Indiana Capital Chronicle
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Pedestrian deaths fell 11% in early 2025 over the previous year, the largest drop since the Governors Highway Safety Association began reporting them 15 years ago, but remain higher than pre-pandemic levels in 2019.
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The nation’s capital will host an autorace through its streets this summer, President Donald Trump said Friday.
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An annual survey shows that the traditional Thanksgiving meal will be a tick more expensive for Hoosier families this year.
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Some 300,000 people covered by Indiana’s Medicaid program will have less than two months to change their health insurance company as state officials are kicking MDwise off the provider list.
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House Speaker Pro Tem Mike Karickhoff won’t seek reelection next year, becoming the first high-ranking member of the Legislature to make such a decision ahead of the 2026 elections.
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Indiana lawmakers will not convene on Monday for an upcoming special session, House Speaker Todd Huston said Wednesday, instead signaling that the Republican-led General Assembly plans to meet later within the 40-day window allowed by state law.
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Indiana Gov. Mike Braun tapped Department of Workforce Development Commissioner Josh Richardson to serve as the IEDC’s president.
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Much of the discussion surrounding property tax reform has focused on schools, law enforcement and local government having to cut services due to reduced funding. But libraries are also in line to see impacts from Senate Enrolled Act 1 – legislation passed in April cutting property taxes.
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News of the co-called “Speedway Slammer” is roiling Indiana, with confusion over a plan to house up to 1,000 immigrants in the Hoosier State.
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Time is tissue in the first responder community, and in rural areas across Indiana, they could be losing too much tissue for EMS responses.