Indianapolis International lands direct service to Branson
Houston-based ExpressJet on Sept. 10 will begin four weekly flights to Branson on behalf of Branson AirExpress, the Indianapolis Airport Authority announced Wednesday morning.
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Houston-based ExpressJet on Sept. 10 will begin four weekly flights to Branson on behalf of Branson AirExpress, the Indianapolis Airport Authority announced Wednesday morning.
Using U.S. Census data, the Indiana Business Research Center finds Indianapolis’ population grew by 6,854 residents last year
while Fishers, Noblesville, Carmel and Greenwood saw less-than-average gains.
Purchases of new homes in the United States fell in May to a record low as a federal tax credit expired, showing the market
remains
dependent on government support.
Key Indianapolis Museum of Art fundraiser Kathy Nagler has been hired as the first development director for Health Foundation
of Greater Indianapolis.
Pennsylvania-based StoneMor Partners could pay up to $32 million for Memory Gardens Management Co. after trust-fund and debt
obligations are made.
The city of Indianapolis wants to generate revenue by using greenways as fiber optic corridors. But previous legal battles
over leasing rights-of-way to utilities could hang up the plan.
City plans to wring green from greenways as fiber optic corridors. But previous legal battles over leasing right-of-ways to utilities could hang up city proposal
The Indiana Department of Revenue says Indiana retailers selling prepaid mobile phones or prepaid wireless phone cards will
have to charge their customers an extra fee.
Interesting wall treatments can turn an ordinary room into an extraordinary room.
Just because it’s summer, don’t expect tree and shrub pests to go on vacation.
LAWN July • Do not try to control crabgrass after mid-July with a post-emergence herbicide. It is often too large to control well. Live with it until it dies from frost. • To prevent grub damage in the lawn, apply insecticides containing halofenozide or imidacloprid. Or, wait until August to determine if you have a […]
Locally, the long-running FLIP program, or Fund for Landmark Indianapolis Properties, has seen a marked downturn in the
resale of historic buildings.
In a name change that sounds like a merger of perfidy and profanity, Quadraspec Inc. is now called Perfinity.
Actually, the West Lafayette-based company merged itself into a sister company, Perfinity Biosciences Inc.
That company was created to commercialize a new method of biological sample preparation, developed by Fred Regnier, one of
the founders of Quadraspec. The shareholders of Quadraspec will remain the owners of Perfinity, and they have committed an
extra $2.33 million to the company. Quadraspec, which has raised more than $20 million in outside investment capital, makes
DVD-like discs capable of holding 272 samples that can be analyzed by a reading machine, like a DVD player.
Who knew? The Clarian North Medical Center in Carmel—famous locally for its terrazzo marble interior—is
the 20th most-beautiful hospital in the nation. At least according to health care staffing firm Soliant Health. The Georgia-based
firm built its rankings on votes cast on its Web site. In a press release, Soliant noted that beautiful surroundings help
people heal better. Not mentioned was that pretty hospitals in rich suburbs also tend to attract patients with the money and
private insurance plans to make a hospital profitable.
St. Vincent Health finally won the go-ahead from the Lawrence County Commissioners and County Council to
absorb Bedford’s Dunn Memorial Hospital. St. Vincent now operates 19 hospitals around the state and
has a joint venture with Clarian Health on a rehab hospital in Indianapolis. The Bedford hospital will now be known as St.
Vincent Dunn Hospital. Bedford is one of the places outside of Indianapolis where Clarian and St. Vincent, the state’s
two largest hospitals systems, are competing head-to-head. Clarian owns the cross-town Bedford Regional Medical Center.
AIT Laboratories plans to create as many as 160 jobs by 2014 and move its corporate headquarters to the
northwest side. The Indianapolis-based forensics, clinical and pharmaceutical testing firm plans to invest $74 million to
acquire and equip an existing 90,000-square-foot building in Woodland Corporate Park near West 79th Street and Interstate
465. AIT also plans to build a toxicology lab adjacent to its new headquarters. Its clients range from law-enforcement agencies
to physicians.
Clarian Health promoted Todd Stanley to the role of administrative director of Clarian Radiology. In this
new position, Stanley is responsible for oversight of radiology services for Clarian’s three downtown Indianapolis hospitals
and its beltway locations.
Dr. Debra Larkins, an OB/GYN doctor, recently joined the physicians at County Line Medical Pavilion, a new
Community Physicians of Indiana office. Larkins trained at the New York College of Osteopathic Medicine. Sherry L.
Harmon, a certified nurse midwife, and Debra Taylor, a nurse practitioner, also have joined the
new practice.
The Indiana Health Care Association has a new president. Scott Tittle, an attorney at the Indianapolis-based
Krieg DeVault law firm, took over from Steve Smith earlier this month. Smith returned to Affiliated Computer
Services, where he had worked previously.
Dr. Gaston Dana has been named medical director of the Wound Healing Center at Johnson Memorial Hospital.
More than $30 million in claims have been filed against Marcus Schrenker, but a court-appointed receiver expects an auction
of the financier’s property on Saturday to bring in less than $1 million.
David Stocum is the director of the Center for Regenerative Biology and Medicine at the IUPUI School of Science.
He and his team are studying how amphibians regenerate parts of their bodies to see if there are ways to induce humans to
regenerate tissue that is lost or damaged. The center has about 20 researchers and funding of about $14 million to fuel its
quest.
Indiana Secretary of Commerce Mitch Roob’s letter Tuesday to Democrat Pat Bauer details IEDC’s approach to job-creation incentives
and its clawback efforts in the recession.
Hospitals continued to be a stable and slightly growing source of jobs and wages in Indiana—for better and for worse.
The sector paid $7.3 billion to 127,000 Hoosiers in 2008, according to the latest data from the American Hospital Association.
Physician offices will begin receiving payments from the Medicare that are 21.3-percent below
what they’ve been getting so far this year. Doctors still expect Congress to reverse the payment cuts, but physicians
and the Medicare program will have to reprocess claims, costing both extra money.