Indiana e-waste collectors, recyclers face deadline
Collectors and recyclers of obsolete electronics have until Jan. 1 to enroll with the state’s E-Waste Program.
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Collectors and recyclers of obsolete electronics have until Jan. 1 to enroll with the state’s E-Waste Program.
The museum has been facing tight budgets and dropping attendance.
Riley Area Development Corp. is pitching the idea of building a performing arts center in the City Market. The YMCA
of Greater Indianapolis, meanwhile, is in talks with the city about building a full-service fitness center on the site.
“Sacred Spain: Art and Belief in the Spanish World” at the Indianapolis Museum of Art is drawing visitors from around the
world for an unprecedented exhibition
Mary Ostrye, 52, will have oversight of 150 different academic programs at Ivy Tech’s 23 campuses around the state.
Cold storage might become a hot business for a building contractor.
Analysis of Medicare data finds that Indiana hospitals and doctors rack up higher costs to treat the same conditions as the
nation’s model markets.
The recession decimated Indiana’s auto-parts makers, but many other manufacturers in the state survived. After a year
adrift in the recession, they see signs of land ahead.
Indianapolis’ largest computer consulting firm on Wednesday received property-tax abatement relating to its plans to
create 200 high-paying jobs and invest $600,000 in new equipment.
Ice Sports and Entertainment, the owner of the Indiana Ice hockey team, announced Wednesday afternoon that it plans to
build a complex that could contain up to four skating rinks and house the Indiana/World Skating Academy.
A suspect is in custody after authorities say he stabbed a Columbus, Ind., police officer during a confrontation over a property
dispute. Police say 38-year-old Carl Drucker II stabbed Officer Marc Hutcheson about 4:20 p.m. Tuesday. Drucker was shot in
the arm and escaped, but was found after a three-hour manhunt. The officer was treated and released from the hospital.
The Indiana Secretary of State’s securities division says Indiana State Teachers Association can’t account for $23 million
intended for
school districts, requests assets be frozen.
Opening statements began Wednesday in the trial of a second man accused in the worst mass murder in Indianapolis history.
James Stewart helped Desmond Turner rob and kill seven people at their east-side home three years ago, prosecutors say. Turner
was recently convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. The trial is expected to last at least a week.
A new report by the Indiana Education Employment Relations Board endorses a raise for Carmel Clay teachers aimed at resolving
a contract dispute between the teachers union and the school corporation. Carmel teachers have been working without a contract
for more than a year and a half. The recommendations include a 1-percent raise during the first year of a three-year contract,
followed by a 1-percent raise each following year. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
Some Indianapolis Colts supporters think it’s time to consider cutting oft-injured Bob Sanders loose. But team president Bill
Polian promises No. 21 "will be back and better than ever."
Indianapolis-based Hansen & Horn Group Inc. is without legal representation after attorneys defending the troubled
home builder from a slew of lawsuits dropped it as a client.
The combined firm will have more than 8,700 members and more than $20 million in assets.
Columbus engine maker Cummins Inc. will idle at least 400 workers at a manufacturing facility in Jamestown, N.Y., because
of a change in emission standards that will cut production from 500 engines a day to 100.
The acquisition of DeTrude & Co. by Shepherd Insurance marks the 13th purchase of an Indianapolis-area benefits brokerage since mid-2007.
Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. has won a bid to dismiss part of a negligence lawsuit brought by Mississippi that alleges
improper marketing of antipsychotic drug Zyprexa for unapproved uses.