Cleveland, OH
ODOT should tell humorless U.S. bureaucrats to stick it and keep the wit in highway signboards: Today in Ohio
CLEVELAND, Ohio — The Federal Highway Administration wants to limit the funny digital messages you drive under on the highway.
Weβre talking about the funny warnings that stuck with us — and why we think they work — on Today in Ohio.
Listen online here.
Editor Chris Quinn hosts our daily half-hour news podcast, with editorial board member Lisa Garvin, impact editor Leila Atassi and content director Laura Johnston.
Youβve been sending Chris lots of thoughts and suggestions on our from-the-newsroom text account, in which he shares what weβre thinking about at cleveland.com. You can sign up here: https://joinsubtext.com/chrisquinn.
Hereβs what else weβre asking about today:
Dave Yost has won over some big-time support for his lawsuit against the NCAA, where he argues the rules unreasonably limit student athlete transfers. Who has joined him?
How could business interests, including some in Ohio, help get a new bipartisan tax deal passed in Congress that would help parents, those who are housing challenges and many others?
Driving Ohio highways has been more amusing in recent years because of the wit used on the warning signs. The people writing the messages have had a keen sense of pop culture and humor. What humorless bureaucrats are trying to stop us from smiling?
Common sense seems to be prevailing in some counties when it comes to transgender candidates seeking their rightful places on the ballot. Whatβs the latest?
Hereβs another highway story. You know how you feel when youβre driving down a snowy highway and one of those ginormous ODOT snow plows comes barreling down the road? You want to stay as far away as you can, right? Well, not everyone. How many cars have collided with snow plows just this season?
We know where it will be and how we will be forced to pay for it, but we have no idea what it will look like or how it will operate. When can we expect a plan for the new Cuyahoga County jail?
One by one, the cowboy cops of East Cleveland are facing the music in court for their abuse of power and criminal behavior that city officials didnβt even try to rein in. Whatβs the penalty for a cop who used a stun gun on a handcuffed suspect?
Is climate change melting away Ohioβs ski season?
One way to retain employees is to take good care of them when they have children. The City of Cleveland is getting a good taste of that, after offering a new benefit last year. What is it, and who is using it?
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Read the automated transcript below. Because itβs a computer-generated transcript, it contains many errors and misspellings.
Chris (00:01.345)
Dennis Kucinich is running for Congress as an independent in the district held by Max Miller. It came up earlier this week. We havenβt talked about it. I donβt know that thereβs a whole lot to say. Weβre going to wait for our reporters to come back and explain what heβs thinking in running as an independent. Weβll be talking about it next week, I suspect. Itβs Today in Ohio, the news podcast discussion from Cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer. Iβm Chris Quinn here with Lisa Garvin, Leila Tasse and Laura Johnston.
On a somewhat snowy morning, Laura and Layla are getting snowed in. Lisa and I are having a summer like day. Ha ha ha. The snow is coming. Letβs get to the news. Dave Yost has won over some big time support for his lawsuit against the NCAA where he argues the rules unreasonably limit student athlete transfers. Lisa, this is kind of unprecedented and really striking who has joined him.
Lisa (00:56.858)
Yeah, this is a suit that Attorney General Davios filed last month with six other states. As you said, theyβre challenging the NCAA limits on student-athlete transfers, but joining them now in the suit as of yesterday, the Department of Justice, which is extremely rare to get involved in state suits, also the District of Columbia, and three new states, Minnesota, Mississippi, and Virginia, have all joined as plaintiffs.
So the NCAA rule states athletes who switch Division I schools multiple times must get a medical waiver or sit out for a year. Now for college athletes, thatβs 20% of their playing career. So the suit says a violation is the violation of federal antitrust laws, itβs illegal restraint on athletesβ ability to market themselves and control their education.
The judge hearing the suit upheld the enforcement of the rule through the end of the spring sports season. And thereβs no trial date been set for this lawsuit yet. But Yost says this is perhaps the first time the Department of Justice has joined a state led antitrust suit. He said thereβs strength in numbers. This case would not have happened had many players not been sidelined by what he calls an unfair and arbitrary rule.
Chris (02:14.173)
I wonder what Dave Yost really thinks about this. He wants to win the suit. Itβs a very legitimate suit. Theyβre doing the right thing. The NCAA times are changing too fast for the NCAA to deal with it. But Yost wants to run for governor and now heβs on Team Biden. Joe Bidenβs administration is teaming up with him to go after the NCAA. I would imagine his opponents of the Republican primary might use that.
Lisa (02:31.339)
Iβm sorry.
Chris (02:41.941)
He files lawsuits that are so popular with the libs that the presidentβs team joined him, but theyβre doing the right thing. I mean, Iβm impressed that the Biden administration joined a Republican governor in doing this. A lot of these lawsuits are so polarizing that all the Republican governors joined or the attorneys general joined in the lawsuits. And when itβs a Democrat, all the Democrats do. Itβs good to see that bipartisan approach.
Lisa (03:06.278)
It really is. And honestly, you know, colleges have controlled the futures and the finances of their student athletes for decades. And now student athletes are saying, hey, itβs my life, itβs my career, give me some control. I think this is good.
