Local not-for-profit execs’ pay lags that of U.S. peers
Compensation for the highest-ranking officials of Indianapolis’ largest not-for-profits falls short of pay at many similar-size organizations throughout the country.
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Compensation for the highest-ranking officials of Indianapolis’ largest not-for-profits falls short of pay at many similar-size organizations throughout the country.
Days after Gov. Mike Pence proposed a $1 billion rehab of state highways, House Roads and Transportation Chairman Ed Soliday raised questions about construction cost estimates provided by the governor’s administration.
The New York-based investor that’s been boosting its stake in Angie's List in recent months has gone public with its demands, blasting the company's chairman and urging a merger.
Michael Klipsch, who stepped down in September as chief legal counsel and president of business development, had been with the indianapolis-based speaker maker nearly 20 years.
The ground-level anchor for the new Pulliam Square apartments offers plenty of space for socializing, both inside and out on the New York Street patio.
Can a show that features a a cheerful ditty about how “Death is Just Around the Corner” still be a feel-good musical?
Team without a school overcomes challenges, finds success on the field.
Placing beer and liquor on the same truck is simply not the issue. The alcoholic beverage industry in Indiana and in other states is based on a concept of limited permits.
Citizens give local police incredible enforcement powers, including the ability to arrest and detain. And with much authority should come much accountability.
A majority of House districts across the country are “safe,” and we can see the results in our dysfunctional Congress.
Gov. Mike Pence's proposal is the latest example of the state using stop-gap measures to maintain basic infrastructure.
It’s an extraordinary coup for Indianapolis partner with the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
Atlanta-based Beazer Homes USA Inc. initially proposed a residential development along Ditch Road between 156th and 161st streets in 2005, but construction never started.
Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia M. Burwell set a target of 10 million people enrolled and paying their premiums by the end of next year—about half the enrollment that was originally predicted.
Businesses will pay $126 per employee to the federal government next year if the state doesn’t pay off a loan that propped up the unemployment program during the Great Recession before Nov. 10.
An attorney for the former top administrator of Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne pressed arguments that a businessman defamed him in a letter shortly before he was forced to retire.
After years of disagreements about the future of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Airport between airport officials and the city of Fishers, the two entities are teaming up to attract developments to hundreds of acres on the property.
The overwhelming evidence shows that, to retain purchasing power through your retirement, say perhaps the next 20 years, a significant commitment to the stock market is safer than retreating to cash or bonds.
if Congress refuses to raise the debt limit, the executive branch always wins the PR war.
Muncie-based First Merchants Corp. is to acquire Ameriana for $69 million under the deal.