-
You don't have to get a REAL ID in Ohio - you can still get a standard drivers' license, but there are restrictions on its use.
-
Brush up on your philatelic knowledge with the Garfield-Perry Stamp Club, a 135-year-old organization keeping postal history alive throughout Cleveland and across the country.
-
The Hamilton County Sheriff's Office and Dublin Police will soon use drones as first responders in some cases. Dublin Police are also adding robots with 360 degree cameras to two locations in the city. The ACLU of Ohio wants regulations on this technology to protect the privacy rights of citizens.
-
It’ll take about a billion dollars for the state to pay back the $600 million in bonds to help fund the Cleveland Browns' new stadium and development, but Republican House leaders say it will be money well spent.
-
The House version of Gov. Mike DeWine's budget doesn't include implementation of the two final years of the bipartisan plan designed to make public K-12 funding in Ohio more fair.
-
Ohio House Finance committee members will continue to vet the amendments in hearings this week, with a full floor vote tentatively scheduled next Wednesday.
-
Many police departments around Ohio use drones, or plan to buy them soon. Some officials view drones as a viable replacement for helicopters.
-
Pay no mind to the calendar: this April Fools’ Day Snipe Hunt at Frohring Meadows in Chagrin Falls is not a prank.
-
Gov. Mike DeWine signed the $11.5 billion two-year transportation budget at the deadline on Monday.
-
Faith groups and social safety net advocates are urging majority Republicans in the Ohio legislature to view the two-year budget they’ll introduce Tuesday as a moral document.
-
Lead paint was outlawed in 1978, but in Cleveland, it's still the biggest contributor to lead poisoning. It’s highly toxic, posing danger in particular to children between the ages of one and five. Some residents who have been impacted by exposure to lead who have found ways to persevere.
-
The Cleveland Museum of Art’s new exhibition features black-and-white etchings, lithographs and linoleum-cut prints made by Black Cleveland artists affiliated with Karamu House in the 1930s and 1940s.