Chris (03:21.169)
Yeah, I mean, this is one where I think Dave Yost really is representing the interests of Ohioans and trying to fix something thatβs just not fair. I with the power behind this lawsuit, if I were the NCAA, Iβd be changing my rules pretty quickly. They just have to get with this quickly. Youβre listening to Today in Ohio. How could business interests, including some in Ohio, help get a new bipartisan tax deal passed in Congress that would help parents?
and those who have housing challenges as well as many others. Laura.
laura (03:53.504)
This looks really promising and talk about bipartisan. I think both sides are on board for this. And leaders of the Ohio Business Roundtable and the Ohio Chamber of Commerce, they both used to be Republican congressmen. They say the deal itself, the fact that it is created is a good sign. And they think that business interests in Ohio around the country will urge Congress to pass this deal. And itβs called Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act of 2024.
So when weβre talking about the child tax credit, thatβs going to increase the maximum refundable amount. From 1,600 per child, that was 2023, goes up to 1,800, then 1,900, and then in 2000 by the tax year of 2025. Itβs gonna adjust it for inflation in 2024 and 2025 there too. So that would help something like 600,000 kids in Ohio, and you have to mention a whole lot more across the country.
Lisa (04:42.698)
So that would help something like 600,000 kids in Ohio and thatβs preventing a whole lot more of that country. Obviously helps from Paris. And then the business side, thereβs full of media production.
laura (04:49.512)
obviously helps their parents. And then the business side, thereβs full immediate deductions for a ton of capital expenses. So there was a law in 2017 that allowed this. It was extended through 2022. This would push it even further. And you can immediately deduct domestic research costs instead of spreading out the deduction over five years as that 2017 law requires.
Lisa (04:59.202)
that allowed this, it would extend it to 2022, this would push it even further. And you can immediately deduct domestic research costs instead of spreading out the deduction over five years as that 2017 law requires. Interesting how these legislators…
Chris (05:12.605)
Interesting how these legislators want to really help mom and pop in the presidential election year. Iβm sure thereβs no correlation between the two.
laura (05:20.684)
supporting voters with tax deductions. I mean, at least this is not just a big business help. This would, you would think, help a whole lot of people and the people who might feel forgotten by government on a regular basis.
Chris (05:37.097)
Right. This helps people. It helps the economy. Thereβs no downside to this. Itβs just because weβre so polarized, you always have ridiculous arguments against because one sideβs trying to get up on the other. In this case, it sounds like they realize they want to be able to go to the voters and say, we did something for you.
laura (05:54.884)
Yeah, and I guess itβs one of the least productive Congresses in recent history, just like we have a very unproductive legislature in Ohio when it comes to passing bills. So the fact that they could actually get something bipartisan done is worthy of note.
Chris (06:09.657)
Bells, whistles, clapping, standing on the sidelines saying, more, more. Youβre listening to Today in Ohio. Driving Ohio highways has been more amusing in recent years because of the wit used on the warning signs. The people writing the messages have shown a keen sense of pop culture and humor, and Iβm betting it has helped ease the anxiety of some white knuckle driving. So Leila, who are the humorless bureaucrats trying to stop us from smiling?
laura (06:11.722)
Yay!
Leila (06:37.608)
Well, itβs the Federal Highway Administration, and apparently they just decided they want people to go back to ignoring these traffic warning signs. They updated their manual for traffic officials, and it really reigns in those funny scrolling messages on the highways. The reason is that the references are sometimes too obscure or the syntax isnβt standard, or some drivers donβt get the joke if the cultural references is lost on them. So…
Lisa (06:43.122)
to ignore these traffic warning signs, they updated their manual for traffic officials and it really reigns in those funny scrolling messages on the highways. The reason is that the references are sometimes too obscure with the syntaxes and standard where some drivers donβt get the joke if the cultural references is lost on them. And so some of the signs drivers have seen on a couple of Ohio roadways include, youβre not a pumpkin, donβt drive smooth,
Chris (06:44.311)
Hahaha.
Leila (07:05.98)
Some of the signs that drivers have seen on Ohio roadways include, youβre not a pumpkin, donβt drive smashed, which refers to the smashing pumpkins, arguably the best alt rock band of the 90s, so everyone should get that reference.
Lisa (07:13.236)
which refers to the Smashing Pumpkin, arguably the best alt rock band ever. Thank you for that reference.
Chris (07:19.181)
But but wait though. I mean donβt drive smashed is not subtle. We know what it means Itβs not being lost on anybody and to say that oh this goes over peopleβs heads. Itβs like only you humorless bureaucrats and
Leila (07:23.524)
No, itβs not. None of these are.
Leila (07:30.744)
I mean, the thing is every single one of these is yes, it has baked into it a pop cultural reference, but the message is crystal clear. I mean, this one is, great Scott, watch your speed McFly. The message is clearly watch your speed. If you donβt know that thatβs a nod to Back to the Future, then youβre a Martian. But still, thereβs no way you can miss what the sign is telling you.
Lisa (07:32.202)
And one of these is yes, if it has been used to a cultural…
Chris (07:40.574)
Yeah.
Chris (07:47.24)
Right.
Leila (07:57.488)
So the directive says that only traffic messages that are part of an active coordinated safety campaign should show up on the changeable message signs. Whomp, whomp.
laura (08:07.904)
Can I tell you my favorite one was camping in state parks is cool, camping in the left lane is not like.
Chris (08:07.965)
You know though.
