Digital marketer growing Indy headquarters
StrataBlue plans to hire 25 people in early 2014 as the firm adds services.
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StrataBlue plans to hire 25 people in early 2014 as the firm adds services.
Strong storms that blew through central Indiana on Sunday toppled much of the two-story former post office building, which had withstood the tests of time for 110 years.
The stock market broke through two milestones Monday before giving up nearly all its gains late in the day.
Did you brave the storm to go see “Wicked”? Meet up with mammoths at the State Museum? Talk loudly at the bar during a cabaret performance?
From the spiraling wooden sculpture suspended from the ceiling in the main concourse to the vegetable garden on the roof, the brand-new Eskenazi Hospital keeps you wondering what you will see around the next corner.
Amid the chaos and fighting that has become Indiana's Board of Education meetings of late, the question has popped up: Why not follow Robert's Rules of Order?
Mike Pence asked a national school boards group to step into an ongoing power struggle with Indiana Schools Superintendent Glenda Ritz on Friday, an offer she said was meaningless unless he deals with her directly.
The Zionsville-based firm said it will spend $1.4 million to lease and equip a 16,626-square-foot headquarters facility at Northwest Technology Park to allow for the expansion.
The state’s Division of Disability and Rehabilitative Services ordered an immediate transfer of the residents to other providers Nov. 11. The state recently cited the facility for violations regarding infection control and other problems.
A former FBI explosives expert was sentenced on Thursday to roughly 3-1/2 years in prison for possessing and disclosing secret information, including intelligence he gave to The Associated Press for a story about a U.S. operation in Yemen. Donald Sachtleben, 55, of Carmel, pleaded guilty to one count of disclosing and one count of possessing classified information. Sachtleben also was sentenced to an additional eight years in prison in an unrelated child pornography case.
The final report on the July 27 church-bus crash on the north side of Indianapolis cites unsafe speed as the primary reason for the accident and says the bus had no mechanical defects. Three people were killed: youth pastor Chad Phelps, his pregnant wife, Courtney, and church member Tonya Weindorf. Dennis Maurer, the 68-year-old driver, told investigators the brakes on the bus failed as he exited Interstate 465 onto Keystone Avenue. A Marion County prosecutor's office spokeswoman said Friday that no decision has been made on whether the driver will face criminal charges.
A 29-year-old Indianapolis man jumped from his second-floor balcony to escape a fire in his apartment early Friday morning. Fire crews found heavy smoke and flames when they arrived at Barrington Estates, near 86th Street and Ditch Road, shortly before 3:30 a.m. A 25-year-old woman was rescued from her balcony with a ladder. Two other tenants escaped without injury. A cause is being investigated.
Republicans renewed an assault on President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul and his credibility on Friday as they pushed toward House passage of a measure to let insurers keep selling health coverage that falls short of the law’s strict standards.
The Indy Chamber presents the awards that honor significant achievements in architecture and design. Buckingham Cos.’ CityWay also won in the Public Art category.
The Insurance Forum, an independent newsletter based in central Indiana and read by industry leaders and consumer advocates across the continent, has placed its last issue in the mail.
Manufacturing output rose 0.3 percent last month, up from 0.1 percent in September, the Federal Reserve reported Friday. Overall industrial production, however, fell 0.1 percent.
Foundation work is under way for the next phase of Republic Development Corp.’s Saxony Village project, which includes a lakefront community building that it wants to turn over to the town of Fishers along with Saxony Beach.
About 3,500 rental units are expected to be built downtown by 2017, adding to 4,700 already on the market. But the analysis says there’s no need to worry about overbuilding.
Three residents have appealed the Tipton County planning director’s decision to extend without public notice the building permit originally given to Getrag, which stopped construction at the factory in 2008.
The Affordable Care Act was designed to restructure the individual insurance market into a true insurance risk pool. President Obama should stop pretending those changes won’t affect everyone in the individual market, whether they want it to or not.