LETTER: Time for city to tackle poverty
Concentrated poverty in Indianapolis is holding back hundreds of thousands of families from accessing opportunities for upward mobility and will hold us back from continued growth for all.
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Concentrated poverty in Indianapolis is holding back hundreds of thousands of families from accessing opportunities for upward mobility and will hold us back from continued growth for all.
We need a thorough, independent study of how to transform this crumbling, 50-year-old urban highway system into an economic driver for the entire region.
One in four job applicants are failing drug tests, which means a large population of people are unable to work.
With 5,000 records breached per minute and malware attacks happening all the time, figuring out how to be GDPR-compliant is just common sense.
Surely, doing it right—learning from mistakes, from the available research and from the experience of cities that have creatively addressed these issues—is worth moving a few stubborn bureaucrats out of their comfort zones.
For a guy who spent much of the 1990s in Moscow, the collusion investigation brings back memories.
We commend programs aimed not at subsidizing businesses but helping to give them a small boost to get them going or keep them going.
Streetcars similar to this one photographed in 1881 were introduced in Indianapolis in the 1860s and were generally pulled by mules.
Because employees need expertise to successfully tackle a job, the answer is simple, right? There is, however, a definite twist to the answer.
Investing is simple, but it’s not easy.
The City Council of Seattle recently passed a controversial tax, and what happened next could be good news for central Indiana’s quest to snag Amazon’s second national headquarters.
The decision was announced Wednesday by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell during the league's spring meeting in Atlanta.
The Indiana Supreme Court has disbarred a lawyer imprisoned for the misappropriation of funds from six estates that authorities say totaled hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Community leaders have tried for years to get the owners to sell or redevelop the mostly vacant building on Broad Ripple's main drag. It was built in 1920 and last updated in 1980.
The purchase is part of the insurance giant’s strategy of bringing provider assets in-house.
Newly created WGU Advancement will raise funds to support the university’s mission and commitment to “reinvigorating the promise of higher education for all.”
TriPhase Technologies plans to consolidate its Carmel office and Westfield warehouse operations into one building in Zionsville and add 10 employees.
The effort, dubbed “Operation Cryptosweep,” is being coordinated by the North American Securities Administrators Association.
Heavy equipment and machinery maker Caterpillar plans to make the investment in building improvements, information technology, software and equipment.
School allows a student and instructor from one of Lincoln Tech’s 12 locations across the country to participate in five IndyCar races, including the Indianapolis 500.