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The software auto-detects the language of an incoming text and translates for dispatchers, then translates back to those contacting them. It's been in use since April 9.
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Council President Pro Tem Rob Dorans said the system is being put in place to help aid code enforcement teams by more quickly identifying vacant properties causing problems in the community.
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Business & EconomyWorthington Steel held an earnings call with investors on Thursday where company President/CEO Geoff Gilmore expressed cautious optimism in the market. Gilmore said uncertainty and change are leading to a sense of unease in some supply chains.
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Legal Aid of Southeast and Central Ohio provides free legal services to those facing housing discrimination through a federal grant from HUD. That grant was just canceled.
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The city has already spent close to $400,000 to plant more than 1,200 trees, with many of them in historically Black neighborhoods.
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Presidential executive orders and legislation from the Ohio Statehouse have created concerns in the LGBTQ community about marriage equality. An Ohio law firm is advising couples to update their legal documents.
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Senate Bill 1 bans diversity programs and faculty strikes at Ohio's public colleges, but it didn't pass without protests.
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The group of protesters were led by the OSU chapter of the Ohio Student Association.
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Overall, around $100 million in state money would be cut from Ohio public schools under Gov. DeWine's proposed budget.
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A federal appeals court in Cincinnati will hear arguments Wednesday in a legal dispute that pits a Columbus-area school district’s gender pronoun policy against the free speech rights of classmates who believe there are only two genders.
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Proposals to cut or flatten Ohio's income tax are being talked about again by Republican state lawmakers, but also by the GOP candidates for governor next year.
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Retaliatory tariffs on U.S. agricultural products have some Ohio soybean farmers concerned.