Partners in Tru by Hilton hotel project file suit, allege unpaid development fees
The lawsuit says the men reached an oral agreement in late May 2017 to split the anticipated $1 million development fee evenly, four ways.
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The lawsuit says the men reached an oral agreement in late May 2017 to split the anticipated $1 million development fee evenly, four ways.
In Marion County, 20% of households still have to be verified during the address-canvassing process, but that’s the smallest amount in the central Indiana region.
The state will take over funding pre-kindergarten programs for 4-year-olds, but the mayor’s office opted not to include preschool funding for younger children after philanthropic support for the program fell.
The requirement drew criticism last week when the certification standards were revealed, including a social media blast by NBA star LeBron James.
The move is part of IU Health’s way to address the state’s high infant mortality rate and keep all newborn services under one roof.
The victim is among divers suing Indianapolis-based USA Diving, alleging it didn’t do enough to stop coach William Bohonyi.
An email from CEO David Horth to staff and volunteers said employees with decades of combined experience had been terminated, including the chief operating officer and director of animal behavior for the not-for-profit.
The governor also has named a 41-year military veteran as the new point person for the Indiana Office of Defense Development as it becomes a business unit of the Indiana Economic Development Corp.
Leah McGrath, a Republican, had been considered a possible candidate in Indiana’s 5th District, which is being vacated by Rep. Susan Brooks. Brooks has represented the district since 2013.
Spa visits and the money they generate reached record highs last year in the U.S. with $18.3 billion in revenue driven by 190 million pampering trips, according to the International Spa Association.
To help lower income residents make headway toward the middle class, city officials are encoding economic development policies with strategies to support them. In this week’s podcast, Ian Nicolini of Develop Indy unpacks how tax incentives will be tied to inclusion efforts.
Residents in a central Indiana city are set to get an update from federal officials this week about planned sewer work near a tainted industrial site.
IU accelerated the timetable for renovations to the Foster Quad and McNutt Quad residence halls after mold was found in both buildings last fall.
The Morgan County town’s best-kept entrepreneurial secret might not be a secret much longer, thanks to private equity ownership, an expanded management team, and ambitious plans to double revenue.
To claim you have integrity is easy. To say it is your value or to put it on a poster for your company or to even name your company after it, that is easy. But to practice it, to hold yourself accountable to that standard and model it consistently, that’s hard.
William Mitchell founded Mitchell Printing Co. in 1856 in Greenfield. It initially printed the Greenfield Sentinel newspaper and, starting in 1859, the Hancock Democrat, as well as other brochures, books and journals.
If and when the political cartoonist’s genre goes extinct, we’ll have lost more than an occasional chuckle.
Stress doesn’t discriminate. It doesn’t know your income, your gender or your job title. And even if it did, it wouldn’t care.
Finding better uses for a few of the city’s underperforming courses can create new opportunities for recreation and nature preservation. But final decisions about whether to repurpose courses and how to use the space must be done thoughtfully—and with plenty of input from Indianapolis residents.
Local ownership, unique content have helped us overcome the headwinds that have damaged the daily newspaper industry.