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Tag: columbus news

  • Mail carriers bitten by dogs — Northeast Ohio city near top of list

    Mail carriers bitten by dogs — Northeast Ohio city near top of list

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    (KTLA) — Los Angeles is famous for a multitude of things, including entertainment, food and traffic, but the City of Angels has become notorious for a different reason.

    According to the United States Postal Service, Los Angeles leads the nation in dog bites against mail carriers. In 2023, the city had 65 reported dog attacks against postal service workers, taking the top spot over Houston, which had 56. L.A. was second on last year’s list.

    Not far behind on the list is Cleveland, Ohio — ranked 5 in the country with 44 mail carriers reporting dog bites. Other Ohio cities made the top 30 list as well.

    City State 2023 Rank
    LOS ANGELES CA 65 1
    HOUSTON TX 56 2
    CHICAGO IL 48 3
    ST. LOUIS MO 46 4
    CLEVELAND OH 44 5
    SAN DIEGO CA 41 6
    DALLAS TX 39 7
    CINCINNATI OH 38 8
    PHILADELPHIA PA 34 9
    COLUMBUS OH 33 10
    KANSAS CITY MO 32 11
    INDIANAPOLIS IN 30 12
    MEMPHIS TN 29 13
    LOUISVILLE KY 28 14
    MINNEAPOLIS MN 27 15
    ALBUQUERQUE NM 26 16
    SAN ANTONIO TX 26 16
    SACRAMENTO CA 26 16
    MILWAUKEE WI 23 17
    DAYTON OH 23 17
    FORT WORTH TX 23 17
    MIAMI FL 21 18
    DENVER CO 21 18
    OMAHA NE 21 18
    BUFFALO NY 20 19
    SAN FRANCISCO CA 20 19
    LONG BEACH CA 19 20
    TULSA OK 19 20
    PORTLAND OR 19 20
    DETROIT MI 19 20

    Overall, in the state list, Ohio ranked third with 359 dog bites reported in 2023.

    The list of top 10 states can be found below:

    State 2023 2022
    CA 727 675
    TX 411 404
    OH 359 311
    PA 334 313
    IL 316 245
    NY 296 321
    FL 193 220
    NC 185 146
    MI 183 206
    MO 180 166

    The report comes as the USPS starts a weeklong initiative beginning June 2 to spread awareness about mail carrier safety to dog owners.

    “Letter carriers are exposed to potential hazards every day, none more prevalent than a canine encounter. All it takes is one interaction for a letter carrier to possibly suffer an injury,” said Leeann Theriault, USPS Manager, Employee Safety and Health Awareness. “The U.S. Postal Service consistently encourages responsible pet ownership. The national dog bite campaign is an effort to promote dog bite awareness to keep our customers, their dogs, and letter carriers safe while delivering the mail.”

    According to the USPS, mail carriers are trained on what to do when dogs are in the area.

    Some of those lessons include making non-threatening noises to alert a dog of their presence, avoiding startling a dog, refraining from petting or feeding a dog and placing a foot against a swinging door to keep a dog from getting out.

    The USPS advised dog owners to lock their animals behind a gate or fence when postal workers arrive at the house or to keep them leashed during walks.

    “Even though a customer’s dog is friendly to most people, it can always have a bad day,” letter carrier Tara Snyder stated in the report. “I know, from experience, even when a dog is in the house, customers need to make sure their door is secure so their dog can’t push it open and bite the letter carrier.”

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    Austin Turner

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  • Ashley Madison: Why this Ohio city top in U.S. for sign-ups

    Ashley Madison: Why this Ohio city top in U.S. for sign-ups

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — A chief executive for a dating website marketed toward married people has a theory on why Columbus suddenly jumped to the top of sign-ups.

    Toronto-based Ruby Corp., the owner of Ashley Madison, named the capital of Ohio as the No. 1 U.S. city creating new accounts on the cheating website. Known for a less-than-traditional slogan “Life is short. Have an affair,” Ashley Madison also included Cleveland and Cincinnati in its top 20 sign-up list.

    Cleveland is 13th on the list.

    The list cites data gathered from June 20 to Sept. 22 of last year and ranked cities on the number of sign-ups against the area’s total population, rather than raw accounts. But a spokesperson for Ruby Corp. declined to provide the number of sign-ups tied to Columbus, or the percentage of the area’s population that created accounts, calling both “competitive intelligence.” Still, Ashley Madison’s website touts “more than 80 million sign-ups since 2002.”

    In an interview with NBC4, Ruby Corp.’s Chief Strategy Officer Paul Keable theorized that Intel, data center and information technology developments could be components in how Columbus suddenly sprung to the top.

