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1990 Cuyahoga County Issue 2, a successful ballot measure to fund the Gateway Sports and Entertainment Complex; 2011 Ohio Issue 2, a successful ballot measure to repeal a law that limited collective bargaining for public employees in the state; 2017 Ohio Issue 2, an unsuccessful ballot measure to lower prescription drug prices
The Ohio Collective Bargaining Limit Repeal appeared on the November 8, 2011 general election ballot in the state of Ohio as a veto referendum.Senate Bill 5 (SB5) was repealed by Ohio voters after a campaign by firefighters, police officers and teachers against the measure, [1] which would have limited collective bargaining for public employees in the state.
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Although a master contract governs the general terms of employment that apply uniformly across the company or industry, master contracts often provide for local terms to be negotiated. [1] Some master contracts may also permit local or regional variations in order to meet special economic, competitive, or other circumstances for a union or ...
The Cuyahoga County Council is the legislative branch of the government of Cuyahoga County in Ohio. Cuyahoga, along with Summit, is one of only two of Ohio's 88 counties not governed by a three-member commission. The council and county executive position were created by means of a charter approved by the county's electorate on November 3, 2009 ...
After a widespread corruption scandal [2] was revealed, the voters of Cuyahoga County, which includes the City of Cleveland and 58 surrounding suburbs, voted to authorize a new form of county government on November 3, 2009. [3] The charter replaced three county commissioners with an executive and 11-member council.
Four large chimneys framed the building on the sides. This building, eventually called "the old court-house," filled all the requirements of county business until 1875. Ground was then purchased on Seneca Street (West 3rd St.), running back to the county jail on Rockwell street, and a contract let for a new court-house, at a cost of $250,000.