Indianapolis-area home sales take nosedive
Although area sales are up 16 percent through the first 10 months of the year, the trend has slammed into reverse in recent months amid higher mortgage rates and tighter inventories.
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Although area sales are up 16 percent through the first 10 months of the year, the trend has slammed into reverse in recent months amid higher mortgage rates and tighter inventories.
Eight games into the NBA season, and there’s a lot for the blue and gold to be happy about. Still, with the team undefeated, you have to wonder what else the team must do to fill Bankers Life Fieldhouse.
Jeffrey D. Jackson, a 25-year transportation veteran named Thursday to head the Central Indiana Regional Transportation Authority, was sued by Durango, Colo.-based American Heritage Railways in May.
The local rest estate investment firm says it will use some of the proceeds to repay debt and the rest to fund part of its recent $307 million purchase of nine Southern retail properties.
The state will provide a $600,000 grant for the next phase in a proposed project to build a $400 million reservoir in central Indiana.
One is an affordable senior-housing complex on North Illinois Street and the other is a small mixed-use development on North Meridian Street that could house a medical clinic.
The move includes a $45 million investment for Lilly's operations in Indianapolis, on top of $400 million in investments the company announced over the past two years.
The Japanese manufacturer plans to stop building cars at the Subaru factory after the contract between the companies ends in 2016.
The Central Indiana Regional Transportation Authority has hired a native Hoosier as executive director, replacing outgoing leader Ehren Bingaman, CIRTA announced Wednesday.
A tug-of-war between Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz and 10 other members of the State Board of Education erupted during a discussion about Common Core curriculum standards, leading Ritz to abruptly adjourn the meeting and leave.
Both in and out of court Wednesday afternoon, Steve Hilbert was calm but defiant about the allegations made by hardware store owner John Menard against him, describing them as “totally personal” and a “vendetta.”
The administration says fewer than 27,000 people managed to enroll for health insurance last month in the 36 states relying on the problem-filled federal website for President Barack Obama’s overhaul.
‘Fracking’ has made natural gas cheap and abundant, but prices could rise with demand, costing consumers.
The days of lone-wolf researchers shouting ‘Eureka’ are over.
More than one homeowner has been convinced to cut home energy bills by replacing windows or installing radiant barriers in their attic.
Despite ongoing research, the energy form is still not economical in many cases.
Want to see the world without leaving the Indiana State Fairgrounds? We’ve got four sets of tickets to give away.
An Indiana Department of Homeland Security survey found that a majority of state residents aren't prepared to survive on their own in the aftermath of a tornado, blizzard or other disaster. The department surveyed 2,500 people and found that more than half didn't have at least three days' worth of food and water on hand in case of a disaster. More than half also didn't have other items recommended for a preparedness kit, including flashlights, extra batteries, first-aid supplies and extra pet supplies.
Investigators say human remains found in July sealed inside an old well tank in Hendricks County belong to a man at least 40 years old. The new owner of the property just west of the Marion County line found the 120-gallon tank while clearing the land. Authorities say the man has probably been missing for years. University of Indianapolis forensics experts are working to put together a better description of the man.
A 24-year-old Noblesville man was arrested Wednesday morning after he broke into an occupied Fishers apartment in an effort to elude police. Justin Morefield was found hiding in a bedroom closet about 2 a.m. after a couple called police to tell them somebody had broken into their Sand Creek Woods apartment, near 116th Street and Cumberland Road. Police had been seeking Morefield since about 9 p.m. Tuesday, after he fled from an attempted traffic stop near 126th Street and Hoosier Road, likely because he has multiple outstanding warrants. The suspect was bitten by a police dog when he was taken into custody.