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According to data collected from the Ohio Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, as of January 2025, one in nine Ohio residents rely on SNAP benefits
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Cody Thompson
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According to data collected from the Ohio Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, as of January 2025, one in nine Ohio residents rely on SNAP benefits
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Cody Thompson
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OHIO — Next summer, America will celebrate a milestone birthday.
To help celebrate its 250th, more than 80 popular sites across the Buckeye State are being highlighted for contributions to innovation.
America’s ‘Semiquincentennial’ is on July 4th, 2026, and states around the nation are showcasing what makes them unique..
“Of course, we didn’t wait until 2026 to throw a party in Ohio. We have so many stories to tell, how Ohio has revolutionized the nation,” said Ohio Travel Association Executive Director Melina Huntley.
“Ohio, I believe, is head and shoulders above other states in what we’re doing. One of the things that we’re doing is telling our story through Trails and Tales, the stories of Ohio contributions to our nation’s history over the last 250 years,” said Destination Toledo President and CEO Lance Woodworth.
The unveiling of the ’Ohio Innovation Trail’ at Carillon Historical Park in Dayton was something volunteer Chuck Johnson said he needed to see.
“I was going home after my talk but then I called my wife and said I can’t miss this,” he said.
The 91-year-old Daytonian is a bit of a history buff and was even taking videos and pictures during the unveiling.
“Worked for Charles F. Kettering for two years when he was alive. I worked there for four years after he died in 1958,” he said.
On the Innovation Trail, the sites include big ones like the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, The National Museum of the U.S. Air Force, Cincinnati Museum Center, the Ohio History Center, and also many others including the National Voice of America Museum of Broadcasting and even smaller ones.
“Like the Music Makers museum or the early television museum in Hilliard, or there are museums that are tucked away in places that you didn’t even know were open such as the Dittrick medical museum up in Cleveland,” said Huntley.
“You can drive to them, you can ride a bike to them, however you want to get to them you’re going to be welcomed there, and it’s just a lot of fun,” Woodworth said.
As for Johnson, he might not get to all the sites, but he’ll be at Carillon and in Dayton discussing the community he knows and loves.
“This particular area is important. Dayton is doubly important with all of the manufacturing that went on here. And that’s why it’s important,” he said.
This is the fourth statewide trail project by America 250 Ohio, and six are planned.
A couple of other trails that have already been launched include the ‘Air and Space Trail’ and the ‘Ohio Creativity Trail’.
The official kickoff for Ohio will occur the first week of January at the Ohio Statehouse.
For more information, click here.
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Alese Underwood
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CINCINNATI — The Cincinnati Bengals have a lot of moving pieces on offense going into this weekend’s matchup with the rolling New England Patriots.
Joe Flacco has been limited in practice as he continues to manage a shoulder injury. Fellow quarterback Joe Burrow, out since September with a toe injury, participated in his first 11-on-11 drills since the injury on Wednesday.
Star receiver Ja’Marr Chase has been suspended for one game. Offensive guard Jalen Rivers missed practice on Wednesday due to an ankle injury, and tight end Mike Gesicki could return from injured reserve this week.
It’s a lot to sort through for a 3-7 team hoping to stop a three-game slide, especially with Drake Maye and the 9-2 Patriots coming to town.
The 40-year-old Flacco injured his shoulder on Oct. 26 in a loss against the New York Jets. He has been managing the injury over the last month while playing through it.
“I feel good, I really do,” Flacco said Wednesday. “I’m starting to feel pretty good with what’s just gone on the last couple of weeks, the rest of the body is holding up well, so I can’t complain.”
Flacco had a great opening drive on Sunday against the Pittsburgh Steelers, but his passing appeared to look different following a massive hit that he took early in the game. Flacco went on to have his worst game during his short stint with the Bengals in a 34-12 loss on a windy day.
“It was a difficult day in general,” offensive coordinator Dan Pitcher said. “The rush in that building is different than the rush on the road. He took that hit. The weather was not easy to throw in. I think if there’s anyone in the world suited for throwing in that weather it’s Joe Flacco. I would lean on whatever his own self-assessment was of his performance when it comes to that.”
This week, the Bengals’ coaches are figuring out how they will fill Chase’s role against the Patriots. After spitting on Steelers defensive back Jalen Ramsey, Chase was suspended by the NFL for Week 12.
Tee Higgins and Andrei Iosivas are good to go, and the Bengals are evaluating several options to be their third receiver this week, including Mitchell Tinsley, Charlie Jones and Jermaine Burton.
“Guys taking advantage of opportunity, that’s exactly what it is,” coach Zac Taylor said. “That’s how some guys have gotten their chances. That’s how Mitch Tinsley has gotten himself on the roster. He has taken advantage of moments where he’s at. We’ll continue to evaluate those guys. We have a good plan in place and will utilize everyone we can.”
Gesicki, a proven pass catcher who has been out since Week 6 with a pectoral injury, also could return on Sunday.
That would provide another boost to the Bengals’ passing game.
