Klipsch plans biggest season in a decade
Nearly 40 headliner acts are on tap for the outdoor amphitheater, owned by Live Nation Entertainment. Recent seasons have hosted only about 30 shows.
Nearly 40 headliner acts are on tap for the outdoor amphitheater, owned by Live Nation Entertainment. Recent seasons have hosted only about 30 shows.
Two technology-related companies will spend a total of $3.5 million to expand their Hamilton County operations and create about 125 jobs over the next four years, state officials said May 3. DuraMark Technologies Inc., a digital printer of safety labels and branding decals, plans to spend $3 million to construct a 17,500-square-foot headquarters at 6450 […]
Less than 24 hours after voters approved the Hamilton Southeastern Schools referendum on Tuesday, the district started planning to roll back pricey fees for extracurricular activities.
DuraMark Technologies plans to spend $3 million to construct a new 17,500-square-foot headquarters in Westfield, while Lumavate will invest $451,000 to grow its Carmel office space over five years.
The average homeowner in the Hamilton Southeastern Schools district will pay about $300 annually under the approved rate. Homeowners in Noblesville Schools will pay an average of $190 per year, which is roughly $23 less than the property taxes imposed under the existing referendum.
Carmel-based Mainstreet Property Group is suing the Indiana State Department of Health in a legal challenge to the state’s new moratorium on nursing homes and transitional care properties.
A proposal that would let Marion County residents vote for an income-tax increase to help fund expanded mass transit passed a City County Council committee Tuesday night.
Hamilton Southeastern Schools and Noblesville Schools are proposing tax-raising referendums on the ballots next week. There’s concern that hotly contested primary races will bring naysayers to the polls.
After years with little construction activity at City Center in Carmel, four projects are expected to break ground this year that will bring more parking, housing and retail to the city’s core.
State officials say nearly 10,000 electronic court documents have been filed since Indiana began a shift last summer toward statewide e-filing.
Its developer boasted last summer that the Fishers Sports Pavilion already was booking events for 2016. But the site sits vacant.
Boone County had an estimated population increase of 2.5 percent from 2014 to 2015, according to new figures released by the U.S. Census Bureau. It was the only Indiana county to make the top 100 list.
For the fifth consecutive year, Hamilton County has been shut out of federal tax credits for affordable housing projects, while nearby counties have had success in the competitive program.
Industry experts point to a host of factors for the increasing shortage but say it’s mostly driven by the state’s property tax caps coupled with rising home-building fees charged by municipalities.
A new effort will be coming to increase pay for Indiana State Police troopers after a study confirmed their salaries trail those of officers in some neighboring states and local police departments.
Cities and counties are set to receive millions of dollars for their road and street projects, but elected officials must decide whether to raise local vehicle taxes to keep the dollars flowing.
Several fast-growing communities in Hamilton County are pursuing certified special counts this year as a way to secure more state funding.
As part of a deal for Riverview Health to build an outpatient facility on prime commercial property at U.S. 31 and State Road 32 in Westfield, the hospital will make payments to the school district and city as a way to make up for its tax-exempt status.
Westfield resident Scott Willis says it’s not an ideal time for him to be running for an Indiana Senate seat. But after he spent time in the fall canvassing the 20th district, he decided he couldn’t keep waiting to see if six-term Republican Sen. Luke Kenley would retire.
Kenley, a former grocery store owner who was first elected in 1992, said he is running for office again because he wants to work on a long-term funding solution for shoring up Indiana’s roads and infrastructure.