Vectren to embark on $650M project, rate increases
The infrastructure work will upgrade the gas utility’s network across much of central Indiana.
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The infrastructure work will upgrade the gas utility’s network across much of central Indiana.
The Indiana Department of Labor is telling retailers to make sure they take steps to ensure workers and customers are safe during Black Friday and other holiday sale events. The department said stores should prepare by using crowd-management techniques, including trained security or police for crowd control. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends stores prepare an emergency plan that addresses overcrowding, crowd crushing, violent acts and fire.
A truck driver fell asleep at the wheel and drove into the living room of a Mooresville family’s home Tuesday at about 2:30 a.m. The incident occurred in the 4300 block of Allison Road, near U.S. 67. No injuries were reported. Police say the truck missed a bedroom where people were sleeping by about 6 feet.
Suspended Indianapolis police officer David Bisard has formally submitted his resignation, three weeks after his reckless-homicide conviction. Bisard has been on unpaid suspension since August 2010, after he drove his squad car into a trio of motorcyclists while drunk, killing Eric Wells and injuring the others. Bisard is scheduled to be sentenced Tuesday afternoon. He faces up to 30 years in prison.
IU Health, the state’s fourth-largest employer, said it was opposing a proposed amendment against same-sex marriage for health-related reasons.
The North Central High School grad has big shoes to fill as Knox retires after nearly four decades at Channel 8.
The Fuel said they are in the process of hiring front-office and coaching staff, signing an affiliation agreement with a NHL franchise, and recruiting players to fill the roster.
Public Access Counselor Luke Britt also warned in an advisory opinion that “final decisions are meant to be open and transparent,” and urged the board and agencies to be careful about following the spirit of the state’s Open Door Law.
State Auditor Dwayne Sawyer—former president of the Brownsburg Town Council and the first black Republican to serve in a statewide office—said he was stepping down due to “family and personal concerns.”
TechPoint, the Indianapolis-based group that promotes the state's technology industry, on Tuesday unveiled a pilot program aimed at attracting young professionals to central Indiana while keeping those who are already here.
Fresh Thyme prepares to enter the Indianapolis market while Wal-Mart pushes its Neighborhood Market concept. Also, Olive Garden expands and a Thai restaurant opens downtown.
A band of Mass Ave merrymakers are heading north for the holidays, opening a pop-up shop in downtown Carmel.
Two investment analysts raised their ratings for Finish Line on Monday, saying the Indianapolis-based athletic shoe and clothing retailer has the opportunity for margin recovery and a stronger online performance.
Lawyers representing Indiana asked an appeals court Monday to refund much of the money the state has paid IBM for a failed welfare privatization effort, but the company countered it's actually entitled to even more.
Spend any time around monetary officials and one word you’ll hear a lot is “normalization.” Most such officials accept that now is no time to be tightfisted, that for the time being credit must be easy and interest rates low.
In an interview with the BBC last month, Oprah Winfrey said of President Obama: “There is a level of disrespect for the office that occurs. And that occurs, in some cases, and maybe even many cases, because he’s African-American.”
We’re about to leave one unique facet of Indiana politics and enter another.
Everybody’s talking about Obamacare. Website crashes. People booted off their health insurance. Sticker shock. No doubt we’ll be talking about it through the 2014 election. And the 2016 election. And most likely well beyond that.
The failed rollout of the Obamacare health care exchanges is seen by many as a political gift to the Republican Party. There is no question that President Obama’s administration failed to execute a controversial law that has been heavily criticized, litigated in courts and elections, and created great unrest among the American people.
Former Indiana Chief Justice Randall Shepard and other veterans of the highest state courts in the country issued a warning a few days ago about the dangers of large-scale campaign spending in judicial campaigns.