“It helps given that situation (with Chase) to lose a guy like Ja’Marr and add Mike helps ease the pain a little bit,” Taylor said. “Happy to have him.”
Since Chase is suspended this week, he isn’t allowed to have contact with the Bengals’ coaches. Taylor has continued to support Chase and said he’s on the same page with the All-Pro receiver about this situation.
“As a team we have a to move forward and still support Ja’Marr,” Taylor said. “I’ve supported Ja’Marr. We have to focus on New England now and we look forward to getting him in there next week.”
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Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press
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OHIO — The Ohio Department of Commerce is hoping to ease some of the holiday stress this season through a new holiday budgeting guide.
A free resource for all Ohioans, the Holiday Budgeting Guide shares tools and strategies to keep the holidays cheerful and affordable.
In 2024, holiday retail spending was anticipated to reach $30.4 billion in the Buckeye State by the Ohio Council of Retail Merchants, a 1.1% increase from 2023. According to data from the Federal Reserve, there was a 4.5% increase in retail sales at Ohio general merchandise stores last November and a 1.9% increase in December.
The National Retail Federation expects shoppers to spend an average of $890.49 per person on holiday gifts, food, decorations and other related options.
“The holidays are meant for joy, not financial stress,” said DFI Superintendent Kevin Allard. “Our Holiday Budgeting Guide is specially designed to help Ohioans take control of their holiday spending so they can focus on what really matters—making memories with friends, family and loved ones.”
According to a recent survey from NerdWallet, 31% of 2024 holiday shoppers who used their credit cards have yet to pay off their balances, while a lendingtree.com report showed 36% of Americans took on holiday debt.
Ohio’s budget guide is set to manage spending and address financial challenges head-on via budgeting techniques and safe online shopping practices.
Key areas covered in the guide include:
“Smart spending is a gift you give yourself,” Allard said. “By planning ahead and using the tools available, Ohioans can enjoy the season without the burden of debt.”
View the full guide here.
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Madison MacArthur
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CINCINNATI — In Ohio, thousands of people living with mental illness are struggling to find stable housing, according to data from the National Alliance on Mental Illness. The group reports that one in five Ohioans experiencing homelessness also lives with a serious mental illness.
For Jeno Shanklin, the crisis is personal — and the solution; he hopes starts with the home he recently bought.
Walking through the doorway of a Cincinnati house, Shanklin pauses at the decoration on the wall and the furniture arranged just as it was years ago.
“That’s actually an old picture my mom had,” he said. “These couches are actually my grandfather’s.”
The memories still bring him to tears. Shanklin says he spent part of his childhood living in and out of shelters before his mother moved in with a man who he says struggled with mental illness, a situation that often turned volatile.
“It was tough being in a house with someone who one second can be laughing and smiling, another second being physically aggressive, verbally abusive to whoever crossed their path,” he said. “I had to grow up really fast being the oldest of four.”
Shanklin later moved in with his grandfather, and he credits his faith with helping him understand the long-term impact of a stable home.
“A lot of people overlook adults,” he said. “They think they’re grown; they can handle it. But there are a lot of adults out there that, if they just had some type of stable environment, it would help them.”
Shanklin recently purchased a home and is turning it into a group home for men living with mental illness — a place he calls the Safe Haven for Healing home in Cincinnati. He said the house will offer group classes, art and music therapy and other programs meant to support mental health and long-term independence.
“I felt like I could be making a bigger impact on my community and my people,” he said. “So I did some research and found the model group home.”
Shanklin hopes this first site will be one of many. He plans to open additional group homes and eventually a day center focused solely on mental health services.
“Come as you are,” he said. “We will do our very, very best to see that when you walk back out these doors, you are better than when you came inside them.”
As Ohio continues to grapple with gaps in mental health housing, Shanklin said he’s committed to helping one person at a time.
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Sheena Elzie
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CINCINNATI — The Cincinnati Bengals’ plan to have Joe Flacco keep them competitive until Joe Burrow can return from toe surgery has hit a major snag.
Flacco was riding high after his first game against the Pittsburgh Steelers this season, a 33-31 victory on Oct. 16. But the 40-year-old struggled in Sunday’s rematch, throwing a costly interception as the Bengals lost 34-12 to extend their skid to three games.
“We have to find a way to scratch and claw, get a win and get that feeling back we had three weeks ago when we beat Pittsburgh,” coach Zac Taylor said. “That’s our only option right now.”
The Bengals (3-7) lost four straight before beating the Steelers last month. They haven’t won since, and their chances of staying in contention in the weak AFC North are dwindling.
“Our goal was to be 3-0 in the division coming out of this game,” Taylor said. “But that’s not how it played out.”
Flacco, making his 200th career start, delivered his worst performance since he arrived in Cincinnati last month to take over for ineffective backup Jake Browning, who had initially stepped in after Burrow got hurt.
Burrow started practicing this week, opening his 21-day window to return, but the two-time Pro Bowler was never expected to play Sunday.
Flacco completed 23 of 40 passes for 199 yards and a touchdown. The game-changing play was an errant throw over the middle that Kyle Dugger turned into a 73-yard pick-6.
