Month: April 2025

  • House budget document will hurt Ohioans

    House budget document will hurt Ohioans

    Ohio House Speaker Matt Huffman. (Photo by Morgan Trau, WEWS.)

    by Marilou Johanek – Ohio Capital Journal

    Just as Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) was never really about improving government efficiency – quite the opposite, in fact – the 5,000-plus page biennial budget rewrite the Ohio House slapped together and sent to the Ohio Senate was never really about improving the common good of everyday Ohioans.

    It was about advancing the hard-right priorities of powerful politicians who answer to big money – not constituents in gerrymandered voting districts.   

    Yet even for the supremely arrogant kingpin of state government, Ohio House Speaker Matt Huffman, the budget bill passed out of the General Assembly’s lower chamber on April 9 was beyond the pale in cruelty and cunning.

    It is the Ohio version of Project 2025 with all the unsparing, exacting hallmarks of the Trumpian blueprint, recklessly destroying federal institutions and agencies that, however imperfectly, protect, serve and promote the welfare of we, the people.

    But that’s the MAGA nihilistic way and Ohio Republicans are doing their part in tearing down what made Ohio great. Huffman, the Lima Republican who runs the state under the one party rule he rigged with unconstitutional redistricting, is in the catbird seat calling the shots. The speaker (and former Ohio Senate president) lords over the GOP supermajority in the Ohio House while his political protégé, Ohio Senate President Rob McColley, accommodates the boss.

    Huffman, who once said the quiet part out loud about GOP gerrymandering (“We can kind of do what we want”), now has a straight runway to enact his blueprint on Ohioans whether they like it or not. I suspect his budget proposal will survive, largely intact, with the House caucus he controls and the one he led with an iron fist for four years in the Senate.

    Local public schools, public libraries, clean drinking initiatives, lead poisoning prevention, pediatric cancer funding, home visits for new mothers, food assistance programs and health care coverage for the poor are all on the chopping block in Huffman’s House Bill 96.

    What wasn’t on his slash-and-burn budget list were government handouts (taxpayer-funded vouchers) to upper-income private school families. But doling out unlimited government subsidies to the affluent, whose darlings are already attending and affording elite high schools and religious institutions, is Huffman’s thing.

    He is on a crusade to shower hundreds of millions of public education dollars on unaccountable private and predominantly religious schools – despite clear prohibitions against such a diversion of public money in the Ohio Constitution.

    “No religious or other sect, or sects, shall ever have any exclusive right to, or control of, any part of the school funds of this state,” the state constitution reads.

    But Huffman has defied the state constitution before with impunity (on gerrymandering) and did so again by ramrodding his universal voucher bonanza through the legislature for everyone, regardless of income. Never mind that the giant state giveaway – to offset private school costs for the well-off – blew a $1 billion dollar hole in the general revenue budget its first year.

    Never mind that public schools in the state, forever cash-strapped and dependent on tapped out property owners, labored under an unequal, inadequate school funding formula (ruled unconstitutional by the Ohio Supreme Court) for 26 years before a bipartisan coalition agreed to a phased-in funding solution over six years. The final two-year phase was expected to be fully funded in the current biennial budget negotiations.

    Not under Huffman. Not in a state where the Republican lock on power is absolute and the Statehouse heavyweight has free, unchecked rein to flout the law and grossly defund the public schools that educate the vast majority of Ohio students (approximately 1.6 million) while greatly expanding appropriations for private school tuitions, homeschooling expenses and even unchartered, nonpublic schools with deeply held religious beliefs that are virtually unregulated by the state!

    Funding for the “thorough and efficient system of common schools” state government is constitutionally obligated to secure – and that would have been secured under the Fair School Funding Plan from 2021 – shrank by over $400 million. House Republicans added insult to injury by robbing fiscally prudent school districts of surplus revenue for future planning to give uneven, one-time property tax relief in some districts and not others. They also ensured that property tax owners will face more school levies from local districts forced to deplete that surplus operating revenue. Sound policymaking (or genuine property tax relief) this is not.

