Yesterday’s loss to the Minnesota Twins looks like an inflection point for the Cleveland Guardians’ leadoff hitter, Steven Kwan.
Cleveland, OH
Why doesn’t Jon Husted want China to know your kid is reading ‘Go. Dog. Go!?’ Today in Ohio
CLEVELAND, Ohio – U.S. Sen. Jon Husted is urging the federal Treasury Department to investigate a Chinese company’s acquisition of Epic, a reading platform that reaches students in nearly every American elementary school.
We’re talking about what the technology does and what information it could send to China 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.
You’ve been sending Chris lots of thoughts and suggestions on our from-the-newsroom text account, in which he shares what we’re thinking about at cleveland.com. You can sign up here: https://joinsubtext.com/chrisquinn.
Here’s what we’re asking about today:
Why is Sen. Jon Husted worried about China learning what American kids are reading? Is Go Dog Go some kind of state secret?
Ohio had been planning to change how it pays daycare centers in a way to help them be more stable. Why is it postponing that move?
First, Frank LaRose loved a system where states could share information about voters, to combat fraud. Then, after MAGA activists criticized the system, LaRose withdrew from it. Is he back now in a new system that does pretty much the same thing? What happens when MAGA attacks it?
Before Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb solicited proposed for developing the lakefront land around Browns stadium, he had thousands of touchpoints with the public about what they want. What did they say?
Rocky River schools have been through the ringer with inappropriate behavior by adults, and one of the egregious cases involves the former school resource officer at the high school. What did he do, and what is his sentence?
What is City Councilman Richard Starr saying about the investigation into the devastating Rainbow terrace fire from earlier this year?
How hot a ticket is Kamala Harris on her book tour, and when is she coming to Cleveland?
Out sister site in Alabama has an investigative project out this week on how a pesticide is linked to Parkinson’s Disease, and one of the people they profile is an Ohioan. What’s the gist of the project, and who is the Ohioan?
Speaking of Parkinson’s, how big of a problem is it in Ohio compared to other states?
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Chris Quinn (00:01.265)
It’s Tuesday on Today in Ohio as our week, we’re weak and our year winds down. It’s the news podcast discussion from cleveland.com and the Plain Dealer. I’m Chris Quinn here with Leila Tassi, Lisa Garvin, and Laura Johnston. Leila, why is Senator John Husted so worried about China learning what American kids are reading? Is Go Dog Go some kind of a state secret?
Leila (00:27.123)
Oh my gosh. I feel like we’ve been talking a lot about Go.Go. But Houston and three other Republican senators are asking the Treasury Department to take a hard look at this popular kids reading app called Epic. And parents know what this is. This is the app that teachers use in class and parents use it at home. It’s in about 94 % of U.S. elementary schools and it reaches something like 75 million kids.
That’s the scale that has everyone’s antennas up because Epic was just bought out of bankruptcy for $95 million by a company tied to China called Tal Education Group. And that’s where Houston’s concern kicks in. The app tracks kids’ reading habits in real time, what they read, how fast they read, what they like. So teachers can tailor instruction. But the senators worry that because the new owner is subject to Chinese intelligence and data security laws,
that information could theoretically be accessed by the Chinese government. So this isn’t really about China cracking the code on Go.Go, but it is about children’s data privacy and whether a foreign adversary should own a platform embedded in nearly every elementary school in America. And the senators are also concerned about editorial control. They argue that whoever owns Epic controls what books and learning materials kids see.
And they draw a straight line to past concerns over Confucius Institutes and Chinese influence in US education. Houston’s framing is that parents want more say in curriculum, not less, and certainly not through a platform owned by a company tied to Beijing. So it’s also worth noting the sale already went through US Bankruptcy Court and a judge allowed it despite last minute Justice Department concern. this letter is essentially asking for a retroactive national security review.
Chris Quinn (02:19.757)
So am I reading it right that this company knows each kid by name? They know what John Smith is reading in real time, or is it more they can see generally what people are reading? Is it individualized data?
Leila (02:38.308)
I, if you drill down to that level, I’m sure you can get individualized data because each kid uses this. It’s sort of like an e-reading application. So.
Chris Quinn (02:49.211)
So China could use this data to build a massive database of pretty much what 95 % of the kids in America, who they are, what their rough age is, what their proficiency is in reading, how smart they are, what subjects they’re interested in. They would have access to all of that. Wow.
Leila (03:10.364)
Potentially, I guess you could say you could make that argument.
Chris Quinn (03:13.967)
It’s kind of frightening. I don’t think any parent when they sign up for something like this thinks that that data could be scattered to the wind like that. And it seems like they’re kind of too late here that there ought to be better guardrails and protecting kids names. I mean, should every kid in America be in a database that can be handed around like that just because a company that is beholden to China buys it. It’s an interesting conundrum, but what do you do now?
The sale’s already gone through, China likely already has the data.
Leila (03:48.264)
Yeah, you know, I kind of thought it was a little funny and ironic though that that they’re concerned about the government overreach into education when it comes to, you know, the Chinese government being able to determine what materials kids engage with, because that, course, is is the province of Republicans, right? Only Republicans can decide which ideas are dangerous and which lessons cross a political line that
Chris Quinn (04:10.223)
Right.
Leila (04:16.764)
that kind of thought policing is, you know, is in their wheelhouse. So they can’t give that up to the Chinese. That’s our job. I know it’s a first thing I thought of. was like, that’s right.
