IPL parent eyes Indy for corporate services hub
AES Corp., based in Arlington, Va., has been considering Indianapolis as the hub for a new shared-services center, and is planning a major economic development announcement in the city on Friday.
AES Corp., based in Arlington, Va., has been considering Indianapolis as the hub for a new shared-services center, and is planning a major economic development announcement in the city on Friday.
At least three other companies pursued the Indianapolis digital marketer amid its courtship with San Francisco-based Salesforce.com, which led to a $2.5 billion buyout announced June 4.
For a bunch of computer nerds, ExactTarget certainly had a lot of suitors. At least three other companies pursued the Indianapolis digital marketer amid its courtship with San Francisco-based Salesforce.com, which led to a $2.5 billion buyout announced June 4. A U.S. Securities Exchange Commission filing Wednesday details a bidding war in which Salesforce had […]
Angie’s List turned a profit for the first time in nearly two decades.
This week, basketball and football pros hit the diamond and the undead overrun the Indiana Historical Society
The USA Cricket Association, a group that Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard hopes will bring high-level competition to a new $6 million local sports park, staged zero national tournaments in 2012.
Affiliates of Planned Parenthood in Indiana and Kentucky plan to merge on July 1 in an effort to pool resources, meet the challenges of the changing health care landscape, and potentially expand their reproductive-health services. The new not-for-profit is expected to be named Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky—or PPINK—and continue to operate the 28 existing health centers, with 26 of those in Indiana. Three of those Indiana centers perform abortions, but the Kentucky centers do not. The group will be based in Indianapolis, and employ 190 people in its health centers and administrative office. Betty Cockrum, president and CEO of the Indiana organization, will serve in the same role for the merged group. Mergers are common among the Planned Parenthood affiliates, according to the organization. At one time, the national Planned Parenthood family had more than 200 affiliates; there are now just 73. PPIN merged multiple times to become a statewide affiliate in 2004.
Indiana University Health has agreed to sell its eight occupational health clinics to a California-based chain that specializes in Workers' Compensation cases. US HealthWorks Medical Group, which already operates nearly 200 clinics in 17 states, agreed in May to acquire the eight clinics from IU Health, the largest hospital system in Indiana. The deal is expected to close before July. Neither entity disclosed the purchase price. US HealthWorks has offered jobs to 126 of the clinics' 149 workers. IU Health, which will maintain a role in serving clinic patients, has offered positions to 20 of those not hired by US HealthWorks and is working to place the remaining workers. US HealthWorks has been expanding rapidly even as the number of workers' comp cases trends down nationally. US HealthWorks operates occupational health clinics in Elkhart, Goshen, Muncie and Warsaw.
Franciscan St. Francis Health will close two After-Hours Clinics on the south side of Indianapolis at month’s end. The hospital system offered no explanation for the closures. It noted that it will keep operating a third After-Hours Clinic in Mooresville, and also will maintain two other immediate care clinics in the southern suburbs of Indianapolis. The clinics that will close are in Beech Grove at 2030 Churchman Ave. and near Franciscan’s Indianapolis hospital at 7855 S. Emerson Ave.
The state of Indiana plans to spend $37 million more each year reimbursing health care providers who treat Medicaid patients, partially reversing a 5-percent rate cut the state adopted in 2010 while struggling through the impacts of the national recession. A spokeswoman for Gov. Mike Pence said the increase would amount to 2 percent more for hospitals, nursing facilities, home health and immediate care providers. Cuts in how much the state Medicaid plan pays for dental, vision, medical transportation and other areas will be fully restored. The Legislature paid for the increased rates in their recently passed, $30 billion biennial budget.
Marian University in Indianapolis has announced it has reached its limit of 162 students for the incoming class of its new College of Osteopathic Medicine. School officials said they have received tuition deposits from 162 applicants. They say those students can still pursue their education elsewhere, but the school has a waiting list. They said they are confident they can fill any vacancies that arise.
The Indiana Blood Center is streamlining its blood mobile operations, closing a donor center and taking other cost-cutting measures in response to shrinking revenue from hospitals. The not-for-profit blood center announced June 4 that demand from hospitals has fallen 24 percent over the past year. That is forcing it to take steps that also include freezing management salaries, eliminating 45 positions, and discontinuing a therapeutic phlebotomy program. The blood center supplies more than 60 Indiana hospitals. It is funded by fees it charges those facilities to recruit donors and collect, test, process, label, store and distribute blood.
Shares of the California-based cloud computing giant continue to lag after last week’s announcement of its $2.5 billion offer for Indy-based marketing powerhouse ExactTarget.
Five teenagers were injured at 11:30 p.m. Thursday in Anderson when their car was struck by a semi. Two of the teens were airlifted to IU Health Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis. The other three were taken to hospitals by ambulance. Police say the car ran a red light and turned into the path of the semi at West 16th Street and Raible Avenue. The truck driver wasn’t injured.
