Top budget aide to Indiana governor steps down
Gov. Mitch Daniels' top budget official is stepping down after being part of the Indiana governor's administration since he took office seven years ago.
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Gov. Mitch Daniels' top budget official is stepping down after being part of the Indiana governor's administration since he took office seven years ago.
Jim Irsay, Indianapolis Colts owner; Scott Dorsey, co-founder and CEO of ExactTarget; Cathy Langham, president of Langham Logistics Inc.; and Jerry Throgmartin, board chairman of HHGregg Inc. will join the Central Indiana Business Hall of Fame in February.
A panel of Indiana lawmakers voted along party lines to move divisive right-to-work legislation to the full House of Representatives. It could pass the House by the end of the week if Democrats continue to attend sessions.
Indiana University Health Methodist Hospital hired Dr. Jeffrey Walker as its lead physician in the palliative care services department. A graduate of the IU School of Medicine, Walker spent most of the past three years as medical director of the Matthew 25 Health Clinic in Fort Wayne.
IU Health also hired Dr. Shiplee Sinha to be a staff physician in the palliative care services department under Walker. She graduated from Armed Forces Medical College in India and has been employed with IU Health Physicians as a hospitalist since 2006.
Stephen Wheatley, a registered nurse, has been named operations director of Franciscan St. Francis Health’s new Carmel hospital, at 12188 N. Meridian St. Franciscan St. Francis Health Carmel, opening in phases now through April 1, is designed as a short-stay medical center. It will have six inpatient beds and facilities for outpatient services. Wheatley has spent nearly 10 years as administrator of the Franciscan Surgery Center in Indianapolis. From 1990 to 2002, he was a surgical first assistant for Cardiac and Vascular Surgery Associates. Wheatley received his bachelor’s degree in nursing from Indiana University School of Nursing in 1980.
Executives at Bloomington-based Cook Group have never been fans of the $2.3 billion-a-year tax on medical-device manufacturers included in the 2010 health reform law. Late company founder Bill Cook even once said the tax could kill 1,000 jobs in Bloomington. Cook Chairman Steve Ferguson won’t go that far, but he insists the law is forcing Cook to grow outside the United States instead of at home. “You don’t want to say to your work force that you’re going to lay people off,” Ferguson told Bloomberg News. “The tax is going to result in growth in another location and not in the U.S.; that’s the way I see the impact on Cook.” The tax will be levied based on each company’s U.S. market share—regardless of how profitable the company is. Supporters of the tax have argued that it will indirectly help medical-device manufacturers do more business, because the 2010 health law uses that money to subsidize insurance coverage for an extra 30 million Americans. But Ferguson said Cook expects to receive no new business from the law. He noted that a large chunk of the newly insured will be young people, who most likely will have no need of Cook’s products. Also, Cook sells to hospitals not to consumers, and in many cases, previous laws have already required hospitals to provide medical devices to uninsured people who need them. “So it doesn’t increase the number of devices sold,” Ferguson said.
Chamberlain College of Nursing is opening a campus in Indianapolis with classes scheduled to begin Feb. 27. It is the first Indiana location for Illinois-based Chamberlain, which operates nine other campuses around the country. “Indiana will not be able to build a strong nursing work force if prospective nurses do not have adequate access to quality nursing education,” said Susan Groenwald, national president of Chamberlain. In Indiana, more than 12,000 additional nurses will be needed by 2018, according to the Indiana Department of Workforce Development. The Indianapolis campus, at 9100 Keystone Crossing, will offer a three-year bachelor’s program in nursing. The local campus will be led by Margaret Harvey, who previously served as interim dean of nursing at Davenport University in Iowa.
Indianapolis-based Healthx Inc., a provider of online health care portals to health insurers, medical providers and employers, has received a $22 million investment from a private-equity firm in Charlotte, N.C. Frontier Capital announced the investment on Jan. 5 and said the funding will support the company’s continued expansion. Founded in 1998, Healthx develops self-service communication and data integration portals for the health care and human resources industries. The company, in The Precedent Office Park on the north side, has 65 employees. Healthx President and CEO Greg Bell will continue to lead the company, Frontier Capital said. The transaction closed on Dec. 28.
A 7-year-old Shelbyville boy has died from injuries following a vehicle accident Saturday night. Nathan Gibson was a passenger in a vehicle struck by another vehicle at the intersection of North State Road 9 and Rampart Street about 6:30 p.m. The boy was a student at St. Joseph Catholic School. School officials said grief counselors would be available to students and staff Monday.
After the insurer's name went on Indianapolis' downtown arena, CBS News focused on how hundreds of Bankers Life’s long-term-care insurance policyholders have accused the company of having “beat them down with bureaucracy."
Lyman Dawson, 22, who was shot by police officers late Saturday near downtown Shelbyville, is in critical condition in a hospital in Indianapolis. According to police reports, Dawson went on a short crime spree before being shot multiple times by three officers who said Dawson fired at least one shot at them. Before the shooting about 11 p.m., police say, Dawson tried to break into a car outside a Family Video Store, shot and injured a man in a nearby apartment, broke into one home, and smashed a basement window in another house. The man he shot, Ryan Rooks, suffered a minor gunshot wound to the leg. The Shelbyville officers involved in the shooting have been placed on paid leave pending an investigation.
One person was injured in a fire that heavily damaged a multi-unit house in downtown Mooresville early Monday morning. Three families were evacuated from the two-story structure, which caught fire about 1:30 a.m. One person was treated for smoke inhalation. Residents of a nearby apartment building also were evacuated, but firefighters were able to contain the fire to just one building. The cause of the fire is under investigation.
A 65-year-old man died Monday morning after he lost control of his vehicle and drove into a Greenwood retention pond. Witnesses called 911 and tried to help the man trapped in the vehicle in the pond near East Stop 11 Road and South Arlington Avenue. Rescue crews eventually freed the unconscious man, but he was pronounced dead at St. Francis Hospital.
Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. is now in the predicament of watching revenue fall as its patents on older products expire, even as the company needs to spend more money on marketing and research to boost sales of new drugs.
The Indianapolis Super Bowl host committee has listed 17 regional airports as additional landing spots outside of the Indianapolis area for people headed to the game on Feb. 5.
A legislator is proposing that Indiana’s utility consumer counselor be elected rather than appointed by the governor.
A Giants-Patriots Super Bowl match-up could bring big money to Indianapolis. If he has two more miracles in him, Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow would send TV ratings off the charts.
Interstate/Delaware & South Towing has filed suit against Indianapolis, charging breach of contract. The company, accused of numerous towing violations, faces suspension or revocation of its license.
Buckingham Cos. and Dolce Hotels and Resorts plan to name their hotel in CityWay The Alexander in honor of the man who developed the original city plan for Indianapolis, Alexander Ralston.
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The lawsuit alleges that the hotels and subcontractor Hospitality Staffing Solutions regularly failed to pay employees for all the hours they worked and forced them to work off the clock without breaks.
Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels' decision to rescind strict new security procedures at the Statehouse took the heat off him and his administration at the start of what was already guaranteed to be a raucous 2012 session.
Twenty Super Celebration sites — selected by the Indianapolis Super Bowl XLVI Host Committee with visitors in mind — include seven located outside the metro area in Anderson, Bloomington, Columbus, Lafayette-West Lafayette, Muncie, Richmond/Wayne County, and Shelbyville.