EDITORIAL: Indy Rezone initiative off to good start
The city unveiled the Indy Rezone plan July 5, and it’s clear from the top of the project flow chart that fresh perspectives are welcome.
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The city unveiled the Indy Rezone plan July 5, and it’s clear from the top of the project flow chart that fresh perspectives are welcome.
Retailer’s operating income is the same as five years ago, even though it has triple the number of stores.
Fuel savings and environmental benefits might not be worth the higher cost of such vehicles.
New owner of property bought out of foreclosure seeks city revenue bonds, state low-income housing tax credits.
Museum has been fine-tuning service in preparation for Batman premier.
Founders of MyBestFriendsHair.com aim to help professionals manage client information.
Hospital system’s health insurance unit has IT infrastructure that will allow physicians to participate in Medicare’s shared savings program.
Companies based in a central Indiana city are hiring a greater percentage of people with visas for high-skilled foreign workers than any place in the U.S. other than California's Silicon Valley, according to a new study.
A man convicted of killing a 13-year-old girl in Indianapolis in 1986 will likely spend the rest of his life in prison. Paul Reese Sr., 69, was sentenced Wednesday to 60 years for the death of Dawn Stuard. Reese was charged with murder and rape in the case in 1986, but charges were dropped due to problems with witnesses and evidence. Investigators said new DNA evidence led them to Reese last year. Reese was already serving a 20-year sentence in an unrelated murder case.
An Indianapolis firefighter was taken to a hospital early Thursday morning after battling a fire on the near-east side. The firefighter injured an ankle while fighting a blaze at a home in the 2800 block of Brookside Avenue about 3 a.m. Damage to the home was estimated at $20,000. The fire is under investigation.
Indianapolis police Wednesday arrested a man they believe to be the driver involved in a fatal hit-and-run accident. Marvin Carter, 20, was charged with failure to stop after an accident resulting in death and operating a motor vehicle without a license. Motorcyclist Michael Holcomb, 36, died in the July 12 incident at 12th and North Meridian streets. Carter is being held on $50,000 bond.
The U.S. equity market tested the confidence and resolve of investors in the second quarter of 2012.
Bill Johnson, the man who was CEO of Duke Energy Corp. for eight hours after its $17.8 billion takeover of Progress Energy Inc., began testifying Thursday to the North Carolina Utilities Commission.
I am always saddened and more than a bit disappointed when I hear politicians promise to create jobs.
League sources say a stadium with capacity below 75,000 will have difficulty landing a future Super Bowl. Even after expansion, Lucas Oil Stadium is 3,000 to 5,000 short.
Wholesale used vehicle prices fell 3.6 percent, to $9,893 on average, in June compared with the same month of 2011, according to data compiled by Tom Kontos, an executive at Carmel-based wholesale auction chain Adesa Inc.
An Indianapolis-area couple that operated more than two dozen companies—including one that provided financial counseling—has filed for bankruptcy, listing $18.5 million in debt that includes unpaid business loans and mortgages for homes in Florida and Wyoming.
First Internet Bancorp, parent of Indianapolis-based First Internet Bank, said Thursday that profit rose 55 percent in the second quarter compared with the year-ago period.
London-based Pearson Plc has purchased Bloomington-based self publisher Author Solutions Inc., which has about 400 employees, most of whom are in Indiana, and had revenue in 2011 of $100 million.