Month: October 2024

  • Ohio voters face critical choices in 2024. No one is coming to the rescue. It’s up to us.

    Ohio voters face critical choices in 2024. No one is coming to the rescue. It’s up to us.

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    Commentary

    Verify that you are a registered voter in Ohio before you go to the polls on Vote.gov.

    by Marilou Johanek – Ohio Capital Journal

    And so, it begins. In-person early voting and absentee voting by mail — from Tuesday, Oct. 8 through Sunday, Nov. 3 — is now officially underway in Ohio. Even before closing arguments are made in the 2024 election, registered Ohio voters (roughly 8 million) can start casting their ballots at their county board of elections before Election Day. Check location and times for your county board of elections.

    If you haven’t voted since the last presidential election in 2020, you could be in for a rude awakening when you get to the polls. Many Ohioans (not obsessively preoccupied with politics, like yours truly) are unaware that Republican lawmakers in Columbus enacted one of the strictest voter ID laws in the country in 2023 — despite no evidence of significant voter fraud, by impersonation or otherwise.

    Voting restrictions (in GOP-controlled legislatures) to address nonexistent problems of pervasive voting fraud were turbocharged in the wake of Donald Trump’s fraudulent efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. (This is usually when I have to breathe deeply). Since then, some 28 states, including Ohio, have passed new laws making it harder to vote in order to “combat concerns” generated by false Republican claims about widespread voting scams.

    Ohio Republicans dove into more voter suppression at the front-end last year with legislated hurdles to ballot access that caught surprised voters off guard. Thousands who had voted uneventfully for years with previously acceptable IDs (i.e., utility bills, bank statements) were suddenly prevented from voting under new, stringent rules rolled out right before the May 2023 primary.

    Those who showed up without the proper, government-issued photo ID could fill out a provisional ballot and double-back to their board of elections with the right credentials in a fast clip (four days, reduced from 10) to hopefully have their vote counted. Tough luck if voters lacked the resources or transportation to obtain the newly prescribed documentation in time.

    The number of provisional ballots thrown out for failure to produce the right paperwork rose tenfold after the Republican law went into effect, according to one report that raised the specter of historic levels of rejected ballots in Ohio’s 2024 presidential election. The Madison Township Republican who sponsored the bill that erected the additional obstacles to voting, state Rep. Thomas Hall, told cleveland.com (ludicrously) that disenfranchising so many voters, particularly the Democratic-leaning kind, was never his intention.

    He could have followed up with, “If you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you.” Don’t hold your breath waiting for any ubiquitous outreach by state Republicans to broadly educate the voting public on all the legal changes and requirements (impediments?) that could affect how and whether Ohioans have a voice in the upcoming election. So, do your homework. Share what you know with other would-be voters in your life.

    Verify that you are a registered voter in Ohio before you go to the polls on Vote.gov. Be sure you have not been wrongly purged by Ohio’s desperately partisan and mistake-prone Secretary of State Frank LaRose — who has notoriously swept eligible voters off the rolls in removal practices deemed among the worst in the nation.

    Make a plan to vote. I know that sounds almost cliché, but when you plan to vote you actually have to think through the how, when and where of getting it done. That’s important. So is the choice you make between now and Nov. 5 to either engage in your most fundamental voting right (upon which all our civil liberties rest) or to live with the consequences of not voting.

    But understand that real decisions are going to be made by the next president, by the next U.S. senator from Ohio, by the next justices who control the state supreme court, by the next state senator and state representative on your 2024 Ohio general election ballot. What do you want next and who do you believe, based on incontrovertible fact, will deliver on that? Are you willing to show up and be a part of making it happen?

    The outcome of this particular election on the state and federal level will profoundly affect whether and to what degree we ultimately endure as a nation “conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.” It is a referendum on the value we place on freedoms once considered inalienable from the freedom of voting and representational equality to the freedom of women to determine their own destiny and the freedom of all Americans to not live in fear of another mass shooting.

    This election in Ohio and nationwide is a referendum on our republic itself and whether, as Benjamin Franklin mused with prescience, we “can keep it.” What’s it worth to you to navigate the exhausting barriers to participate in self-governance, to exercise your birthright franchise defiantly despite massive voter purges and extreme voting laws?

    Think about it. No one is coming to the rescue. It’s up to us. Always has been.


    Marilou Johanek
    Marilou Johanek

    Marilou Johanek is a veteran Ohio print and broadcast journalist who has covered state and national politics as a longtime newspaper editorial writer and columnist.

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  • How the Ohio Supreme Court races intersect with Issue 1 and redistricting

    How the Ohio Supreme Court races intersect with Issue 1 and redistricting

    Retired Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor speaks to supporters at the Citizens Not Politicians rally, July 1, 2024, at the Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio. (Photo by Graham Stokes for Ohio Capital Journal. Republish only with original story.)