Lisa (08:07.99)
Thatβs a bummer. Oh my God, Laura, get out of my head. I was going to say the same thing. That was one of my favorite ones.
Leila (08:14.579)
Yeah.
Leila (08:18.864)
Laura, I saw one thatβs for you. It says texting and driving. Say it. Iβm the problem. Itβs me. Yes, yes. Not because she texts and drive, but because sheβs a Swifty.
Lisa (08:26.198)
Hehehehehehe
Chris (08:26.398)
Heh.
laura (08:27.02)
Sheβs saying that because itβs Taylor Swift, not because I text and drive.
Yes, thatβs fun.
Chris (08:33.933)
The thing about this is how do you even begin to govern where the line is? If I were Ohio officials, Iβd say stick it and keep doing what theyβre doing. This is an amusement on the highways. The highways can be pretty tense. And I donβt think any of us have ever seen one of those signs and rolled our eyes and thought, oh, stop it. Get, get back to being serious and boring. I think whenever you see those messages, you smile, you might talk about it.
Leila (08:55.368)
right.
Yeah, it sticks with you actually, and thatβs the point of marketing, right?
laura (08:59.872)
We remember them! Like, when was the last time you remembered a road sign?
Lisa (09:01.627)
Exactly.
Leila (09:04.844)
I know. I know. Oh, and I saw one road sign that I think makes its point clearly and resonates with every single driver, no matter where youβre coming from in your cultural references. It said, visiting in-laws, slow down, get there late.
Lisa (09:21.177)
Hehe
Chris (09:22.837)
Yeah, I saw this start bubbling up a couple days ago. It just rolled my eyes. This is such a dumb move by the federal government to interfere with what is actually a very positive kind of thing thatβs going on. In the vein of humor and law enforcement and driving, North Olmsted police, I think it was North Olmsted, put out a fascinating press release about the weather overnight. Cliff Pinkard wrote it up.
Why was it funny?
Leila (09:50.98)
Oh my gosh, it was so hilarious. I mean, they were just like, you know, no matter, depending on where you get your weather, weβre either getting a dusting tonight or 962 inches of snow. I mean, and it just kept going from there and saying things like, you know, your car cannot touch another car or a ditch or a telephone pole. And this is not an exhaustive list, everythingβs on it. You need to drive slowly. I mean, it was really, they were just perfect.
Chris (10:01.429)
Hahaha.
Lisa (10:02.326)
Hehehehe
Leila (10:20.38)
messaging. And thatβs what you got to do. Everyone needs a little humor to get these kind of safety things out to people.
laura (10:21.388)
It was like, yes.
They said, we are not Atlanta. And itβs like, yes, we are better than this, Cleveland. We are heartier people.
Leila (10:30.476)
Yeah, they said, they said, letβs pretend weβve all been here before.
Lisa (10:31.894)
What?
Lisa (10:35.102)
And I would argue that a boring like click it or ticket message people are like, oh, Iβve seen it. I think they probably ignore it. But if somethingβs funny, they pay attention to what itβs saying.
Chris (10:44.137)
And it permeates the brain, it gets through. You do notice it, unlike the millions of random bureaucratic messages. I think humor is the antidote and gives everybody a nice smile. So.
Leila (10:44.305)
Yeah.
laura (10:44.436)
And do you know-
laura (10:56.689)
and ODOT for a while.
Leila (10:56.982)
Thanks to the wet blanket at the Federal Highway Administration.
Chris (11:00.613)
Ha ha
laura (11:01.62)
But ODOT was actually soliciting ideas. I donβt know if you can still do it, but for a while you could go to their website and suggest a road sign. So I think that was cool.
Leila (11:11.216)
And itβs a trend that every state was participating in, basically. Like you can find these all over the country.
Chris (11:11.374)
I hope they ignore this.
laura (11:17.12)
They did say it was a suggestion.
Chris (11:17.317)
I just hope they ignore it. Well, they were, they had these stupid guidelines. Itβs just dumb. Look, the federal government doesnβt have better things to do. I mean, this is what the Joe Biden administration, thatβs what it wants to be known for. Letβs make the highways boring again.
Leila (11:30.964)
Thatβs true. I think though that the Ohio Department of Transportation sees a lot of wiggle room in this manual update because like Laura said, theyβre saying, yeah, itβs more of a recommendation than a ban. And as long as the underlying safety message is easy to discern from the cultural reference, theyβre going to keep doing the humor.
Chris (11:42.606)
I hope so.
Chris (11:49.425)
Ohio has a better sense of humor than the federal government. Youβre listening to Today in Ohio. Common sense seems to be prevailing in some counties when it comes to transgender candidates seeking their rightful places on the ballot. Lisa, whoβs the latest?
Lisa (12:04.962)
So the bipartisan Mercer County Board of Elections unanimously tossed a Republican protest against House District 4 Democratic candidate Ariane Childrie. They ruled that protests against primary candidatesβ eligibility can only come from the same party, according to Ohio law. They decided not to remove her name from the ballot after she failed to provide her dead name on campaign forums because there was no space for it.
And this was in compliance with a little known and little used law on prior names. So the protest was filed by Mercer County Republican Chair, Robert Hibner. Childress says sheβs pleased with the outlook. She says, I had prepared my arguments but I thankfully didnβt have to make them. So over in Montgomery County, there is a Democratic candidate, Bobby Arnold from Preble County. She can remain on the ballot. In Stark County though, Vanessa Joy was disqualified.
