Cook among groups behind annexation nix
Cook Group, among other groups and local government agencies, is partially responsible for halting Bloomington’s annexation proposal.
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Cook Group, among other groups and local government agencies, is partially responsible for halting Bloomington’s annexation proposal.
A local coalition filed a lawsuit Tuesday to challenge the authorization of Seven Oaks Classical School by a private, religious entity.
INDIANAPOLIS — Theodore Williamson, 4, held the multicolored binoculars against his small, wire-framed glasses and peered intently into the distance from his high perch atop his dad’s shoulder.
Though the legislative session doesn’t legally conclude until April 28 and will likely finish sooner, Gov. Eric Holcomb has already signed a number of bills, including ones concerning environmental regulations and prevention of cancer, into law.
In recent years, Indianapolis has been known for its increasingly high murder rates per capita, but Rep. John Bartlett has proposed a solution to the violence: bringing back school prayer.
After August 2018, Yogi’s Kitchen and Tap won’t be found at its familiar location on the corner of 10th Street and Indiana Avenue.
Flint, Michigan, is synonymous with the story of its water contamination and a reminder of how necessary clean drinking water is — a luxury often taken for granted in American cities.
As the week comes to a close, Hoosier legislators again decide which bills will advance one stop closer to becoming law.
INDIANAPOLIS — A food truck handing out free burritos with a long line of lunch-goers stretching down the sidewalk formed the backdrop for a Tuesday press conference outside the Statehouse.
A Senate committee passed an infrastructure improvement bill Tuesday that would hike up Indiana’s gas and diesel tax, despite some concerns that it is not fully clear yet how the bill will affect taxpayers.
Sen. Cory Booker, D-New Jersey, was in town Saturday for a fundraiser, but despite the enthusiastic crowd responses he received inside the Fountain Square Ballroom, a couple angry Hoosiers protested outside.
A bill related to teacher unions passed with a complete partisan split in the House education committee Tuesday morning. These splits have become a common occurrence recently, with many education-related issues causing a heated divide between Democrats and Republicans.
Annually released data from the Indiana Department of Education sheds new light on the statewide voucher program and shows it saves the state money. This is a change from the rhetoric of years past, which represented vouchers as a cost.
INDIANAPOLIS — In the front of the Vermilion family’s Washington Township lawn, an orange, green and blue sign sticks out from the ground, with the same phrase written on it in Spanish, English and Arabic.
Legislators have a name for when people try to mimic grassroots campaigns, state Rep. Matt Pierce, D-Bloomington, said.
A woman whose friends call her Miss B stood in front of the Statehouse steps Saturday afternoon and yelled at a cardboard cutout of Sen. Todd Young, R-Indiana.
The end of the week marks the final deadline for bills to pass through committee in the Indiana legislature. That leaves a big question — which ones made it through, and which ones won’t see the light of day?
President’s Day at the Indiana Statehouse was busy, colorful and loud.
Students from all around Indiana gathered at the Statehouse early morning Valentine’s Day to celebrate a mutual love — journalism.
Bills that would make the school chief an appointed position rather than elected one are making progress in both the House and Senate.