    But it is a gut punch to public schools, just as a $100 million reduction in funding to Ohio’s public libraries is, or cutting over $22 million from the Help Me Grow program is for in-home visits to newborn babies to mitigate the state’s infant mortality problem. But Matt Huffman’s Ohio-centric Project 2025 is also a kick in the teeth to democratic self-governance.

    Last budget go-around Republican lawmakers stripped the Ohio Board of Education of most of its power and gave it to the governor. This two-year budget proposes cutting all 11 elected members of the board and shrinking the gubernatorial appointments from nine to five. This is Matt Huffman removing voters entirely from state education policy as he engineers total opaque privatization of Ohio schools.

    How is silencing the electorate improving the common good?


    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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  • Eight LHS students honored at Fine Arts Signing Day

    Eight LHS students honored at Fine Arts Signing Day

    Photos by Loveland Schools

    Loveland, Ohio – Loveland High School celebrated Fine Arts Signing Day on Tuesday.

    Cameran Cook, Brooke Morris, Luke Jacobs – Media Production at the University of Cincinnati
    Keally Hubbell – Social Work and Art Therapy at Ohio University
    Emily Hahn – Digital Media Communication at UC Blue Ash
    Piper Schaeffer – Fine Arts at the University of Tennessee
    Erin O’Neill – Jazz Trombone Performance at Oberlin College
    Ethan Shepherd – Theater Arts at Long Island University
    ______________
  • Ohio University to close Pride Center, Women’s Center and Multicultural Center due to new law

    Ohio University to close Pride Center, Women’s Center and Multicultural Center due to new law

    Alumni Gateway at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. (Stock photo from Getty Images.)

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    Ohio University will close the Pride Center, the Women’s Center and the Multicultural Center in response to a new higher education law banning diversity efforts that takes effect this summer, the university president announced Tuesday.

    OU will sunset the Division of Diversity and Inclusion — which includes those three centers — “over the next several weeks,” Ohio University President Lori Stewart Gonzalez said in a statement.

    GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

     

    There is no definitive date for when the division or the centers will close, but the centers will not be open beyond when the law takes effect on June 23, according to university spokesperson Dan Pittman.

    “Work managed by the division that remains within the law will be moved to other areas of the university,” the university said.

    State Sen. Jerry Cirino, R-Kirtland, introduced Senate Bill 1 at the end of January, it quickly passed both chambers and Gov. Mike DeWine signed it into law on March 28. Youngstown State University faculty are trying to get a referendum on the November ballot to block S.B. 1. The law affects Ohio’s public universities and community colleges.

    The new law will also prohibit faculty strikes, regulate classroom discussion of “controversial” topics, create post-tenure reviews, put diversity scholarships at risk, create a retrenchment provision that blocks unions from negotiating on tenure, shorten university board of trustees terms from nine years down to six years, and require students take an American history course, among other things.

    “We must continue to ensure every person we invite to be a part of our university community finds their place here and develops connections,” Gonzalez said in her letter to the university. “Without forgetting that essential commitment, we must also follow the law.”

    All employee positions within the Division of Diversity and Inclusion will be eliminated. The three centers have eight full-time staffers, according to their websites. The centers also have student workers.

    “Employees will continue in their current roles for the next several weeks and will be given the opportunity to interview for any open university position for which they apply and meet minimum qualifications,” Gonzalez said.

    Employees who don’t continue to work at OU will receive full separation benefits, according to the university.

    Support for the university’s Templeton, Urban, Appalachian, and Margaret Boyd Scholars programs will move under the Honors Tutorial College.

    Ohio University’s Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine’s Office of Inclusion will also close because of the new law.

    The university said it will be reaching out to students, faculty and staff for their input on inclusion and belonging moving forward.

    “I want to be clear that the task ahead for all of us is not to look for ways to recreate the same approaches under a different name,” Gonzalez said. “Rather, the charge is to invent something new that meets the moment and delivers results for our students.”

