Ohio
2024 promises to be a wild year in Ohio. 10 fearless predictions for the new year
Thomas Suddes is a former legislative reporter with The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and writes from Ohio University. tsuddes@gmail.com
Given that 2024 is on Santa’s heels, here are some fearless forecasts about Political Ohio as the New Year beckons:
Could J.D. Vance run with Donald Trump in 2024?
Sen. J.D. Vance, a Cincinnati Republican, could become Donald Trump’s vice presidential running mate, and not just because Vance would like that spot.
A possible fly in the ointment (at this writing): Polls suggest Trump, as of today, would carry Ohio no matter who his running mate is. Side note: Were a Trump-Vance ticket elected, Republicans would still hold Vance’s Senate seat because GOP Gov. Mike DeWine would name Vance’s successor.
Bellwether no more? Is Ohio’s bigly love for Donald Trump proof it lost its swing? |Opinion
Citizens will win over politicians
Assuming it makes the ballot despite courthouse carpet-bombing by Republicans, Ohio voters will in November ratify the proposed statewide anti-gerrymandering issue (“Citizens not Politicians”), clearing the way for competitive General Assembly districts. Fair districts would prune the GOP’s rigged supermajorities in the Ohio House and the state Senate.
Frank LaRose will have the name but not the money
The three Republicans vying for the GOP’s Senate nomination – to challenge incumbent Democrat Sherrod Brown – are state Sen. Matt Dolan, of Chagrin Falls; Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose; and Westlake entrepreneur Bernie Moreno.
Name recognition alone could give LaRose, of Upper Arlington, an edge – but Dolan and Moreno are or will be far better funded. And Tuesday, in a potential game-changer, Trump endorsed Moreno – a huge boost for Moreno.
Marijuana to abortion: 4 times Ohio voters told thirsty politicians to sashay away in 2023
House Bill 6 fall out will continue
Some time in 2024, a Cincinnati-based federal grand jury will indict more players in Ohio’s House Bill 6 scandal, which has already sent former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder, a Perry County Republican, and former Republican State Chair Matthew Borges, of Bexley, to prison.
Jason Stephens vs. Matt Huffman will be a lot clearer
(*) March 19’s primary election could be decisive in whether Republican Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens, of Lawrence County’s Kitts Hill, is positioned for re-election as speaker for 2025-26.
Lame-duck Senate President Matt Huffman, a Lima Republican, aims to return to the House (term-limits are forcing him out of the Senate) and seek the speakership for himself. Whether that happens may be determined by the outcome of some key Ohio House Republican nominating contests in the March primary.
Construction will be in the air
(8) Before or after the primary, the legislature’s focus during the 2024 session, besides re-election, will be passage of a two-year capital improvements (state construction) bill. There’s nothing like ground-breakings and ribbon-cuttings to imply to a General Assembly member’s district that she or he actually does something in Columbus besides schmooze and party.
Sherrod Brown will not be in a shoo in
Democrats will do their all to win Senate re-election for Brown. Still, as previously noted, only one popularly elected U.S. senator from Ohio has won four terms – Columbus Democrat John Glenn.
Michael Rulli will win the 6th
The timing of a special primary is uncertain, but state Sen. Michael Rulli, a Salem Republican, will be nominated for, then win, the 6th District U.S. House seat to be vacated by Rep. Bill Johnson, a Marietta Republican, who’s been named president of Youngstown State University. The district includes Youngstown, Steubenville, parts of Stark County and a swathe of southeastern counties along the Ohio River.
Dave Yost will jockey against Jon Husted to replace Mike DeWine
Because term-limits will retire DeWine in 2027, backroom jockeying for the GOP’s 2026 gubernatorial nomination will continue between Republican Attorney General David Yost and Republican Lt. Gov. Jon Husted, although LaRose – if he doesn’t land the GOP Senate nomination – is also a possibility. (Potential GOP candidate for attorney general: State Auditor Keith Faber, of Celina, an Ohio State law grad.)
LGBTQ will continue to be bullied
The General Assembly’s Republicans will continue to bully sexual minorities at every opportunity, despite the damage that does to what’s left of Ohio’s reputation as a place to live.
In that connection, it’s unknown at this writing whether DeWine will sign, veto, or let become law without his signature trans-bashing Substitute House Bill 68, a demagogic measure passed by General Assembly Republicans (minus Sen. Nathan Manning, of North Ridgeville, who voted “no”).
