Ohio
No national abortion ban in GOP's draft platform, disappointing some Ohio Republicans – WOUB Public Media
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WOUB) — As the Republican National Convention begins, the party’s official platform seems to be softer on abortion. Many of those opposed to abortion, including some Republican candidates, have said they had hoped for a national ban on abortion after 15 weeks.
But a draft of the platform that will be finalized by delegates at the RNC doesn’t include such a proposal. In fact, there’s only one mention of the word “abortion.”
Gabriel Mann of Abortion Forward, formerly Pro-Choice Ohio, said he thinks many Republicans realized they were on the losing side of that hot-button issue, especially after 57% of Ohio voters approved an amendment to protect reproductive rights last year.
“They see this record from Ohio voters – voters who approved abortion access. Now they are starting to change their tune because they are realizing that voters approve abortion access. They know that abortion is health care. And their Republican line is not as popular so they are trying to appear to soften,” Mann said. “But we know their true record. They do not support abortion access.”
But Aaron Baer, president of the Center for Christian Virtue, wanted a national abortion ban.
“It’s disappointing that they weakened the language and the commitment to protecting the most vulnerable, the commitment to life,” Baer said.
Baer said former President Trump won in 2016 with a strong anti-abortion platform and policies. And Baer said a national ban would have prevented some abortions now allowed in Ohio, which permits the procedure until viability, usually around 20 weeks.
Baer added it’s now time for Ohioans to talk about limits on abortion.
“And whether folks agree with us on things like the ‘heartbeat bill’ or things like that, that’s one question. But there’s a whole other conversation about later term abortion,” Baer said. “And there’s a lot of work that needs to be done to convince voters about the dangers and harms of late-term abortion. And then one day, we hope to have that debate and vote again in Ohio.”
Late-term abortion is very rare. The so-called “heartbeat bill”, which bans abortion after six weeks, is still in court. A Hamilton County judge is expected to rule on its constitutionality following the passage of the reproductive rights amendment last fall.
Mike Gonidakis, president of Ohio Right to Life, said the RNC platform still reaffirms a commitment to life through the 14th amendment. And he said he doesn’t think voters who oppose abortion are going to be dissuaded from voting Republican because of the change. After all, Gonidakis said the proposed 15-week national ban would still have allowed many abortions in Ohio.
“You know we have called into question the purpose of a 15-week abortion ban because at 15 weeks, 95 to 98 percent of abortions have already occurred or whatever that number is,” Gonidakis said.
The most recent Ohio Abortion Report from 2022 shows about 90% of abortions performed were done before 13 weeks, and 99% happened by the end of 18 weeks. More than two-thirds of abortions are conducted by the end of nine weeks.
Gonidakis, a delegate to the RNC, said he didn’t hear any debate over IVF or birth control – two controversial issues that have come up in discussions on abortion bans. But for the first time in recent years, C-SPAN was not allowed to cover the actual draft session for the platform.
Gonidakis said Ohio’s limits on abortion still apply, even with the new amendment in place. Because Ohio’s Republican-dominated legislature has not changed any abortion-related laws following the approval of the amendment last year, advocates for abortion rights are suing over those laws. Mann agreed the courts have and will play a pivotal role in abortion in the future.
“Donald Trump packed the Supreme Court for the purpose of overturning Roe,” Mann said.
Both sides in the abortion debate said who sits on courts will be a top priority this fall as jurists, not politicians, will play a key role in the future of legal abortion in Ohio and elsewhere.
Ohio
Urban Meyer recalls Pete Rose’s texts about Ohio State football
Cincinnati Reds legend and well-known gambler Pete Rose was possibly more than just curious about Ohio State football’s 2012 season when he texted Buckeyes coach Urban Meyer.
Appearing on “The Triple Option” show with Alabama running back Mark Ingram May 6, Meyer told a story about his relationship with Rose.
After OSU hired Meyer, the Reds asked him to throw out the first pitch at a game. Meyer threw to his son, Nathan, and walked into the dugout, where Rose, MLB’s all-time hit leader, was waiting to greet him.
“I couldn’t get enough talking about ‘Big Red Machine,’ and he wanted to talk college football,” Meyer said on the podcast, explaining how the two spoke for hours and exchanged numbers.
Meyer said that during his first season, Rose texted him early on. He wanted information about the team, like news on Braxton Miller’s shoulder injury.
“I told that to someone, and they said, ‘You’re an idiot. Do you know he’s trying to get information from you for gambling, and you could get in trouble?’ ” Meyer said.
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Though Meyer asserted that he never disclosed much, he started to steer the conversations clear of college football after he realized Rose potentially wanted information for gambling.
