2015 Forty Under 40: Corrie Meyer
Corrie Meyer, 37, president of Innovative Planning LLC, last year became executive director of the Carmel Redevelopment Commission, a role in which she brings together parties with diverse perspectives.
Corrie Meyer, 37, president of Innovative Planning LLC, last year became executive director of the Carmel Redevelopment Commission, a role in which she brings together parties with diverse perspectives.
Justin Moffett, 35, partner in Old Town Design Group, has found strong demand for his company's craftsman-style homes.
Eric Payne, 38, is managing director of wealth management at the Payne & Mencias Group at Merrill Lynch, which manages $1.7 billion for 200 families.
Carmel-based KAR Auction Services Inc. is the holding company for ADESA Inc., which operates used-vehicle auctions at 65 locations, Insurance Auto Auctions Inc., which operates salvage auctions at 164 locations, and Automotive Finance Corp., which provides floorplan financing.
PulteGroup is embarking on a large residential development in Plainfield that provides one of the clearest signals yet that the local housing market is on the mend.
Stuffy nose and shaking chills? Need a doctor? Good luck finding one in Hamilton County. As an influenza epidemic races through Indiana and Obamacare demands that you select your primary care physician (PCP), many in suburban Indianapolis cannot find a health care provider.
Announcements Becky Gilbert is new owner of Paris Salon at 104 E. Carmel Drive. Phone: 844-4014; facebook: https://www.facebook.com/newparissalon. Michelle Boyd and Michelle Travis have launched m2 Performance Strategies, a consulting firm focused on association management sales and marketing consulting, event planning and community engagement designed to accelerate economic growth. Contact Michelle Boyd at 919-4943; [email protected]; […]
Fishers has paid out about $35,000 since agreeing to subsidize the commuter route to downtown Indianapolis last year.
The last five acres of a seven-acre site where Tutwiler Automotive long operated is for sale with an asking price of $1 million per acre.
A Hamilton County agency sees its ad dollars pay off, French Lick Resort unveils a $20 million expansion, winter diving championships are coming to Indy, and Hendricks County tourism grants no longer require matching dollars.
Local preservationists are rallying to save the 101-year-old church from being razed to make way for a gas station and convenience store. Its congregation wants to start fresh in a new facility.
RadioShack Corp. can start getting rid of its inventory right away, a judge said in approving the 94-year-old consumer-electronics chain’s request to begin store-closing sales. The list includes more than a dozen local stores.
A three-year moratorium on construction of new nursing home beds sailed through the Indiana Senate 35-14 on Feb. 3. Senate Bill 460 now moves to the House, where it will be sponsored by Rep. Tim Brown, R-Crawfordsville, the powerful chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, and Rep. Charlie Brown, D-Gary. The moratorium moved easily […]
If approved, the new chamber will be called OneZone. The combined organization would have about 1,200 members.
John Qualls, former CEO of Bluelock, has joined Eleven Fifty, the Carmel-based coding academy started by serial entrepreneur Scott Jones.
CNO Financial Group Inc. saw a decline in revenue and profit in the fourth quarter, but the results met or exceeded Wall Street predictions.
Plans to build a gas station and convenience store on the site of the historic church received a positive recommendation Thursday, moving the matter to the Metropolitan Development Commission next month.
Thank you for [Sheila Kennedy’s Feb. 9 column] on the demise of our infrastructure. I’ve been making this point for years and I’m thrilled that it is getting some exposure.
The Senate Elections Committee voted Monday to request that the issue be assigned to a study committee for review. A similar bill is awaiting a vote in the full House.
The move could set off a new battle with labor unions three years after Republicans pushed through the state’s right-to-work law, which drew thousands of union protesters.