Indianapolis Business Journal

JANUARY 17-23, 2011

This week, read about what Rolls-Royce is considering as it weighs a move downtown and find out the prospects for a citywide curbside recycling program. In Focus, see the methods companies are using to deliver get-healthy messages to teenagers. And in A&E, check out how a local firm benefited from the popularity  of ugly Christmas sweaters.

Front PageBack to Top

Brizzi filed for OmniSource forfeiture

Former Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi blasted metal-recycling giant OmniSource in a court filing in his last week in office, asking a judge to force the company to forfeit all five of its Indianapolis scrap yards and a foundry facility in Hendricks County.

Read More

Tight supply of used vehicles drives up values

Used-car prices are on the rise. Last month, the average used-car transaction was for $19,345 vs. $16,586 a year earlier, according to Edmunds.com. Last year, used-vehicle prices generally were 10 percent to 15 percent higher than in 2009.

Read More

Top StoriesBack to Top

WellPoint headquarters snags $42M

Massachusetts-based Franklin Street Properties acquired the Monument Circle headquarters of insurance giant WellPoint Inc. late in 2010 for $42 million—a rich $196 per square foot—from an affiliate of locally based HDG Mansur.

Read More

Universal curbside recycling program looks iffy

Finding a way to cover the cost of expanding the program with revenue from sales of recycled goods such as aluminum, plastic and glass has proved tough, even as commodities prices rise with the improving economy.

Read More

FocusBack to Top

Deal could give Lilly full diabetes deck

Eli Lilly and Co.’s diabetes partnership with Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH represents a new kind of disease-focused strategy that some consultants think is key to pharma companies’ futures.

Read More

OpinionBack to Top

MARCUS: Daniels ignores deficit of neglect

In the long run, a city or state will attract households and businesses through the services it offers, not the taxes it does not collect. Our political leadership knows this, but ignores it.

Read More

FEIGENBAUM: Right-to-work debate could create sparks in Legislature

The bulk of legislative Democrats, allied with organized labor, are vehemently opposed to having Indiana join almost two dozen other states with right-to-work laws, labeling them as discriminatory against minorities and women, and contending that such laws will do little more than reduce wages and lower the living standards of many Hoosiers.

Read More

In BriefBack to Top

Newspaper chain expanding in Fishers

Current Publications is exhibiting growth seldom seen in the newspaper industry these days. Four years after launching, the company is preparing to debut its fourth weekly newspaper in Hamilton County on Jan. 25.

Read More

NFP of NOTE: Camptown Inc.

Camptown challenges, mentors and teaches youth about life through outdoor adventure and nature programs that help build confidence, character and hope.

Read More