“We made mistakes and they capitalized,” Flacco said.
Flacco had been pushing the ball to the Bengals’ star receivers, but they were quiet on Sunday. Tee Higgins caught three passes for 63 yards and the Bengals’ only touchdown, and Ja’Marr Chase was limited to just three catches for 30 yards.
Chase was also involved in a heated fourth-quarter exchange with Steelers veteran defensive back Jalen Ramsey. Ramsey, who was ejected after grabbing Chase’s facemask with his left hand and taking a swing with his right, accused Chase of spitting on him. Chase denied the accusation.
“He didn’t like some of the words I told him,” Chase said. “We’ve been going back and forth the whole time, so I’m sure something got under his skin.”
The Steelers put the game away when cornerback James Pierre scored on a 32-yard fumble recovery.
“You have to give them credit,” Taylor said. “They won the turnover battle 2-0 and that’s the recipe for success. I don’t think the score is indicative of how the game played through three quarters, but they did the things you have to do to win and they had a chance to run away with it.”
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Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press
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CLEVELAND — How much would you pay to see the Cleveland Browns play in the new covered stadium in Brook Park?
That’s the question the team is asking season-ticket holders in a recent survey. The survey shows several pricing options for PSLs, or personal seat licenses, which may be required to purchase season tickets at the new stadium.
Cleveland State University Director of Sports and Entertainment Jim Kahler said PSLs are common in new stadiums.
“PSLs have been around for years but they’re becoming more and more common for new construction buildouts,” said Kahler.
In a recent survey sent to season ticket holders, the Browns put out potential price points for PSLs in the new stadium. A general seat in the upper level from the 30-yard lines to the endzone requires a one-time payment of $1,050 to be able to purchase a season ticket. The PSL to be able to buy a coveted club seat on the home side 50-yard line for the season could cost over $130,000 in the new stadium.
“It’s a partnership with fans and the owners of the team,” Kahler said. “We’ve got raise enough money in this case in Cleveland to build a state-of-the-art domed stadium. Is the Haslam family going to get some contributions from the state? They’ve done that. Are they going to put their own money into it? They’ve done that too. To be fair to the equation, the fans are going to own a piece of it and they way they do that is through PSLs.”
PSLs were used in 1999 for the current lakefront stadium. Rodney Symons remembers it well as a former season-ticket holder but says higher priced PSLs and tickets could ice out loyal fans.
“If their tickets are going to be right around $200 a piece once again with the PSLs people just can’t afford that,” Symons said. “It’s overpriced.”
Symons is excited for the new domed stadium but thinks the team could struggle filling it due to high prices and lackluster performance on the field.
“If you build it, they’re going to come we already know that,” said Symons. “But once that newness wears off you’re going to be in a situation where it’s like okay, ‘we’ve seen the facility’. If the product is the way it is right now, they’re only going to come for so long and then what are you going to do?”
The Browns have not made a final decision on whether PSLs will be a part of the new stadium. Kahler thinks it’s not a matter of if PSLs are instituted but when.
“It’s just a natural way to fund the financing of the new facility,” said Kahler.
Kahler thinks the Browns have an opportunity to do right by the fans by gathering feedback so early in the process.
“You don’t want to alienate the fans that have been with you for a lifetime,” Kahler said. “I’m sure that they will come up with some sort of scoring or rating system that rewards people. The Browns have an opportunity to do that and in my professional opinion the right time to do that is when you’re going to open a new stadium.”
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Jack Berney
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COLUMBUS, Ohio — Investigators say a convicted child killer and known sexual predator could be anywhere except where he is supposed to be: behind bars.
Lester Eubanks, 82, is one of the U.S. Marshals Service’s “15 Most Wanted Fugitives,” and Dep. U.S. Marshal Vinny Piccoli is now the lead investigator tasked with tracking him down.
“It’s kind of surreal and crazy to look back at a case from, you know, when this initial incident happened in 1965, and then now it’s come all this time and all this way,” Piccoli said.
On Nov. 14, 1965, Mansfield police found Mary Ellen Deener’s body behind a vacant house on North Mulberry Street. Within hours, Eubanks confessed to killing the 14-year-old during an attempted rape.
“My poor sweet sister,” said Myrtle Carter. “Gotta fight you. A person that has karate experience, black belts or yellow, whatever color. And you fight a child.”
At the time, Eubanks was out on bond for another attempted rape.
“He should have been in jail then, because it wasn’t his first one then,” Carter said.
Carter said her mother sent Mary Ellen and another younger sister, Bonnie, to finish chores at the laundromat after their home washer or dryer broke. She said Mary Ellen went by herself to get some change for the machines and Eubanks grabbed her on her way back.
Mary Ellen Deener. (U.S. Marshals Service)
“If she hadn’t run out of change, it would have been a whole different story,” Carter said. “Because he would have had to fight both of them.”
She said that when her little sister tried to resist Eubanks, he shot her and left the scene. She said Eubanks returned when he heard her moaning.
