Cleveland, OH
Ohio high school boys basketball scores: Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026
CLEVELAND, Ohio — OHSAA boys basketball scores from Tuesday in Ohio, as provided by The Associated Press.
Apple Creek Waynedale 71, Kidron Cent. Christian 58
Batavia 49, Cin. Mariemont 48
Beaver Local 63, St Clairsville 58, OT
Bellaire 73, Valley Wetzel, W.Va. 33
Beloit W. Branch 78, Dalton 47
Bluffton 55, Elida 45
Botkins 59, Rockford Parkway 41
Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 63, N. Royalton 48
Cadiz Harrison Cent. 61, Barnesville 47
Caldwell 72, Bridgeport 52
Campbell Memorial 63, Niles McKinley 52
Can. Cent. Cath. 59, Louisville 43
Can. Glenoak 68, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 64
Can. McKinley 64, N. Can. Hoover 59
Canfield S. Range 63, Girard 54
Carlisle 58, Middletown Madison 42
Carrollton 66, Alliance Marlington 61
Castalia Margaretta 70, Shelby 64
Chagrin Falls 74, Independence 38
Chagrin Falls Kenston 52, Willoughby S. 31
Cin. Deer Park 80, Lockland 50
Cin. Hughes 71, Cin. Gamble Montessori 39
Cin. NW 70, Cin. Colerain 64
Cle. Adams 66, Horizon-Cleveland 29
Cle. John Marshall 58, Andrews Osborne Academy 54
Clyde 64, Vermilion 47
Cols. Upper Arlington 61, Pickerington North 52
Columbia Station Columbia 56, Cuyahoga Hts. 48
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 73, Cle. Benedictine 53
Danville 57, Morral Ridgedale 40
Day. Dunbar 55, Day. Belmont 40
Day. Oakwood 65, Brookville 58
Dublin Coffman 45, Gahanna Lincoln 33
Elyria 82, Westlake 72
Fostoria 60, Maumee 48
Ft. Jennings 58, Ada 51
Gates Mills Hawken 57, Gates Mills Gilmour 39
Genoa 58, Pemberville Eastwood 42
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 77, Uhrichsville Claymont 47
Hamilton Ross 54, Harrison 44
Hartville Lake Center Christian 67, Cornerstone Christian 34
Hubbard 63, Cortland Lakeview 52
Huron 52, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 49
Independent Baptist Academy, Md. 75, Milford Christian 30
Ironton 67, Gallipolis Gallia 66
Jackson Center 54, Waynesfield-Goshen 34
Kansas Lakota 73, N. Baltimore 59
Kinsman Badger 72, Berlin Center Western Reserve 68
Kirtland 79, Perry 53
Lakewood 52, Fuchs Mizrachi 51
Lancaster 55, Cols. St. Charles 47
Lancaster Fairfield Union 46, Baltimore Liberty Union 30
Lima Shawnee 72, Columbus Grove 58
Lorain Clearview 77, Elyria Open Door 56
Lucasville Valley 70, Bainbridge Paint Valley 37
Mason 40, Cin. College Prep. 36
Massillon Perry 50, Uniontown Lake 35
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 74, Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 66
Medina Christian Academy 61, Louisville Aquinas 41
Millbury Lake 69, Rossford 39
Mineral Ridge 52, Windham 41
Mogadore Field 70, Garrettsville Garfield 65
Montpelier 58, Sherwood Fairview 45
Mt Gilead 77, Marion Elgin 45
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 67, New Washington Buckeye Cent. 29
New Concord John Glenn 74, Warsaw River View 55
New Lexington 55, Crooksville 40
New Matamoras Frontier 56, Trinity, W.Va. 44
Newcomerstown 70, Tuscarawas Cent. Cath. 47
Oakstone 66, Foxfire 42
Orwell Grand Valley 64, Jefferson Area 58
Ottawa-Glandorf 59, Lewistown Indian Lake 47
Painesville Harvey 75, Ashtabula Edgewood 67
Painesville Riverside 76, Eastlake North 55
Portsmouth 75, South Point 55
Portsmouth Notre Dame 41, Ironton St. Joseph 40
Racine Southern 62, Southeastern 36
Richfield Revere 74, Aurora 62
Rocky River Lutheran W. 58, Streetsboro 38
Salineville Southern 65, Madonna, W.Va. 56
Shekinah Christian 60, Columbus International 34
Southington Chalker 66, N. Jackson Jackson-Milton 58
Spring. Kenton Ridge 69, S. Charleston SE 42
St. Edward (OH) 62, Cle. Hts. Lutheran E. 58
Steubenville 91, John Marshall, W.Va. 64
Stow-Munroe Falls 62, Hudson 51
Tontogany Otsego 62, Oak Harbor 53
Toronto 88, Lisbon David Anderson 80
Urbana 70, Spring. NW 38
Utica 70, Newark Cath. 58
Vienna Mathews 74, Ashtabula St John 57
W. Jefferson 49, Spring. Cath. Cent. 45
W. Liberty-Salem 66, Anna 53
Washington C.H. 57, McArthur Vinton County 26
Waverly 57, Sardinia Eastern Brown 50
Waynesville 86, Germantown Valley View 79
Willard 61, Port Clinton 46
Williamsburg 45, Cin. Madeira 26
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 80, Columbiana 48
Youngs. Ursuline 74, Warren Howland 57
Zanesville Maysville 66, Thornville Sheridan 31
Zanesville Rosecrans 71, Fairfield Christian 63
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 67, Magnolia Sandy Valley 63
Cleveland, OH
Man shot on Cleveland’s West Side
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – A man was shot in Cleveland’s Cudell neighborhood Tuesday night.