“Ghost Brothers of Darkland County,” which plays in Bloomington and Indianapolis in October, is a musical that’s not quite like anything out there — as you might expect from two of America’s most independent artists.
Attorneys for the Michigan contractor being sued over construction defects at Carmel’s Palladium concert hall have asked a Hamilton County court to stop repair work immediately to preserve evidence in the case.
The 2.1 million-square-foot plant, which sits on 102 acres near downtown, opened in 1930 and employed more than 5,000 at its peak. That number was fewer than 700 when it closed two years ago.
The Indianapolis-based maker of equipment for cutting and forming metal beat the weakened economy in Europe, but saw a sales drop in the recessionary Asia Pacific market.
xactTarget Inc.’s sale will swell the value of employee stock options to nearly $300 million—a windfall local tech experts expect will launch a wave of entrepreneurship over the next several years.
-Spectra Premium Industries leased 250,000 square feet at Axcess 70, 3052 N. Distribution Way, Greenfield. The tenant was represented by Andrew Morris, Tony Hupp and Andrea Hopper of Summit Realty Group. The landlord, Browning Investments, was represented by Mark Writt of CBRE.
-SKH Paper Company leased 42,500 square feet of industrial space at 2363 E Perry Road, Plainfield. The tenant was represented by Sean McHale of Colliers International. The owner, CLPF-Plainfield Park 3 LP, was represented by Bryan Poynter of Cassidy Turley.
-Ruth’s Chris leased 10,257 square feet at Ironworks at Keystone, 2727 E. 86th St. The tenant was represented by Larry Davis and Tom English of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The landlord, Ironworks Indianapolis LLC, was represented by Mark Perlstein of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-Gordon Trucking Inc. leased 10,116 square feet of industrial space and 4 acres of land at 3805 S. Harding St. The tenant was represented by Jim Karozos of Lee & Associates. The landlord, L & S Kopetsky Realty LLC, was represented by Brian Dell of Summit Realty Group.
-Med Express Urgent Care leased 4,824 square feet at Centre East, 10863 E. Washington St. The tenant was represented by Harley Carroll of Petroplus Lane and Larry Davis of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The landlord, Centre East LLC, was represented by Dean Almas of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-Med Express Urgent Care leased 4,794 square feet at Southport Shops, 7225 U.S. Route 31 South. The tenant was represented by Harley Carroll of Petroplus Lane and Larry Davis of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The Landlord, Southport Shops, was represented by Dean Almas of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-Popeye’s Louisiana Kitchen leased a 4,200-square-foot building at 635 Carmel Drive, Carmel. The tenant was represented Steve Delaney and Larry Davis of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The landlord, NRW Corp., was represented by Todd Camesasca of Kosene & Kosene.
-Meridian Pain Group P.C. leased 2,913 square feet at 9292 N. Meridian St., Suite 110. The tenant was represented by Drew Augustin of Alliance Commercial. The landlord, Fairhill Realty LLC, was represented by Matthew Broderick of Acorn Group Inc.
-Dentistry on 116th leased 2,880 square feet at 116th Street Centre, 33 E. 116th St., Fishers. The landlord, TCP Guilford LLC, was represented by Keith Fried of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The tenant represented itself.
-South of Chicago Pizza leased 2,519 square feet at the Bonn Building, 13578 E. 131st St., Fishers. The landlord, Bonn Building Partners LLC, was represented by Steve Delaney and Keith Fried of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The tenant represented itself.
-The Shipping Store & More renewed its lease for 1,765 square feet at Northbrook Shopping Center, 1427 W. 86th St. The tenant was represented by Pat Chesebrough of Century 21 Scheetz. The landlord, 86th & Ditch Realty LP, was represented by Keith Fried of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-Shangri-La Foot Spa leased 1,600 square feet at Avon Station, 8100 E. U.S. 36, Avon. The landlord, Avon Station Inc., was represented by Michael Cranfill of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The tenant represented itself.
-Little Caesars leased 1,600 square feet of retail space at 2181 N. Meridian St. The tenant was represented by Ron Mannon of Lee & Associates. The landlord, SRT Property Holdings LLC, was represented by Pat Boyle of Midland Atlantic.
A toast is in order: The $2.5 billion sale of ExactTarget Inc. to San Francisco-based Salesforce.com is the most lucrative exit yet for an Indianapolis technology company.
Whenever a new report claims hospitals are charging too much, a stock set of defenses comes out. But hospitals are cutting prices and expenses as we speak, undermining those arguments.
IU President Michael McRobbie told trustees meeting in Indianapolis that the 1.75-percent hike was the lowest tuition increase possible while ensuring world-class educational opportunities for students