How the governor deals with that bill will help define his Statehouse legacy. In this year’s state of the state speech, DeWine said, “There is no question – Ohio is on the move!” But he didn’t say in which direction. What DeWine does with HB 68 will make that clear.
Thomas Suddes is a former legislative reporter with The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and writes from Ohio University. tsuddes@gmail.com
Ohio
With NIL on OHSAA’s doorstep, here’s what high school athletes, athletic directors think
Name, image and likeness opportunities have arrived for Ohio high school athletes – at least temporarily, thanks to a case currently making its way through the courts. And there might be only one thing on which supporters and opponents agree.
“It won’t affect as many students as people think,” Pickerington North football coach Nate Hillerich said.
“It’s going to be (about) .0003% of kids that are affected,” Columbus Academy athletic director and former Ohio State basketball player Jason Singleton said. “I don’t think it’s going to be very significant even when they pass that Ohio high school kids can have NIL. I don’t think it will have a huge effect.”
The biggest question in the wake of a lawsuit filed on behalf of Huber Heights Wayne junior and Ohio State wide receiver commit Jamier Brown might be whether NIL permanently comes to Ohio high schools. That could happen through an Ohio High School Athletic Association emergency referendum or the courts.
The OHSAA has put a referendum on the ballot in November for its 815 member schools. A simple majority decides the vote, and new rules would be implemented immediately.
How would Ohio become the 45th state with NIL?
Three years after OHSAA member schools rejected a proposal to allow NIL by a 68-32% margin, Brown’s mother, Jasmine, filed a lawsuit in Franklin County Common Pleas Court on Oct. 15 against the OHSAA seeking a change to the organization’s bylaws.
Five days later, Franklin County Common Pleas Judge Jaiza Page issued a 45-day temporary restraining order nullifying the OHSAA’s prohibition of NIL until a preliminary injunction hearing Dec. 15.
The emergency referendum could render the December hearing moot. The OHSAA’s board of directors met Oct. 23 to determine voting dates for the proposal, which it had originally planned to put up for a vote in May.
The vote is now set for Nov. 17-21. Each school gets one vote, submitted virtually by its principal.
Athletes would not be allowed to use their team or school logos in advertisements, represent their deals during contests or make agreements based on particular performances, such as scoring a certain number of points. They must report any deals to the OHSAA within two weeks; not doing so could result in being ineligible for up to 20% of their sport’s season.
Forty-four states – all but Alabama, Hawaii, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wyoming – allow NIL for high school athletes.
“Some people might not make it to the dream of playing professionally in their sport,” said Pickerington North defensive back Amar’e Miller, a senior and three-star recruit. “This may be the best time of their life for their earning potential.”
Westerville Central athletic director Andy Ey was glad to learn it would not fall to coaches or athletic departments to arrange or keep track of NIL deals. The OHSAA referendum also would prohibit NIL collectives, which are popular among college programs, from managing opportunities for athletes.
“If someone out there wants to pay a kid to be in a commercial or wants to have a kid be a spokesperson for their business or (says), ‘We’ll let you drive this car if you appear in our television ad,’ you should be able to capitalize on your name, image and likeness,” Ey said. “I don’t think that it’s wrong and I don’t think that’s a bad thing.”
Athletes would be prohibited from receiving deals as part of recruitment to another school, and the OHSAA does not plan to change transfer rules, potentially mitigating concerns that NIL could lead to so-called “super teams.”
High school NIL ‘not the same thing’ as college
OHSAA executive director Doug Ute met with athletic directors from across the state Oct. 22 to further clarify what NIL might mean.
“We’re going to adhere (to) the regulations, but at the same time, our school name isn’t going to be out there,” Watterson athletic director Doug Etgen said, adding that the Diocese of Columbus met with its member schools in mid-September to discuss NIL.
“I don’t think it’s as scary as some people think,” Etgen said. “They’re just used to the college NIL. It’s not the same thing. It’s going to be a true NIL situation where a kid can sell his name, image and likeness and get a couple of bucks.”
Big Walnut athletic director Brian Shelton remains opposed to NIL but is open to change.
