Greenwood pet store stocked with exotic critters
From tarantulas to emperor scorpions and monitor lizards, Pandemonium Exotics caters to enthusiasts looking for pets beyond a dog or cat.
From tarantulas to emperor scorpions and monitor lizards, Pandemonium Exotics caters to enthusiasts looking for pets beyond a dog or cat.
A society can be judged by how it deals with its most vulnerable. When it comes to health care, the best thing for every Hoosier, rich or poor, is more choices and more incentives for preventive care. In the debate over Medicaid expansion, our aim must be to protect the health of Hoosiers in need and maintain the fiscal health of our state. Expanding traditional Medicaid cannot accomplish both.
The city of Indianapolis is poised to pay Citizens Energy Group $6.5 million to buy a key parcel of real estate it’s targeting as the centerpiece of its ambitious 16 Tech project.
Indiana lawmakers and Gov. Mike Pence drew closer to a budget compromise Thursday with the unveiling of a $30 billion Senate plan that cuts the state income tax by $150 million and establishes a new roads fund.
The House Utility Committee approved a bill Wednesday that would send the $2.8 billion project back to regulators for another round of reviews unless the Indiana Supreme Court sides with the project’s developers
Brian and Emily Kahn had virtually identical physical therapy. He paid much more than she did. Why? Because of where the therapy took place.
The local developer said it plans 60 to 70 apartments on the northeast corner of College Avenue and the Central Canal as part of a mixed-use development.
A House Republican spokeswoman said Bosma learned from tests Monday that an infection had developed in a knee and he needed immediate surgery.
Shares of Indianapolis-based WellPoint rose along with those of other medical insurers Tuesday morning after the U.S. government reversed a decision to cut a key Medicare payment rate, offering them an increase instead.
The biggest changes from President Obama’s 2010 health reform law take effect nine months from now, so many Hoosier employers have started crunching detailed numbers to cost out their options.
USA Swimming’s decision to torpedo a bid to host the 2016 Olympic Swim Trials at Lucas Oil Stadium casts doubts on the venue’s chances for future big-time, non-traditional events.
A legislative committee has backed harsher penalties for pot possession and dealing in a proposed overhaul of Indiana’s criminal sentencing laws.
An Indiana lawmaker who opposes a 30-year contract with the developers of a proposed $2.8 billion coal-gasification plant told a House committee Wednesday that the surge in U.S. shale gas production has driven down natural gas prices, leaving synthetic gas projects unfeasible.
Tougher marijuana possession and dealing penalties could be added to a proposed overhaul of Indiana's criminal sentencing laws by legislators after Gov. Mike Pence questioned whether the plan was strict enough on low-level drug offenders.
The main thing wrong with the term limits movement is the “s” at the end of the word “limit.”
As the end of the annual meeting of our General Assembly draws nigh, it is not inappropriate to once again view both the legislation considered and the general health and well-being of the system itself as it works in the Great Hoosier Heartland.
It was lunchtime reading unlike any other Craig Dunn had seen.
City-county councilors have a nasty tradition of agreeing with one another to blackball developments within their individual districts.
High-end grocery chain Whole Foods Market Inc. wants to triple the number of stores it operates, but the company has bagged plans for a location on 116th Street in Fishers.
Eli Lilly and Co. granted larger bonuses to its top five executives early this year, which boosted the value of their compensation packages 3 percent to 8 percent. John Lechleiter, CEO of the Indianapolis-based drugmaker, saw his overall compensation reduced 10.7 percent because the calculated value of his pension fell. But excluding that on-paper reduction, the actual compensation Lechleiter received for 2012 rose 3.6 percent to $10.2 million. His salary and stock award were unchanged from 2011, but his bonus rose 13.6 percent to nearly $3 million. Chief Financial Officer Derica Rice received a modest increase in salary and a larger bonus. His overall compensation, excluding the pension adjustment, rose 3.3 percent to $5.2 million. Jan Lundberg, the president of Lilly Research Laboratories, enjoyed increases in his salary, stock award and bonus, which boosted his overall pay 8.3 percent to $4.5 million, excluding any pension adjustment.
Hospital officials praised Indiana's medical savings accounts but some consumer advocates panned them March 20 during a public hearing on Gov. Mike Pence’s plan to use the Healthy Indiana Plan to expand Medicaid in Indiana, according to the Associate Press. The Indiana Hospital Association and officials from hospitals around the state said the Healthy Indiana Plan would reduce the amount of indigent care they must provide to uninsured patients. But critics noted HIP isn't available to everyone, and even when it is, it can prove too costly for some low-income Indiana residents needing medical care. "I do not believe it will do what we need to do to cover people," said Rep. Sue Errington, D-Muncie. Pence has proposed using HIP to complete a Medicaid expansion for Indiana residents earning up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level. That's a sliding scale that includes $15,856 for a single individual or $32,499 for a household of four. If the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services approves Pence's proposal, it could provide coverage for as many as 400,000 low-income residents. If CMS rejects it, it could end coverage for about 40,000 residents already enrolled in HIP. A decision must to be made by June, six months before the state's current waiver expires. Also, Pence has said he might not sign off on the expansion using HIP even if CMS approves it.
Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH and Eli Lilly and Co. filed for FDA approval of a new anti-diabetes medicine, the two companies announced Monday. The drug, empagliflozin, is known as an SGLT2 inhibitor and fights Type 2 diabetes by removing excess glucose through a patient’s urine by blocking the re-absorption of glucose in the kidney. Several large pharmaceutical companies are trying to bring an SLGT2 inhibitor drug to market. In January, New Jersey-based Johnson & Johnson, won the backing of an FDA advisory panel for its drug, called canagliflozin. Other companies in the SGLT2 race are New York-based Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and United Kingdom-based AstraZeneca plc. Lilly is helping to develop and commercialize empagliflozin, which was discovered by Germany-based Boehringer Ingelheim. The drug is one of five that Lilly hopes to submit to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration this year.