    “We haven’t seen Columbus in this position ever before,” Keable said. “You cite some of the increase of population and economic growth in relation to the IT industry. And that actually is one of our top professions, when we polled our members, ‘Which types of jobs do you have?’ It was certainly within the top five, I think. And if that is clearly a part and parcel of what’s happened in Columbus, I would not be surprised to see you continue to be in the top 10, if not top five, as a go-forward basis for our reporting.”

    A Bank of America Insitute Ranking reported that Columbus grew faster than any other city in the U.S. during the second half of 2023, the same time period that Ashley Madison gathered its data for the top 20 list. Moreover, an earlier study indicated Columbus is the only place in Ohio where the population grew over two decades. It’s only going up from here, as the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission — crediting multibillion-dollar investments from Intel and Honda — forecasted that central Ohio could be home to 3.15 million people by 2050.

    Keable added that with Columbus, Cleveland and Cincinnati all on the list, people here may be telling of cultural attitudes around marital affairs.

    “What I find fascinating this time round is with three cities from Ohio … Ohio is a swing state politically, is probably more representative of the true America than you know, New York might be or LA might be, because those have very unique cultures that are very specific to those places,” Keable said. “Whereas Ohio stands out of place as typically Middle America. It’s your average American. And what it tells us is that infidelity, non-monogamy is rather ubiquitous against your race, your income level, your education, and where you live.”

    The CSO said that as of 2024, Ashley Madison has about 365,000 new members each month, and the website’s gender ratio is one man for every 0.7 women. But records leaked a decade ago in a highly publicized data breach previously raised questions about how many of those accounts belonged to real people.

    A Gizmodo investigation of the leaked data — which included internal emails from when Ruby Corp. was branded as Avid Life Media Inc. — found Ashley Madison was paying people to create fake female profiles and talk with men on the site. Going deeper into hacked source code, the company itself also created more than 70,000 female bots that sent more than 20 million messages to court real male subscribers. Ashley Madison lets women message for free but requires men to pay for the same feature.

    “But once she engages with you, if she responds, your conversation can be free for the rest of the time,” Keable noted.

    The hack did not capture any recorded activity between humans, however, meaning there’s no telling how many real women were on the site. Keable wasn’t shy about talking about the bots, which Ashley Madison previously codenamed “engagers” and “angels.”

    “We actually brought in Ernst and Young Global auditing firm to go through our source code, review all the details to verify in fact that that program, and all presence of those bots, as it were, are no longer there,” Keable said. “We understand that the previous organization and management made some bad choices, and that was part of our growth phase. We can’t hide from that, but that’s no longer part of our system.”

    While Ashley Madison has scrubbed the internal bots from their site, Keable admitted they, like Tinder, Bumble, Hinge and other traditional dating sites, now have had problems with external bots deployed for sextortion schemes. In these scenarios, a scammer uses a fake profile to seduce a real person and then records sexually explicit photos or videos of them to use as blackmail. Revisiting the affair website, Gizmodo found more than 200 consumer complaints filed in the past five years by clients who fell victim.

    While Keable credited a “business intelligence” system as a first layer of defense for Ashley Madison, he shared red flags that could give away a scam attempt on any website.

    “If you’re signing up and your IP address says you’re in the Philippines, but you’re saying you’re
    located in Columbus, guess what, that doesn’t count, you’re out of the system, we immediately
    would pick that up, and you’d be out within three seconds,” Keable said. “If you meet someone online, whether it’s on our dating site or any other one, and they want to immediately jump off the site to a private conversation, that’s a bit of a red flag … if they give you a link that you don’t recognize, that certainly would be a massive red flag, don’t click on that. I think the majority of them are often trying to take you to a cam site, so they can make money off you there.”

    In Ohio, Reps. Brian Lorenz (R-Powell) and Beth Lear (R-Galena) recently introduced a bill to make sexual extortion a crime. And the FBI has recently investigated sextortion cases in the state, but those involved minors.

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    Mark Feuerborn

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  • Ohio Fire Marshal picks local kids fire safety posters

    Ohio Fire Marshal picks local kids fire safety posters

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    *Above video has safety tips for fire prevention*

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (WJW) — From kindergartners through sixth graders, Ohio’s State Fire Marshal announced the 12 winners of this year’s Fire Prevention Poster Contest which promotes fire safety and prevention.

    Some of the winning drawings are from students in Northeast Ohio!

    This year’s theme, “Cooking Safety Starts with YOU.”

    “The theme aligns with national statistics that indicate cooking as the leading cause of home fires and fire injuries in the United States,” according to the State Fire Marshal’s Department.

    The contest was open to all Ohio elementary school children, divided into two categories: Grades K-3, and Grades 4-6. 

