The state will now avoid a lengthier fight over a mandated redraw of boundaries for the 15 members of Congress from Ohio.
        
        
            
                Latest Headlines
    
- Northeast Ohio food banks, pantries prepare for surge in need
- Judge gives Trump administration until Monday to have a plan for SNAP benefits
- Cuyahoga County officials, businesses donate $625k to help fill some gaps from lost SNAP benefits
- Shopping for ACA health plans this open enrollment? Here's what to know
- Ghost stories of ‘The Shawshank Redemption’ prison live on in Mansfield
Editors' Picks
    
 
We'll talk to a national advocate and a leader from Cleveland's Joseph & Mary's Home about the challenges people experiencing homelessness face, and the organizations serving them.
            
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                        Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine has been battling to ban micro prop bets, which are wagers on specific actions athletes take during a game.
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                        Forgotten cemeteries could be anywhere; beneath grocery stores, gas stations, even your home or office where you’re reading this right now. Here's the story of cemeteries lost to urban sprawl in Cuyahoga County.
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                        A therapy developed by University Hospitals to prevent leg amputations in people with poor circulation continues to be effective two years later, according to a recent study.
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                        We asked readers whether young Americans today can still have a better life than their parents. They responded with stories of economic hardship and growing disillusionment with leaders in Washington.
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                        A Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine analysis finds that starting estrogen therapy during perimenopause may be as safe as beginning it after menopause, showing no increased risk of breast cancer, heart attack, or stroke.
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                        Buckingham Palace said the king's brother will be known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and not as a prince, and he will move from his Royal Lodge residence into "private accommodation."
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                        Both candidates have never held elected office but are no strangers to city council. Wilson and Reynolds are community activists who are frequent attendees of council meetings.
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                        A Boston federal judge suggested she was not persuaded by the Trump administration's argument that it is legally barred from using a USDA emergency fund to keep the SNAP benefits coming.
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                        NPR alleges that CPB unlawfully yanked away a planned three-year contract worth $36 million in the face of intense pressure from the White House to sever ties with the radio network.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