Chris Quinn (04:23.611)
Yeah. We don’t want China brainwashing you. That’s our job. That’s our province. What are you doing? Get out of this. Right. Jerry Serino wants inside those kids’ heads. Get China out. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. Ohio had been planning to change how it pays daycare centers in a way that would help them be more stable. We talked about this earlier in the year as a great idea to help fortify our much needed daycare. Why is it postponing that move, Laura?
Laura (04:53.761)
because it’s a Biden rule and the Trump administration says, you don’t have to do this. We’re going to change the rule anyway. Because right now, child care providers who are paid through the government are based on child attendance. So if a kid misses a day, whether they’re sick or their parents stays home with them or something else, that provider doesn’t get paid for that day, even though the staffing is the same, the planning is the same, the space and the food and all of that is the same. So it would make…
Daycare and childcare centers a lot more stable if they could count on the money based on enrollment. And that’s what Biden wanted to do. was giving about $70 million more a year to childcare centers in Ohio. But in August, Trump administration said, we’re gonna put that on hold. And also a co-payment assistance that the Biden administration also wanted to offer, which would add up to about $19 million.
and said, hey, brakes on that, we’re going to come up with our own rules, but they haven’t come up with them yet.
Chris Quinn (05:54.025)
He just knows no depth of being vile, right? This is about kids. Daycare centers, the way they get paid now, if the kids don’t show up, they don’t get paid, how do you plan for paying your staff and paying for your supplies? The Biden administration saw this and said, no, this isn’t right. We need to make them safe. It was about the kids. But because it’s Joe Biden, Trump doesn’t care about the kids. If Joe Biden did it, I’m going to stamp it out. I want to erase his presence.
Laura (06:06.893)
True, the teachers are there regardless.
Chris Quinn (06:22.287)
no matter how many people suffer. It’s vile. And look, this is a guy who reached new depths of vile yesterday when he issued horrible comments about the death of Rob Reiner. He’s just a vile human being. Everything that comes out of his mouth is vile and evil and mean-spirited. He is attacking children just to go after Joe Biden. I just cannot understand why Republicans stand by this monstrous human being.
Laura (06:33.099)
Yes.
Laura (06:50.305)
Yeah, the states had planned for it. Ohio put aside the money and it’s only fair. You have the enrollment, you have the teachers, you have the space, you have everything you need for those kids. Pay them because we know that a lot of these are small businesses. Some are nonprofits. They’re not operating with big margins. It’s really expensive to pay childcare because of the ratio it takes for the teachers to the kids. And that’s why childcare is so expensive. And that’s why so many families need help. But in Ohio, we have
some of the lowest threshold for helping in the entire country. You have to make less than 145 % of the poverty line in order to even get public assistance. And Mike DeWine has tried to raise that. The state legislature says no. And what’s really galling is that we’re spending about a billion dollars on publicly funded child care.
But only $250 million of that is coming from the state coffers. The rest is coming from the federal government. So think about, like, we could offer more if we would just raise this threshold and help more families who are hurting for everything, basically. And we just don’t want to as a state. Yet we’ll spend a billion dollars on private school vouchers. Yeah.
Chris Quinn (08:00.208)
Yeah.
But that’s a separate issue. The issue here is they were trying to help these places be healthy. And think about it. Think about the two stories we just talked about. What’s the bigger threat to children in Ohio? The dearth of quality child care or that China might know their reading go dog go? Now, what is John Huston all all huff and puffing about? It’s about China in the books. Where is he to contrast what the president is doing to child care? That’s where he should be. That has a
direct ramification for Ohio children and he’s silent. Where’s Bernie Moreno? You care about Ohio kids? Stand up to your guy and say, don’t do this. Just because Biden did it doesn’t mean it’s bad. This helps our kids. Silence.
Laura (08:46.231)
Yeah, I totally agree with you, but there’s no law that says Ohio can’t pay per enrollment. Other states do it. They’re just saying you don’t have to. So if Ohio doesn’t have to, it’s not going to do it because we don’t care enough about child care. Like we could have all the legislators, we could have DeWine saying, you know, Trump’s not making us do it, but it’s the right thing to do. So we’re going to go ahead and do it anyway.
Chris Quinn (09:08.433)
You’re listening to Today in Ohio. First, Frank LaRose loved a system where states could share information about voters to combat fraud from people who tried to vote in two different states. Then, after MAGA activists criticized the system, LaRose withdrew from it, saying it’s bad, bad, bad. Lisa, is he back now in a new system, does pretty much the same thing? And what happens when MAGA attacks this one?
Lisa Garvin (09:33.502)
Yeah, it’s kind of the same old system but with a new fancy name. It’s called the Alexa Network and Ohio is joining with nine other states to share their voter data to keep the rolls accurate and to pinpoint any fraud. Most of our all of our neighboring states are part of this group including Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
But there was an analysis done by the Center for Economic Policy Research a few years ago. They found out that about 3 % of voters are double registered. And these are people who have just recently moved or they’re snowbirds, they have a second home. But they say trying to vote in two states in the same election is extremely rare. Violations do carry a fine of up to $10,000 and up to five years in prison.
