Cincinnati-based Messer Construction is focused on steady growth in Indy
Indianapolis is home to the construction management and general contracting firm’s second-largest office, after its corporate headquarters in Cincinnati.
Indianapolis is home to the construction management and general contracting firm’s second-largest office, after its corporate headquarters in Cincinnati.
The Indy Chamber is revving up the campaign with a call for people to share personal stories of ambition, growth and resilience in the context of living in Indianapolis and its surrounding counties
A number of local employers have taken a new look at their dress codes over the past few years, partly due to pandemic-related factors.
Low founded seven companies based on intellectual property developed at Purdue, including Endocyte Inc., which he sold to Novartis Inc. in 2018 for $2.1 billion.
State Treasurer Daniel Elliott on Tuesday said he is “increasingly worried” about the impact of a recently announced deal that would see private equity firms acquire the parent of AES Indiana.
The event will include a keynote speech from Ravi Kumar, the CEO of international IT consulting and outsourcing firm Cognizant and a former executive at Infosys.
States face an immense task to prepare for the Jan. 1 kickoff of new Medicaid eligibility mandates affecting millions of lower-income adults in the government-funded health care program.
The Olympics remind us that while the financial rewards are uncertain, the human drive for excellence, identity and meaning remains one of the most powerful economic forces in the world.
The chamber’s final 43-6 vote on Senate Bill 282 followed weeks of negotiations between lawmakers and competing corners of the health care industry.
Dozens of bills received final concurrence votes in both chambers Wednesday at the Indiana Statehouse.
Legislation creating a “military police force” of Indiana National Guard members — to be deployed around the state at the governor’s behest — overwhelmingly passed the Senate on Tuesday despite bipartisan opposition. The Senate also approved more than three dozen other bills.
In a Tuesday press conference, Rokita said the money comes from 89 separate recoveries, some through civil settlements and others via criminal prosecutions.
Democrats argued that new rules could push eligible Hoosiers out of coverage.
Indiana and the nation have a chronic shortage of deaf educators, and many programs that train them are being eliminated or merged, compounding the problem.
While major drugmakers tussle for market supremacy, they are also taking on compound pharmacies that have not stopped selling obesity drugs despite the end of the shortage of such drugs.
It seems Congress has prioritized partisan point-scoring over working together.
More than 63 million Americans provide care for an adult family member, and most of them have regular paid jobs as well.
Supporters say state action is needed to boost housing supply, but critics question whether the bill will actually lower costs.
The FDA officials predicted the shift would lead to “a surge in drug development.”
The company has warned that mounting legal costs are threatening its ability to continue selling the product in U.S. agricultural markets.