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Ohio Senate approves DATA Act standardizing elections information statewide

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Ohio Senate approves DATA Act standardizing elections information statewide


The following article was originally published in the Ohio Capital Journal and published on News5Cleveland.com under a content-sharing agreement.

The Ohio Senate has approved a bill overhauling how county boards collect and maintain voter data. The vote comes one day after the proposal passed committee, and without any of a handful of changes proposed by interested parties.

The proposal, known as the DATA Act, grew out of a report commissioned by the Trump-aligned America First Policy Institute. The think tank criticized record keeping in numerous jurisdictions, in part, because they updated it too regularly.

“While this may be with the best intentions by election officials to maintain updated voter rolls,” AFPI argued, continually overwriting the voter rolls violates federal law “which mandates election data must be retained and preserved for 22 months after all federal elections.”

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The report claims there were discrepancies in 2020 between the number of voters and the number of ballots cast in the Ohio counties. AFPI then attempted to apply those disparities across the map to suggest 2020 election data in Ohio could be off by about a quarter million votes.

A review of the three county’s records and the Secretary of State’s data, however, reveal no such discrepancies.

Questioning the intent

The Senate proposal aims to clean up election data by standardizing information. But while Ohio’s Secretary of State has championed the bill, Frank LaRose has also taken recent steps that would tend to undermine the state’s election data.

In Tuesday’s committee hearing, Columbus Democratic Senator Bill DeMora tried to address that.

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“The amendment is fairly simple,” he said, “it is to have Ohio re-enter the ERIC collaborative that transmits voter information between states.”

The nonpartisan Electronic Registration Information Center, or ERIC, operates as a voter information clearing house for the states who participate. The organization compares data across states to spot potential changes — for instance, if a voter moves without changing their registration.

But the group has lately become the target of conservatives skeptical of how it uses that information. Among other complaints, they criticize the organization for sharing data with the Center for Election Innovation and Research which gave grants — so-called “Zuckerbucks” — to underfunded election administrators.

In March, LaRose announced he was pulling Ohio out of the multi-state compact. In his letter, the secretary argued states should be able to share information ‘al a carte.’

“I fundamentally believe that every dues-paying ERIC member should have the right to use these services in the best interest of their own state and its taxpayers,” LaRose contended.

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But without some alternative, Ohio and the six other Republican-led states to exit have fewer tools to ensure election integrity.

DeMora argued LaRose’s decision has to do with “other ambitions” — an allusion to the Secretary’s likely challenge of U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown in 2024.

“For what little voter fraud there actually is,” DeMora said of ERIC, “this actually catches those people that move between states.”

But the committee voted along party lines to set aside his amendment.

DATA Act quibbles

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In addition to DeMora’s concerns, a handful of organizations raised a few of their own. The organization All Voting Is Local raised doubts about the effort in light of the state’s ERIC exit.

“We must be clear,” the group wrote, “no proven alternative to ERIC currently exists, and Ohio would be foolish to use this new bill as an excuse to attempt to recreate the wheel and replace ERIC with an alternative system.”

Another organization, Secure Democracy USA, argued the bill should provide funding for boards.

Both groups also flagged problems related to the secretary’s regular “voter roll maintenance” which includes removing inactive voters. They argued the bill should include rejected ballots when determining a voter’s last activity date.

“Otherwise eligible voters should not be considered “inactive” after attempting in good faith to cast a ballot that ultimately could not be counted,” Secure Democracy USA wrote.

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The bill’s sponsor Sen. Theresa Gavarone, R-Bowling Green, disputed that characterization, arguing her bill does nothing to change the definition of voter activity. The measure instead directs the secretary to set those guidelines in rule.

Aaron Ockerman, speaking on behalf of county elections boards, offered a handful of what he termed “technical” changes.

He argued setting voters’ registration date by postmark only makes sense around the registration deadline. Doing so when there’s no question about an application’s timeliness will complicate filing unnecessarily. On privacy grounds, he suggested state websites only share a voter’s birth year, rather than their full birth date.

Time certain

In an echo of the ‘discrepancies’ highlighted by AFPI, Ockerman also questioned requiring boards submit daily “snapshots” at 4:00 pm. Many boards, he argued, continue operating well into the evening.

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“It’s going to create inconsistencies,” he explained. “If someone’s looking at that information they’re going to see that our voter registration database will look different at the state level on a certain day than it did at a local level. And that’s the kind of thing we’re trying to avoid with this bill.”

The committee didn’t take Ockerman up on any of his proposed changes. The members voted to advance the proposal along party lines.

Speaking after the hearing, Gavarone explained she’d heard arguments before about whether or not to use postmark for registration date. But she argued it was better to remain “consistent.”

