Cleveland, OH
Kyuu-juu in Ohio City Announces Abrupt Closure – Cleveland Scene
There are restaurant closures that come as abrupt shocks and then there’s whatever is happening at Kyuu-juu in Ohio City.
Management today announced that the modern izakaya, which only opened its doors in July, will close for good at the end of service on December 31.
“After a wonderful, tragic, beautiful, chaotic journey of many memorable moments with friends, colleagues and guests, our investors have chosen to stop financially backing Kyuu-Juu,” a message posted to Instagram stories read.
Partners Ryan Endrian and Chef Kwan created one of the hottest tickets in town, offering small plates built around veggies, chicken, beef, and duck alongside shining sashimi dishes featuring seafood flown in from Tokyo. Classics preparations mingled with modern interpretations. The izakaya experience felt at once special and casual.
And it’s all no more.
Kwan told Scene he and his team tried in recent weeks to convince the investor to give the restaurant a longer runway, but that person wanted the restaurant closed, and soon.
“We invite you all to oin us for one last celebration,” management said. “Come enjoy your favorite dishes or cocktails, share a toast, and please help us say goodbye the best way we know how… together. Thank you all for being a part of our story. Let’s end on a high note. Kanpai!”
Sushi Kuwahata, Chef Kwan’s eight-seat omakase restaurant which operates in the second floor of the renovated Victorian, will remain open “for now,” Chef Kwan said.
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Cleveland, OH
She lost her job. So why wouldn’t Ohio pay her unemployment benefits?
CLEVELAND — A Cleveland resident said she is owed over $5000 in unemployment funds after the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services (ODJFS) abruptly stopped paying her benefits.
“This is a system that’s in place to support me should I need it – and I did – and it was just a complete nightmare and a headache,” Jenna Berris said.
A money mystery
After she lost her job last September, Berris applied for unemployment benefits from the ODJFS.
Initially, the process worked as it was supposed to. She filed for benefits each week, along with submitting proof she was searching for a new position.
“The first couple weeks, I got my money,” she said.
But then, she said her payments abruptly stopped.
Berris said she would call ODJFS every Monday after filing for benefits on Sunday to ask why she wasn’t receiving payments.
“No one seemed to be able tell me what was going on,” she said.
A waiting game
Berris said she kept track of the time she spent on the phone waiting for answers from ODJFS.
She estimates she spent at least sixty hours on hold trying to find out why she had stopped receiving benefits.
“They (ODJFS) would do something in their system and say, ‘You know, you should be paid.’ — and it never happened. This went on for eight weeks,” she said.
At the same time, she said she was searching for a job, prepping for interviews, and writing resumes and cover letters.
She said trying to get to the bottom of why she stopped receiving benefits “just added a lot of extra stress to my plate.”
Berris said she was eventually told she had missed a deadline to upload her resume to the state’s system.
But Berris, who works in the technology sector, said she does not recall receiving any notifications about the requirement.
“The system is poorly designed,” she said. “I think it’s both a tech problem and a communications problem.
“The system is super antiquated… so you’re navigating back and forth but, also, any time you receive a communication, whether it’s about why your claim has been denied or why your claim is going for an appeal, it’s written in this complex legal jargon that I can’t understand, that I’m sure most people can’t understand,” she said.
A call for OH to ‘step up its game’
OH Rep. Darnell Brewer (D-Cleveland) was not surprised to hear Berris’s story.
“The state should … be stepping up its game,” he said. “We need to hold them accountable as well as to what they’re doing and what they’re not doing to help the citizens.”
Brewer said his office has received numerous phone calls and e-mail messages from constituents who are struggling to obtain unemployment benefits.
He said constituents complained about problems involving uploading information, updating information, and not receiving information from ODJFS.
He also said constituents complained about long wait times when they call, getting hung up on, and never receiving return phone calls.
It’s been six years since a massive surge in unemployment claims during the pandemic exposed Ohio’s unemployment system was antiquated, fragile and easily overwhelmed.
He said the state has improved measures to identify fraudulent claims, but should also improve systems to help claimants, like Berris.
“We (Ohio) should have been there to make sure everything she submitted was submitted on time, correctly and in a timely manner, so she can receive those benefits,” he said.
