-
The budget passed by the Ohio House would remove elected members from the state school board and reduce the board to five members appointed by the governor.
-
When state lawmakers advanced the biennial state budget last month, they redirected money for the Ohio Housing Trust Fund.
-
More than five dozen international students from colleges throughout Ohio have had their visas pulled by federal authorities in recent weeks.
-
A new coalition of the state's largest business groups is lobbying for wider reform of the oldest tax Ohio has.
-
Bloomberg News is reporting Intel plans to lay off 20% of its workforce.
-
A year-long court battle over a proposed amendment to end qualified immunity for Ohio's government employees, including police officers, is over.
-
The Ohio Supreme Court will decide if LGBTQ people in relationships before the US Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage in 2015 have the same parental rights as married opposite sex parents.
-
A group of professors at Youngstown State University are leading the charge to repeal Senate Bill 1, the law that strikes down diversity, equity and inclusiveness programs on public college campuses in Ohio.
-
Ohio’s Mobile Response & Stabilization Services, which provide mental, emotional, and behavioral health care to kids in crisis, are being expanded.
-
State, national and international leaders are remembering Pope Francis, who died just after Easter Sunday.
-
Ohio's May 6 ballot will feature local primaries and money asks, but only one statewide question, on whether to renew a nearly 40-year-old initiative that allows the state to issue bonds to pay for local infrastructure projects.
-
Moreno said the historic Chillicothe paper mill, owned currently by Pixelle Specialty Solutions, will pause its permanent closure until December.