IBJ election roundup: Study up on top races before you head to the polls
From Indiana’s intense U.S. Senate race to the surge in female candidates to school referendums, the state has been propelled by major political currents this election season.
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From Indiana’s intense U.S. Senate race to the surge in female candidates to school referendums, the state has been propelled by major political currents this election season.
An annual survey of Hoosier school superintendents shows 91 percent say their districts had a teacher shortage this fall.
It will be the first Indianapolis location for Taxman, which also has operations in Johnson and Hancock counties.
The last major economic data before Tuesday’s congressional elections also showed that the unemployment rate remained at a five-decade low of 3.7 percent.
Socio is just two years old but already has hundreds of clients across six continents, including Google, Microsoft, PepsiCo and Hyundai.
Apple's faithful customers aren't snapping up iPhones quite as enthusiastically as anticipated heading into the crucial holiday shopping season.
Federal prosecutors are conducting a criminal investigation into the natural gas explosions and fires that rocked three communities near Boston in September, killing one person and injuring 25 others.
Drinkers in Indiana will have an extra hour to purchase alcoholic beverages early Sunday.
Noblesville School Corp. and Clark-Pleasant Community School Corp. are asking voters to approve higher property taxes to pay for more safety and security efforts in their districts.
The City-County Council’s public works committee voted unanimously Thursday night to move a proposal forward that would establish a so-called “flood control improvement district” in the Warfleigh neighborhood, plus parts of Broad Ripple and near Butler University.
Across the state, a total of 518,891 ballots have been cast, as of the end of Wednesday. That’s more than double the number seen at this point in the last midterm election in 2014.
Justin Markel and Quinton Lasko are obsessed with feet and legs, technology and helping people improve their mobility. The combination led the duo to an invention designed to help athletes, although it has applications far beyond sports.
An IBJ analysis of political giving this election by CEOs of Indiana’s biggest companies found 56 executives donated $650,000 to nearly 92 organizations and candidates seeking federal office.
When Brooke Thompson arrived in Indiana in 2017 to lead the market, she not only focused on the numbers, but also on company morale and community givebacks.
Emerging from the health care services arena and state government sector, Audrey Taylor founded risk-management services company Netlogx in 1998.
More than 50 city services—from requesting extra police patrols to filing property tax appeals to requesting a streetlight in your neighborhood—are now offered digitally at my.indy.gov.
Melissa St. John’s company specializes in corporate moves and has a long list of prominent clients, but the awards she’s received have as much to do with corporate citizenship as with the bottom line.
Taking over as the leader of Girl Scouts of Central Indiana in 2017, Danielle Shockey came to the job with 20 years of experience working with Indiana youth.
Working at Eli Lilly and Co. right out of college, Christi Shaw went on to other major drug companies before returning to head a division that represents about 40 percent of Lilly’s worldwide revenue.
After beginning her Cummins career working on advancing fuel cell technology, Jennifer Rumsey now guides the company’s second-largest function, leading a global team that includes 7,000 engineers.