    The Capital Journal previously reported on how OU student Audrey Ansel has been preparing for Ohio University’s Pride Center to likely close as a result of the law.

    This comes as Ohio’s public universities are in the midst of figuring out how the controversial law affects them. The University of Toledo recently announced they are suspending nine undergraduate programs in response to S.B. 1.

    Follow Capital Journal Reporter Megan Henry on Bluesky.


    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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  • “Women Working”, a program series on equity, from the Women of Grailville

    “Women Working”, a program series on equity, from the Women of Grailville

    Loveland, Ohio – A group of Women called the “Women of Grailville” formed close to 2 years ago and are both Grail members and friends who love and are committed to re-energizing Grail-related works and projects at Grailville. Earlier this year they held the “Hope Weekend, Hope for the Flowers” event.

    Nicole (Nicky) Westrick is a member of the group and is spearheading an series: “Women Working”, a program series on equity, from the Women of Grailville.

    The first “Women Working” event is May 31, from 7 until 830 PM at the Grailville Oratory. This premier is highlighting Women Working in Music.

    Please note the subsequent events list on the poster.

  • Your invitation to Cardinal Land Conservancy’s 2nd Annual Meeting

    Your invitation to Cardinal Land Conservancy’s 2nd Annual Meeting

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    Loveland, Ohio – You’re invited to Cardinal Land Conservancy’s 2nd Annual Meeting! It is a celebration of our community’s commitment to local conservation and provides a space for members to gather, ask questions, and learn what new, exciting projects are coming down the pipeline.

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    Cardinal now has a very big presence in the City of Loveland after their recent acquisition of 89 acres of the historic Grailville site. (Read more)

    This year’s Annual Meeting will be our second annual dinner and fundraiser! Light bites and beverages will be provided by our venue (Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Gardens) as well as a cash/card bar option, and we will have a catalog of items for our silent auction.

    When: Tuesday May 27, 2025 from 6:00 pm to 9:00 pm (US/Eastern)

    Where: Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Gardens Parking, 3427 Vine Street, Lot A, Cincinnati, OH 45222

    Sponsorship options are available. We hope to see you at this exciting night with you!
    This is our opportunity to show you what your support has helped us achieve over the last year. It is a celebration of your commitment to local conservation and provides a space for members to gather, ask questions, and learn what new, exciting projects are coming down the pipeline.

    REGISTER

    “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.” -Margaret Mead
  • 12th Annual Loveland Food Truck Rally is Saturday, May 10

    12th Annual Loveland Food Truck Rally is Saturday, May 10

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    Saturday, May 10, 2025, from 12 PM to 8 PM

    Loveland, Ohio – The 12th Annual Loveland Food Truck Rally is rolling back into town—bigger and better than ever! Join us on Saturday, May 10, 2025, from 12 PM to 8 PM at Shopper’s Haven Plaza (597 Loveland-Madeira Rd.) for an unforgettable day of delicious eats, family fun, and community spirit—all with free admission!

    Enjoy a wide selection of food from 30 food trucks offering something for everyone. Beverages will be available for purchase, including beer, wine, seltzers, soda, and water while enjoying live music to keep party vibes going all day and into the evening.

    But that’s not all—join forces with the Loveland Police Department as we stuff-a-truck with non-perishable donations for the Loveland LIFE Food Pantry. And for the little ones, there’s a jam-packed children’s area featuring inflatables, face painting, and more excitement!

    Additionally, we will be kicking Fentanyl to the Curb with beverage tips Supporting the Do it for Jack Foundation.

    The food truck rally kicks off at 12:00 PM with local performances from Premier Tumbling & Dance, then the one and only Naked Karate Girls take the stage and get the party started at 1:00PM. Stay and play and catch the Counting Skeletons rockin us through the evening until close at 8:00PM. If you can’t get enough, swing by for a take-out order to enjoy the flavor fest at home!

    Be sure to enjoy the Children’s Zone play area and bring along your pet for the NEW Pet Zone complete with a water station and treats!

