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What you need to know Thursday, May 12, 2022

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WEATHER

 

The summerlike weather continues today, with sunny skies and highs in the low 80s. It will remain clear overnight with a low around 60 degrees. Read more

 

MLB: Guardians at Chicago White Sox, postponed

 

OVERNIGHT

 

Health disparities: University Hospitals CEO Dr. Cliff Megerian,Cleveland Clinic Chief of Staff Dr. Beri Ridgeway and MetroHealth CEO Akram Boutros on Wednesday stressed the importance of collaboration for solving the region’s health disparities. Julie Washington reports that as part of the 2022 Accelerating Health Equity Conference, they said they were collaborating on issues including lead poisoning, infant mortality, maternal health, food deserts and more. 

 

TODAY IN OHIO 

The Ohio State Board of Education chose its former vice president to oversee the state’s 1.7 million students as superintendent of public instruction. We’re talking about Steve Dackin, who resigned from the board and applied for the job three days later, on Today in Ohio, cleveland.com’s daily half-hour news podcast. 

 

STATEHOUSE & POLITICS 

Marijuana legalization: A coalition that wants to legalize recreational marijuana in Ohio filed a 129-page lawsuit against a handful of state officials in hopes that a Franklin County judge will allow voters to decide the cannabis question at the polls in November. Laura Hancock reports state officials argued that lawmakers and voters shouldn’t act on the proposed initiated statute until 2023.

 

Abortion bill: The U.S. Senate on Wednesday rejected legislation adopted by the U.S. House of Representatives that would codify the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision by blocking governments from restricting access to abortion services. Sabrina Eaton reports the 49-51 vote was no surprise, but Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer of New York promised to put his colleagues on the record after a leaked draft of a pending U.S. Supreme Court decision revealed the court is likely to overturn the landmark decision that legalized abortion.

Filibuster end: U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan, Ohio’s Democratic Senate nominee, has joined more than 100 other House Democrats in calling to end the filibuster rule to pass a federal law protecting abortion rights in the face of the possible overturning of Roe v. Wade. Andrew Tobias reports Ryan signed on to the letter to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer calling for the end to the filibuster, which will allow Senate Republicans to block any abortion-related legislation.  

 

METRO 

Police review: Cleveland has received 281 applications for the 13-member body that will have final say on police discipline, among other broad civilian oversight powers of police. Now the city must sort through the applications and determine who to nominate to the panel, reports Courtney Astolfi. Mayor Justin Bibb will nominate 10 of the applicants, City Council will nominate three and all will go to council for confirmation. 

 

Opioids trial: Programs and services needed to reverse the opioid epidemic in Lake and Trumbull counties are extensive and urgently needed, a Johns Hopkins epidemiologist testified Wednesday in the penalty phase of the first opioid trial against pharmacy companies in the country. Caleb Alexander’s testimony came during the second day of the penalty phase of a trial in Cleveland federal court that pits the two counties against national pharmacy chains CVS, Walgreens and Walmart, Adam Ferrise reports.

 

Smart buoys: Smart buoys that have become an important source of data for Cleveland Water and other organizations that monitor Lake Erie were redeployed Wednesday. Peter Krouse reports the four buoys, which were taken into the lake by boat from Edgewater Marina, use marine-sensing technology to measure wind, waves, water temperature, and water quality every 10 minutes and then post the data online. 

 

Cruise ships: For the first time in more than two-and-a-half years, a cruise ship docked at the Port of Cleveland, and visitors disembarked to explore the Land. Cruisers first had to clear customs in the port’s new customs clearance facility, located a couple of hundred feet from the water, just west of FirstEnergy Stadium. Susan Glaser reports Cleveland is expected to welcome 36 cruise ships this year, up from 22 in 2019.

 

Mutual aid: A recent Brooklyn hotel fire highlighted suburbs’ reliance on mutual aid. Olivia Mitchell reports that the number of firefighters continue to drop through retirements and departments struggle to find new hires.

 

County vehicle: State authorities are investigating allegations that Medina County Treasurer John Burke sold a county-owned vehicle to a dealership, a move that county commissioners called a violation of Ohio law. Commissioners say the car was later transferred to Burke’s son, And last week, Kaylee Remington reports, they asked the Medina County prosecutor’s office to refer information to the Ohio Attorney General’s Office, which turned the case over to its Bureau of Criminal Investigation. 

 

BUSINESS 

Carvana: Amid a difficult used car market, Carvana has announced it is laying off 2,500 people across the company and “transitioning” away from its inspection center in Euclid. Sean McDonnell reports the company announced the mass layoff in an SEC filing on Tuesday, attributing it to declining profits on used-vehicles sales. Carvana only sells used vehicles, which have risen in value but have been hard to find amid the COVID-19 pandemic for both dealerships and drivers.

 

Lordstown Motors: Lordstown Motors announced that is has closed on a deal with Foxconn to sell its former GM plant to the Taiwanese manufacturer, Sean McDonnell reports. Foxconn will now manufacture Lordstown’s Endurance pickup truck and take on hundreds of the automaker’s employees.

 

CRIME 

4-year-old murder: A Euclid man and woman have been charged with murder in the death of 4-year-old son, Musiah Wadud. Kaylee Remington reports the Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner said Musiah’s death was caused by blunt impacts to his head, neck and buttocks. Three other young children were removed from the home by Cuyahoga County’s Department of Child and Family Services.

 

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 

Blue Agave: Blue Agave, a new taco and tequila concept, is now open on Cleveland’s busy East 4th Street district in the former Zocalo space. Annie Nickoloff reports the restaurant comes from the partnership of restaurant owners behind other Mexican restaurants in Northeast Ohio, including Tres Potrillos, Tito’s Mexican Grill, Tacologist, Blue Habanero and Fiesta Jalapeno’s. 

OTHER HEADLINES

Shooting in Lorain leaves 1 dead, wounds another Read more

 

Cleveland man is shot to death in city’s South Broadway neighborhood Read more

 

Cleveland police investigate deadly shooting on city’s East Side Read more

 

Ohio man who hid fentanyl in dog’s collar gets 13 years in prison Read more

 

Derby-winning rider sidelined 4 days after Ohio stewards suspend him Read more

 

Murray Hill Market brings together Little Italy community -- and beyond Read more

 

Orange School District sees uptick in COVID-19 cases; families to be kept updated Read more

 

Richmond Heights council votes to opt out of state law, prohibit fireworks use Read more

 

Fairview Park asks artistic residents to submit entries for annual recycling calendar Read more

 

North Olmsted school and city leaders discuss safety; district allowing police access to real-time video Read more

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