot health pavilion would include physician offices, imaging equipment and lab testing. It could also serve as a training facility for osteopathic medical students. If approved by the boards of directors for Community and Westview, groundbreaking for the health pavilion could occur as early as spring 2012.
UnitedHealth Group Inc. won the sweepstakes for XLHealth Corp., which had reportedly included Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc. Baltimore-based XLHealth is the latest company nabbed in a string of acquisitions of Medicare managed care companies. The purchase by Minnesota-based UnitedHealth follows purchases of similar companies by WellPoint and Cigna in June and October, respectively. WellPoint acquired California-based CareMore Health Group, which operates clinics for Medicare patients in California and Arizona. Health insurers are trying to expand their businesses caring for seniors in the federal Medicare program, as the baby boomer generation began to flood into the program this year.
Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. recently rejected CVS Caremark’s demands for big price discounts on its insulins, leading CVS to kick Lilly’s insulins off its list of recommended drugs.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners passed a resolution Nov. 22 that urges Congress and the Obama administration to exclude benefits brokers’ commissions from the new requirement that insurers spend only 15 percent to 20 percent of the premiums they collect on administration and profits.
Regulators allege CEO Patrick G. Rooney diverted millions of dollars from a hedge fund into the struggling Fishers company without investors’ knowledge.
Southport Police Chief Steve Davis announced Sunday that he would resign in January to pursue elected office. Davis, the first full-time police chief for the Indianapolis suburb, did not say which office he will seek. He unsuccessfully ran for Marion County sheriff in previous elections. Davis has been Southport’s chief since 2009.
A 66-year-old woman died Sunday night when she was struck by a car while crossing a road on the north side of Indianapolis. Police say the woman was crossing at the intersection of 86th Street and Colby Road at about 7 p.m. Witnesses told police that the driver tried to swerve, but could not avoid hitting the woman. Her identity has not been released.
Warren Township Schools called off classes Monday morning after thieves stole batteries from more than two-dozen buses belonging to the suburban Indianapolis district. The thefts were discovered at about 5:30 a.m. Officials said at least 26 buses were damaged over the weekend. Thieves cut cables to steal 50 to 60 batteries from the buses, many of which have dual-battery systems.
As consumers were nursing their Black Friday hangovers and warming up their clicking fingers ahead of Cyber Monday, entrepreneurs nationwide had their sights set on Small Business Saturday.
A jury has held a utility liable for $27 million in damages over a propane explosion at a central Indiana horse farm that killed a man and injured three family members.
College basketball may be one of the biggest benefactors of the soon-to-be ratified National Basketball Association labor settlement.
Honda Motor Co. said six plants in the U.S. and Canada will reach normal production levels on Dec. 1 after having to adjust output this month because of floods in Thailand.
Community Health Network plans to move its inpatient rehabilitation facility from its east-side hospital to a new $23 million, 60-bed facility in the Castleton neighborhood.
Employees at the company’s Sherwood Packaging plant in Indianapolis expected to return to work in January but now won’t return until “well into the second quarter.”
Did you catch the Monument lighting? Hit the multiplex? Visit the new Tawara Yusaka show at the IMA?
U.S. retail sales during Thanksgiving weekend climbed 16 percent to a record, as shoppers flocked to stores earlier and spent more, according to the National Retail Federation. Sales totaled $52.4 billion, and the average shopper spent $398.62 over the holiday weekend, up from $365.34 a year earlier.
Indiana’s nearly 300 school superintendents are receiving more compensation than reported in their contracts, with extra payments for benefits such as health insurance counting toward their overall salaries for pension purposes, a newspaper’s investigation has found.
Student leaders on three college campuses are urging Indiana lawmakers to enact a law that shields underage drinkers from disciplinary action if they report that someone is intoxicated and at serious health risk.
Both sides of the NBA labor impasse reached an agreement early Saturday to end the 149-day lockout and hope to begin the delayed season with a marquee tripleheader Dec. 25. Most of a season that seemed in jeopardy of being lost entirely will be salvaged if both sides approve the handshake deal.