Disputed $50M fee expected to be paid in Indiana casino deal
The owner of two horse track casinos near Indianapolis is preparing to pay a $50 million state fee as part of its sale to casino giant Caesars Entertainment Corp.
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The owner of two horse track casinos near Indianapolis is preparing to pay a $50 million state fee as part of its sale to casino giant Caesars Entertainment Corp.
Steel Dynamics plans to upgrade its northeast Mississippi steel mill and add 45 jobs at the plant.
Many families are hard-pressed to meet soaring deductibles and have put off routine care or skipped medication to save money. The resulting health problems can be enormously costly for the medical system.
The final store closures for iconic retail chain Toys “R” Us are slated for this week. But an executive who oversaw the store a decade ago is looking into whether some kind of reboot is possible.
American consumers are still feeling good current economic conditions by historical standards.
The project will close both directions of Interstate 65 between the Meridian Street and 21st Street exits starting next week.
Chief Justice John Roberts, who wrote the majority opinion, said presidents have substantial power to regulate immigration. He also rejected the challengers' claim of anti-Muslim bias.
Organizers of the affordable-housing and neighborhood-revival effort, designed to attract and retain teachers for urban schools, are set to unveil the first 15 homes.
The Food and Drug Administration approved the medication, called Epidiolex, to treat two rare forms of epilepsy in patients 2 years and older.
A proposal to build an 88-room extended-stay hotel on Old Meridian Street in Carmel is gaining traction after city leaders and the neighboring Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 10003 had initially opposed it.
Community Newspaper Holdings Inc. plans to sell off community newspapers in Zionsville, Anderson, Lebanon and 10 other Indiana communities.
The Indianapolis-based system opened the new simulation and education center this month at its West 86th Street campus.
The Commerce Department has been deluged with requests from 20,000 companies seeking exemptions from tariffs on steel, aluminum and other goods.
In November 2017, the school announced it was suspending admissions and exploring alternatives to remain open. In 2016, it was censured for admitting students who didn’t appear capable of completing law school or passing the bar exam.
The Supreme Court handed American Express a win Monday in a lawsuit over rules it imposes on merchants who accept its cards.
General Electric Co. has agreed to sell its industrial gas engine business to a private equity for $3.25 billion, passing over interest in the acquisition from Columbus-based Cummins Inc.
Single-family construction permit filings in the nine-county area have been on the rise in 28 of the last 30 months on a year-over-year basis.
The building, which sits on a 1.7-acre lot at 120 E. Walnut St., has served as the district's home since 1960.
The annual AABP Editorial Excellence competition recognizes print and online writing, photography and design by regional business publications.
Host Mason King interviews IBJ reporter Hayleigh Colombo about her series “One City, Worlds Apart,” which looks at income inequality and poverty in the city and why everyone should be concerned.