SKARBECK: A business day marked by blizzard of big stories
May 2 was a lollapalooza day in Indiana business, as three companies delivered significant news.
May 2 was a lollapalooza day in Indiana business, as three companies delivered significant news.
Dr. John Steenbergen admitted he had a sexual relationship with a patient for five years and performed an abortion on her, but said the licensing board unfairly characterized the matter.
Meanwhile, the Indiana Fever signs a deal with a local marketing firm to build on the team’s strong sales in 2016, and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway educates its fans on organ donation.
Peyton Manning will become the first Indianapolis Colts player to have his jersey retired during a two-day celebration of his career this fall.
Telecommunications company Sinclair Broadcast Group is buying rival Tribune Media Co. in a deal between the nation’s two largest TV station owners. Tribune Media owns two Indianapolis TV stations.
Plus, the varied venues of the Virginia Avenue Folk Festival.
U.S. Sen. Joe Donnelly said in a statement that the VA and Crown Hill will pursue a land swap that would allow a national cemetery to be built on an adjacent parcel of land.
IBJ’s Life Sciences Power Breakfast was held April 28, 2017, at the Marriott downtown. Here’s the full transcript.
No one knows how the $505 million sale of Angie’s List Inc. to New York media and internet company IAC will affect local employment, but the buyer doesn’t seem interested in slash and burn.
Around Indiana, life sciences companies are searching high and low for venture capital to fund promising but expensive new products, which can take a decade or longer to develop.
Here is a sampling of panelists’ comments at the April 28 Life Sciences Power Breakfast.
The year Deb Kunce was named a Forty Under 40 honoree she was working for Schmidt Associates, but she’s since left to start her own firm, CORE Planning Strategies, a third-party, outsourced project-management company.
The 66-unit development that would encompass an entire block between East Street and Park Avenue in the neighborhood had been sent back to the drawing board several times.
More than 900 works—in storage since the organization vacated the former University Place Conference Center—to become part of sports-focused expansion.
The law requiring a gun license is supported by logic. Weapons can be dangerous and attention needs to be paid to who has them and how they are used.
Infosys leaders said Indiana officials took advantage of their earlier relationship to land one of the four U.S. hubs and as many as 2,000 jobs. Indianapolis and Carmel are in the running for the hub’s short-term home.
Gone is the jersey’s subtle yet unmistakable checkered design background—a nod to the Indianapolis 500 and the team’s support squad, the Brickyard Battalion—which was popular with the team’s fan base.
The local developer’s plan for the problematic downtown property calls for 2.7 million square feet of development, including 250 apartments in the first phase, office and retail space, a hotel and public green space.
Construction on the four-story structure should start next month and will continue a campus transformation featuring more than $220 million in projects.
Jeff Papa, who served on the council from 2010 to 2015 and again from 2016 until present, announced his decision Monday.