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An eleventh-hour effort before summer recess to send regulations on data centers in Ohio to Gov. Mike DeWine died late Wednesday night.
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The petitioners, upset by recent decisions by the board including major layoffs, hope an elected school board will bring more accountability to Cleveland schools.
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Cat Predmore, interim executive director for the Wexner Center for the Arts, told WOSU the center has only lost one artist and one donor due to the controversy surrounding billionaire Les Wexner and his connections with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
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As many Ohio communities consider or have already enacted data center moratoriums, Governor Mike DeWine urged local leaders not to completely rule out what he said could be a good deal.
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Paid family caregivers in Ohio, who could have seen payments eliminated in an earlier version of the bill, are expected to be largely unaffected by the changes.
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The GOP-majority legislature concurrently advanced major, related modifications of mail-in voting to an unrelated bill originally meant to get homeless Ohioans ID cards.
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The $3.7 billion capital budget that provides money for infrastructure and state and local projects passed both the Ohio Senate and House easily.
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A bipartisan bill that started out as an avenue for homeless Ohioans to get free identifying documents like birth certificates and state ID cards has been fast tracked as it's turned into something else.
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Brown's path to another NBA Finals has been unique, including two stops in Cleveland
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Rooftop gardens are gaining popularity as cities expand and green, natural habitats decline. University of Dayton biology professor Chelse Prather explores green roofs as habitat for organisms by studying ant communities on rooftop gardens and adjacent ground level habitats in Cincinnati, Dayton and Columbus.