She appealed, the appeal failed, this is in House District 50, and she wrote a Thursday letter to the Stark County Board of Elections asking them to reconsider in light of the Childry decision. So I think we need to see some consistency here. Both Governor Mike DeWine and Secretary of State Frank LaRose say they do want that rule mentioned in future documents, but thereβs some lawmakers who say they donβt see any need for change.
Chris (13:26.101)
Well, whatβs happening now is a spotlight is getting on Stark County for being intolerant. Other boards of elections are looking at this and recognizing itβs preposterous that you would kick somebody off the ballot. Itβs not right. Thereβs no place to list your previous names. Thereβs nobody that tells you have to do so and to block them is completely unfair. And I think it would lose in court. But thatβs what Stark County did. If they were smart in Stark County, they would reconsider this immediately and defer.
the wisdom of their fellow boards of elections and get this yoke off their back because theyβre going to be anti transgender central if they donβt fix this.
Lisa (14:05.822)
Well, itβs made national news. It was a top story on the Associated Press website yesterday. So, you know, itβs getting a lot of attention.
Chris (14:13.033)
Maybe Stark County wants to be known as an anti-transgender county. I wouldnβt think that a lot of the residents want that to be on their backs. Youβre listening to Today in Ohio. Hereβs another highway story. You know how you feel when youβre driving down a snowy highway and one of those ginormous ODOT snowplows comes barreling down on you? You want to stay as far away as you can, right, Lara? Well, not everyone. How many cars have already collided with snowplows, even though weβve had almost no snow this season?
laura (14:41.852)
Yeah, itβs like the North Olmsted cops said, youβre not supposed to touch anything else with your car. But nine people, nine, in just basically a week, just in ODOT, so weβre talking about the big highways, cars hit snowplows. These weigh 2,500 pounds. If you hit them, you are not going to win. And thatβs just a plow. It is insane to me. They have video of this. They have a truck that tried to pass a snowplow on the left, on a highway, on the shoulder.
Lisa (15:08.97)
on the shoulder.
laura (15:11.112)
And what happened? The truck hit the snow plow and went flipping upside down because the plow is wider than the truck is. Think about that. To me, I cannot believe any idiots are trying to pass a plow on the left.
Chris (15:26.709)
Yeah, I mean, those plows are frightening, right? And plus, theyβre spraying huge amounts of salt. So itβs like getting sand blasted by pebbles. I cannot understand how anybody would get it in their head to get closer to them. You want to get away from them as far away as you can.
Leila (15:44.264)
No, you want to travel in their path. Everyone knows, go behind the plow. You got the cleanest path. Thatβs true.
Lisa (15:47.561)
Mm-hmm.
laura (15:48.352)
Well, then you stay pretty far back though, because you donβt want to get pelted by those salt pellets, right?
Chris (15:48.397)
Far behind.
Chris (15:55.037)
Yeah, but one, youβre not supposed to pass on the shoulder anyway in any situation, but you certainly donβt want to pass these behemoths. And you know, those things canβt be easy to drive. You got to feel for the people behind the wheel driving down the road in these enormous vehicles, trying to keep the roads clear. Itβs mind-boggling that weβve had that many accidents because itβs really, itβs…
Lisa (15:58.484)
Anyway…
laura (16:20.308)
lot of times they line up right kind of like the skaters at the hockey game where theyβre trying to get the ice the snow off the ice they go in a row so that they plow into each other so that they can you know theyβre coordinated they know what theyβre doing just take away from them
Chris (16:38.465)
All right. Youβre listening to Today in Ohio. We know where it will be. We know how we are being forced to pay for it, but we have no idea what it will look like or how it will operate. Well, when can we expect a plan for the new Cuyahoga County jail?
Leila (16:55.176)
Soon, eventually, County Executive Chris Staytuned Ronane told reporter Lucas de Prilly that Ronane expects to have details on what the new jail campus on the 72-acre site in Garfield Heights would look like, how itβs going to function, and what amenities itβs going to include sometime in 2024. So weβre still awaiting some basic details. The number of jail beds, the size of the building.
what kind of presence the sheriffβs department would have there, how to transport people to and from this location, and the type of social and reentry services that theyβre going to have on the campus. All of that has remained kind of out there in the ether. The county bought this site in Garfield with $38.7 million in ARPA money. That amount was just for the site. It doesnβt include the construction cost, which they think could be at least $750 million.
the debt service on construction costs will be paid through a 40-year, 0.25% sales tax extension that was approved back in December. Renane has really high hopes for what this new campus can achieve by way of diversion programs and social services and reentry programs. And Lucas, he pushed him also on more transparency on plans to select a site for the future courthouse downtown. And Renane…
demurred on that. He said the countyβs legal counsel advises them to keep all of those plans close to the vest until thereβs a signed agreement in place with all the parties. And he says heβs, he says heβd like to have that decision made by the end of the year.
Chris (18:23.721)
and Iβm not buying that. That is complete. Thatβs just horse hockey. The law allows them to keep it secret. They donβt have to keep it secret and keeping it secret builds suspicion. That was I read that part of the story and itβs like no way no how do you get away with that? That is not true. Yeah, weβre doing what the state told us to do. No, youβre not. You are you are hiding what youβre doing. You can easily say here are the seven buildings.