“I don’t think it’s a good fit for high school athletics, but I do understand that times are changing, and I do understand that it’s probably going to come to Ohio at some point, and I will be supportive of it,” Shelton said. “If the kids deserve it, they deserve it, and they should be able to get what’s coming to them. We’ll follow the rules, and we’ll do what’s right by the kids and OHSAA and everything else.”
Academy basketball standout Jason Singleton Jr., a Harvard commit, said he will think more about NIL opportunities after high school.
“If one came to me, I would be happy, but I really don’t think about that too much,” he said. “Once I get to college, I’ll start thinking about that a lot more.”
Miller suggested some top-tier athletes could leave Ohio if NIL does not become a reality.
“Eventually it will have to pass because it will eventually set Ohio behind in athletics,” Miller said. “Players and families will transfer to other states to take advantage of those life-changing opportunities.”
High school sports reporters Frank DiRenna and Dave Purpura can be reached at sports@dispatch.com and at @DispatchPreps on X.
Ohio
THC gummies at some Ohio dispensaries recalled for mislabeling
(WJW) – The Division of Cannabis Control has recalled some THC gummies sold at dispensaries across Ohio, state officials announced on Tuesday.
The DCC issued a Class II Product Recall for some batches of Kiva Lost Farms Cannabis-Infused Pectin Gummies after learning that servings weren’t labeled with the universal THC symbol, the Ohio Department of Commerce said.
“A product recall was determined to be the most appropriate course of action, as a child accessing the product or another individual ingesting the product unaware it contains THC could result in adverse health consequences,” state officials said in the recall.
The recalled gummies, manufactured by Klutch Processing, LLC, were sold at many Ohio dispensaries, including locally, between Jan. 14, 2025 and Oct. 21, 2025.
They were listed under the following product names:
- Kiva Lost Farms Cannabis-Infused Pectin Gummies – Island Punch Made With O43 Strain
- Kiva Lost Farms Cannabis-Infused Pectin Gummies – Thorny Berry Made With Violet Fog Strain
- Kiva Lost Farms Cannabis-Infused Pectin Gummies – Watermelon Made With Ice Cream Cake Strain
The Department of Commerce provided a breakdown of the recalled products and where they were sold:
License #
Business Name
DBA
City
CCD000013-00
Verdant Creations Newark
Sunnyside
Newark
CCD000015-00
The Forest Cincinnati, LLC
The Forest Cincinnati
Cincinnati
CCD000016-00
THE FOREST SANDUSKY, LLC
The Forest
Sandusky
CCD000024-00
Care Med Associates LLC
Sunnyside
Cincinnati
CCD000025-00
Greenleaf Apothecaries, LLC
The Botanist
Akron
CCD000027-00
Cresco Labs Ohio, LLC
Sunnyside
Wintersville
CCD000028-00
Herbal Wellness Center Jeffersonville, LLC
Herbal Wellness Center Jeffersonville
Jeffersonville
CCD000033-00
App1803, LLC
Herbal Wellness Center Columbus
Columbus
CCD000035-00
QUEST WELLNESS OHIO II LLC
Leaf Relief
Youngstown
CCD000038-00
Herbal Wellness Center Athens, LLC
Herbal Wellness Center Athens
Athens
CCD000043-00
Pure Ohio London LLC
Pure Ohio Wellness
London
CCD000048-00
Cannascend Alternative, LLC
Columbia Care
Marietta
CCD000050-00
Cannascend Alternative, LLC
Columbia Care
Monroe
CCD000051-00
Cannascend Alternative, LLC
Columbia Care
Dayton
CCD000052-00
Green Leaf Medical of Ohio II, LLC
Gleaf
Warren
CCD000059-00
Simple AG Ohio, LLC
Supergood
Ravenna
CCD000060-00
Heritage Wellness Ohio LLC
Story
Cincinnati
CCD000061-00
Jackson Pharm, LLC
Herbal Wellness Center
Jackson
CCD000064-00
Canoe Hill Ohio LLC
Queen City Cannabis Medical Dispensary
Harrison
CCD000072-00
Slightly Toasted, LLC
Bliss Ohio
Kent
CCD000073-00
Marimed OH, LLC
Thrive Wellness Dispensary
Tiffin
CCD000076-00
Pure Ohio Dayton, LLC
Pure Ohio Wellness
Dayton
CCD000082-00
FRX Health of Cuyahoga Falls LLC
FRX Health
Cuyahoga Falls
CCD000083-00
Citizen Real Estate, LLC
Klutch Cannabis
Canton
CCD000084-00
Citizen Real Estate, LLC
Klutch Cannabis
Lorain
CCD000085-00
Cascade Southern Ohio, LLC
Uplift
Milford
CCD000093-00
127 OH, LLC
Bloom Medicinals
Akron
CCD000096-00
SEO Natural Enterprises, LLC
Backroad Wellness
Cambridge
CCD000100-00
127 OH, LLC
Bloom Medicinals
Columbus
CCD000102-00
127 OH, LLC
Bloom Medicinals
Painesville
CCD000103-00
SEO Natural Enterprises, LLC
Backroad Wellness
New Boston
CCD000106-00
SEO Natural Enterprises, LLC
Backroad Wellness
Lima
CCD000109-00
Culture Retail Partners of Ohio, Inc.