    “The 12 students and their posters were selected for their creativity, message clarity and overall impact,” according to the State Fire Marshal’s Department.

    Here are some of the local winners’ posters below. You can see all of the posters on the State Fire Marshal’s Facebook Page.

    • Here is the list of winners!

       Mary M., Grade 6, Winning Poster
    North Spring Christian Academy (Teacher: Mrs. McKee), Westerville

    ·        Aubrey G., Grade 5, Winning Poster
    Willard Elementary School (Teacher: Mr. Casto), Willard

    ·        Muzhdah K., Grade 5, Winning Poster
    Harrison Elementary School (Teacher: Mrs. Day), Lakewood

    ·        Melanie K., Grade 5, Winning Poster
    Kinson Elementary School (Teacher: Mrs. Lozano), Fremont

    ·        Evie B., Grade 4, Winning Poster
    Joshua Dixon Elementary School (Teacher: Mrs. Gorby), Columbiana

    ·        Lucy M., Grade 4, Winning Poster
    North Spring Christian Academy (Teacher: Mrs. Gaggin), Westerville

    ·        Roseline P., Grade 4, Winning Poster
    Willard Elementary School (Teacher: Mr. Casto), Willard

    ·        Addie W., Grade 3, Winning Poster
    Dan Emmett Elementary (Teacher: Mrs. Morris), Mt. Vernon

    ·        Eliana D., Grade 3, Winning Poster
    Gorrell Elementary School (Teacher: Ms. Seifert), Massillon

    ·        Ella B., Grade 3, Winning Poster
    St. Anthony Catholic School (Teacher: Mrs. Etzkorn), Columbus Grove

    ·        Aurora S., Grade 2, Winning Poster
    Suffield Elementary School (Teacher: Mrs. Lowden), Mogadore

    ·        Mahomoud O., Grade K, Winning Poster
    Lincoln Elementary (Teacher: Miss Light), Lakewood

    Fire Prevention Week in Ohio starts October 6.

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    Paul Kiska

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  • These 23 movies, shows are being filmed all over Ohio

    These 23 movies, shows are being filmed all over Ohio

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    *Related Video Above: Celebrities from Ohio**

    CLEVELAND (WJW) – The state of Ohio is giving $44 million in tax credits to film TV series and feature films across the state.

    The Ohio Department of Development announced earlier this week that $44 million is being awarded through the Ohio Motion Picture Tax Credit Program.

    “Investing in these productions fuels the vibrant creativity that’s alive in Ohio’s communities and serves as a powerful catalyst for economic growth,” Ohio Department of Development Director Lydia Mihalik said in a press release. “These projects celebrate and showcase our diverse landscapes, generate jobs, stimulate local businesses, and create a lasting legacy for the arts in Ohio.”

    The tax credits are going to 23 different productions, which are expected to create 530 full-time jobs, according to the release.

    TV series and feature films being awarded include:

    • An Interesting Life Season 2, Southwest Ohio, $432,300
    • WWE 2024, Ohio, $1,675,986
    • Nightmare Transmission Season 2, Ashland/Columbus, $265,247.40
    • Heartland Horror Chronicles Season 1, Crestline, $129,444
    • Christmas on Main, Ashland, $148,842
    • Kings of Vegas, Cleveland, $105,878.25
    • Genesis, Cleveland/Cincinnati, $11,091,686.70
    • Superthief, Northeast Ohio, $5,296,260.30
    • Alarum, Cincinnati, $5,863,392.30
    • Epiphany, Cincinnati, $6,052,988.40
    • Stained Glass, Southwest Ohio, $3,026,255
    • The Marshal, Southwest Ohio, $2,380,988.40
    • Nutcracker’s Mustache, Dayton/Cincinnati, $2,008,106.70
    • The Last of the Big-time Promoters, Southwest Ohio, $985,500
    • Never Quit, The Todd Crandell Story, Toledo, $1,256,153.40
    • Harbor Master, Northeast Ohio, $1,113,364.80
    • Down to the Felt, Columbus, $385,853.70
    • Oscar’s Options, Cincinnati, $823,269.60
    • Slay, Columbus, $519,603.60
    • The Forgotten Chord, Columbus, $115,651.50
    • Heavenly Wickedness, Ashtabula, $110,625
    • Cannonballer, Summit, $148,371
    • Aimless, Columbus, $93,313.50

    The project costs total nearly $503 million in production expenses and $146.7 million in total eligible production expenses.

    The Ohio Motion Picture Tax Credit was created in 2009 to encourage and develop a strong film industry in Ohio, according to the release. The program provides a tax credit of 30% on production cast and crew wages and other in-state spending for eligible productions.

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    Celeste Houmard

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