    Even though Ohioans will be voting on Issue 1, which would remove politicians from the redistricting if approved, it’s possible redistricting will go before the state’s high court again.

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    The justices elected to the Ohio Supreme Court in 2024 will be the ones deciding on any challenges to new maps if Ohio voters pass the proposed Issue 1 anti-gerrymandering amendment this November.

    Even though Ohioans will be voting on Issue 1, which would remove politicians from redistricting if approved, it’s possible redistricting will go before the state’s high court again.

    “Maps, no matter who draws them, are certainly subject to challenge, and they’re subject to challenge for violating the provisions of the Ohio Constitution,”said University of Cincinnati Political Science Professor David Niven. “So we’re not done no matter what happens with Issue One. … There are still unhappy political actors who will go to the courts in some cases, questioning the process.”

    Redistricting and past Supreme Court rulings

    Redistricting is currently done through the Ohio Redistricting Commission — which includes the governor, the secretary of state, the state auditor and four legislative leaders (two from each party). In 2015, 71% of Ohioans voted in favor of a constitutional amendment to create a bipartisan redistricting commission to draw legislative districts in 2021.

    Six different Statehouse district maps and two congressional maps have gone through the current redistricting process. The Ohio Supreme Court ruled five of the Statehouse maps unconstitutionally gerrymandered and both congressional maps were rejected as unconstitutional.

    A federal court ordered Ohio voters to use the last of the gerrymandered Statehouse maps in 2022 since the commission ran out of time to come up with a constitutionally approved map. State lawmakers are currently occupying those districts.

    Republican former Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor, who served on the state’s high court from 2003 to 2022, talked about this in an ad for Issue 1.

    “Seven times career politicians have so blatantly gerrymandered our voting district maps that the Ohio Supreme Court ruled the maps unconstitutional. Seven times,” she said in the ad. “Issue One bans politicians from drawing voting maps. It will restore power to where it belongs, with citizens not politicians.”

    Citizens Not Politicians, a nonpartisan coalition, is behind the proposed constitutional amendment. Issue 1 would create a 15-member Ohio Citizens Redistricting Commission made up of Republicans, Democratic and independent citizens. It would prohibit current or former politicians, political party officials, lobbyists and large political donors from being on the commission.

    Ohio Supreme Court races

    Republicans currently have a 4-3 majority on the Ohio Supreme Court. Depending on the outcome of the election, the Democrats could flip the court or the Republicans could tighten their grip.

    “The makeup of the court makes a tremendous difference,” Executive Director of Common Cause Ohio Catherine Turcer said. “Are these folks that are going to serve on the court going to look at new voting districts with an eye to what’s in the Ohio Constitution and to what is actually good for Ohio voters, or are they going to be swayed by partisan interests?”

    Ohio Republican lawmakers added party labels to the previously nonpartisan Ohio Supreme Court races starting in 2022.

    Incumbent Democratic Justice Michael P. Donnelly is being challenged by Republican Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas Judge Megan Shanahan.

    Incumbent Democratic Justice Melody Stewart is being challenged by incumbent Republican Justice Joseph Deters, who decided not to run for his current seat and instead chose to go up against Stewart.

    Democratic candidate Lisa Forbes, of the Eighth District Court of Appeals, and Republican candidate Dan Hawkins, of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, are fighting for Deters’ open seat.

    Deters recently talked briefly about redistricting on a right-wing Cleveland radio show.

    “I think it’s kind of humorous to watch when the other side can’t win, they want to change the rules whether it’s hacking the U.S. Supreme Court because they don’t have the justices they like, or getting rid of the Electoral College because they don’t have a clear advantage in the Electoral College like they do, and it’s just a flat popular vote. And now redistricting,” he said on Strictly Speaking with Bob Frantz.

    Follow OCJ Reporter Megan Henry on X.


    Megan Henry
    Megan Henry

    Megan Henry is a reporter for the Ohio Capital Journal and has spent the past five years reporting in Ohio on various topics including education, healthcare, business and crime. She previously worked at The Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • [Photo Album by Andrew Sichak] FC Cincinnati drop final regular season home match 3-1

    [Photo Album by Andrew Sichak] FC Cincinnati drop final regular season home match 3-1

    Loveland, Ohio – These photos by Andrew Sichak were taken at FC Cincinnati’s final regular season home match.

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    Recap provided by FC Cincinnati

    FC Cincinnati dropped a 3-1 result to Orlando City SC Saturday night at TQL Stadium.

    With one game remaining before the start of the Audi 2024 MLS Cup Playoffs, the Orange and Blue are locked into third place in the Eastern Conference at 17-11-5 (56 points). Orlando are in fourth place at 15-11-7 (52 points).

