Editor Chris Quinn hosts our daily half-hour news podcast, with editorial board member Lisa Garvin, impact editor Leila Atassi and content director Laura Johnston.
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost joined GOP counterparts in Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Virginia and West Virginia in suing the administration of President Biden over changes in Title IX to protect transgender students.
Mike DeWine slams Joe Biden on tobacco, but where’s his wrath for Ohio legislators on the topic? Today in Ohio Remember Arthur Keith? He’s the guy who was shot in the back by Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority police while children at a Cleveland rec center were watching. What happened to the lawsuit against CMHA over the shooting?
Meanwhile, the Guardians have come up with another way to get people into Progressive Field for a few days in September. It’s a little strange. What is it?It’s Thursday on Today in Ohio, the news podcast discussion from cleveland .com and the Plain Dealer. Chris Quinn here with Lisa Garvin, Leila Tasi and Laura Johnston. And before we start, a couple of things to clarify. We talked earlier in the week about the park that is no longer being built at Metro Health.
That’s the first thing. But this is a big, obviously, federal requirement. And it seems like a little bit of a jump here, but don’t join the GOP attorney general at a meeting in Canada, Virginia, and West Virginia. The administration has over -claimed the title and protect transgender people. They say these terms change, trample over the lawmaking power of Congress. What is interesting is it really just changes something that’s under the law.
So, Joseph Russell, he put it out about the lawsuit, said transgender girls and women would be allowed to go to female sports under the rule of law. Now, Ohio just recently passed a law saying they can’t go to high school sports, but Title IX, as the original form of the 50 -year -old law, acknowledges the enduring physical differences between men and women committing to making sex and sex -related changes in the staff and blocking access to housing. That’s what Joseph pointed to.
Well, yes. So as everyone knows, police have been arresting protesters on college campuses, sometimes in altercations that have escalated to violence. And Sherrod Brown has really no criticism for that police response. He said his colleagues who have condemned police use of force against protesters don’t speak for him. He also thinks that the students demands that their universities divest from Israel isn’t even legal under Ohio law.
You do have to be careful with things like this because if you define it too stringently, you’re getting in the way of free speech and the First Amendment. And so there are groups that are alarmed by what’s happening here. But then you have Max Miller, who saw a sign at one of the protests that said, final solution, which is a clear anti -Semitic sign referring back to Hitler’s.treatment of Jewish people and the six million that died in World War II. So it’s tough.
And I feel like if people feel like their words are going to be used and manipulated in that way, this is incredibly dangerous, something like that. So even Jerry Maddler, who is Jewish and describes himself as a... But I will say, let me say this though, and I mean you’re blaming right -wing media, but I think once the protest starts, all nuance is lost. You’re either on one side or the other. That’s kind of how protests work in a way. So...No, it doesn’t, but that nuance, when people are screaming and yelling and waving signs, that nuance gets lost.
He said in a statement upon his retirement that he says, I’m confident I’m leaving Baldwin Wallace prepared to continue its mission of providing education based on 21st century needs and based on the arts and sciences. So the cuts that he oversaw included 23 jobs, eliminating nine academic programs and extending the hiring freeze. Tuition revenue at Baldwin Wallace is down by $16 .2 million.
It seems like another spring without spring. We’ve had some warm days early, a bunch of cold ones, and now we’re in the 80s. And it seems like that every year with spring seeming to be our most fickle season. Laura, we went to the numbers to see if this is a false impression or if it is real. What did the numbers show us?
Well, in the fall, we do have a pretty decent transition and we’ve done lots of stories looking at the numbers that in late September and October, we have a long string of days that are in pretty much the ideal zone. Your high 60s, low 70s, and we love our autumns. It’s just they’re heading into winter. But we just don’t get that feel in spring. It feels like you do get a few days and then we get really annoyed because it’s freezing or cold and rainy. And then...
Officers said the gun was found near Keith’s body, but no photographs were taken of that gun near Keith because there was a large crowd that had gathered and officers secured the gun in a police cruiser. There was also no footage at all of these events because CMHA police didn’t wear body cams at the time and CMHA surveillance cameras that would have recorded this entire thing were broken. And the judge said witness accounts were either inconsistent or people didn’t clearly see what happened.
Yeah, Joanne Fabrics emerged from bankruptcy after filing for Chapter 11 on March 18th. So they emerged about six weeks after they filed. They became a private company again, two years after an initial public offering. So lenders, vendors, and other industry parties were given ownership of Joanne and the publicly traded shares were canceled.
This is a Cleveland Heights man accused of stealing $177 ‚000 from vulnerable victims in a credit card scam. The thing is, he’s already served the time he was sentenced to. So I don’t know what you do with that. But the 6th District U .S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that U .S. District Judge Solomon Oliver twice failed to stop this clock ticking towards Carlos Deshaun Brown’s trial. And
Or maybe they dismiss the case, charge him again and make a deal that, you know, plead guilty, you get time served and we’ll walk away and then he can’t sue for some kind of wrongful conviction. Taxpayers should not have to pay anything as a result of this. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. We haven’t talked about Ohio gambling revenue in a while. Laila, what did the March numbers tell us? People still gambling it away?Oh yeah, they definitely are.
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