The bill doesn’t adjust the income tax rate for Ohioans who make anywhere between $26,700 and $102,400, since they already fall within that 2.75% bracket.
There’s a saying that cash is king. And one state lawmaker has a bill to keep it that way, or at least ensure it’s an option in Ohio.
Students at Ursuline College navigate an uncertain future. A perfect storm of rising costs and enrollment challenges has some small private colleges in Ohio, and across the country, facing an ...
The Ohio Senate has resurrected a proposal that overhauls the state’s relatively young recreational marijuana program, ...
Ohio's Dave Yost has joined 18 other Republican state attorneys general in demanding Costco get rid of their DEI policies.
The bill backed by lawmakers would establish a new program with the state and employers to help Ohio parents with child care ...
The Great Lakes are losing winter days — about 14 per decade, according to a recent study published in the Environmental Research Letters. Winters on the Great Lakes are getting shorter. A recent ...
President Trump froze funds Tuesday for some loans and grants while his administration reviews whether those purposes line up ...