Indiana expands probe into Indy manhole blasts
Indiana utility regulators are expanding a third-party review of Indianapolis manhole explosions to include the latest two blasts.
Indiana utility regulators are expanding a third-party review of Indianapolis manhole explosions to include the latest two blasts.
A new restaurant called The End of the Line Public House is set to replace Shelbi Street Cafe & Bistro in the Fountain Square Theatre building. Plus, more restaurant news.
You have to wonder how many Big Ten and Indianapolis tourism officials will be rooting hard for Wisconsin this weekend when the Badgers play Penn State at Madison.
The International Motorsports Industry Show at the Indiana Convention Center should get a jolt of publicity from Tony Stewart, who is not only the 2011 NASCAR champ but the show's part-owner.
Dr. Elizabeth Grethen, an endocrinologist, has joined the St. Vincent Physician Network in Zionsville. Grethen holds a bachelor’s in biological sciences from Cornell University and a medical degree from Loyola University’s Stritch School of Medicine.
Methodist Health Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Indiana University Health Methodist Hospital, named Kevin Armstrong its new president. Armstrong replaces Betty Stilwell, who has become chief philanthropy officer for the IU Health network. Armstrong, who has been on the foundation’s board since 2008, has also been serving as senior pastor for North United Methodist Church in Indianapolis. Armstrong holds degrees from DePauw University and Duke Divinity School.
Former Indianapolis Colt Gary Padjen is turning a vacant 18,000-square-foot building near Lucas Oil Stadium into a venue he is hopeful will host everything from Super Bowl and other corporate parties to concerts and mixed martial arts bouts.
Christine Collier, the longtime leader of the Center for Inquiry elementary and middle schools, is designing a high school within the Indianapolis Public Schools system that officials hope will draw students who now attend some of the highest-achieving K-8 schools in the IPS system.
Angie’s List Inc. shares rose as much as 44 percent in their trading debut Thursday after the company raised $114 million Wednesday in its initial public offering. The stock closed the trading day up more than 25 percent, at $16.26 per share, after rising as high as $18.75 early in the morning.
Nearly four of five students received A’s in Indiana University education classes in 2010-2011, but education deans at IU and other universities say grading is approached differently than in other schools, such as math.
Citizens Energy Group plans to switch the primary power source for its Perry K Steam Plant in downtown Indianapolis from coal to natural gas, the utility announced Wednesday. The conversion will cost about $9 million.
Demand for hotel rooms will make it difficult for some out-of-town lawmakers to find at hotel rooms or long-term residences in Indianapolis.
A trio of Heartland Film Festival Award-winning shorts is screened at the JCC Nov. 19. Details here.
Paul Simon performs Nov. 20 in a live concert (which is also being simulcast) from IU Auditorium in Bloomington. Details here.
The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra performs Mendelssohn’s “Scottish” Symphony with pianist Jeffrey Kahane Nov. 17-19 at Hilbert Circle Theatre. Details here.
The Nov. 19 IMCPL Fall Fest includes music, dance and a visit from TV judge Greg Mathis. Details here.
Eroica Trio takes the stage at the Palladium Nov. 19. Details here.
Pianist Lang Lang performs a one-night-only concert with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra Nov. 22 at Hilbert Circle Theatre. Details here.
Encore Vocal Arts performs Mendelssohn’s “Elijah” with Arsenal Tech’s chamber choir and Heifer International Nov. 19 at Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Details here.
For the 10th-anniversary Tonic Ball, benefiting Second Helpings, local bands celebrate the music of R.E.M., David Bowie and Michael Jackson. The concerts and art show all take place Nov. 18 at a trio of Fountain Square venues. Details here.
This week, we meet ex-IUPUI soccer players Peter Brasovan and Jared Byczko, who opened CrossFit NapTown last month in a Delaware Street building that once housed an FBI tactical team.
Eli Lilly and Co.’s experimental drug doubled levels of good cholesterol in a study, setting up a race with Merck & Co. and Roche Holding AG to develop a new class of medicines to lower heart risk.
WellPoint Inc. is one of several health insurers weighing bids as high as $2 billion for XLHealth Corp., a provider of managed care for chronically ill Medicare members, according to Bloomberg News. According to unnamed sources cited by Bloomberg, the bids for XLHealth may value the company in a rage from $1.5 billion to $2 billion. A deal may be announced in the coming weeks, Bloomberg reported. Indianapolis-based WellPoint and its peers have made a point of expanding their services to beneficiaries of the federal Medicare program, which is expected to grow rapidly thanks to aging baby boomers. By contrast, WellPoint expects its bread-and-butter employer business to stagnate soon. In June, WellPoint purchased California-based CareMore Health Group, which serves Medicare patients. XLHealth, started in 1997, provides managed care services for Medicare patients with diabetes, heart disease and other chronic conditions. It has 111,000 members in Medicare products, including the Part D drug plan and the Advantage plan for physician fees and hospital charges.
