ONN Daily: Friday, December 9, 2022
COVID is still a virus to be wary of; U.S. Senator Rob Portman (R-Ohio) says goodbye; Toledo’s mayor releases his budget proposal for next year; Bengals QB Joe Burrow tries to figure out how to beat the Browns.
COVID is still a virus to be wary of; U.S. Senator Rob Portman (R-Ohio) says goodbye; Toledo’s mayor releases his budget proposal for next year; Bengals QB Joe Burrow tries to figure out how to beat the Browns.
Three Euclid brothers accused of stealing millions in Covid relief money from the government; Ohio Supreme Court sides with Ohio History Connection over Newark Earth Works case; US Senate passes Big Cat Public Safety Act to prevent incidents like
Medical experts are sounding the alarm about the high rate of flu infections and deaths; state lawmakers are trying to make swatting a more serious offense; Columbus Crew names new head coach; big changes are being made to the stadium where the
Preble County woman charged with murder for drowning her grandmother; Columbus City Council passes “common sense” gun control measure; Central Ohio measles outbreak now has 58 cases, 2 have had partial doses of MMR vaccine; OSU
Investigators try to determine cause of a fire in Kent’s oldest building; Ohio House working to decriminalize fentanyl test strips; OSU Buckeyes going to the Peach Bowl; Deshaun Watson booed in Houston.
Medina school bus driver facing charges for driving kids to school while under the influence of alcohol; new bill would boost Ohio’s minimum wage to $15; Deshaun Watson plays with the Browns for the first time this weekend; OU faces off
Jury finds George Wagner IV guilty on all counts in the Pike County massacre; Columbus measles outbreak continues to grow; Indiana’s AG wants to punish doctor who provided abortion for 10 year-old Ohio rape victim; College Football Playoff
Jury deliberates in the Pike County murder trial of George Wagner IV; Toledo’s city council votes to terminate city’s auditor; some of Deshaun Watson’s accusers plan to attend his first post-suspension game on Sunday; what the
Ohio State University’s president unexpectedly resigns; CDC staffers are now in Columbus investigating Measles outbreak; farmers in northwest Ohio considering a lawsuit over livestock killed by released mink; Columbus Air Show set to return
Gunfire shuts down Dayton’s holiday parade; murder trial of George Wagner IV set to resume in Pike County; the Cleveland Browns have a new, four-legged fan; what does Governor DeWine owe Michigan’s governor after the Buckeyes’