    Best of all, entrance is free, and you can indulge in mouthwatering eats priced at just $6-$10 per item.

    Food trucks in attendance:

    Adena’s Beefstroll
    Best Thing Smokin
    Big Dogs Pizza
    Cheese N Chong
    Chef Shack Food Truck
    City Belle Fried Pies
    Daizie’s Dillas
    Dine-In Hawaiian
    El Cardenal taqueria
    FolksNMotionLLC
    Funnel Vision
    Graeter’s Ice Cream
    Just Jerks
    Kabobske
    Kona Ice of NE Cincinnati
    Lazy Dogs
    MamaBear’s Mac
    Maw Maw’s Creole Kitchen
    Nou Street Food
    Off The Hook
    Quad Que BBQ
    Quite Frankly LLC
    Red sesame korean bbq
    S.E.A. Cuisine Ohio LLC
    Schmidt’s Sausage Truck
    Steak It Eazy
    Streetpops
    Sweets & Meats BBQ
    The Cheesecakery
    Twisted Greek

     

    Schedule of events:

    12pm-1pm: Premier Dance & Tumbling

    1pm -4pm: Naked Karate Girls

    4:30-8pm: Counting Skeletons

    The event is currently at capacity for food truck vendors. Parking is available at the Primary School across the street and in the Goodwill lot just a block from the event.

    For more information visit www.lmrchamberalliance.org or call our office at 513-683-1544.

  • Loveland students Ava Pursley and Leah Naylor are finalists in Caring for Our Watersheds contest

    Loveland students Ava Pursley and Leah Naylor are finalists in Caring for Our Watersheds contest

    Loveland, Ohio – Ava Pursley and Leah Naylor, students in the Loveland City School District are finalists in the Caring for Our Watersheds contest. They wrote and illustrated a children’s book, coloring it with natural paints they made themselves. At the end of the book, they include a link with instructions so readers can make their own paints.

    Some copies will be donated to teachers for classroom libraries, and one will be placed in the public library.

    Ava and Leah talk about their book in the YouTube video below.

    You can also enjoy the story and share it with your children through their read-aloud video below on YouTube.

    They also (below) share how to make your own paints using natural plants.

    Ava and Leah hope their book inspires you to make a positive impact on the environment.

    [pdf-embedder url=”https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/How-to-Create-Your-Own-Paints-.pdf” title=”How to Create Your Own Paints!”]

    About the Caring for Our Watersheds contest”

    Turning ideas into
    environmental solutions

    CARING FOR OUR WATERSHEDS is an education program that engages students in preserving and improving their local watersheds through student-led solutions.

    This program is curriculum-based and an excellent way to bring project-based learning to the classroom. Plus, students and their schools can win cash-prizes!

    In 2024, Reese, Heather, and Maggie from Loveland High School noticed the lack of environmental education in their community, particularly awareness of invasive plant species around their  school’s nature area. To address this, they created a deck of playing cards featuring environmental facts, tips, and simple sustainable actions. Each suit focuses on a unique topic: spades cover invasive species and native alternatives; hearts share sustainable living tips; clubs highlight recyclable items; and diamonds offer sustainable recipes, like utilizing locally available ingredients, to help lower your carbon footprint.

    The students distributed these educational cards for free at their school, local farmers’ markets, community locations, and successfully had them displayed in local restaurants including Tano Bistro. Continue reading

  • Join the Loveland High School Student Athletic Leadership Team’s Relay for Life

    Join the Loveland High School Student Athletic Leadership Team’s Relay for Life

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland High School Student Athletic Leadership Team (SALT) has launched their Relay for Life in support of the American Cancer Society. Their goal is to raise $20,000. Follow this link to make a donation to support the students in this effort or purchase a luminaria bag to dedicate to someone who has battled or is battling cancer.

    Relay for Life will be taking place on May 9, 2025, at the high school track. Questions? Contact Brian Baugh at baughbr@lovelandschools.org.