Larose says he wants to work with these other states to find people voting illegally and casting multiple ballots in the same election. But as you said, this is kind of just 2.0 version of Eric, which was the Electronic Registration Information Center. And that was a similar state partnership that they were tracking moves and voter deaths. Larose, as you said, praised it until conservative media claimed that Eric favored Democrats and undermined election integrity. And he dropped it like a hot potato.
Chris Quinn (10:48.911)
Yeah, this was the case that for anybody that wanted to see it showed just how Lily Liver LaRose is that he doesn’t stand for anything because he was full throated in support of the old system until all of a sudden the MAGA folks said it’s bad. And then like you said, hot potato now he’s back again, but the same thing will likely happen. And watch if MAGA comes out and says, we hate this system. He’ll, he’ll immediately turn tail again. And it shows you everything. He doesn’t stand for anything except supporting.
Lisa Garvin (10:58.279)
Mm-hmm.
Chris Quinn (11:18.917)
MAGA and the Republicans and he’s running for attorney general,
Lisa Garvin (11:23.227)
I believe so. don’t know, did he file? I don’t know. you know, the thing about LaRose is he’s always trumpeted the integrity of Ohio’s election system. And then he turns around and said, well, there’s fraud everywhere. And it’s like, what do you believe? This is like cognitive dissonance.
Chris Quinn (11:40.689)
It is. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. Before Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb solicited proposals for developing some of the lakefront land that we’ve been talking about, the part around Brown Stadium, he had thousands of touch points with the public about what people want there. What did they tell him, Leila?
Leila (12:00.665)
Well, people were remarkably consistent and surprisingly practical about what they would like to see on the lakefront. They didn’t come in asking for, you wild futuristic mega projects and things like that. Over years of workshops and surveys and conversations, more than 5,000 responses, in fact, they kept saying some of the same things like make the lakefront usable every day for everyone. And they talked about basics first, places to sit and watch the sunset, green space,
walking and biking paths and benches and shade and access to the water. Comfort and accessibility came up again and again, not just for big events, but they want a place where you’d actually want to linger on a random Tuesday, for example. And from there, the idea has got more fun. People wanted activation. They want small shops and food vendors, maybe a couple of restaurants and live music, festivals, art and cultural events. 60 % said lakeside dining.
would feel very Cleveland. Nearly half said a real beach would be wonderful. Families kept saying, don’t forget the kids, playgrounds, interactive arts, spaces that work across the generations. There were also some wonderfully Cleveland suggestions like a zoo or aquarium annex or a water park or a roller skating trail, a home base for Great Lakes cruise ships came up. But running through almost all of it was the
one big clear value, which was public space. People literally wrote public, public, public. They want the lakefront to belong to everyone. They wanted affordable, welcoming, connecting the east to the west and tying back into the city instead of being cut off by highways. So when Bib and the Waterfront Development Corporation went looking for developers, they were not starting from scratch. They were starting with a very strong mandate from residents.
Don’t wall it off, don’t over privatize it. And don’t forget that Lake Erie is Cleveland’s greatest asset here.
Chris Quinn (13:59.961)
What’s important about this, this is a tiny piece of land. This doesn’t even include where the stadium sits because when they did this, it wasn’t clear that the stadium would be coming down. But now we’re also talking about 450 acres. It’s Berkeley for an airport. That’s not what these people were asked about. But I think we can start to extrapolate. I think Burke offers a much greater potential. You could do something dramatic and big and unique. And I hope
Leila (14:19.976)
Sure.
Chris Quinn (14:29.435)
there’s a new conversation to really envision that. This is a small piece. How many acres are we talking about here? Like 50 something?
Leila (14:36.296)
I, that’s a great question. mean, I know that the stadium alone sits on what, 50 acres? So I’m not, yeah. great. Can you imagine how transformative?
Lisa Garvin (14:42.323)
believe it’s 177 acres, if I’m not mistaken, yeah.
Chris Quinn (14:45.111)
Is it? Okay. Which is about the size of Acacia Park. mean, that’s a pretty sizable piece of land.
Leila (14:51.696)
Right. And then you add to it, Burke, if that comes online, this is going to be just an incredible moment for Cleveland to have all of that activated space on the lakefront. We expect to hear pretty soon which developer was chosen for this project. And then I guess we’ll know more details and we’ll know for sure how closely the plan will adhere to the wishes of the people or whether they did all this public outreach just to be able to say that they did it.
Lisa Garvin (15:17.363)
Actually, I need to make a correction. That number is incorrect. That’s the acreage of the new stadium site, so I apologize.
Chris Quinn (15:25.379)
Okay, you’re listening to Today in Ohio. Rocky River schools have been through the wringer lately with inappropriate behavior by adults and one of the egregious cases involves the former school resource officer at the high school. Laura, what did he do and what is his sentence for that?
Laura (15:42.562)
This is so disturbing. illegally searched the law enforcement database to gather information on women and students. And he was sentenced Wednesday to six months in prison. He’s 55 years old. His name is Michael Bernhardt. And he admitted to three counts of unauthorized use of the Ohio law enforcement gateway. He’s arguing, though people do it all the time, which is not a great defense. It’s still illegal. He can no longer be a police officer, thanks
goodness, but what really swayed Judge Timothy McCormick was the victim’s statements and that this isn’t necessarily about the going into the database, but the fact that he was grooming girls as young as 14 in high school, exchanging all sorts of messages and then meeting up with them later. A relationship turned physical when a girl turned 16. I just have to reiterate how awful this is. This is a police officer placed in the school so that
you know, obviously keep the kids safe, also have a good rapport with kids so that they have a good relationship with law enforcement. Keep them on the straight and narrow and he’s the one that is just preying on them. It is so awful.