Cleveland Police 1st District officers responded to the 10100 block of Madison Ave around 9:00 P.M.
A man approximately 45 years of age was found with a gunshot wound.
EMS took the victim to MetroHealth Hospital. This incident remains under investigation.
There is no information on any suspects or arrests.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Leaders in Washington and Cleveland take aim at affordable housing in Northeast Ohio
CLEVELAND — Ahead of her Third Annual Housing Expo this Saturday at Tri-C Corporate College East, Rep. Shontel Brown (D-OH) rolled out her Safe and Affordable Housing Agenda on Tuesday. It’s a series of four bills aimed at lowering home costs while strengthening lead paint and pipe abatement.
“We wanted to bring something forward that would improve the living conditions, to make things more affordable and more accessible for not only the constituents of Ohio’s 11th Congressional District but those who are experiencing the same challenge across the country,” Brown told News 5.
The Housing Supply Fund Act is legislation that encourages the building of more affordable housing by filling financing gaps that are holding back construction. The legislation would establish a competitive program within the Treasury’s Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund to address financing gaps that prevent otherwise viable housing projects from moving forward.
“We want to make sure we do not give up on affordable housing; we want to make sure that it is more accessible,” Brown said.
There is also the Affordable Housing Preservation and Protection Act, which is legislation to maintain and preserve existing HUD-assisted housing. This legislation establishes a new HUD preservation authority to provide targeted financing and intervention tools for distressed HUD-assisted multifamily properties at risk of deterioration, foreclosure, or loss of affordability.
The bill is designed to help preserve affordable housing, facilitate responsible ownership transitions, and protect existing federal housing investments serving seniors, working families, and vulnerable residents.
The other two bills introduced deal with the issue of lead abatement. The GET THE LEAD OUT Act of 2026 would create a new federal grant program to replace lead pipes, fixtures, and taps. The legislation would create a broad federal framework to address lead in drinking water and housing by funding removal of lead-based pipe and tap hazards, establishing training and certification requirements, directing federal standards and state programs, and integrating lead plumbing remediation into major housing programs. Brown’s legislation creates new authorities and financing mechanisms to drive national action on residential lead plumbing hazards.
The Removing Existing Pipes with Lead and Advancing Clean Environments (or REPLACE) Act improves existing lead paint and lead pipe removal programs within the federal government. This legislation would amend existing HUD and Safe Drinking Water Act authorities to strengthen lead-paint hazard remediation in housing, improve local implementation capacity, and better coordinate paint and pipe removal efforts.
“We know that this has been a longstanding issue in the City of Cleveland,” she said. “What we’re doing is trying to supplement and amplify the opportunities to be able to address these issues that have long-standing impacts in our community.”
Brown’s announcement comes on the heels of the Bibb administration’s announcement of the creation of the Housing Innovation District, a 1,500-acre swath of land covering St. Clair, Superior and Hough where efforts will begin this summer to repopulate streets that have lost more than half of their homes in recent decades with new housing starting on East 67th south of St. Clair, where ten homes will go up later this year.
A recent New York Times piece cited that among the barriers to building more housing are restrictive zoning and permitting, something the city addresses in this district.
“One of the big things that we’re doing is eliminating permit fees for single-family home construction, which is again a real sort of barrier to this sort of work,” said Tom McNair, Mayor Justin Bibb’s Chief of Integrated Development.
They also established what they call a “Pattern Book,” where they’ve pre-approved designs for certain types of homes in this district to speed up the process.
“When there’s a vacant lot that the city owns, it will be like this is the home you want, this is the lot you want to build on, here’s your permit,” he said.
Congresswoman Brown sees their efforts helping citizens towards the same goal.
“Our legislation would dovetail perfectly into what the mayor is putting forth as well,” she said. “People are doing all of the right things, they’re working hard, but they’re still having trouble getting ahead, and we want to be able to again address that gap as it relates to the opportunity to build wealth in our community, and this legislation will certainly help put people on a pathway to do that.”
Part of that pathway includes Brown’s Housing Expo for constituents of the 11th Congressional District. “It’s a one-stop shop for everything housing, so whether you are a renter or whether you are a first-time home buyer, whether you are looking to renovate, whether you are a senior that’s aging in place. We wanted to bring every aspect of the housing industry under one umbrella, and so we will do that.”
Constituents can register for the free event here.
Cleveland, OH
Fire crews battle Cleveland duplex blaze, ammunition heard popping inside
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – The Cleveland Division of Fire responded to a 2 1/2 story side-by-side duplex fire Monday afternoon.
According to Cleveland Fire, the call came in just after 5 p.m. at 2154 and 2156 W 98th St.
The fire started in a second floor bedroom that spread to the attic.
Due to the size of the house and the volume of the fire, an extra engine and ladder companies were called to assist.
Cleveland Fire said a total of eight adults and three children were displaced from the fire and the Red Cross was called to assist.
Firearms were inside the structure and firefighters said they could hear ammunition going off as they fought the fire.
The fire also extended to an old tree that caught fire.
Total estimated loss is $120,000, Cleveland Fire said.
The cause of the fire is still under investigation and no injuries were reported.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
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