Truck insurer’s new jobs to boast gold-plated pay
The 133 full-time jobs the truck and auto insurer plans to add over the next five years will pay around $60 an hour, or nearly $125,000 a year.
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The 133 full-time jobs the truck and auto insurer plans to add over the next five years will pay around $60 an hour, or nearly $125,000 a year.
-Indiana Continuing Legal Education Forum bought a 38,000-square-foot office building at 230 E. Ohio St. The seller, the Indiana Bar Foundation, was represented by Denice Michel, Jimmy Clark and Adam Broderick of Jones Lang LaSalle. The buyer represented itself.
-4930 Lafayette LLC bought a 29,380-square-foot retail building at 4930 Lafayette Road. The buyer was represented by Clint Fultz of Prime Site Brokers. The seller, Eagle Creek Shoppes Property Trust Ltd., was represented by Brian Knapp and Janice Paine of Colliers International.
-Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen bought 0.669 of an acre at County Line Road and Emerson Avenue. The buyer was represented by Steve Delaney and Larry Davis of Sitehawk Retail Real. The seller, Fenneman & Brown Properties LLC, was represented by Craig Ramsay of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-WF Industrial Properties VI LLC bought 1.69 acres in Brookville Crossing, 1520 Brookville Crossing Way. The buyer was represented by Patrick Lindley of Cassidy Turley. The seller, Brookville Crossing LLC, was represented by Shawn Deitch of Kaiser Land Co.
The change to the Expedient moniker is not expected to affect the center's 40 employees and 300 customers.
Greensburg-based MainSource Financial Group is the holding company for MainSource Bank, which has 78 offices in Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky and Ohio.
ExactTarget continues to spend down its sales gains so that it can grow its business.
Thomas Carr Howe Community High School, one of four taken over by the state Department of Education, is being remade yet again. And this time it faces a slew of competitors in the education-reform arena.
The recession and then the death of a founder put the Carmel waxing spa on a new trajectory. Now co-owner Brenda Schultz is mulling expansion plans.
After Google cracked down on some of the tools companies were using to improve their positions in search results, Indianapolis-based Slingshot SEO opted to launch a sister brand called Digital Relevance that will focus on earning media attention.
The developer of a $17 million mixed-use project proposed for Broad Ripple is expected to seek a city subsidy—support that at least one City-County councilor believes should be reserved for neighborhoods starved for investment farther south.
On June 20, a California federal court will determine if an antitrust lawsuit brought by former UCLA basketball player Ed O’Bannon—who argues he should’ve been paid for the use of his likeness on game broadcasts and in EA Sports video games—can become a class action.
A local developer plans to tear down part of the Indianapolis Star’s downtown headquarters while saving most of the building in a redevelopment that calls for 350 apartments—more units than the massive CityWay.
The substantial changes highlighted in the April 29 article, “Speedway’s Speed Zone redevelopment project in high gear,” should be praised.
I strongly support Maestro Urbanski’s decision not to have people seated in the Stage Terrace behind the orchestra [April 22 editorial].
An old sports reporter takes a stab at covering a game using social media.
Controversy over education policy is normal for the General Assembly, but this session’s pointless rancor over Common Core State Standards has only hindered progress in teaching our children and building our communities.
Early this month saw the passing of Otis Bowen, among the most admired, respected governors in Indiana history. Tributes following his death have been gratifying and well-deserved.
‘Young Turks’ of 30 years ago largely achieved what they set out to accomplish for city.
Frustration on the part of mass transit proponents was palpable last month when the Indiana Senate shunted the matter to a summer study committee after the House had approved a bill with strong bipartisan support.
A federal bankruptcy judge has slapped down an Anderson church that attempted to blame its bank for a failed scheme to finance church upgrades by buying life insurance policies on its elderly members.