Lisa (18:24.418)
Ha ha ha!
Chris (18:51.989)
that are in play for a justice center. These are the ones, weβre not gonna get into the specific dollar details because those are trade secrets or whatever they wanna call it, but they could be much more open about it. What theyβre trying to do, pick their plan, sign the deal, and then bring it to the public when itβs almost too late to do anything about it. The big problem they face here is the judges wonβt stand for it. This is the home of the judges. They are a branch of government.
And if theyβre frozen out and donβt get a say, theyβll go to court and theyβll win because guess who decides these cases? Other judges. And everything about this stinks. I mean, itβs just, it stinks. They did an RFP, theyβve got the proposals, itβs the publicβs business, and they have yet to put it before the public.
Leila (19:40.565)
Stay tuned.
Chris (19:42.505)
Wow, when? When the deal is signed? I mean, look, thereβs a lot of suspicions that theyβre trying to cut some deal with Gilbert, that thatβs what this always was about. You hear it all over town. So if they come out, and thatβs what the deal was with, everybody is not going to believe it. Itβs just this is not the way to build good faith in the voters and the people have to pay for this thing. Itβs wrong, wrong. And he pedaled a line of just bull to our reporter.
Leila (19:44.825)
Right.
Chris (20:11.797)
Youβre listening to Today in Ohio. One by one, the cowboy cops of East Cleveland are facing the music in court for their abuse of power and criminal behavior, which city officials never even tried to rein in. Whatβs the penalty Lisa for a cop who used a stun gun on a guy who was in handcuffs?
Lisa (20:30.314)
Yeah, 41-year-old former East Cleveland police officer Brian Parks of Broadview Heights cut a plea deal and he gets a six-month prison term. He pled guilty to misdemeanor assault and felony record tampering attempts in connection to that 2021 arrest of a suspect.
He used this taser on this handcuffed man who was on the ground. And this was captured in body cam footage from another officer who was at the scene. The guy was shot two times. He begged Parks not to do it again. He says, I donβt know why yβall tasered me so many times. So part of the plea deal, Parks will forfeit his Ohio peace officerβs training academy license. More serious charges were dropped, including felonious assault.
So Parks is one of 18 former law enforcement officers indicted in East Cleveland. Just an update on some of the others. Willie Simms and Alfonso Cole were sentenced back in November for robbing drivers during traffic stops. They got two and two and a half years in prison, respectively. Nicholas Foddy, he got 18 months of probation for stomping a manβs head as the man was being restrained. That was a plea deal as well. Demarco Johnson and Von Harris
will be sentenced on Monday after their guilty verdict for bribery. They actually went to a jury trial. And then there are 10 officers that are going on trial on Valentineβs day, February 14th. And then former East Cleveland police chief, Scott Gardner, will be going on trial March 11th.
Chris (21:58.849)
They stole from people, they beat people, they cruelly treated people, and the check on them was supposed to be the government, the mayor and the council. We did story after story about this. We did a whole series about how out of control they were, and nobody did anything. That happens for the justice system, because the only check that we ultimately had to stop what was happening in East Cleveland were the prosecutors and the investigators that have taken the painstaking time.
to bring them to trial. It was so out of control. I still cannot believe there was no way to stop them, to decertify that police department. It was one of the most abusive situations weβve ever seen with police. Oh well, weβll see what happens in the trial that starts on Valentineβs Day, which as Laura and I are discussing is also Ash Wednesday, which is gonna make it interesting for people who abstain from sweets for Lent. Youβre listening to Today in Ohio. The failure, oh wait.
What, Laura, what am I supposed to ask you about?
laura (23:00.173)
Youβre supposed to ask me how that ski season.
Chris (23:02.342)
And you were supposed to remind me and you didnβt.
laura (23:04.08)
I was supposed to remind you, sorry. Iβm reminding you now. Weβre talking about whether weβre going to have a ski season in Northeast Ohio in the future because itβs so hard to make snow.
Chris (23:07.744)
Hehehe
Chris (23:11.273)
Alright.
Chris (23:15.189)
Reporter Pete Krause has taken a look at 10 years of opening dates for the ski slopes around Northeast Ohio to see if it tells us anything about climate change. Itβs a very late opening this year. Itβs what made us think of it. Laura, what does that story show?
laura (23:30.376)
I love that weβre talking about the story when weβre getting snowed on and everyoneβs going to be like, thereβs plenty of snow in Northeast Ohio. But if youβre a skier, you donβt think so. The only reason we can ski regularly in Northeast Ohio is because of snowmaking. You have to have temperatures of 28 degrees or lower for that to happen. We didnβt get much of those in December. Thankfully, we did get Boston Mills opened on December 22nd. They opened with three hills. They have had three hills open.
until we got to Wednesday, they finally were able to open one more. Brandywine at Sister Resort just opened. But when you look at the trend, and thatβs what weβre really hoping to do, there really isnβt one. They hope to open before Christmas. Thatβs always the goal. It doesnβt always happen. I remember a late start as late as January 7th in recent years. But it does depend on the temperatures. And as it gets warmer and warmer, it wonβt be as
is easy to make snow. And there is a national study that says, you know, in a couple of decades, we wonβt be able to ski, that weβll lose something like 81% of the snowmaking ability.