“That’s when he hit her in the head with a brick and killed her,” Carter said.
She said the laundromat the girls were using was next to their grandmother’s house.
“And her mother lived, like, say, 10 houses down on the opposite side of the street,” Carter said. “So where Mary Ellen’s body was found, that’s like halfway between both houses.”
She said Bonnie saw Eubanks outside the laundromat.
“We don’t know what he came back for, but she saw him in the window,” Carter said. “And when he left, she ran over to my grandmother’s house.”
Carter said their grandmother went looking for Mary Ellen and found a group of police officers. When she told them about her missing granddaughter, Carter said her grandmother was asked to identify Mary Ellen’s body.
“I never recall her talking about it,” Carter said.
Carter said she attended every day of the Eubanks’ trial.
“I wanted him to turn around and see me,” she said. “I just wanted him to know that somebody was here and somebody was there for her.”
“This is a court document from Nov. 26, 1968, from Richland County Court of Common Pleas showing that Eubanks was found guilty by a jury of his peers and sentence should be carried out,” Piccoli said, referring to a scanned document on his computer screen. “At the time, it was the death penalty.”
But before Eubanks had his appointment with Ohio Penitentiary’s electric chair, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the death penalty unconstitutional in 1972. His sentence was commuted to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
“But you get to go Christmas shopping,” Carter said. “Make it make sense.”
On Dec. 7, 1973, Eubanks was treated to an unsupervised shopping trip in Columbus with other inmates as a reward for good behavior.
“Who are you buying a gift for?” Carter said. “The people that let you out?”
“Someone like him, he was supposed to be doing life,” Piccoli said. “He was literally sent to death and then was commuted to life in prison. So how he made his way onto an honor group, an honor assignment, is beyond me.“
Eubanks used the opportunity to escape.
“You look back at what he did, his crime back in 1965, and, you know, he spent roughly seven years in prison and then has been free for 50 plus years,” Piccoli said. “So it’s just, it’s not fair to Mary Ellen. It’s not fair to her family.“
Piccoli now oversees the manhunt for Eubanks. In his first year as lead investigator, he brings a fresh perspective to the case.
“I don’t believe that if he were to run, you know, now and try to escape, I don’t think he would be on the run for 50 years,” Piccoli said. “It’s just unfortunate. Back then, you know, investigators did all that they could with what they had. And he got lucky in a way.”
“Fugitives … on the run,” U.S. Marshal Peter Elliott said, “will make up a story about their past where nobody’s going to go back and ask questions about. And they’re not going to have any family or friends, you know, to the ones they’re talking to, because they’re going to say that ‘my family was killed in a fire, traffic accident,’ or so on and so on.“
But one thing Eubanks can’t change is his genetics.
Elliott said 60 years after Mary Ellen’s murder, the Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office re-tested the clothes Eubanks wore that night and found his DNA in a pocket.
“It’s a game changer,” Elliott said. “It’s going to get us a step closer to catching him. It’s only a matter of time.”
Eubanks could be anywhere.
Age-progression photos of what Lester Eubanks could look like now at age 82. (U.S. Marshals Service)
One of his last known sightings was in Southern California where Piccoli said Eubanks likely worked in a mattress factory in the 1970s using the alias “Victor Young.”
“There’s no doubt in my mind that someone has had recent contact with him,” Piccoli said. “You know, maybe not as recent as this week, but over, you know, the last month or years.”
He hopes that person will offer information leading to the violent fugitive.
“We have a job, and our job is to find individuals, no matter how long it takes to find individuals,” Piccoli said.
The arrest would give Mary Ellen’s family some long-awaited closure.
“I like to think I’d be like my mother would probably want me to be,” Carter said. “And say, ‘I forgive you.’”
The U.S. Marshals Service is offering up to a $50,000 reward for information leading to Lester Eubanks. His only known distinguishing feature is a 1-to 3-inch scar or burn mark on the upper outer portion of his right arm.
If you have any tips, call 1-866-4-WANTED.
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Jenna Jordan
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OHIO — The Ohio Department of Natural Resources announced new deer bag limitations for several southeastern Ohio counties on Thursday that run through the remainder of the 2025-2026 season.
Hunting limitations were approved for white-tailed deer in Athens, Meigs, Morgan and Washington counties by the Ohio Wildlife Council.
(ODNR)
Officials said the new bag limits for these counties start on Monday, Dec. 1. Athens, Meigs and Washington counties’ bag limit will be reduced to one deer. Morgan County’s new limit is two deer. All the counties will have a three-deer limit until Sunday, Nov. 30.
The reduction is in response to an outbreak of Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD). Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD) can be caused by the bite of an infected midge and is one of the most common diseases of white-tailed deer in the U.S. The disease does not affect humans, and transmission ends with the first frost, which kills the insect and interrupts the cycle.
ODNR said deer bag limits throughout the rest of the state remain unchanged.
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Madison MacArthur
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CINCINNATI — A Cincinnati drug dealer who dealt in fentanyl, cocaine, methamphetamine and marijuana and who shot a rival dealer last year has been handed an 18-year prison sentence in U.S. District Court.