ODJFS response
ODJFS does not comment on specific cases.
However, in an email to News 5, a spokesperson said the agency regularly experiences an increase in claims during the winter months, which it started seeing in November 2025.
He said the federal shutdown last fall “delayed the hiring and training of our contract staff into December,” which is “partially responsible for some of the delays.”
He also said wait times for callbacks from ODJFS are improving.
At the beginning of February, the average wait time for callbacks was about 21.3 hours.
By the end of the month, it was within 5.6 hours.
The endgame
Berris said she recently got a new job, but drained her savings to stay afloat after the state stopped paying her unemployment benefits.
“I was unemployed for about five months and I didn’t receive payments for about half of that time,” she said.
Even though she’s now employed, Berris is still fighting to receive compensation from ODJFS.
She filed an appeal with the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Review Commission, which reconsiders ODJFS cases.
She said she had been on a decision from the commission since January. She said the commission should authorize the release of unemployment funds to her.
“This is money that I was counting on for survival during that time,” she said.
Cleveland, OH
Cleveland’s West Side, Lakewood without power again
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – Thousands of FirstEnergy customers in Lakewood and Cleveland’s West Side, including the Westpark neighborhood, are without power again.
These areas have been plagued by outages since late December 2025.
Check FirstEnergy’s website outage maps for the latest numbers and restoration times.
Cleveland Public Power is reporting some outages on the West side and downtown Cleveland. Click here for the CPP power outage map.
19 News has reached out to FirstEnergy for the cause of the outage.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Bigfoot ‘Flap’ Reported in Northeast Ohio – Cleveland Today
Published on Mar. 11, 2026
Got story updates? Submit your updates here. ›
A series of social media posts from a cryptid-focused podcast has ignited speculation about widespread Bigfoot sightings in northeast Ohio, with enthusiasts pointing to what they describe as a concentrated burst of activity in the Mantua and Garrettsville areas southeast of Cleveland. The Bigfoot Society, a podcast and online community, says it has received six separate reports of alleged Bigfoot encounters between March 6 and March 10 in wooded areas in the region.
Why it matters
Bigfoot sightings are relatively common across the United States, but a cluster of multiple reported encounters in a small geographic area over a short period is considered unusual and potentially indicative of increased cryptid activity. The reports have generated excitement within the Bigfoot research community, which is eager to investigate further and potentially uncover new evidence of the elusive creature’s existence.
The details
According to the Bigfoot Society, the reported encounters include alleged sightings of a nine-foot-tall, brown-haired Sasquatch, as well as other details about the creature’s appearance and behavior. However, the group has not released any photographs, video, or independently verified physical evidence to corroborate the claims. Nonetheless, the podcast host described the cluster of sightings as a possible “flap” event, a term used in cryptozoology to refer to multiple sightings within a short time span.
- The reported sightings occurred between March 6 and March 10, 2026.
- The Bigfoot Society received the six separate reports during this four-day period.
The players
The Bigfoot Society
A podcast and online community dedicated to collecting eyewitness accounts of Sasquatch encounters.
Jeremiah Byron
The host of the Bigfoot Society Podcast, who spoke to Fox 8 about the reported sightings.
Got photos? Submit your photos here. ›
What they’re saying
“It’s normal for there to be Bigfoot sightings all over the United States, but it’s not normal to have multiple sightings in a small area within a short number of days.”
— Jeremiah Byron, Host, Bigfoot Society Podcast (Fox 8)
“So, if you’re in this area, keep your eyes open and maybe your doors locked because there could be a Bigfoot in the same general vicinity.”
— Bigfoot Society Poster (Bigfoot Society)
What’s next
The Bigfoot Society has urged residents in Portage County to remain vigilant and report any additional sightings or evidence to the group. The podcast host indicated that the community is eager to investigate the reports further and potentially uncover new evidence of Bigfoot’s existence.
The takeaway
While Bigfoot sightings are not uncommon across the United States, the cluster of reports in northeast Ohio has sparked significant interest and speculation within the cryptid research community. The lack of verifiable evidence, however, means that the alleged encounters remain unconfirmed, and the true nature of the activity in the region remains uncertain.
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