Chris (24:43.073)
Do you ever at the end of the season calculate the total cost of your season pass against it and is it still worth it?
laura (24:48.436)
Yes, every year.
I mean, to me it is because anything, I mean, is it expensive? Yes. But I try to ski 20 times a season. To me, that makes me feel like Iβm getting my moneyβs worth on this epic pass, which now that Vale owns Boston Mills, you could go out and ski Park City or Whistler or Tahoe for the same price youβre paying for Boston Mills. But I donβt live out west, so Iβve got to do what I can do here.
Chris (25:16.237)
But what Iβm asking is do you compare what would it cost you individually without the pass against the pass and itβs still it is
laura (25:19.944)
Yeah. Oh, itβs a much better deal to buy the pass. And hereβs the thing about a pass, right? If you have it, you go. If youβre like, oh, I can only get in an hour, fine. Iβll still go. Like, itβs a crappy ski day, whatever. Itβs free, I already paid for it, Iβll go. If you waited till you had the perfect ski day because you had to shell out 60 bucks to go buy a pass, you would never ski.
Chris (25:41.005)
All right. Well, check out Peteβs story. Itβs on Cleveland.com and itβs going to run on the plane dealer this weekend. Youβre listening to Today in Ohio. One way to retain employees is to take good care of them when they have children. The City of Cleveland is getting a good taste of that after offering a new benefit last year. Whatβs that benefit and how many people are using it?
Leila (26:03.972)
Itβs paid parental leave, 12 weeks of it. City Council approved this new benefit back in May at the urging of council members, Stephanie House and Charles Slife, and it became available to workers in mid-September. And during the last three and a half months of 2023, 144 city workers took advantage of this benefit. And itβs a terrific perk of employment with the city where theyβve been really struggling to fill these positions.
And the labor market is so challenging, and especially among the ranks of the cityβs safety forces. The city is hoping that a benefit like this will go a long way toward recruiting and keeping talent and strengthening their workforce. So the paid leave is available to parents who welcome a new child via birth or adoptions and guardianships, plus 20 additional hours to attend appointments related to prenatal care, adoption, or guardianship.
And employees who experience stillbirths or miscarriages also receive three weeks paid time off. Before this, city workers who wanted to start a family had to just save up all their time off, sometimes for years while they plan their families. So this is a dramatic change in the way theyβre doing things. So far, police officers and firefighters have used it the most, followed by EMS workers and employees in the Department of Public Utilities.
And what I find really interesting about this is the gender breakdown of whoβs using the leave. 110 men used parental leave and 34 women did. So I wonder what do you make of those numbers?
Chris (27:33.553)
I wish I could have done it when my kids were young. And really, I look at you and Laura, who have had kids and got some parental leave, but you didnβt get 12 weeks. I mean, this is a game changer.
laura (27:42.58)
No. And my husband never got anything, right? He took a couple of days off from his PTO bank. But Leila, if you said police and firefighters are the people who are using it the most, those tend to be men. I mean, overwhelmingly.
Leila (27:55.44)
Yeah, thatβs what Iβm thinking is that it could simply, those numbers could be a function of the fact that safety forces are such a big chunk of the payroll and most safety forces workers are men. So they naturally represent a disproportionate share of the people who are availing themselves of this benefit. But I thought that was a little surprising still that itβs so lopsided. I mean, it could indicate a really terribly lopsided workforce where women are disproportionately underrepresented. But my hunch is…
laura (28:00.048)
Just the number of men. Yeah.
laura (28:15.189)
But isnβt it?
laura (28:21.396)
Yes, but it is great news.
Leila (28:24.369)
That wouldnβt be the case at all, had the city offered at least some paid parental leave much earlier.
laura (28:29.196)
Well, thatβs true. And maybe theyβll get more women into the safety forces because of this. But regardless, I think itβs great news for everyone because by equaling this with men and women, then everybodyβs going to take that time. Itβs better for the kids. And then for the families, itβs easier on both parents if both parents have time to split between the childcare. And then you never get this mom role where like, oh, she was the one who was home, so sheβs the one that does it all.
Leila (28:56.337)
Right.
laura (28:56.5)
And then itβs equal for careers too, because you donβt have someone being like, oh, I donβt wanna hire a woman of childbearing age because sheβs gonna take maternity leave. Like the guy of childbearing age, which could be any age, could be taking it too.
Leila (29:08.216)
Yeah. I think, I mean, this really does bring the city closer to the 21st century. A lot of businesses are taking this approach. And Chris, to your point, I just wanted to point out, when I had my last baby, I did get 12 weeks off because our company changed its policy to be more expansive. And since then, theyβve included fathers and the whole gamut of parental, you know.
Chris (29:23.124)
Right.
Leila (29:33.244)
people who are adopting babies and that sort of thing. So we have a very progressive policy.
Chris (29:34.857)
Yeah. But in that light, let me add a little bit from the employerβs perspective, because we know that the safety forces are depleted in Cleveland, and if you take somebody away for three months, theyβre more depleted. When you took your leave, it wasnβt like I got another employee to fill in for you. We had to do your duties for 12 weeks while youβre away.
thatβs a challenge. And if you have as many employees as Cleveland has taken this in a short period of time, I have to imagine that is a bit of a management challenge trying to cover all the duties that need to be covered with the long-term absences of the people.