As for the how much of a voters birthdate to share and the 4:00 pm deadline, Gavarone said those arguments were new to her, and she’d be willing to discuss them more with Ockerman. Still, she expressed reticence about abandoning a concrete deadline.

“The great thing about this bill is it’s going to make everything (the) same throughout the state and a four o’clock time deadline is very certain,” she explained. “I would certainly not want to make any changes without doing a thorough examination as to the pros and cons of changing a time certain to an open-ended time.”

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In the end, none of the changes proposed by Ockerman and others made it into the proposal.





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THC gummies recalled in Ohio for not being properly marked

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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.

marijuana leaf(Iarygin Andrii – stock.adobe.com)

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.

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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

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Purchase Dates: September 5, 2025, to present

Processor Name: Green Investment Partners, LLC (License# CCP000024-00)

Product ID and Batch:

Gummy recall
Gummy recall(ODC)

Affected Product Sold at the Following Dispensaries:

(OCC)



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Ohio State’s defense is already elite, but these two players could make it even better

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Ohio State’s defense is already elite, but these two players could make it even better


COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State’s defense has been nothing short of dominant this season, but what’s scary for future opponents is that it might be on the verge of getting even better.

The latest episode of Buckeye Talk revealed two fascinating developments that could transform an already-elite unit into something truly unstoppable.

The first involves what Stephen Means described as “the ultimate good problem” at the nickel position. While Lorenzo Styles has been solid, Jermaine Mathews has shown flashes of being an elite playmaker who can dramatically change games with his ability to create turnovers.

“This is, I think, the ultimate good problem that a defense could have — where the guy who’s doing a job isn’t doing it poorly, but there just might be a guy who is elite, elite, elite at it,” Means said.

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What’s Up With That? Why isn’t trick or treating always on Halloween?

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What’s Up With That? Why isn’t trick or treating always on Halloween?


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Why do central Ohio communities trick or treat on nights other than Halloween?

This week’s What’s Up With That? is a personal one, as it’s a query I’ve had since I moved to Columbus nearly seven years ago. What’s the origin of central Ohio’s complex (to outsiders) tradition of holding trick or treating (or Beggars Night, as some call it) on nights other than Oct. 31?

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It is a question that has been asked and answered by The Columbus Dispatch before. But to save you a journey through our archives, I’ll recap the history here. 

Why does central Ohio schedule trick-or-treating on nights other than Halloween?

Up until 2005, when the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission adopted the current system for recommending when communities should hold trick-or-treating, Columbus hadn’t held the event on Halloween itself in 90 years, according to past Dispatch reporting.

Columbus historically held a raucous Downtown Halloween party on Oct. 31, according to our archives, prompting the preference for Oct. 30 as the day kids could collect candy. That party was discontinued in the 1950s over too much revelry, but Oct. 30 trick-or-treating persisted.

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MORPC took on its role as trick-or-treat scheduler in 1993 and adopted the current system it uses to choose the date in 2005. MORPC’s recommendation is just that; communities are still free to set their own trick-or-treating days and times.

When is central Ohio trick-or-treating in 2025?

Here’s MORPC’s system: When Halloween falls on a Friday, Saturday or Sunday, trick or treat typically takes place the Thursday before Oct. 31 in central Ohio. When Halloween falls on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday, expect costumed kids on the day itself. 

In 2015, a MORPC spokesman told the Dispatch the system was meant to increase convenience for families. Friday or Saturday night trick or treating could conflict with football (as could Sunday, for that matter, although in central Ohio it’s largely the first two putting a dent in people’s calendars).

Since Halloween falls on a Friday this year, the recommended trick-or-treat date is Oct. 30, and cities and towns have official candy-calling hours of 6-8 p.m.

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But there are exceptions. Here’s a look at which Franklin County communities are going their own way:

  • Bexley: 5:30 to 7 p.m. Oct. 30
  • Grandview Heights: 6 to 8 p.m. Oct. 31
  • Groveport: 5:30 to 7 p.m. Oct. 30
  • Madison Township: 5:30 to 7 p.m. Oct. 30
  • Worthington: 6 to 8 p.m. Oct. 31

You can see other communities’ hours in this list we published in early October.

Have a question about Columbus? I’ll find your answer

What other weird central Ohio traditions would you like to have explained? I’m happy to track down the information. Or just curious what that development is, or why the traffic pattern you hate is the way it is?

Email ekennedy@dispatch.com and I will see what I can do.

Eleanor Kennedy is the senior digital director of the Columbus Dispatch. She can breached at ekennedy@dispatch.com.



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