Indianapolis controller leaving for education group
The city will lose its controller a few months before the 2014 budget is due to be presented to the City-County Council.
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The city will lose its controller a few months before the 2014 budget is due to be presented to the City-County Council.
A southern Indiana boy has successfully spurred a change in state law that will allow sports leagues to hire youngsters like him as referees.
Noblesville voters weigh in next month on a $28 million school referendum that would fund building renovations intended to accommodate a growing student body—and clear the way for Ivy Tech Community College to establish a regional campus in the Hamilton County seat.
The housing market has spiked so much in some places that real estate agents are turning to Facebook and going door-to-door looking for prospective sellers because of a shortage of houses for sale.
Indiana's riverboat casino revenues fell 4.4 percent in March, dragged down by declines at two southeastern Indiana venues that faced their first month of head-to-head competition with a Cincinnati casino.
Northern Indiana's recreational vehicle industry is getting a boost with the relocation of RV components producer Drew Industries Inc. to Elkhart and its pledge of up to 800 new jobs by 2017.
The plan keeps much of the additional education spending that House Republicans added to their budget proposal in February. But the Senate package also includes a $150 million cut to personal income taxes.
Two Gentlemen with Coronas? A Raisin in the Scone? Moon Pie for the Misbegotten? What would you call a theater eatery?
Economists point to several likely reasons for the disparity between a surge in job openings but only a modest rise in hiring.
A bronze fish stolen three years ago from Indiana University's iconic Showalter Fountain has been recovered by school officials in less than pristine condition. Campus art curator Sherry Rouse told The Herald-Times the statue recovered this week is ragged, has "been beaten to death" and also reeks of beer. The fish was recovered from an undisclosed location not in Bloomington by school officials who offered immunity from prosecution after an Instagram photo of the sculpture was posted online.
A pedestrian died Monday night after being hit by a van at East 38th Street and North Post Road on the city’s northeast side. A witness told Indianapolis police that the pedestrian was crossing the street about 9 p.m. and stepped in front of the van. The victim’s identity has not been released.
An Indiana legislative committee has dropped a proposed requirement that all public and charter schools have a gun-carrying employee during school hours.
Indianapolis officer Daniel Slightom suffered minor injuries early Tuesday when he was dragged about 50 feet by a car driven by a fleeing suspect. Slightom pulled over Brian Henderson, 40, about 2 a.m. near West 16th Street and Lafayette Road for traffic violations. Henderson took off as the officer leaned into his vehicle, dragging him in the process. After a chase that ended in the 2400 block of Lafayette Road, Henderson was subdued with a stun gun. He faces charges of battery, fleeing arrest and possession of a controlled substance, believed to be cocaine.
The board of directors of Chromcraft Revington Inc., a West Lafayette-based designer and manufacturer of furniture, has decided to pull its shares from the New York Stock Exchange.
Indy Swirl, the latest offering from South Bend Chocolate Co., is set to open early next month.
The Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy—believed to be the first of its kind—is set to be christened at a ceremony Tuesday afternoon.
The move—debated Monday in the Indiana House Ways and Means Committee—is meant to subsidize upgrades at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and make low-interest loans available to other auto tracks and businesses across the state.
Horseshoe Casino Cincinnati, which is expected to lure some gambling revenue from Indiana’s casinos, opened March 4.
Gaming Commission Executive Director Ernest Yelton said declining casino revenue and other factors are helping drive the push for land-based casinos.
Hendricks Commercial Properties is set to break ground on the $30 million mixed-use development on the southwest corner of 86th Street and Keystone Avenue on Wednesday.