Leila (30:15.784)
Yeah, but I think youβre kind of playing the long game with this one. You know, you know that your recruitment chances are much greater with this kind of policy in place. So youβre probably going to end up with a stronger workforce in the long run. And youβre going to retain those people when they do come back, theyβre going to stay. I mean,
Chris (30:33.789)
Yeah, I hope. Look, itβs a good thing, but I tell you, as the person thatβs trying to figure out how to cope with it, itβs a challenge. Lisa.
Lisa (30:34.712)
Thank you.
Lisa (30:42.286)
No, I remember that story we did last summer about the female lawyer who got 12 weeks paid leave, came back and quit like a week after she came back. Yeah, so those things happen too.
Chris (30:49.497)
Yeah.
Chris (30:54.176)
Yeah, I-
Leila (30:54.432)
say, honestly, our companyβs parental leave is one of the reasons Iβm still here today. Because there was a point years and years ago when I was preparing, I really wanted to have a second baby. And there was a moment when I thought about leaving this job to go do something else. And the parental leave policy was completely inadequate in that place. And it was one of the factors that brought me back and stayed. And Iβm so glad I stayed,
Chris (31:23.137)
So am I. No, look, itβs an absolute good thing. I wish it had existed when I was younger and had kids. I think itβs great that employers are doing this and it makes for a stronger workforce. I donβt think most employers have figured out how to cope with the loss of the people for time. Youβre going to have to invest something to do that in temporary workers or something, but.
Lisa (31:24.116)
Mm-hmm.
Leila (31:25.404)
But see how you play the long game with policies like this.
Chris (31:51.701)
But itβs like Clevelandβs clearly seeing the benefit of it. People are taking advantage of it and youβre right. Theyβre going to be more excited about being there. It makes Cleveland a more competitive employer.
laura (32:01.832)
And can I add that itβs good for the kids because we have this whole childcare series. You could be taking your kid to daycare at six weeks old. If you have these helpful parental policies where you can both take it, then youβre pushing that problem back by months.
Chris (32:17.373)
Yeah, itβs six months.
Leila (32:17.552)
You know, I was thinking about that, Laura, because, you know, Bibb is rolling out some vacation perks, some enhanced vacation perks for city employees too. And I really think that he should think about including childcare subsidies in the next, you know, go around of employment perks that heβs thinking about.
laura (32:34.663)
Letβs email them all the stories.
Chris (32:35.013)
Oh, wait, got to stop, got to stop. Weβve gone long. And if you mentioned childcare to Laura, weβre going to be here for 10 more minutes. Thatβs a subject for another day. Have a great weekend. Thanks, Lisa. Thanks, Leila. Thanks, Laura. Thank you for being with us for a week of discussion of news. Weβll be back Monday.
Leila (32:38.664)
laughs
Cleveland, OH
USS Cleveland arrives in namesake city for commissioning
CLEVELAND (WJW) β Crowds gathered along the Lake Erie shoreline Saturday morning to welcome the USS Cleveland as it arrived in its namesake city.
The Freedom Class littoral ship will be historically commissioned in Cleveland on May 16 during its weeklong stay, after which it will officially join active service in the U.S. Navy.
The arrival of the ship is a milestone for Ohio and the nation, marking the first time in the 250-year history of the United States that a U.S. Navy warship will be commissioned in the State of Ohio.
βThere have been 81 ships in the history of the U.S. Navy that have been named after cities in Ohio or the state of Ohio itself, but out of all 81, this is the first that will be commissioned in its namesake city, so this is an incredibly historic moment and itβs fitting that itβs happening for the 250th anniversary of the Navy and our nation,β USS Cleveland Legacy Foundation Director Nick Lippert said.
Ahead of the commissioning ceremony next weekend, the public is invited to tour the ship starting Sunday, May 10, at the North Coast Yard. The USS Cleveland Legacy Foundation is hosting a βCommunity Dayβ Sunday that will include live entertainment, family-friendly activities, food, drinks and more.
βThis special event will connect the crew with the community of Northeast Ohio for a day of excitement and celebration as residents will have the opportunity to meet the Sailors, learn more about the ship and our Foundation, and kickoff Commissioning Week in true Cleveland fashion,β the USS Cleveland Legacy Foundation website reads.
Tours will be available through Thursday, May 14.
Click HERE For more information about the tours and the weeklong celebration.
Cleveland, OH
Bomb threats against Northeast Ohio school districts continue for 2nd day
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – For the second day, Northeast Ohio school districts are receiving bomb threats.
On Friday morning, two schools in the Elyria City School District, the high school and Ely Elementary, received bomb threats.
Both schools are evacuating students, and emergency responders are on the way, according to a social media post.
All other district schools are in a lockout status as a precaution.
The district asks that family members not come to the schools or call school offices at this time so emergency communication lines remain available.
Elyria Police said that the department is working with the district to ensure the safety and security of students and school personnel following the threats.
βWe are aware that neighboring school districts experienced similar swatting-related incidents yesterday, and our investigative personnel are working diligently with our law enforcement partners to identify the source of these threats,β police said.