Robert Lee Howard, 34, was charged in in a criminal complaint back in June last year and pleaded guilty in July of this year, according to a press release from the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Ohio.
That release notes that Howard had been captured on camera in February last year “shooting a rival fentanyl dealer repeatedly in the chest, after losing a bet over who sold more potent fentanyl.”
They also said agents recorded Howard, back in June of 2024, when he said he was awaiting 23 pounds of meth in the mail in several packages. When they intercepted the packages, agents found “more than four kilograms of 96% pure crystal meth.”
“That same month, Howard’s car was shot up while he was driving around Cincinnati,” the release reads. “The next day, he was recorded on calls offering to pay $10,000 total for ‘friends from Chicago’ to come to Cincinnati and solve his ‘problem’ by ‘putting [the rival fentanyl dealer] on a T-shirt.’”
He was arrested when agents conducted a search warrant at his Price Hill home. During that search, agents found:
The release states that four young children also lived at this residence.
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Cody Thompson
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WASHINGTON, D.C. — The House of Representatives is poised to move forward on a bill to force the release of files related to Jeffrey Epstein, opening another chapter in the ongoing controversy around the late convicted sex offender and disgraced financier’s relationship with President Donald Trump.
On Nov. 12, enough lawmakers signed a petition to force a vote on legislation that would mandate the Justice Department release all files related to Epstein, minus identifiable information about his victims, within 30 days of the bill passing.
Trump, who has argued the Epstein controversy is a distraction, is opposing the measure. House Speaker Mike Johnson has also opposed the measure and refused to bring it up for a vote, resulting in Democrats and four Republicans signing the discharge petition to force a vote.
The action comes after Democrats on the House Oversight Committee released emails Wednesday from Epstein that referenced Trump. One email from 2019 said that Trump “knew about the girls.”
Though the emails make clear that Epstein and Trump were once friends, as Trump has acknowledged, they do not allege any criminal behavior by the president.
Rep. Shontel Brown, D-Ohio, who sits on the Oversight Committee, said she supports the measure to release more files.
“The bottom line is we want the files should be released so that we can get to the bottom of this and give those who have been impacted by this pedophile the justice that they are long overdue,” she said.
Trump this week warned Republicans against joining efforts to release more files, posting on Truth Social, “Only a very bad, or stupid, Republican would fall into that trap.”
That admonition is not deterring Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, who said he plans to vote for the measure.
“If crimes have been committed, I want the Attorney General of the United States or the Attorneys General in the U.S. district courts to bring charges against individuals, for the evidence to come out at trial, where there’s convictions and jail time. That’s what I think the people want,” Davidson said.
Davidson added he thinks the files will not reveal any improper conduct by the president.
Even if the bill passes the House, it faces a frosty reception and uphill battle in the Republican-controlled Senate.
Speaker Johnson said the House will vote on the measure next week.
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Harri Leigh
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OHIO — More than $1.3 million in loans is headed to small businesses across the Buckeye State to help expand operations, create jobs and strengthen their communities.
The Minority Development Financing Advisory Board approved $1,346,388 durings its monthly meeting for five businesses.
Two Hamilton County businesses were approved for loans, including 3T Learning Academy LLC and AV Beauty Bar LLC.
A $460,594 Women Business Enterprise loan will go to 3T Learning Academy, a Cincinnati-based licensed child care center dedicated to providing a supportive environment for early childhood development. It currently serves 120 children. Funds will go toward refinancing existing business debt, renovations for the facility and the creation of 25 full-time jobs. Officials said eight full-time positions will be retained.
Another $54,593 Women Business Enterprise loan will go toward AV Beauty Bar to help consolidate high-interest debts and create substantial annual savings for the company, a full-service salon that has grown from a mobile bridal service.
To the north in Franklin County, Columbus Aesthetic Medicine LLC and Nina Deep Aesthetics LLC received Women Business Enterprise loans totaling $614,881.
Columbus Aesthetic Medicine LLC, a real estate holding company created to own and lease property to Nina Deep Aesthetics LLC, received $379,072.
Nina Deep Aesthetics LLC, specializes in non-surgical aesthetic services and offers a range of skincare products and sunscreen online and in-person, received $235,809.
The loans will go toward refinancing existing debt and toward the purchase of new equipment and the retention of one position.
In northeast Ohio, Pink Transportation in Cuyahoga County received a $216,320 Women Business Enterprise loan.
The company was founded in 2014 as a non-emergency and non-medical transportation provider. However, in 2020, it was restructured into a full-service logistics and supply chain business focused on bulk material transport, fulfillmentlogistics and certified supplier services for public and private clients.
The funds will be used to purchase new equipment, create one full-time position and retain two full-time positions.
According to the Ohio Department of Development, over the last two years nearly $32 million in loans were approved for over 350 businesses. For more information about loans, eligibility and other capital assistance programs, click here.
