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Ohio Adjutant General's Department is in the executive branch of government in the State of Ohio concerned with the military forces of the State of Ohio in the United States of America. The Adjutant General has responsibility for the Ohio Army National Guard, the Ohio Air National Guard, the Ohio Naval Militia and the Ohio Military Reserve.
The Ohio National Guard comprises the Ohio Army National Guard and the Ohio Air National Guard. The commander-in-chief of the Ohio Army National Guard is the governor of the U.S. state of Ohio. If the Ohio Army National Guard is called to federal service, then the President of the United States becomes the commander-in-chief. [1]
Director of the Adjutant General's Department: Major General John C. Harris, Jr. Director of the Ohio Department of Administrative Services: Director Robert Blair; Director of the Ohio Department of Aging: Director Ursel J. McElroy; Director of the Ohio Department of Agriculture: Director Brian Baldridge
MG Wayt assumed the duties as the adjutant general, Joint Force Headquarters — Ohio on 1 July 2004. He was a member of the governor's cabinet and responsible for the command of the Ohio National Guard and the military readiness of the Ohio Militia.
The Ohio National Guard celebrated the second Freedom to Serve Campaign by sharing the stories of four Black Ohioans who served in the Civil War.
Also, for the first time state Adjutant Generals had a formal relationship with the War Department. These common sense reforms were to pay their first dividends in 1916 when Ohio National Guard units were mobilized to serve as part of Gen. John Pershing 's punitive expedition against Pancho Villa along the Mexican Border.
The daily administration of the state’s laws are carried out by six elected statewide officials; the chief executive the Governor, and their second in command the Lieutenant Governor, the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, the State Treasurer, the State Auditor, and by the staff and employees of the executive branch agencies.
President Joe Biden had highlighted the 10-year-old's case that Friday, at the signing of an executive order aimed at protecting access to abortion as restrictive state laws began to kick in.