Former state official violated law by hiring family, panel says
An ethics panel has found that a former state administrator violated Indiana's nepotism law by hiring three relatives to work at her agency.
An ethics panel has found that a former state administrator violated Indiana's nepotism law by hiring three relatives to work at her agency.
The company said the cuts will take place after its merger with HomeAdvisor and will target redundant roles. The merger could happen as soon as this month.
No particular industry sector appears safe from the impact, as the county’s unemployment rate falls below 3 percent. Companies in health care, information technology, advanced manufacturing and construction are all struggling to find workers.
Workers who lose their jobs will be eligible for federal assistance in training and education, the Labor Department has ruled.
The resignation comes about three months after the India-based company said it would hire 10,000 U.S. workers by 2021, including 2,000 in Indiana.
In response to an employee survey two years ago that revealed shockingly low morale, IU Health executives respond with 33 town hall meetings over four months.
Hotels in Carmel could soon have an unexpected competitor—the city itself.
Scott Fadness says he’s OK losing an election if he’s making what he believes are the right decisions for the Hamilton County city.
Seattle-based Amazon employs more than 9,000 full-time workers at its five Indiana fulfillment centers, four of which are in central Indiana—with plans to add more positions.
Jason Vasquez has helped DeveloperTown grow from a small design and development shop working primarily with startups to a well-established agency working with Fortune 500 companies.
Eric Sendelbach has helped Mobi step up its growth by rolling out its mobile-device-management software globally.
Lucia Downton and her team converted an analog phone system to VOIP and switched ISP vendors, adding up to $50,000 a year in savings for the United Way of Central Indiana.
Technology firms accounted for nearly one-third of job commitments announced by the state so far this year, the highest share among all industries.
Urgent care centers, which already seem to have blanketed nearly every retail strip and neighborhood in central Indiana, are continuing to spring up at a surprising rate.
Landowners in Hamilton County are being offered as much as $40,000 an acre by real estate agents, but it's unclear what plans are in the works.
Securities filings show how activist investors gained influence, how organic turnaround plans lost favor, and how IAC played hardball at the negotiating table.
Avoid "shiny-object syndrome." Build the systems and processes to support "catastrophic growth." Avoid micromanagement. Those are some of the pearls of wisdom offered by executives who've helped their companies survive and prosper through torrid growth.
The Indianapolis museum at the home of the 23rd U.S. president is allowing consumers to print 3-D versions of its artifacts for free.
Sherry and David Williams, both in their 50s, work seven days a week to keep their two restaurants and a catering business running.