Mark Montieth: ‘A solid nucleus’
The Pacers haven’t suited up for a postseason game since 2020 when they lost in the first round to Miami in the COVID bubble in Orlando.
The Pacers haven’t suited up for a postseason game since 2020 when they lost in the first round to Miami in the COVID bubble in Orlando.
Of course, our hope is that the Indiana consortium lands the full $70 million for biotech research and work.
I was especially moved this year by words from Mel Raines, president and chief operating officer of Pacers Sports & Entertainment.
This is a fight against barbarism, one of good versus evil.
I’m sharing five initiatives we’ll advance immediately in January 2024.
It is time for a change, pure and simple. We are starved for leadership in this city. And leadership starts at the top. I believe Jefferson Shreve can bring that leadership.
Leadership happy talk stems from pressures, both real and perceived, to show the world and one’s team that everything is going great.
Running a business for the first time is incredibly difficult and undeniably risky.
We remain hopeful that environmental concerns can be allayed with advancements in technology and believe that it makes sense to keep Indiana companies in the lead on such developments.
This past Wednesday, Inside INdiana Business launched the weekly South Bend/Elkhart Region Report, a free email newsletter authored primarily by reporter Carley Lanich, who is based in South Bend.
We now have the potential solution to significantly improve health equity in the Hoosier state while also stimulating economic growth for the state and strengthening health care practices that call Indiana home.
This proposal to eliminate the income tax altogether is not a way to help all Hoosiers—it’s a way to keep high-earning Hoosiers from having to pay their fair share in taxes.
As members of the AES Indiana Advisory Board, we have a unique opportunity to see what goes into “keeping the lights on” while also keeping costs as affordable as possible for customers.
A regulated cannabis industry would create jobs, generate tax revenue and expand investment opportunities.
We’re unabashedly “old school” investors who view stocks as ownership interests in the underlying business (not just ticker symbols traded millions of times a day) and value stocks based on future profitability (not what we think the next “sucker” will pay for it).
The primary way the Fed tries to maintain low and stable inflation is through the target rate it sets for Fed Funds, which is the interest rate for overnight lending between U.S. banks.
I’ve been on both sides: the leader helping someone transition, and most recently, the person going through one.
The people in charge seem to want this city to be a “walking/bicycle” city, which it never will be. There are thousands of people that need to use their cars to get to work, to meetings, to concerts, to get through the city without using the overcrowded interstate.
For a few days this month, Indianapolis and Indiana Humanities will host conversations aimed at helping the nation navigate the pressing issues of our day.
Indiana is attracting the jobs of the future. Pitting city against city or rural versus urban will set us back.