    Orlando struck first at the 10-minute mark as Ramiro Enrique found the back of the net for his seventh goal of the season.

    Luciano Acosta brought the game level in the final moments of the first half with an extraordinary effort from just outside the Orlando box. Cincinnati’s captain tallied his 14th goal of the season and his second in as many matches after his midweek goal at New York City FC. Teenage Hadebe earned his first assist for the Orange and Blue in the process in his first home start.

    Iván Angulo would restore Orlando’s lead in the 66th minute followed by Enrique’s second goal of the evening six minutes later.

    FC Cincinnati close the 2024 MLS Regular Season on Saturday, October 19 at Philadelphia Union. Kickoff is set for 6 p.m. ET for the Decision Day match.

    The Orange and Blue will host Game 1 of the Audi 2024 MLS Cup Playoffs Round One Best-of-3 Series on a date to-be-determined following Decision Day.

    GAME NOTES
    – Luciano Acosta recorded his fourth-straight game with a goal contribution, the second-longest streak of the season for FC Cincinnati behind Acosta’s club record nine-game streak from April 6 – May 25.
    – There have been seven streaks in club history of four-plus games with a goal contribution … Acosta accounts for six of them.
    – Saturday marked Lucho Acosta’s 250th career MLS Regular Season appearance.
    – Teenage Hadebe recorded his first assist for FC Cincinnati.

    FC Cincinnati ultimately outshot Orlando 17-6 and earned 54 percent possession. But they could not overcome the two second half goals. With the loss, FC Cincinnati finish their home regular season record 7-7-2.

    The Orange and Blue must now wait two weeks before their next match as the FIFA International Window opens with MLS Decision Day to follow on Saturday October 19. FC Cincinnati will travel to Philadelphia Union for the final match of the regular season at Subaru Park before kicking off the MLS Cup Playoffs Round One Best of 3 series at TQL Stadium.

  • LHS teacher Lisa Brinkman selected for the 2025 NEA Foundation Global Learning Fellowship

    LHS teacher Lisa Brinkman selected for the 2025 NEA Foundation Global Learning Fellowship

    Loveland, Ohio – Loveland High School Spanish Teacher Lisa Brinkman has been selected for the 2025 NEA Foundation Global Learning Fellowship. The Fellowship is a year-long opportunity for her to learn and grow as an educator and bring her learning back for the benefit of our students.

    Lisa has been teaching Spanish at LHS for 20 years, is the chairperson of the World Language Department, and her two children attend Loveland Schools.

    Outside of the school day, Lisa will dedicate time to webinars, online coursework, a two-day conference, and an international field study.

    She is one of only 48 educators from across the country to be chosen for this prestigious opportunity.

    More about NEA Foundation Global Learning Fellowship

    Through the NEA Foundation Global Learning Fellowship, public school educators develop the knowledge and skills to integrate global competency into their daily classroom instruction, advocate for global competency in their schools and districts, and help students to thrive in our increasingly interconnected world. Fellows transform their classrooms to give students a global perspective.

    Over the course of a year, NEA Foundation Global Learning Fellows immerse themselves in:

    • Ongoing workshops and webinars with global competency and education

    • Fellows’ independent study followed by group reflection and discussion

    • Group mentoring

    • A two-day in-person conference

    • Completion of a capstone project incorporating one or more of the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals into classroom instructions

    • A 10-day international field study to examine another country’s education system, culture, and historical context

    Described by many fellows as “transformative,” the international field study experience guides fellows through thoughtful investigation of the historical and cultural contexts of the country visited while they also learn about its education system.

    Fellows meet with policymakers, community and nonprofit leaders, educators, students, and school administrators. The NEA Foundation carefully selects field study destinations where fellows can forge fruitful relationships while deeply immersing themselves in a new environment. Previous field study destinations include Peru, China, Brazil, South Africa, and Costa Rica.

    Fellows emerge from the Global Learning Fellowship with a deeper appreciation for cultural differences, stronger perspective taking skills, and firsthand experience of another culture’s approach to education. Their experiences throughout the fellowship reinforce the importance of diversity, equity, and inclusion in meeting the needs of students and communities.

    Fellows also develop an informed understanding of what global competency looks like in the classroom, why it’s critical to incorporate it into their teaching practices, and how they can be advocates for global competency at their schools and districts. They establish meaningful relationships with fellows across the country, many maintained throughout their careers and lifetimes.

    Since its inception in 2011, more than 500 public school educators have participated in the Global Learning Fellowship. Fellows have come from all 50 states, teaching every subject, at every grade level, and at all stages of their teaching careers. For many past fellows, participating in the field study was their first time traveling abroad. The Global Learning Fellowship has expanded the horizons of fellows, their students, and their communities.

