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Indiana's 2026 Legislative Session: Economic Growth, Tax Cuts, and Data Privacy Take Center Stage

Indiana's 2026 Legislative Session: Economic Growth, Tax Cuts, and Data Privacy Take Center Stage

Published 2 months ago
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Indiana enters 2026 with lawmakers returning to the Statehouse next week, gearing up for a session focused on economic momentum, reduced property taxes, and affordability. According to Indiana House Republicans, priorities include balancing farmland protection with development, drone privacy, food security through standardized health inspections, and a new Food Protection Panel. New laws effective January 1 bring relief, like dropping the state income tax rate to 2.95 percent from 3 percent, saving someone earning $100,000 about $50 yearly, per House Enrolled Act 1001. Businesses now face the Indiana Consumer Data Protection Act, giving consumers more control over personal data, as Sen. Liz Brown noted in Public News Service reports, with Attorney General Todd Rokita set to enforce it.

Downtown Indianapolis buzzes with development, including the Gold Building's conversion to 350 apartments and retail, backed by an $18 million city loan to Gershman Partners and Citimark, alongside City Market reimagining and catacombs daylighting, according to Indiana Economic Digest. Casino relocation debates heat up, with Sen. Aaron Freeman pushing for Indianapolis over Fort Wayne, projecting $170 million in annual tax revenue. In Shelbyville, Prologis eyes a massive data center campus on 400 acres near I-74, promising 450 high-paying jobs averaging $100,000 and privately funded power upgrades, as detailed by The Addison Times.

Education faces headwinds from Senate Bill 1's budget pressures; Wawasee Schools cut programs like gymnastics but advanced projects like a new Performing Arts Center and Milford Elementary, emphasizing transparency via community alliances, per InkFreeNews. Public safety saw Indianapolis's first homicide of the year, an east-side teen shooting, and two Franklin hotels condemned for violations, reports WTHR 13News. No major weather events disrupted the state recently.

Looking Ahead: Watch the legislative session for MLS stadium bids, childcare crises, and casino bills, plus completions like Wawasee facilities and Johnson County booms.

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