  • Analysis shows universal pre-K in Ohio would repay its costs almost fourfold

    Analysis shows universal pre-K in Ohio would repay its costs almost fourfold

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    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    A paper issued last month by Scioto Analysis concluded that every dollar spent on universal pre-K in Ohio would produce $3.80 in benefits.

    Unsurprisingly, most of that benefit comes in the form of greater future earnings of kids who attend pre-K and then show up to kindergarten prepared to learn, the analysis said.

    “Seven dollars of every $10 of benefits generated by a universal prekindergarten program come from future labor market earnings of children,” Scioto Analysis Principal Rob Moore said in a written statement accompanying the report. “According to the evidence we have, universal prekindergarten could be a strong long-term economic development investment for Ohio.”

    The Ohio state government doesn’t fund universal pre-K. Some cities, including Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dayton, and Toledo, have funded pre-K programs that are less than universal.

    Head Start is a federal pre-K program, but in Ohio and most other states, eligibility is generally restricted to families living at or below federal poverty guidelines. For a family of four, that’s less than $42,000 a year.

    The Scioto Analysis report cited research showing that universal pre-K can benefit kids from middle-income families almost as much as it does those from poor ones.

    In Ohio, 57% of three and four-year-olds were enrolled in pre-K in 2022. Using the Washington State Institute for Public Policy’s benefit-cost analysis of universal prekindergarten, the Scioto Analysis report modeled the impact on the economy if 71% of Ohio’s preschoolers went to prekindergarten.

    It found that adding 29,000 Ohio kids to the program would benefit the economy by cutting the time kids would later spend repeating grades, in prison, or needing special education. But by far and away, the biggest benefit was in kids’ future earnings.

    “This benefit occurs because children develop essential cognitive and social skills during prekindergarten which lead to higher academic achievement and better job prospects,” the report said.

    In its draft of the biennial budget, the Republican leadership of the Ohio House has been generous to the state’s wealthiest interests.

     

    GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

     

    The billionaire Haslam family wants $600 million to move the Browns out of downtown Cleveland and into a new stadium in Brook Park. House Finance Committee Chairman Brian Stewart, R-Ashville, built that funding into the budget, calling it “a once-in-a-lifetime project.” He added that new stadiums are “huge economic drivers.”

    However, most economists who have studied them would disagree.

    They say stadiums by and large don’t create new spending. Instead, they shift existing discretionary spending from one part of a regional economy to another, experts say

    “The empirical evidence shows repeatedly that stadium subsidies fail to generate new tax revenue and new jobs or attract new businesses,” the Tax Foundation said in an October report. “While attending a sporting event or a concert in a new, publicly subsidized venue might benefit fans of the team or those who attend the event, those subsidies shift spending that would have occurred in other parts of the city or state in the absence of a new sports stadium or arena.”

    Meanwhile, by developing intellectual capital, public education provides multifaceted benefits to the economy, experts say.

    “Research shows that individuals who graduate and have access to quality education throughout primary and secondary school are more likely to find gainful employment, have stable families, and be active and productive citizens,” Dana Mitra of Pennsylvania State University said in a research report. “They are also less likely to commit serious crimes, less likely to place high demands on the public health care system, and less likely to be enrolled in welfare assistance programs.”

    However that may be, the Ohio House budget would slash funding for public education far below what’s called for under a 2021 plan to make it sufficient to meet the requirements of the Ohio Constitution.

    The Fair School Funding Plan calls for $666 million in new spending on public education. The Republican House budget would provide only $226 million.


    Marty Schladen
    Marty Schladen

    Marty Schladen has been a reporter for decades, working in Indiana, Texas and other places before returning to his native Ohio to work at The Columbus Dispatch in 2017. He’s won state and national journalism awards for investigations into utility regulation, public corruption, the environment, prescription drug spending and other matters.