  • OOD Recognizes National Disability Employment Awareness Month with Hiring Events and Webinar

    OOD Recognizes National Disability Employment Awareness Month with Hiring Events and Webinar

    National Disability Employment Awareness Month (NDEAM) is observed every October to celebrate the contributions of America’s workers with disabilities and promote inclusive employment practices. This year’s theme, “Access to Good Jobs for All,” underscores the importance of ensuring workers with disabilities have access to quality employment opportunities throughout the year. Opportunities for Ohioans with Disabilities (OOD) is spearheading the state’s efforts to highlight the benefits of hiring individuals with disabilities and facilitating meaningful employment connections.

    “Ohio is the heart of opportunity and the heart of prosperity, and that includes individuals with disabilities. Every Ohioan should have access to a good job and a path toward economic success,” said Ohio Governor Mike DeWine. “National Disability Employment Awareness Month is a reminder of the diverse talents and contributions people with disabilities bring to our workforce. This year, I challenge more businesses to participate in OOD’s upcoming hiring events and webinars and learn how they can be a part of creating opportunities for all Ohioans to reach their full potential.”

    Kevin L. Miller, OOD Director, emphasized the agency’s commitment to this goal: “Our mission goes beyond a single month; we are dedicated to creating lasting employment opportunities for Ohioans with disabilities year-round, fostering workplaces where everyone can thrive and contribute meaningfully.”

    Throughout October, OOD will host hiring events across Ohio, providing individuals with disabilities unique opportunities to connect directly with employers seeking to build inclusive workforces. These events aim to foster relationships that lead to long-term, quality employment.

    Additionally, OOD will offer a free webinar for employers titled “Building an Inclusive Apprenticeship Program” on October 16 at 10 a.m. This session will explore the benefits of inclusive apprenticeships, discuss reasonable accommodations, and highlight resources supporting these initiatives. More information, including the link to join, can be found on OOD’s webinar webpage.

  • Polling Location Change in Symmes Township

    Polling Location Change in Symmes Township

    Symmes Township, Ohio – If you plan to vote in person during the November election and vote at the Symmes Township Library (Precinct H), your new temporary voting venue will be at the Symmes Township Safety Services Center. The Board of Elections selected the site while the new library is under construction.

  • Loveland Symmes Fire Department Hosting Open House

    Loveland Symmes Fire Department Hosting Open House

    Symmes Township, Ohio – The Loveland Symmes Fire Department will be hosting an open house for fire prevention month on Wednesday, October 9th at the Symmes Safety Services Center from 6 until 8 PM. Children will get a tour of the safety equipment with the firefighters and Hamilton County Sheriff officers, and learn more about fire safety in the homes. There will also be lots more fun on site with a bounce house and refreshments.

  • Symmes Township Parks Levy on the November ballot

    Symmes Township Parks Levy on the November ballot

    Symmes Township, Ohio – Symmes Township Trustees have voted to place a .5 mill levy on the November ballot. The proposed levy will generate $477,000 each year for the next 5 years (2025-2029) and cost an additional $18.00 per $100,000 of valuation per residence.

    The levy will be used to pay for capital improvements to all township parks.

  • Harrison Hentz, Carter Lucas, Benjamin Tibbs, and Adam Yesso are Loveland High School National Merit Commended students

    Harrison Hentz, Carter Lucas, Benjamin Tibbs, and Adam Yesso are Loveland High School National Merit Commended students

    Loveland, Ohio – National Merit Commended students from Loveland High School Class of 2025 are Harrison Hentz, Carter Lucas, Benjamin Tibbs, and Adam Yesso. National Merit Commended students are among the highest achievers in the country on the PSAT.

  • New Episode: The Queen City Sports Podcast by Chris Ball & Mark Raines

    New Episode: The Queen City Sports Podcast by Chris Ball & Mark Raines

    by Chris Ball

    Loveland, Ohio – The Bengals got their first win of the season! But there is little time to celebrate as they clash with their division rivals the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday. A lot is on the line, and Chris and Mark break it all down for you. Mark also analyzes what went wrong, and what went right for the Bearcats in their narrow loss against Texas Tech on Saturday. He also talks about how the Cats grade out going into their bye week. The guys also get to the bottom of just what happened on that Minnesota onside kick at the end of the Wolverines’ win last week, and delve into whether Michigan will ever be able to solve their quarterback issues.

     

    Have a listen and don’t forget to leave your comments and feedback!

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    Christopher Ball is a longtime Loveland resident and an attorney. He graduated from Loveland High School in 2003 and was a member of the football team before going on to become a coach’s assistant at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana. He has been following and rooting for the Reds and Bengals since the early 1990s and has been through the many ups and downs that fandom has wrought over the years.