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Madison MacArthur
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COLUMBUS, Ohio — Max Arfsten had a goal and two assists and Dylan Chambost scored a first-half goal on Sunday night to help the Columbus Crew avoid elimination from the MLS Cup playoffs and beat FC Cincinnati 4-0 in Game 2 of the best-of-three first-round series.
The series returns to TQL Stadium, where Cincinnati won the opener 1-0, for Game 3 on Saturday. The winner advances to the one-game Eastern Conference semifinals against No.3 seed Miami or sixth-seeded Nashville.
Jacen Russell-Rowe, who replaced Diego Rossi in the 61st minute, fed Andrés Herrera for a goal in the 65th and added a his first career playoff goal in the 69th.
Arfsten opened the scoring in the 33rd minute. Rossi, on the counter-attack, won a loose from defender Alvas Powell at the edge of the 18-yard box and poked it Arfsten on the left side of the area. The 24-year-old midfielder cut outside to evade goalkeeper Roman Celantano, who had charged off his line, and blasted a shot from the corner of the 6-yard box into the top-net for his third career playoff goal.
Yuya Kubo was shown a yellow card in the seventh minute and another in the 38th and No. 2 seed Cincinnati played a man down the rest of the way.
Chambost, whose shot in the seventh minute was stopped by Celentano, bent the ensuing free kick, from just outside the top of the box on the right side, inside the near post to make it 2-0 in the 41st.
The seventh-seeded Crew outshot Cincinnati 19-1.
Columbus defender Rudy Camacho, who had been sidelined due to a thigh injury, made his season debut when he subbed on 81st minute.
Celentano, who finished with five saves, dove to break up a cross played by Taha Habroune and was accidentally kicked in the head by Hugo Picard in the third minute. Celentano was evaluated for a head injury and was allowed to remain in the game.
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Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press
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CINCINNATI — Cincinnati’s mayor seeks a second term in a municipal election next week against a challenger with notable family ties.
Mayor Aftab Pureval, a Democrat, is running against Republican Cory Bowman in this Democratic stronghold on Nov. 4. Bowman is a pastor, cafe owner and the half brother of Vice President JD Vance.
Pureval finished far ahead of Bowman in the May 6 primary, with about 83% of the vote. Bowman placed a distant second with about 13% of the vote, enough to secure a spot on the ballot. The Cincinnati mayor’s office is a nonpartisan position, so all candidates competed on the same ballot in the primary, with the top two vote-getters advancing to the November general election.
The election in Ohio’s third-most-populous city takes place against the backdrop of an unprecedented level of federal intervention in big American cities by the Trump administration in the name of fighting crime and illegal immigration, over the objections of the cities’ Democratic leaders. Crime was a major topic in the mayoral campaign in August following a brawl downtown that was shared widely on social media.
Pureval was first elected in 2021 with about 66% of the vote over fellow Democrat David Mann, a former mayor and U.S. Representative.
Democrats have long held a lopsided advantage in Cincinnati elections. Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris carried the city in the 2024 presidential election with about 75% of the vote, compared to about 22% for Republican Donald Trump.
Trump was the top vote-getter in only one of the city’s 26 wards. He carried four of the city’s 190 precincts, all of them located along the Ohio River on opposite ends of the city. Bowman held two of these precincts in the May primary – in Sayler Park and California – the only places where he outperformed Pureval.
Turnout tends to be relatively low in off-year Ohio elections. A recent exception was in 2023, when a pair of ballot measures motivated voters on both sides of the abortion debate to head to the polls.
The Associated Press does not make projections and will declare a winner only when it’s determined there is no scenario that would allow the trailing candidates to close the gap. If a race has not been called, the AP will continue to cover any newsworthy developments, such as candidate concessions or declarations of victory. In doing so, the AP will make clear that it has not yet declared a winner and explain why.
Recounts in Ohio are automatic if the margin is less than 0.25% of the total vote in statewide races or 0.5% in district races. The AP may declare a winner in a race that is eligible for a recount if it can determine the lead is too large for a recount or legal challenge to change the outcome.
Here’s a look at what to expect on Nov. 4:
Polls close at 7:30 p.m. ET.
The AP will provide vote results and declare a winner in the Cincinnati mayoral race. Other local contests in Cincinnati and across the state will also be held Nov. 4, but only the Cincinnati mayoral race will be part of the AP’s vote tabulation.
Voters registered in the city of Cincinnati may participate in the mayoral general election.
There were more than 221,000 registered voters in Cincinnati as of the May 6 primary. Turnout in the primary was about 10% of registered voters. About 17% of the vote was cast before primary day.
In the 2021 mayoral general election, turnout was about 24% of registered voters. One quarter of the vote was cast before Election Day.
As of Thursday, about 4,900 ballots had been cast in Hamilton County before Election Day.
In the May 6 primary, the AP first reported results in the mayoral race at 7:53 p.m. ET, or 23 minutes after polls closed. The last update of the night was at 10:24 p.m. ET with nearly 99% of the total vote counted.
