Berry Plastics adding 120 jobs in Evansville
Berry Plastics Corp. plans to add 120 office jobs at its Evansville headquarters as it consolidates operations there.
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Berry Plastics Corp. plans to add 120 office jobs at its Evansville headquarters as it consolidates operations there.
Japanese manufacturer Nidec Motor Corp. plans to close its facility in Frankfort, eliminating 94 jobs in the Clinton County community.
A deep round of layoffs at The Indianapolis Star is only the beginning of a major restructuring of the company's news operations, Publisher Karen Crotchfelt told IBJ in an interview Wednesday.
Think Global, which has a factory in Elkhart and uses batteries made in the Indianapolis area, plans to liquidate its assets, according to supplier Ener1 Inc. Ener1 expects to lose $32 million in the process.
Wishard Health Services will change its name to Eskenazi Health after receiving a $40 million gift from Indianapolis real estate developer Sidney Eskenazi and his wife Lois, the county-owned hospital announced Wednesday morning.
The Orestes-based company—the nation’s second-largest tomato canner—on Tuesday announced plans to invest $3.5 million to convert a former Elwood elementary school into a new corporate headquarters.
The lab has been run out of Indiana University and has produced increasing numbers of incorrect test results over a period from roughly 2003 to 2008.
Anthem Blue Cross, an affiliate of WellPoint Inc., has agreed to settle a lawsuit that accused the health insurer of manipulating policies and forcing patients into higher deductible policies with fewer benefits.
The Indianapolis Star on Tuesday laid off 62 employees including more than 15 percent of its newsroom staff in the latest round of cost-cutting by Gannett Co. Inc., the newspaper's parent company.
Indiana Secretary of State Charlie White painted a picture of himself as a man with a complicated personal life that led him to use dual addresses but he denied ever providing false information as he defended himself Tuesday against voter fraud allegations.
An Indianapolis soldier has been killed supporting Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. The Department of Defense said Monday that 36-year-old Specialist Scott Smith died from injuries suffered in a non-combat related incident. He was part of the 81st Troop Command of the Indiana Army National Guard stationed in Indianapolis.
Motorists should be able to use the Keystone Avenue bridge at 80th Street and Woodfield Crossing within two weeks. The bridge was heavily damaged by Monday’s major rains, but the southbound lanes are stable and will be converted to two-way traffic as a short-term fix. A new traffic pattern should be in place in about 10 days. The city's Department of Public Works also is getting quotes for design and repair of the bridge, located along the major northbound thoroughfare. Design is expected to take about three weeks, and construction should take about six weeks, DPW spokeswoman Molly Deuberry said. The city expects to seek funding from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to cover repair costs.
Firefighters needed several hours to extinguish a blaze that broke out overnight at the Amtrak maintenance facility in Beech Grove. Officials said the fire started early Tuesday in an office area and spread to a building where train cars are repaired. The cause was unknown and no injuries were reported.
The hiring of former player Calbert Cheaney by Indiana University shows that relations are finally thawing between the school and Bob Knight or at least the backlash from Knight's firing is fading.
Several notable departures including Flower Factory and Frankey’s lead off the latest retail real estate roundup.
Emmis Communications Corp. has reached an agreement to sell three big-market radio stations to a partnership involving a private equity firm and a prominent media executive, the company disclosed Tuesday morning.
A provisional settlement in a federal lawsuit filed last September against the city by St. John United Church of Christ gives parties in the case six months to find a buyer for the nearly 100-year-old church.