-
Today is Election Day, and there are some high-profile races on the ballot in Ohio; Akron-based FirstEnergy has agreed to refund customers of its three Ohio electric companies $306 million for collecting significantly excessive profits over a three-year period; unionized teachers in Akron are responding to an uptick in student violence and other disruptive behavior; and more stories.
-
Cleveland Clinic has filed a federal lawsuit claiming it’s among hospitals that received shipments of fake N-95 masks; proposed legislation in Ohio would prohibit children under 18 from getting some medical treatments for gender transitioning; FirstEnergy successor Energy Harbor has begun a hydrogen fuel project at its Davis-Besse nuclear plant in Northwest Ohio; and more stories.
-
The masking requirement is now set to expire Oct. 29, when the school board will review the policy and decide whether to extend it again.
-
And sometimes school board members are being threatened over what people think they are teaching.
-
While some school districts have moved to requiring masks, others have had to close schools because of ill workers.
-
But state leaders say they are not taking action to curtail off-label use of the drug ivermectin for now.
-
This decision comes after the FDA granted full approval to Pfizer's vaccine earlier this week.
-
Northeast Ohio students start returning to school this week, just as the delta variant has turned the state into a COVID-19 hotspot. Whether students will be required to wear masks in the classroom depends on which district they attend.
-
The Cleveland Metropolitan School District welcomed students into the classroom full-time on Monday, for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic started. For many parents and guardians who dropped off students after more than a year of remote learning, it was exciting to see their children greet old friends and teachers. However, with COVID-19 and the Delta variant looming, their joy and excitement was expressed through a twinkle in their eye, rather than a smile on their face, as they adhere to CMSD’s mask policy for all students, staff and visitors.
-
Nan Whaley says the governor has that power, even though a new law would allow legislators to vote to overturn it.