Chris Quinn (16:52.753)
Yeah, I was a little bit surprised that judge said he was thinking of not sending him. He’s going to be in jail, not prison. But the six months actually seems kind of light to me because what blows me away is he was doing this for 10 years. Do they not have safeguards on this system where they can detect that somebody’s using it inappropriately? He was looking up girls all the time and then he was looking up people in their lives. I it was really over the top bad. And I just can’t understand how that can go on for a decade.
Laura (16:57.847)
Sorry.
Laura (17:15.735)
Mm-hmm.
Chris Quinn (17:22.757)
and no one notices.
Laura (17:24.461)
There’s so many questions and you know, this is my community. My kid goes to this high school and the principal who was overseeing this during this time and you know, we’ve talked about all sorts of other things that happened in Rocky River schools at the time is now gone and they’re looking for a new principal. The superintendent is gone and I’m personally very glad about that because I agree. How could this go on for this many years and he’d been in the school since 1994, I believe.
And this is just so wrong on so many levels. These girls are going to be, you know, they’re dealing with this for the rest of their lives. That’s what their parents said. And it’s supposed to be a person of trust.
Chris Quinn (18:04.729)
You watch though, he’ll get out in six months. He’ll have the record sealed and then he’ll be asking us to remove him from our archives. Not going to happen. I’ve just kind of, I, when this all happened to the school district was not good about transparency. And so it’s, I feel like now we know what this was about in full detail and it’s really, really bad. So six months doesn’t feel like enough. You’re listening to today in Ohio.
Laura (18:10.407)
No way.
Chris Quinn (18:32.591)
What is city councilman Richard Star saying about the Cleveland investigation into the devastating Rainbow Terrace fire from earlier this year, Lisa?
Lisa Garvin (18:41.745)
Yeah, he’s not happy about it. That fire was June 26. It was an explosion at the Rainbow Terrace Apartments. 44 units burned. 120 people are displaced. Over $3.5 million in damages, but they still have no answers on what caused that fire and explosion six months down the line.
So Ward 5 Councilman Richard Starr wrote a letter to the Bibb administration demanding updates on the investigation. He says residents have been asking, you know, if there was negligence or code violations that could have caused this and are there steps being taken to prevent future incidents at the apartments? No response, he says, from the property manager of Independent Management Services, which manages that property. They’re Michigan-based group. They have not answered any of his inquiries.
Displaced residents are complaining of being relocated to squalid conditions. We talked to a couple of them, Eon’s Jen Moses. She’s a 23 year old mom with two kids. She says that the Cuyahoga Metro Housing Authority has relocated her several times. Every apartment they moved her to had serious issues. And then it turned out that her two year old son tested positive for lead.
Kayana Bell, lost, two of her kids were severely burned in this fire. We did a story on that. It was a great story. She said she had to move to a home that had no working oven. And then, you know, there was somebody who died in this too. Cordale Sheffield died trying to save one of Bell’s daughters.
Chris Quinn (20:11.245)
Olivia Mitchell’s done terrific work in documenting everything that’s happened here. And I’m I’m with Star. I cannot understand why we don’t know anything. And I’m starting to wonder if maybe Cleveland has some culpability. There was talk that there were no firewalls in the attic between the units. And it was an old building. And so it predated those codes. But if there was any work done in that building since the code was changed, then it would have applied. And I wonder if Cleveland
housing inspectors didn’t do their job and get this to be safe. I don’t understand why six months later we don’t have answers. This thing spread super fast. It was hugely tragic. Like you said, there was a death by a hero trying to rescue people. And how can we not know anything all this time later? You hate to think it’s because, well, these are poor people. We don’t care about poor people if it were, you know,
wealthy people in the suburbs we’d have a million answers but i wonder if cleveland dropped the ball on inspections of this building
Lisa Garvin (21:14.131)
Here’s my question, why would a city hire a third party to manage the property? Isn’t it their job to manage the property? I don’t know.
Chris Quinn (21:22.127)
I don’t I I think he was it’s private right I thought it was private but it was. I it was I thought it was subsidized by housing Lila do you know.
Lisa Garvin (21:26.482)
I thought it was Public Housing Unit. I could be wrong.
Leila (21:31.568)
It’s yes, yeah, it’s a it’s it’s it’s a building. It’s a facility that accepts housing vouchers, but it’s privately owned and operated.
Lisa Garvin (21:38.638)
okay, okay.
Chris Quinn (21:41.009)
And it had had trouble before. just, there’s a lot of questions and I’m glad Star is, is raising. He, it’s not like he, he grandstanded on this. waited six months, but it’s come on. What, what happened here? How do we make sure it doesn’t happen somewhere else? There’s a lot of suffering that resulted from it. And maybe what the city really needs to do is to turn this whole investigation over to a independent party. You’re listening to Today in Ohio.
Layla, how hot is a ticket to Kamala Harris with her book tour and when is she coming to Cleveland?