In the 2024 presidential election, the first results the AP reported in Hamilton County were available at 7:57 p.m. ET. Tabulation stopped for the night at 11:54 p.m. ET with about 96% of total votes counted.
As of Nov. 4, there will be 364 days until the 2026 midterm elections and 1,099 days until the 2028 general election.
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Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press
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OHIO — Starbucks is under fire from investors and customers nationwide, including in Ohio, regarding worker treatment as it gears up for its crucial holiday drink season.
Amidst claims of unfair labor practices, supporters and baristas will rally for a fair contract with better staffing, working hours, pay and job protections.
“Starbucks knows where we stand. They know our demands,” said Michelle Eisen, Starbucks Workers United spokesperson and 15-year veteran barista. “We remain ready to negotiate whenever Starbucks is willing to bargain in good faith and offer new proposals that address our demands. For example, baristas across the country are calling on Starbucks to come back to the table and address our demands now.”
The strike is part of a national wave of 70 pickets in 60 cities around the nation.
Starbucks workers have increased their demands for a fair union contract and authorized a strike if Starbucks does not meet them.
Starbucks workers and allies plan to strike at these locations in Ohio:
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Ryan Johnston
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CINCINNATI — As colder weather rolls in, many drivers are scheduling seasonal tune-ups from tire replacements to brake checks. But this October, a local initiative is turning a routine car repair into a way to make a difference.
The “Give the Girls a Brake” campaign brings together auto repair shops across the Cincinnati area to raise money for women battling breast cancer. Throughout the month, participating shops provide free brake pads with qualifying services and donate 10% of brake repair costs to the Karen Wellington Foundation.
For breast cancer survivor Amy Bishop, that mission hits close to home.
“I am a fitness instructor. I’m healthy, young, active, and had no previous issues with anything,” Bishop said. “This just came right out of the blue.”
Bishop was diagnosed with breast cancer last October after a routine mammogram revealed the disease in its early stages. Following surgery and radiation, she is now cancer-free.
“This happened to me a year ago, and I can’t believe it’s already been a year,” she said. “You can move through it too. You just have to grab somebody’s hand.”
Those helping hands now include local auto shop owners like Dale Donovan, who has participated in the campaign since it began.
“What we do is we offer brake jobs and give you the brake pads, then we donate 10% of that brake job to the Karen Wellington Foundation,” said Donovan, owner of Donovan’s Auto & Tire Center.
Over the last four years, the campaign has raised more than $125,000 for the Karen Wellington Foundation. “Maybe it’s a balloon ride, maybe it’s just a spa,” Donovan said. “What we’re trying to do is put fun back in their lives because their lives consist of going to the doctor every single day.”
Bishop, a longtime customer of Ulmer’s Auto Care Center, said she’s grateful to see businesses driving awareness in such a meaningful way.
“It just gives you another avenue to say, ‘All right, somebody else has been in my shoes,’” Bishop said. “You just feel a lot less alone.”
Organizers expect to present a donation check to the Karen Wellington Foundation in early November.
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Javari Burnett
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COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ironton High School will not be taking part in the 2025 football playoffs after the Ohio High School Athletic Association recently discovered “numerous violations of… recruiting bylaws over the last seven years.”
The district confirmed in a letter posted on social media that the OHSAA determined the coaching staff committed recruiting violations in 2018, 2019 and 2025.
“The OHSAA’s investigation determined that some members of the Ironton football program had engaged in ongoing and coordinated recruiting efforts, including communications with parents and students regarding methods to influence other prospective athletes’ enrollment,” reads an OHSAA press release. “Records show deliberate efforts to conceal recruiting activity, including direction on how to avoid leaving evidence of infractions, which demonstrates an awareness of wrongdoing and an intentional effort to circumvent compliance. The scope and coordination of these activities, as well as the number of impermissible contacts, represents a serious and pervasive violation.”
Penalties include:
The OHSAA clarifies that these penalties and probations are for the football program specifically.
The district said these penalties are being imposed by the OHSAA and that the school board has taken no action.
“The OHSAA’s determination followed an investigation during which we repeatedly advocated strongly for the District’s football program and its students, presented all rebuttal evidence available to us, and did everything we could in the short time provided to achieve a different outcome,” the district’s letter reads.
The OHSAA said it will not make Ironton give up its 2024 Division V state championship or forfeit wins from past seasons. However, they note Ironton allowed an “ineligible student-athlete” to play in its final regular season game on Friday, resulting in a forfeiture.
The district said they are disappointed in the OHSAA’s decision and the impact it has on their students.
“We want you to know, however, that the sanctions initially proposed by the OHSAA would have made our team ineligible to participate in playoffs for two years and their decision to remove the ban in the second year was a result of our advocacy on the team’s behalf,” the district’s letter reads. “We understand that many of you are upset. After consultation with attorneys who have the most successful experience with legal challenges to OHSAA determinations as well as multiple local attorneys, it was their collective recommendation that we accept the negotiated sanctions presented to us at this point in time.”
