JOSH SWEIGART Editor of investigations and solutions journalism
Good morning
Welcome to the Weekly Roundup, where we bring you the top stories from todayâs Dayton Daily News and major stories from the past week you may have missed.
This week, that includes an investigation into projects paid for with federal COVID funds that fell short of promised results, and an interesting look at the growing popularity of high school girls wrestling.
Also donât forget our Dayton Daily News Community Gems initiative, highlighting people who give their time and effort to improve the lives of their neighbors and community. Do you know someone like this in your community? Follow this link to nominate them.
More than $500K in Dayton ARPA projects fell short
The federal government poured billions of dollars into local governments during and after the COVID pandemic. We have been following and investigating how that money is being spent since the beginning. That coverage continues today with an investigation into projects funded by the city of Dayton that didnât come to fruition.
⢠Background: The Dayton Daily News project Billions in COVID aid: Where itâs going, has won awards for keeping local governments accountable and informing taxpayers about where COVID relief funds are going.
⢠The latest: The city of Dayton awarded more than half a million dollars in COVID relief funds to community projects and business startups or expansions that fell short of promised results, according to records obtained by the Dayton Daily News. Read the story from Cornelius Frolik here.
⢠Largest expense: A $200,000 grant to Ace Healthy Products for a mobile vaccine clinic was the largest grant to a for-profit business from $7.6 million the city allocated in American Rescue Plan funds to support minority-owned businesses. The city canceled the award for lack of performance.
⢠Chicken Headâs: Chef Anthony Head told me in 2022 when he was awarded $178,100 from the city that his restaurant on North Main Street would open in months. Head has since opened and closed a restaurant in Kettering, with little visible progress on the Dayton site. The city now wants some of its money back.
⢠Zooming out: The combined value of these grants â about $553,000 â account for a small share of the $138 million Dayton received in ARPA funds, which the city is using to fund a large number and wide variety of investments and projects.
⢠From the archives: Previous Dayton Daily News reporting looked into what obstacles Dayton faces in making the $138 million it received in ARPA funds truly transformative, and whether local governments were taking public opinion into account in deciding how the money should be spent. What do you think? Has all this money been âtransformative,â as local officials predicted?
⢠The numbers: This month, female high school wrestlers from across Ohio competed in the third state championship since the Ohio High School Athletic Association sanctioned girls wrestling in 2023. There were over 1,700 girls in the postseason at the sectional level, and around 3,000 girls participated statewide.
⢠Beginnings: The first-ever girls state wrestling tournament, organized by the Ohio High School Wrestling Coaches Association in 2020, hosted about 250 wrestlers.
⢠Different rules: Coaches and refs are learning there are differences in the sport. One factor is that girls are more flexible than boys, allowing for different moves. And different rules are needed for how much weight wrestlers can cut and still be healthy.
⢠The quote: âIt was really exciting,â said Greeneview High School senior Eve Matt, who finished second at state. âWhen I started wrestling, Iâd be lucky if I got to practice with another girl in the room, and now thereâs all-girls clubs that I get to be a part of.â
As a measles outbreak continues in rural west Texas, local doctors and public health experts urge families to keep their children up-to-date on childhood immunizations to avoid similar risks in the Dayton and Springfield region.
Police, downtown leaders address NATO Assembly logistical issues including parking, access, safety and bus hub. Business owners worry about ability to do business during week-long partial shutdown of downtown.