Former Indiana regulatory attorney reprimanded
The Indiana Supreme Court has publicly reprimanded a former regulatory attorney for negotiating a job for himself with Duke Energy Corp. while presiding over a case involving a Duke project.
The Indiana Supreme Court has publicly reprimanded a former regulatory attorney for negotiating a job for himself with Duke Energy Corp. while presiding over a case involving a Duke project.
Carmel-based developer Mainstreet Property Group announced Friday that it will open seven more health care facilities for Hoosier seniors this year and another 17 on top of that by 2016.
City tourism officials worked for years to bring second-largest convention ever to Indianapolis.
The new two-year agreement gives UnitedHealthcare discounted rates retroactive to Jan. 1. Such discounts, which insurers negotiate with hospital systems, reduce prices 30 percent or more.
The uninsured aren’t scattered evenly across the country: half of them live in just 116 of the nation’s 3,143 counties. Federal officials are focusing on 25 key metro areas, including Indianapolis.
The recovery accelerated a disappointing pattern. Regional economic growth and activity are increasingly moving to the suburbs.
Businesses are scrambling to decide how to cater to the massive confab.
The nation's second-largest drugstore chain said Wednesday that it will phase out cigarettes, cigars and chewing tobacco by Oct. 1, a move that will cost it about $2 billion in annual revenue.
Chase Development plans to build six, four-story townhomes along with six more traditional houses on a 1.25-acre parcel between Michigan and North streets.
Community Health Network named Ron Thieme, the former CEO of AIT Laboratories, its chief knowledge and information officer. Thieme, who served on Community’s board of directors, succeeded AIT founder Michael Evans as CEO of the medical lab business in 2012 but was then replaced by Evans later that year. Thieme holds bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees from Purdue University.
Dr. David Crabb has been named the new chief of internal medicine at Eskenazi Health, replacing Dr. William Tierney, who remains CEO of the Indianapolis-based Regenstrief Institute Inc. Crabb, an internist and gastroenterologist, has been on the Indiana University School of Medicine faculty since 1983. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Purdue University and a medical degree from the IU medical school.
Community Physician Network named Dr. David Kiley senior specialty care medical director. Kiley, an OBGYN, also serves as vice president of clinical performance for Community’s north region. He holds a medical degree from the IU School of Medicine.
A new study of 10 cities, including Indianapolis, gives a picture of how big hospitals have been battling with big health insurers over prices—and winning.
Occupancy in Simon’s malls climbed to 96.1 percent in the fourth quarter, up from 95.3 percent in the year-ago period as total sales per square foot increased to $582 from $568.
Plenty of examples, both at home and abroad, show the world is still an unfriendly place.
Many years ago, a legislator told me it was “country bankers” who killed Indiana banking. They and their lawmakers carried the day in the 1970s and 1980s with regulations against buying banks across county lines. The big Indianapolis banks were thus held in check.
The Carmel company complains that its insurers “denied all coverage for the theft-fraud loss under both policies on the grounds that the individual leased to Telamon was an ‘employee’ of Telamon, and simultaneously was not an ‘employee’ of Telamon.”
Heavy security at Olympics is nothing new, but this year foreboding hits a new high.
As incredible as Peyton Manning's comeback in Denver has been, his former Colts coach said the all-pro quarterback was better in Indianapolis. But which season does Tony Dungy consider No. 18's greatest?
Edward Thomas, 39, a U.S. Army veteran, earned a degree from the Robert H. McKinney School of Law at IUPUI by taking night classes and working during the day. He’s now an associate at Lewis Wagner LLP.
K. Alicia Schulhof, 34, a senior vice president for IU Health, initially thought she wanted to be a physician. But while studying at Purdue University, she became involved in student organizations and found she enjoyed the administrative and leadership side.
While at Indiana University, Ilya Rekhter, now 25, was intrigued by transportation—specifically why fuel efficiency and safety have improved but there still wasn’t a way to know when your already-20-minutes-late bus would arrive. His solution: DoubleMap, a bus-tracking application.