The OHSAA said the district will change enrollment and transfer policies as well as attend an educational seminar. If there are further violations of recruiting bylaws while the football program is on probation, it will lose postseason eligibility for the next tournament.
“Moving forward, we are fully committed to ensuring that appropriate corrective measures are taken to avoid any further adverse impact on our football program,” the district’s letter reads. “This is a setback, but this has not erased the hard work and accomplishments of our students as a team this year. We are so proud of them. We will not let this take away our pride or our legacy, and we will strive, as always, to uphold the values that define Ironton City Schools both on and off the field.”
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Cody Thompson
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COLUMBUS — More parents are choosing to welcome their babies into the world outside of a hospital setting, opting instead for the comfort of being at home.
Holistic birth specialist Marina Zahran said she did a four-year program studying at the California College of Ayurveda medicine. She said she’s hearing from families that have their first birth in hospitals because they’re told that’s the safest place to have a baby.
But she said women are supposed to feel like they’re in a safe, calm environment during that experience.
“Home birth, you’re watching the birth happen, a lot of the times you’re not having people yell in your face, ‘push,’ you’re experiencing the physiology of birth move through you, and you get to just be a part of it instead of feeling like you’re not doing things right, your body’s not doing things right, and that’s why home births have really positive maternal outcomes for not just the baby but also the mom,” Zahran said.
Zahran said, to have a home birth, working with a doula or midwife is best.
“Home birth isn’t for everybody. A lot of times, there isn’t as much pain medication as there is at a hospital, so if you know you want an epidural, a home birth isn’t for you and that’s why hospitals are there,” Zahran said.
She said that she was meeting more and more families that has their first baby in the hospital and just wanted to go the natural route and do it at home.
She said this fascinated her, and she wanted to learn more about it and be able to help other women. She took her training program three times in one year to make sure she was knowledgeable about it.
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Cassidy Wilson
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OHIO — Lake Erie is all that separates Ohio from our neighbor to the north, Canada.
President Donald Trump’s recent call for an abrupt end to trade negotiations could further inflame trade tensions that had already been building with that neighbor for months.
Trump said late Thursday that he was ending “all trade negotiations” with Canada because of a television ad opposing U.S. tariffs that he said misstated the facts and called “egregious behavior” aimed at influencing U.S. court decisions.
The post on Trump’s social media site came after Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said he aims to double his country’s exports to countries outside the U.S. because of the threat posed by Trump’s tariffs.
But how could this affect Ohio, and what exactly does our state trade with the country?
Well, according to a fact sheet from connect2canada.com, Ohio exports $19.9 billion worth of goods to the country every year. The top industry for exports to Canada from Ohio is equipment and machinery, with 28% of the goods.
The top three goods, specifically, that we export are:
We also export $2.5 billion in services to the country, according to the fact sheet. The highest amount is transport at $675 million, followed by financial services ($653 million) and then travel ($459 million).
“Ohio sells more goods to Canada (its #1 export market) than to its next six largest foreign markets combined,” the fact sheet reads.
We import a tad less than we export at $19 billion worth of goods each year. Some goods we’re bringing in are:
“Ohio’s top import from Canada is crude petroleum and this contributes to job creation, energy security, and affordability throughout the Midwest,” the fact sheet reads. “Calgary-based Cenovus Energy Inc announced plans to expand its headquarters in Dublin, Ohio which will add 115 technical and professional services jobs to the more than 1,200 Ohioans already employed by Cenovus. The move parallels Cenovus’ decision to invest an additional $1.5 billion in a pair of refineries that it operates in Toledo and Lima.”
The president has moved to impose steep U.S. tariffs on many goods from Canada. In April, Canada’s government imposed retaliatory levies on certain U.S. goods –– but it carved out exemptions for some automakers to bring specific numbers of vehicles into the country, known as remission quotas.
(connect2canada.com)
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Cody Thompson, Associated Press
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OHIO — The National Association of State Chief Information Officers awarded Ohio for taking action to stop fraud.
Ohio was awarded the State IT Recognition Award for its unique approach to proactively detecting suspicious activity in state systems.
“It is crucial that we protect state systems and taxpayers from fraud while also ensuring Ohioans are getting uninterrupted access to the services they need,” said Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine. “Ohio takes cybersecurity seriously. Our state is on guard against fraud and works to continually adjust our tactics as cyber criminals adjust theirs.”
The InnovateOhio team began developing the fraud detection solution in 2023 when the state noticed suspicious behavior within the system.
The machine learning model identifies fraud patterns and produces a risk level for suspicious accounts, which determines whether an account will be deactivated.
“We challenged ourselves through a ‘do-no-harm’ approach to balance access and security: we must keep our defenses strong while continuing to serve the needs of Ohioans,” said Department of Administrative Services Director Kathleen C. Madden. “This combination of machine learning and human oversight is what makes the FDR solution a truly unique cybersecurity tool.”
From Sept. 2024 through April 2025, the risk engine reviewed nearly 3 million unique users and disabled just over 186,000 of them. The oversight team reviewed 16,000 accounts and made changes to better train the tool.
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Ryan Johnston
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