Marshawn Wolley: To move city forward, we need the next Black agenda
In four short years, several institutions have launched within the Black community because of the Black agenda.
In four short years, several institutions have launched within the Black community because of the Black agenda.
The crisis is too urgent for posturing: We must do what it takes to save kids’ lives in our city and give our police the tools they need to bring order to our streets.
Consumer spending that boosted state revenues has cooled after two years of above-average financial performance, bringing the state’s reserves back within a typical range.
Shreve is calling for gun control measures, the hiring of a public safety director and more support to hire and retain police to fill a 300-officer gap.
In a letter, NCAA President Charlie Baker said there are 17 active investigations into infractions of its sports-betting policy.
Former Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, who is running for president, said “I want to always err on the side of life,” in explaining his views on abortion.
In Indiana, state leaders and others are already worried about the declining college-going rate, which is especially low for Black and Hispanic and Latino students.
To guard against a chilling effect on non-threatening speech, the majority said, states must prove that a criminal defendant has acted recklessly, meaning that he “disregarded a substantial risk that his communications would be viewed as threatening violence.”
Wells said the benefits and perks are necessary to keep employees engaged and happy, “so you’re not constantly having to hire new people.”
In a world where post-high-school education is crucial to good jobs and better lives, too many Hoosiers are being left behind.
Other topics include a review of crime trends, traffic fatalities and an analysis of the state’s Medicaid reimbursement rates.
This year is the second year Indiana has received money from a national settlement with opioid distributors and manufacturers for opioid-related harms.
The executives of corporate America are stepping up efforts to get workers back into the office, using a combination of threats and incentives to get employees to give up the work-from-home lifestyle they adopted in the first years of the COVID-19 pandemic.
We simply cannot rest until we have provided this opportunity to every single Indiana student.
The Environmental Protection Agency’s new rule—released last week—would extend monitoring, closure, and cleanup provisions to certain landfills, ponds and other sites for the first time.
The new law creates Career Scholarship Accounts to pay for internships and apprenticeships with local employers for students in grades 10-12.
Mayor Joe Hogsett’s administration has boosted starting pay for new officers, offered signing bonuses and launched a marketing campaign to attract recruits from other Midwestern cities.
While this isn’t a silver bullet for the myriad challenges we face in Indianapolis, it’s a decisive step in the right direction.
The benefits of a healthier Indiana would include longer average life expectancy, a larger tax-paying population, lower healthcare costs, and a more productive workforce.
Authenticx filters through millions of its health care clients’ interactions each week—such as recorded audio files, chat files and text files—and uses artificial intelligence and algorithms to find themes in the data.