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Ohio nonprofits are getting millions of dollars from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott's organization Yield Giving, according to Lever for Change.. Out of 6,000 applicants, 361 groups nationwide were ...
Michael A. Cicconetti (born 1951) is a retired Municipal Court judge who presided in Painesville, Lake County, Ohio, United States, dispensing a unique brand of what he calls creative justice. The judge often left the choice of penalty to the defendant, who was faced with spending time in jail or undergoing one of Cicconetti's unusual ...
In 2006, ODJFS took away the license for Lifeway For Youth, a nonprofit Christian-based placement agency, due to the death of a 3-year-old boy. [7] Barbara Riley, then the director of ODJFS, questioned "how the private placement agency Lifeway for Youth, Butler County Children Services, and her own department failed the boy."
Tragically, a fatal incident occurred involving Marion County Deputy William Bender, who lost his life in a collision with a truck while responding to the pursuit of escapees. [8] In the context of these events, the valor exhibited by Ohio Highway Patrol Capt. J. J. Fuenkamp during a particular escape incident garnered recognition. Capt.
A Goodwill Columbus thrift shop and learning center will have to relocate after the Franklin County Commissioners agreed to sell two county Board of Developmental Disabilities buildings for a ...
State lawmakers are looking to send millions in capital project money to Stark County to fund universities, parks and a new youth jail. A total of $3.5 billion will be invested in capital projects ...
The Lebanon Correctional Institution is a prison in the United States operated by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction in Warren County's Turtlecreek Township, about four miles west of Lebanon and two miles east of Monroe and about 32 miles north of Cincinnati, Ohio on State Route 63.
The Franklin County Jail was a county jail building in Columbus, Ohio, administered by the Franklin County government. The building opened in 1889 and was in use until August 1971. At that time, the jail was moved to a new facility, part of the Franklin County Government Center. The 1889 structure was demolished two months later.