The two had another conversation in Las Vegas, where Rose told Meyer he gambled daily after retiring.
Rose was banned from baseball for betting on the sport, something he admitted to in his 2004 autobiography. Rose was reinstated in 2025 and so is considered eligible for the Hall of Fame.
Still baseball’s most prolific hitter (4,256 hits), Rose died in 2024.
Ohio
8th Annual Trumbull County Special Olympics Invitational held in Girard
GIRARD, Ohio (WKBN) – Over 100 athletes came together for the 5th Annual Trumbull County Special Olympics Invitational Saturday morning in Girard.
These athletes represent five different schools across Trumbull County to compete and spread the message of inclusion, achievement, and sportsmanship.
The Invitational continued its long-standing tradition of honoring the legacy of Randy Suchanek while celebrating the dedication and accomplishments of Special Olympics athletes throughout the region.
“You can hear all the excitement for this, for the athletes that are here today,” said superintendent Bryan O’Hara. “They work hard all year long to participate. We’ve always worked hand in hand with the rotary to get this accomplished is a lot of work behind the scenes.”
Participating schools included Ashtabula, Geauga, Columbiana, Kent-Portage and Trumbull Fairhaven
“There’s a lot of nice participation from girard students as you see behind us, and a lot of participation from the community helping out,” Girard-Liberty Rotary co-president Andy Kish added.
O’Hara added that the event keeps everything in perspective, seeing the athletes compete in the spirit of fun, along with the courage and determination that they show.
Alex Sorrells contributed to this report.
Ohio
Can you eat Ohio River fish? Just Askin’
Out of prison, Indiana’s caviar king back on Ohio River to find fishing holes taken
David Cox, of English, Indiana, says once he began setting his nets again after a two-year prison sentence and a three-year ban on commercial fishing, all of his once-secret spots were taken.
Can you eat fish from the Ohio River?
In 1975, future presidential candidate Michael Dukakis, then governor of Massachusetts, bet 20 pounds of New England cod that the Red Sox would defeat the Reds in the World Series. If things went south for Boston, Ohio governor James Rhodes promised to send Dukakis 10 pounds of Lake Erie perch and 10 pounds of Ohio River catfish. The Reds ended up winning and the cod was sent to the Convalescent Home for Children, in Cincinnati.
At the time, people were still eating catfish from the Ohio without too much concern. The fish were also served at several restaurants along the river.
There were warnings in 1977
But two years later, in 1977, The Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission released the results of a study of contaminants found in the tissues of Ohio River fish. They warned anglers in cities such as Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Louisville, Wheeling and Gallipolis that man-made chemicals known as PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, had been discovered in the river fish. Later, high concentrations of mercury were discovered in the fish, too.
Thanks to the Clean Water Act of 1972 and the environmental regulations that followed, the river is now cleaner than it was in the seventies. And it’s still teeming with a variety of fish, including catfish, striped bass, drum and black bass, among other species.
But even though PCBs were banned by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1979, they are still found in fish, since they remain in the sediment in the bottom of the river. “Organisms live in the sediment and fish feed on them,” Rich Cogen, the executive director of the Ohio River Foundation told The Enquirer. Mercury is also a big problem, according to Cogen.
So the question is: Can you eat fish caught in the Ohio River?
The short answer is yes. But it depends on what species you are eating and where along the river you caught it.
There are also very strict limitations on how frequently you should eat them, according to the web site for the Ohio Sport Fish Consumption Advisory, part of the Ohio Department of Health.
In areas of the river between the Belleville Lock, located 204 miles downstream from the river’s origins in Pittsburgh, to the Indiana border, the advisory agency currently recommends consuming Ohio River fish no more than once a month max. That area includes Adams, Brown, Clermont, Gallia, Hamilton, Lawrence, Meigs and Scioto counties.
Here’s where to check
Recommendations change throughout the year, but you can keep up by visiting the Ohio Department of Health’s Sport Fish Consumption Advisory page, which provides updated information on when certain fish, usually bottom feeders such as carp, are deemed too dangerous to eat at all.
Here’s who should take a pass on Ohio River fish
The agency also warns that people who are more likely to have health effects from eating contaminated fish, includingchildren younger than 15 years old, pregnant women and women who are planning to become pregnant to avoid Ohio River fish altogether.
Just because you have to limit the amount of fish you eat, doesn’t mean the river is a bad place for fishing, as long as you limit your intake or do catch-and-release fishing. Just make sure you have a proper fishing license before casting your line.
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The Just Askin’ series aims to answer the questions that no one seems to have an answer for, except maybe Google.
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