West Lafayette-based Medtric Biotech LLC won $65,000 in cash and services at the Purdue University Life Sciences Business Plan Competition for its winning presentation on its innovative wound-care technology. Medtric’s technology uses "nanobubbles" in its antimicrobial process for destroying bacteria to help prevent and treat infected wounds. Two other West Lafayette companies—BioRegeneration Technologies and QuantIon Technologies Inc.—placed third and fourth, respectively. The runner-up company was OneBreath, of Palo Alto, Calif., which is developing a simpler platform to provide mechanical ventilation for those with respiratory problems from flu or other trauma.
Indianapolis-based Better Healthcare for Indiana is convening community leaders to improve health and health care in cities around Indiana. The not-for-profit group’s third annual “All Healthcare is Local” conference will take place on Nov. 16 at Second Presbyterian Church in Indianapolis. Leaders from Terre Haute, Columbus, Kokomo and Evansville will all give presentations on the efforts in their communities. Keith Reissaus, vice president of community and work force initiatives at Goodwill Industries of Central Indiana, will give the lunchtime talk. The keynote speech, titled “Healthy Communities Mean Lower Costs,” will be delivered by Tyler Norris, president of Community Initiatives Inc. in Boulder, Colo., and a senior adviser to the California-based health insurer and medical provider Kaiser Permanente.
In an early example of enforced rebates, Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc. is one of 11 health insurers ordered by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo to refund $114.5 million to policyholders, according to Bloomberg News. That’s because the insurers failed to spend at least 82 cents of each premium dollar on health care as required by the state. A mandate to spend a certain amount on medical care also is a federal requirement under the 2010 U.S. health reform law. WellPoint’s Empire BlueCross BlueShield was ordered to pay $61.1 million, which is the largest rebate demanded from insurers in New York and nearly three times as much as the second-largest rebate. WellPoint’s Empire payments represent about 3 percent of its total premium revenue for insurance products subject to these laws, Kristin Binns, a WellPoint spokeswoman, told Bloomberg. “As in previous years, and consistent with New York law, if the amount Empire pays for medical claims is unexpectedly low, Empire pays refunds to its customers,” she said.
Biomedical research at the Indiana University School of Medicine and its partner hospitals pumped $370 million into Indiana's economy in 2009, according to a new study detailed by the Associated Press. The study by the Association of American Medical Colleges estimates the medical school pumped an estimated $142.5 million into the economy directly through federal and state-funded research. That research generated another $228 million in indirect economic activity. It also estimates the Indianapolis medical school's research supported about 2,470 jobs in Indiana in 2009. The report doesn't include economic activity of businesses that commercialize biomedical discoveries made by IU researchers.
Hall Render Killian Heath & Lyman PC hired three new associate attorneys in its Indianapolis office. Geoffrey Davis focuses his litigation practice in defending physicians, hospitals and dentists. He graduated from Butler University in 1999 and earned his law degree from the University of Toledo in 2005. Katie Miller focuses on corporate deals, physician integration and intellectual property issues. She graduated from Purdue University in 2008 and from the Indiana University School of Law-Indianapolis in 2011. Chad Wilson, a licensed physical therapist, focuses on hospital and physician contracts. He received all his degrees from Indiana University.
Dr. Ryan R. Lacy has established a practice with Martinsville Family & Internal Medicine with St. Francis Medical Group, the second physician in St. Francis’ new Martinsville medical office. Lacy holds a bachelor’s in biology and a master’s in physiology, both from IUPUI. He did his medical training at the Indiana University School of Medicine.
Dr. Jeff Sperring, chief medical officer of Riley Hospital for Children at Indiana University Health, has been named the hospital’s president and CEO. Riley was left with a sudden leadership vacuum in late spring after CEO Dan Fink resigned, followed three weeks later by the departure of Chief Operating Officer Brett Lee to another hospital. Since then, Riley’s chief nursing officer, Marilyn Cox, has been serving as interim CEO. She will return to her role in nursing administration. Sperring graduated from Emory University in Atlanta and did his medical training at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville, Tenn.
Most economic development programs are crafted in such a way that no benefits are paid unless promises are kept.
Community leaders are coalescing around a three-prong strategy to attract residents and capital to neighborhoods from just outside downtown to the borders of Interstate 465. It’s not yet clear whether all the initiatives will have the full support of Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard.
The Carmel City Center Community Development Corp. has emerged as a key player in the city’s burgeoning downtown. The not-for-profit 4CDC last month gave the performing arts center $1 million to cover its operating expenses, and it’s expected to provide another $4.5 million through June 30.
As horrific as the allegations are, just as horrendous are the alleged inactions of Penn State officials and Paterno himself.