Leila (22:13.884)
This ticket is very hot, Chris, and Cleveland is absolutely on this list. Kamala Harris is heading back out on the road in early 2026 with an expanded book tour to her memoir, 107 Days is the name of the book, and tickets are moving fast. This isn’t a casual author stop. It’s being billed as a conversation with Kamala Harris with onstage discussion, reflections on her presidential run, and a lot of focus on
resilience and civic engagement for people who feel burned out by politics. The proof that it’s a hot ticket is in the prices, honestly. In many cities, seats are already limited and resale prices are climbing, especially in bigger markets. And Cleveland is actually one of the pricier stops, which tells you something about the demand here. She’ll be in Cleveland on Wednesday, February 25th at the Key Bank State Theater at Playhouse Square. It starts at 7 p.m. The show is sold out.
And if you got a ticket, you know that these tickets are going for as much as a couple hundred dollars, depending on where you’re sitting. Much more on some resale sites if you’re trying to get a ticket now. The format is intimate by design. There’s conversation, audience Q &A, and optional meet and greet packages that include a signed copy of the book and a photo with Harris. It’s not a stump speech or anything like that. It’s supposed to be more reflective. But this is obviously a political figure who still draws a crowd. So yeah, it’s a hot ticket.
Chris Quinn (23:37.393)
Yeah, I looked at some of the prices, 225, 300, 325. You’re right, it’s a hot ticket. People want to hear from her. I think it says something about the current political climate. She is hinting that she’s going to make another run, and I guess people want to hear from her.
Leila (23:55.369)
I feel like what’s been really fascinating about Harris lately is how unfiltered she’s become. I haven’t read her memoir, but I suspect that it reflects what she’s been saying too in these long form interviews that I’ve been listening to and reading that she’s not smoothing over what happened in 2024. She’s really naming it. She’s been blunt about feeling abandoned after stepping up as the Democratic nominee and
I listened to the diary of a CEO interview where she didn’t dance around any of this. She said President Biden was so bitter about being pushed off the ticket that he and his inner circle essentially went silent and offered no real support while disinformation about her just really spread unchecked. It was stunning how candid she is.
Lisa Garvin (24:47.751)
But it sounds like a whole lot of sour grapes to me, quite personally.
Leila (24:51.74)
Well, I but I think the things that she’s calling out really happened in the background. she, you know, I don’t doubt that Joe Biden was, you know, not treating her the way he should have during that time. She was kind of thrown into the mix at a very late moment and had to carry the mantle. So I don’t know. I think people are dying to hear all of that in this unfiltered way.
Chris Quinn (25:17.769)
Okay, you’re listening to Today in Ohio. Our sister site in Alabama has an investigative project out this week on how a pesticide is linked to Parkinson’s disease. One of the people they profile is an Ohioan. Laura, what’s the gist of the project? And who is the Ohioan?
Laura (25:35.33)
Yeah, I had no idea about this pesticide. It’s called Paraquat, and it is super dangerous. I you can die from getting contact with it on your skin. And between 11 million and 17 million pounds of this are sprayed annually in the United States to help grow all sorts of crops like cotton, soybean, corn, even peaches. And the use is increasing. It doubled from 2012 to 2018, but there are links to Parkinson’s disease. And so there are thousands of lawsuits.
suing Sagenta, which is the company that developed it, and Chevron, which sold it until 1986 about these, you know, the cancers and all sorts of things that people have. Basically, the lawsuits are on Parkinson’s. And the folks who did the story from M. Live in Alabama talked to a winery owner in Valley City, it’s in Medina County, about his experience. And he hadn’t even
worked with it for that long, but there are these links. The companies say that’s not causation, but they have been working on settling some of them.
Chris Quinn (26:43.631)
Yeah, think Lisa will remember Paraquat like I do. Because when we were, it was used to wipe out marijuana fields,
Lisa Garvin (26:46.78)
yes. yes, I was just…
Lisa Garvin (26:53.435)
Yeah, exactly. In the 70s, they sprayed Mexican marijuana fields. And people were freaking out because they thought, you know, the pot they were smoking had paraquad in it.
Laura (26:53.948)
yeah.
Chris Quinn (26:57.23)
Yeah.
Laura (27:02.359)
Well, they’d be dead. mean, this is so deadly. Like at the time that Dave Gilbert, the Ohio man, was spreading it on his fields, the precautions were wearing rubber gloves, a heavy shirt, and goggles. Now you have to have respirators and closed cabs and other safety measures. But most countries seem to have banned it, like 70 countries have banned it. China won’t let it be used, but they’re manufacturing it, which is crazy.
I mean, I’ve talked about this on the podcast before. My dad has Parkinson’s and it’s just an awful debilitating disease and it’s horrible to watch. And Parkinson’s diagnoses in this country are increasing like crazy. Right.
Chris Quinn (27:43.505)
Yeah, right, we’re gonna talk about that in a minute. What threw me was seeing Paraquat again. Unlike Lisa, I remember the huge controversy of the 70s when it was being used in Mexico. There was abject fear by marijuana users back then, but I don’t think, Lisa, I’ve heard of it since the 70s, have you?
Lisa Garvin (28:02.899)
I haven’t either. thought that it was completely out of use. And I want to point out that it was our federal government that was spraying the Mexican marijuana fields. It wasn’t the Mexicans doing it. But yeah, I haven’t heard about it since then. I thought it had been taken off the market.
Chris Quinn (28:13.124)
Yeah.
Laura (28:17.453)
But it’s being used everywhere, including in golf courses. And this one stat, that even living within a mile of a golf course increased the risk of Parkinson’s by 126%. So we should all be aware of it, whether or not we live on a farm.