Culture Cannabis
Akron
CCD000116-00
Curaleaf Cuyahoga Falls, LLC
Curaleaf
Cuyahoga Falls
CCD000117-00
Curaleaf Newark, LLC
Curaleaf
Newark
CCD000118-00
The Mavuno Group, LLC
Mavuno of Athens
Athens
CCD000120-00
Therapeutic Healing Care II, LLC
Ethos
Lebanon
CCD000133-00
Greenleaf Apothecaries, LLC
The Botanist
Columbus
CCD000135-00
Elevated Growth OH LLC
Elevated Growth
Columbus
CCD000141-00
Canoe Hill Ohio 2, LLC
Story of Cincinnati
Cincinnati
CCD000144-00
The Source Holding Ohio, LLC
Certified Dispensary
South Euclid
CCD000148-00
Ohio Bound Inc.
Locals Dispensary
Cincinnati
CCD000151-00
CV10B, LLC
Story Cannabis
Massillon
CCD000153-00
Grow Ohio, LLC
The Vault
Zanesville
CCD000154-00
Greenleaf Apothecaries, LLC
The Botanist
Solon
CCD000165-00
127 OH, LLC
Bloom Medicinals
Athens
CCD000197-00
AB Retail LLC
Roam Dispensary
Seven Hills
CCD000215-00
Herbal Wellness Portsmouth, LLC
Herbal Wellness Center Portsmouth
Portsmouth
CCD000216-00
RC Retail 2, LLC
Curaleaf
Westerville
CCD000218-00
Farkas Farms, LLC
Farkas Farms
Columbus
CCD000231-00
Columbia Care OH LLC
Columbia Care
Norwalk
CCD000232-00
ATCL2, LLC
Klutch Cannabis
Loudonville
CCD000244-00
Curaleaf OGT, Inc.
Curaleaf
Girard
CCD000248-00
Klutch Northfield, LLC
Klutch Cannabis
Northfield
CCD000253-00
Klutch Prospect, LLC
Klutch Cannabis
Cleveland
CCD000261-00
HWB Ohio, LLC
Story Cannabis
Dublin
There have been no reported illnesses tied to this recall.
The affected gummies have been placed on hold by the DCC. Anyone who purchased the recalled products can return them to the dispensary for a refund.
Learn more about this recall at the Department of Commerce’s website.
Ohio
THC gummies recalled in Ohio for not being properly marked
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO)- The Ohio Division of Cannabis Control has issued a product recall for edible gummies made by Green Investment Partners, LLC.
The Division investigated a complaint that the affected gummies were not marked with a universal THC symbol on each serving.
The Division’s rules require the universal THC symbol on each serving; therefore, the products are not compliant.
The Division has placed a hold on all affected gummy products so that no additional products are distributed to or sold at dispensaries.
No adverse events have been reported. Anyone who experiences adverse health effects after consuming the affected product should contact their health care provider immediately and report the event to the DCC at 1-833-464-6627. The DCC will provide any updates, as necessary.
AFFECTED PRODUCT:
Product Name:
O’Dank Cannabis Infused Gummies – Pineapple
O’Dank Cannabis Infused Gummies – Sour Watermelon
Purchase Dates: September 5, 2025, to present
Processor Name: Green Investment Partners, LLC (License# CCP000024-00)
Product ID and Batch:

Affected Product Sold at the Following Dispensaries:

Copyright 2025 WOIO. All rights reserved.
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