Five Northeast Ohio school districts received bomb threats on Thursday, including:
- Alliance City School District
- Amherst Exempted Village Schools
- Cleveland Metropolitan School District
- Lorain City School District
- Shaker Heights School District
Below are the details from each district and the protocols in place to protect students and staff.
ALLIANCE CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT
The Alliance Police Department confirmed there was an βanonymousβ robo-voice style call that came into the high school saying there were β20 pipe bombsβ outside of the schoolβ before 12:30 p.m.
Officers rushed to the high school and Rockhill Elementary School campuses βdue to an alarm in which we were not getting a response from the school,β according to APD.
APD shared that the schools evacuated the students temporarily as officers conducted a sweep of the area.
βNothing was found, thankfully,β APD Lt. Christopher McCord stated. βThe school staff, and especially the students, did a great job of staying calm and making everyoneβs jobs easier, smoother, and safer.β
βWe will be looking into the source of the threats to hold those responsible accountable, if possible,β McCord added.
AMHERST EXEMPTED VILLAGE SCHOOLS
The Amherst Exempted Village School confirmed at 10:25 a.m. that Marion L. Steele High School and Walter G. Nord Middle School received a bomb threat.
AEVS said all district facilities were placed on a level 1 lockdown before the two schools were evacuated to a safe location under the supervision of administration and staff, according to district protocol.
The Amherst police and fire departments teamed up with the Lorain County Sheriffβs Office to perform perimeter and building sweeps to determine if the threat was substantiated, said AEVS.
The perimeter sweeps of the two schools were complete by 11:34 a.m., and law enforcement then conducted the interior sweeps of the buildings, AEVS explained.
Amherst Junior High School and Powers Elementary School lifted their lockdowns at that time and resumed normal procedures, according to AEVS.
AEVS also confirmed at that time that all students and staff were accounted for and safe.
The Amherst Police Department completed its sweep of Steele High School and cleared the building of any threat by 11:51 a.m., AEVS updated.
Students were dismissed for the day at that time, according to AEVS.
AEVS instructed student drivers to leave the campus, and students unable to immediately leave were to stay at the school until they could be picked up by a parent, guardian, or approved emergency contact.
The bus routes were running at the scheduled normal dismissal time for students who need a ride home, AEVS added.
APD completed its sweep of Nord School and cleared the building of any threat by 12:32 p.m., AEVS updated.
Nord School students were safely escorted back into the building, according to AEVS, after evacuating to the New Beginning Church as a safe location.
AEVS instructed parents, guardians, and approved emergency contacts who wanted to pick up their student to report to the schoolβs front entrance, where staff and APD officers would help.
Classes, activities, and normal dismissal procedures resumed as scheduled for students who stayed at the school, AEVS shared, and bus dismissal also proceeded per usual.
βWe appreciate the cooperation, patience, and support of our families and community throughout todayβs situation,β AEVS stated.
According to AEVS Superintendent Mike Molnar, all evening activities at the school will continue as scheduled, and school will resume on Friday.
Molnar added that AEVS will have an increased police presence at schools on Thursday night and Friday.
CLEVELAND METROPOLITAN SCHOOL DISTRICT
The Cleveland Metropolitan School District confirmed two threats were received on Thursday morning. The threats were against East Tech High School and Buhrer Dual Language Academy.
According to CMSD, Cleveland police and CMSDβs Department of Safety & Security conducted an investigation and found the buildings to be safe.
From the information gathered during the searches, Cleveland police believe both calls were swatting incidents.
Classes at both schools were uninterrupted, and the school day progressed normally.
Cleveland Metropolitan School Districtβs Communications Officer Jon Benedict added that parents were informed about the incident.
LORAIN CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT
Lorain City School District confirmed the high school has been evacuated due to a bomb threat on Thursday afternoon.
This is the third Northeast Ohio school district to receive a bomb threat on May 7.
The district announced the evacuation of Lorain High School at 12:23 p.m., and dismissed students at 12:40 p.m.
Bus riders were escorted to the buses waiting to take them home, according to LCSD.
LCSD said many elementary and middle school students were at the high school for the dance showcase.
Those elementary and middle school students were brought back to their home schools, said LCSD.
All students and staff are safe and following established protocols, LCSD stated, and these measures are being taken out of an abundance of caution.
The district safety team and law enforcement partners continue to investigate this threat.
βYour studentsβ and our staffβs safety is our top priority,β LCSD stated.
A 19 News crew is on their way to the scene to learn more.
SHAKER HEIGHTS SCHOOL DISTRICT
Shaker Heights High School received its second threatening phone call this week on Thursday, the district confirmed.
Shaker Heights School District said it immediately teamed up with the Shaker Heights Police Department to investigate the threat and determined its credibility.
SHSD said it was aware of the other Northeast Ohio school districts that received similar threats on Thursday.
βBased on the SHPDβs assessment and established safety protocols, the decision was made to continue normal school operations rather than initiate a shelter-in-place,β SHSD stated.
Additional SHPD officers and a K-9 unit were sent to the school out of an abundance of caution to support the safety and security of the building as the investigation continues, SHSD added.
Orrville City Schools were also placed on a soft lockdown on Thursday.
However, this was not a bomb threat, nor any direct threat to the school.
The soft lockdown was a precautionary measure for an incident that happened not just off school property, but out of the town.
This is a developing story. Return to 19 News for updates.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
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