Chris Quinn (28:17.542)
Great work.
Chris Quinn (28:30.837)
Great work by AL.com. Thanks for sharing it with us. You can find it on Cleveland.com. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. Speaking of Parkinson’s, Lisa, how big of a problem is it in Ohio compared to other states? There’s new information out.
Lisa Garvin (28:45.011)
Yeah, we’re kind of high on the list. Ohio and surrounding states have some of the highest death rates from Parkinson’s disease. In Ohio, it’s just over 10 deaths per 100,000 population. That was in 2023. Surrounding states, Pennsylvania was 9.5, Kentucky 10.2, Michigan was 9.8.
West Virginia was 10.5. The highest in the nation was Kansas at 11.5. So we were only, you know, point and a half below them. And then the lowest was New York at 6.2. So about 1.1 million Americans have Parkinson’s. They diagnose 90,000 new cases every year. The highest prevalence tends to be in the Rust Belt, Florida and Southern California. The risk factors, it’s one and a half.
times more common in men than women. mostly onset is mostly in the early to mid sixties. then environmental exposure is a big risk factor, pesticides and toxins and manganese and welders, which makes me think that’s why the Rust Belt has such a high prevalence of Parkinson’s.
Chris Quinn (29:51.697)
Yeah, and you could see Florida having it because a lot of people from the Rust Belt migrate there when they retire. It is frightening to think that a lot of these cases are based on environmental exposure because we’re we really don’t have a lot of control over that in our lives. And as Laura points out, it’s devastating disease. I mean, you just wither and weaken and it’s horrible. I would hope.
that we would get a much better handle on what the causes are so we can remove them from the environment.
Lisa Garvin (30:23.525)
And there is no cure. It’s a progressive disease. It affects your neurological system. It can be controlled with medications and physical therapy, but only up to a point.
Chris Quinn (30:33.849)
All right, you’re listening to Today in Ohio. That’s it for the Tuesday episode. Thank you, Leila. Thank you, Lisa. Thank you, Laura. Thank you for being here with us. We’ll return Wednesday to talk about the news.
Cleveland, OH
Guardians Set Off Alarm Bells for Kwan Yesterday
In the bottom of the 8th inning, with the Guardians trailing 5-3, David Fry and Brayan Rocchio singled to leadoff an inning against right-handed reliever Luis Garcia. For his career, Garcia has been a very serviceable relief pitcher with a 4.20 ERA. However, he is 39 years old and, as of today, has an ERA of 10.50 and an FIP of 6.12. So, to be clear, while potentially a competent middle reliever, not someone that an all-star hitter hitting leadoff should feel anything less than fully confident to get a hit or a walk.
Enter Steven Kwan. As of today, he has a 67 wRC+. He is having an awful year, no doubt. But, it’s May and he has a career wRC+ of 109. He also has a career 117 wRC+ vs. RHP. He also has a 213 wRC+ for his career in 3-1 counts. And, guess what? Steven Kwan worked a 3-1 count.
NOW enter Tony Arnerich, acting manager of the Guardians yesterday as Stephen Vogt dealt with what I hope is simply a nasty cold (he sounded TERRIBLE in interviews on Saturday). Arnerich put the sacrifice bunt sign on for Steven Kwan. He clarified this was the case after the game, as reported by Cade Cracas of Sports Illustrated on Twitter:
Are you curious how often a team’s leadoff hitter has been asked to lay down a sacrifice bunt in a 3-1 count with his team down 2 runs late in the game and at least one runner in scoring position? Well, I can tell you that from 2023 until yesterday, it did not happen one time. Let’s look further back… oh, ok, in the past decade prior to yesterday, it happened exactly ONE time… for the Chicago Cubs in 2022.
Here’s the thing… I don’t even know that having Kwan bunt was 100% the wrong call. I mean, aside from the fact that I am fundamentally opposed to sacrifice bunts except in situations where one run wins the game and the sacrifice bunt is with no outs to get a runner to third by an offensively-challenged hitter who knows how to execute a bunt, I think I understand why Arnerich decided his best hope was sacrificing Kwan’s chances for a hit and punting things to Chase DeLauter and Jose Ramirez. It’s because Arnerich recognizes that Kwan is nowhere near a 109 wRC+ or 117 wRC+ hitter as he currently exists.
We can’t say “Oh, Arnerich is new to the team, he doesn’t know about good Kwan.” Arnerich has to know these players inside and out, their present and their past and projected future. He knows Kwan has traditionally handled RBI opportunities well and has been very effective in 3-1 counts. If he didn’t know that, well, to be honest, he should be fired for lack of preparation. But, I think he did know that. I think he made the very pragmatic assessment that Kwan was more likely to provide a 67 wRC+ output in that situation which would make advancing the runners to get to actual good hitters a much riskier proposition.
Last night needs to be the flare fired off by the Guardians’ bench coach to the team to say “Hey, it’s time to move Steven Kwan from the leadoff spot.” It’s time to platoon Kwan vs. LHP. It’s time to let Kwan have more room to breath to figure out if he can get back to the hitter he was before June 2025. From June 2025 until now, Kwan has a 77 wRC+. He’s still walking at a good rate and striking out at a low rate. He’s just simply not hitting the ball well at all with a 15.6% hard-hit rate and an average exit velocity of 85 mph, and a 1.4% barrel rate. He is Austin Hedges (well, prior to this season) who strikes out a lot less. And, yes, that is the kind of player you can justify asking to sacrifice bunt to give your actual good hitters a chance to win you the game, even though a sacrifice bunt down two STILL seems insane.