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

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  • “It is a party! It’s Spring! ” by Elizabeth (Schickel) Robinson

    “It is a party! It’s Spring! ” by Elizabeth (Schickel) Robinson

    Poppies from Armand and White Iris from Becky, photo © Elizabeth Robinson

    I am grateful to share my Natural Wonderings/Wanderings. I write them as time and spirit allow. The idea and title were conceived one day many years ago when exploring outside with my young family. It would be quite a few years more before I began writing them in 2008. There are many connecting points over the years in observations of nature, life, and seasons. One for me is a strong sense of home-place, specifically in our little corner of the world here, in Southwestern Ohio. This sense of place helps carry interrelatedness over time and retains a comforting, familiar thread over endless variations within the cycle of nature and life.

    _______________

    In latest winter, when the world is gray, my spirit longs for sun and spring. Grace arrives with snowdrops nosing up through blotchy snow, and soon, tiniest blue flowers, like wishes come true, sprinkling the greening grasses.

    In the parade of spring, thin green blade-like leaves herald the timid crocus. getting bolder in the gathering light, beginning to show off spring colors of lavender, white, and yellow. The forsythia blooms butter yellow. Stepping into the dance,  the daffodils and sweet-smelling jonquils, colors ranging from salmon to white to the brightest yellow. I like to name them, fun names like Sweet Smiles and Pipit.

    My flowers give added joy by reminding me of the gardening friends who gifted me.  Here are Iris from Becky, Woodland Poppies from Cindi, and ferns from brother-in-law Kurt.

    Sometimes, I covet the brightest fire engine red, and nothing shouts “ red” like red tulips. The clumps of 5 -10 planted around the yard last fall don’t disappoint. These make my heart ache, their beauty reminds me of my mother, who loved red and wore it so well.

    In the spring shade garden, spring marches on.  Pink Bleeding Heart is sending its perfect packet of flowers in greeting beneath a single sky blue Virginia Bluebell.  Pushing up from the ground and unfurling are a host of Hosta.  Lining my basement steps, Solomon’s Seal quietly exhibits nodding, shy little white bells that march in neat rows up the underside of stems. In shadiest corners, ferns are beginning to unwind their tight little green balls as the False Forget Me Nots are sending up whorls of heavenly blue. Creeping low, is Wild Ginger with perfect, heart-shaped leaves. I will keep an eye out for its unusual blossom, spotted brownish red, and hugging the ground so close it is hidden unless you know to look.

    Where the sun is more plentiful, Iris are sending up stately buds.  In late April, the first one, deep purple, has bloomed. What is it about Iris?  They have presence and class, like ladies of a certain age, elegantly dressed and perfectly accessorized.  Nearby,  the Poppies are sending up Egyptian-looking shoots wth curving, graceful necks and bobbing fuzzy oval grey green buds. Poppy flowers are garden standouts, in the brightest orange, large and fragile, their petals resembling crinkly crepe paper.. They look so fine paired with the tall, lovely, brilliant, white Iris.  Did I mention their smell?  Please! Stick your nose right in one and inhale the freshness of springtime, with a definite hint of lemon.

    A new Iris, gleaned from a friendly, roadside gardener,  bloomed sunset orange this year. For two springs, I have patiently waited for it to grow strong enough to flower.  For just such occasions, I carry a small shovel in my car for roadside stops.  I hear memories of my kids’ voices,  “mom,  are you allowed to do that?

    My garden gives me buckets of delight and beauty that is a pure gift from God, helped along by neighborly friends.

    It rained yesterday. The bright orange Poppy petals litter the sidewalk like crepe paper after a party.

    It is a party!   It’s Spring! 

    ___________________

    Elizabeth (Schickel) Robinson has always lived in Loveland, married and raised a family here. Family, faith, service, community and creativity are most important to her. She is an artist driven to notice and bring beauty to others including creating commissioned works of art for hospitals and churches. She cares about our culture and wants to build opportunities for community and connection to God, each other and creation. She recently retired as a Registered Nurse at Cincinnati Children’s where she was privileged to care for patients and their families. She strives to live with her eyes wide open, seeing the extraordinary in the ordinary in life and nature that surrounds her.