After last night, the Guardians cannot have it both ways. Either Kwan is a leadoff hitter and should be trusted to figure it out and HIT. OR, he is what Arnerich told us last night… a bottom of the order hitter who should only be looking to flip the order over to hitters who can actually imapct the baseball. I know it’s a hard conversation and I know Kwan is a selfless player who volunteered to switch to centerfield to help the team, even having won four consecutive gold gloves in his previous position. You hate showing any lack of confidence in him, Vogter. But, there is absolutely nothing wrong with telling a struggling veteran, “We are taking some pressure off you and batting you 7th for a while. We’d love to have you back in the leadoff spot as soon as possible. We are going to give you more days off to try to fix what’s wrong and work with our supposedly competent hitting staff. We believe in you and this is a chance to take a deep breath and get back to being you.”
Will moving Steven Kwan down in the order solve the Guardians’ hitting issues? Of course not. But, it’s a simple, straight-forward way to try to help solve KWAN’S hitting issues, who remains a key to getting this offense humming. I would immediately install Travis Bazzana as the leadoff hitter and let him, DeLauter and Ramirez do their absolute best to drive pitchers insane for three batters for a while. But, after the message your bench coach sent last night, you simply cannot continue to bat Kwan leadoff and hope things magically change.
Cleveland, OH
Paint the Town: Sherwin-Williams Opens Massive 36-Story Headquarters in Cleveland – Scioto Post

CLEVELAND, OH — Governor Mike DeWine joined city leaders and executives today to officially cut the ribbon on the new Sherwin-Williams global headquarters, a project that literally changes the skyline of downtown Cleveland.
The grand opening coincides with the company’s 160th anniversary. Founded in Cleveland in 1866, the paint giant is doubling down on its Ohio roots with a sprawling, one-million-square-foot campus.
By the Numbers: A New Hub for Talent
The new headquarters is more than just an office—it is a massive economic engine for Northeast Ohio:
- 36 Stories: The main office tower now stands as a prominent feature of the downtown landscape.
- 3,000+ Employees: The tower will house thousands of workers, bringing consistent foot traffic back to the city center.
- $37.5 Million: The investment committed by JobsOhio to ensure the project stayed in Cleveland.
- 1 Million Square Feet: The total size of the campus, which includes a two-story welcome pavilion and a multi-level parking garage.
“Sherwin-Williams has called Northeast Ohio home for 160 years, and today is a celebration of their longtime commitment to Ohio,” said Governor DeWine during the ceremony. He noted that the state-of-the-art facility is designed to keep Ohio’s “best and brightest” students in the state after they graduate.

Investing in the Future
The headquarters is the second half of a two-part expansion. In September 2025, Sherwin-Williams opened its Global Research and Development Center in Brecksville, which currently houses 900 employees. Between the two sites and various other operations, the company now employs more than 6,500 Ohioans.
To keep the “talent pipeline” flowing, JobsOhio is also backing the “Create Your Possible” Career Accelerator at Baldwin Wallace University. The program provides mentorship and internships specifically for STEM and business students, creating a direct path from the classroom to a desk in the new 36-story tower.
Cleveland, OH
What’s it like being a news anchor at Cleveland’s ABC Channel 5
Note to readers:
The following item is a written record of the Ward 2 council community meeting from April 29, 2026, compiled by Akron Documenter Wittman Sullivan. It is not a reported story.
Documenters are residents who are trained to observe and document local government meetings. Their notes are edited before publication for clarity and accuracy — unless quotation marks are used, all text is paraphrased.
If you believe anything in these notes is inaccurate, please email us at documenters@signalakron.org with “Correction Request” in the subject line.
Summary
- Tessa DiTirro, an anchor and reporter from Cleveland television station News 5 (WEWS), talked with community members about local concerns, including traffic issues and community events. She lives in West Akron and graduated from Firestone High School and Ohio State University.
- Multiple community events are coming up in Ward 2, including the Ward 2 Baseball Game in July at 7 17 Credit Union Park in downtown Akron and the annual Ward 2 Community Cleanup led by Keep Akron Beautiful at the Patterson Park Community Center on May 9 at 8:30 a.m. Sign up here.
- A community member spoke with Ward 2 Council Member Phil Lombardo about traffic safety concerns on Cuyahoga Street, saying his concerns about crashes have been ignored.
Documenter follow-up questions
- What is the exact criteria that determines the order of house demolition in Akron?
- Ward 2 City Council Member Phil Lombardo started the meeting at 6:01 p.m.
- Ward 10 City Council Member Sharon Connor and Akron Public School Board Member Nathan Jarosz were also present.
- Lombardo said his campaign manager helps to schedule meetings.
- Lombardo said the Ward 2 baseball game will be in July at 7 17 Credit Union Park with $8 seating in line with third base and a free hot dog. The first 1,000 fans will get a free Jose Ramirez bobble head.
- Keep Akron Beautiful is looking for a volunteer for a month to water a flower bed at the corner of Dan Street and Glenwood Avenue in North Hill.
- The annual Ward 2 cleanup is May 9 at 8:30 a.m. at Patterson Park Community Center, led by Keep Akron Beautiful, to make “this place look sparkling despite the orange barrels.”
Channel 5 anchor graduated from Firestone High School
- DiTirro said she graduated from Firestone High School, Akron School for the Arts Visual Art program, and participated in choirs and musicals. She studied TV Broadcasting at Ohio State University and has worked in broadcasting in Wheeling, Cincinnati, Grand Rapids and now in Cleveland since July 2023.
- She said she has long ties to Akron and lives in West Akron, her parents live in West Akron, and she loves Dontino’s in Akron.
- She hosts Good Morning Cleveland on Channel 5 on Saturdays at 8 a.m. and Sundays at 10 a.m. Stories come from her listening to residents and reading social media, the Akron Beacon Journal and Signal Akron posts. She works with a photographer and producers to write 90-second to two-minute segments. Lombardo gives her some stories, she said, like the street light outage story.
- She works from 3 a.m. to 11 a.m. Wednesday through Friday and 5 a.m. to 1 p.m. on weekends.
- Lombardo asked if she works on investigative or feel-good reporting
- DiTirro said News 5 has an investigative team that she’ll sometimes pass ideas to. Still, she has the freedom to focus on community stories and accountability pieces as a morning news anchor.
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DiTirro fields questions about news decisions
- A community member asked her to cover the National Night Out against crime on Aug. 4.
- A community member asked what her favorite story has been.
- DiTirro said in 2024, they covered the recycled Cleveland E-Scooters that were refurbished at Summit E-Waste Recycling (the company no longer rehabs scooters), which led to people across the country buying all of them.
- Lombardo asked how hard it is to switch between sad and feel-good stories.
- Ditirro said, “It is tough,” but her producer helps her write a balanced show with smooth transitions.
- A community member asked if she goes to churches and communities that read to children.
- DiTirro said she goes but doesn’t usually make stories out of it.
- A community member asked how community concerns turn into a story.
- DiTirro said she’ll take larger community concerns to a team of producers and executive producers. Stories come from curiosity usually, but timely news such as crime usually takes precedent. She said the E-Scooter story came from curiosity.
- A community member asked her to cover speed tables.
- Connor asked how community members can spread good news.
- She said that community members elevating good news to her helps.
- A community member with Progress Through Preservation said they need more time to find investors to save Firestone Plant #1. She said Tony Troppe hasn’t been given enough time for projects like saving St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in University Park.
🗓️ New events calendar! From block parties to concerts and kids’ activities, find fun around Akron and Summit County all year long. Dive into the calendar and start planning.
Residents raise concerns about Cuyahoga Street safety, vacant houses
- A community member asked for a plan for Cuyahoga Street and asked why Sackett Avenue has a speed trap trailer.
- Lombardo said it was added after resident requests.
- The community member said his 31 calls have been ignored even after a family was killed on the 1600 block of Cuyahoga Street. He said he’s been asking for help since 2025, and a dead-end road got action before a street with an issue of head-on collisions and deadly speeding issues.
- An Akron Police Department (APD) officer said there were multiple resident complaints on Sackett.
- A community member said they are putting a permanent speed table next to his house on Gorge Boulevard and said people will speed after passing it.
- Lombardo said the maintenance with the rubber tables is too much, but if anybody has concerns about asphalt speed tables, they can speak to the city council on Mondays at 6:30 p.m. during the public comment period.
Issues with vacant houses, potholes also raised to council member
- A community member asked Lombardo about a vacant corner house in the community.
- Lombardo said the house should have come down. He doesn’t know the schedule since about 50 homes are demolished annually, but the city can’t schedule them since fire-damaged homes always take top priority.
- He said when he was riding with the police once and they checked on a vacant house at 857 Gorge Blvd., and when they knocked on the door, they were greeted by a squatter who had removed the condemnation sign.
Go deeper: Read our full explainer on how Akron decides which derelict houses to tear down next.
- A community member said panhandlers near state Route 8 are getting close to cars.
- An Akron Police Department officer said they need a vendor’s license and may not go beyond the curb, but people shouldn’t pay them because it will be spent on drugs.
- A community member said people could give out “blessing bags” with toiletries and basic needs.
- A community member said kids have been hiding money in hole in a rotted tree in her yard. She asked when the city would remove the tree.
- Lombardo said there isn’t a schedule, but if he gets an address, he can check with the municipal arborist.
- A community member said it can take up to six months to remove a tree.
- A community member asked why the city removes devil strip trees.
- Lombardo said it is usually a disease or sidewalk damage.
- A community member asked who’s liable for damage if a devil strip tree falls on their house.
- Lombardo said that is what home insurance is for.
- A community member said a pothole keeps reopening near North High School on Tallmadge Avenue.
- Lombardo said they are looking for repaving grants in 2027, but it also needs utility work.
May speaker will be Akron Chamber of Commerce president
- Lisa Mansfield from Vantage Aging said the Senior Summit Expo on May 6 at St. George’s Fellowship Hall in Fairlawn will have more than 75 vendor booths.
- Lombardo said Greater Akron Chamber of Commerce President Steve Millard will be the meeting guest in May, WAKR will be at the meeting in June, and University of Akron President R.J. Nemer will be a guest speaker in July or August.
The meeting ended at 6:54 p.m.
Find your neighborhood news: See all of our reporting on Ward 2 neighborhoods North Hill, Merriman Valley, and Chapel Hill in one place.
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