-
A bipartisan group of state leaders and politicians were banned from entering Russia. And a bill is introduced to stop employers from terminating workers health insurance while on strike.
-
Gov. Mike DeWine did not mention several of the gun regulations he proposed in 2019 after the Dayton mass shooting.
-
In Ohio, a proposed legislation was introduced that would allow more school staff to carry guns.
-
The Dayton police department announced they will enforce curfews for minors beginning this Friday.
-
Garrett Reese spoke with West Liberty-Salem’s superintendent about how staff who experienced the shooting in 2017 are responding to the tragedy in Texas.
-
Local leaders and politicians react to a mass shooting carried out by an 18 year old gunman on Tuesday that killed multiple children and faculty members at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas.
-
Tuesday's attack at Robb Elementary School took the lives of 21 people. An additional 17 people were injured.
-
Dion Green is a survivor of the 2019 Oregon District shooting in Dayton. Currently, he’s in Buffalo, New York offering support to families and friends of the victims of a mass shooting. A gunman opened fire in a grocery store – killing ten people and injuring three others.
-
An Ohio House committee recently proposed a bill banning gender transition medications and procedures for minors. Dion Green, a survivor of the mass shooting that happened in Dayton, Ohio visits Buffalo.
-
The Two Days in May Conference on Victim Assistance is an annual two-day event for crime victim professionals put on by the Ohio Attorney General’s Office. This year’s theme was, “A Celebration of Resiliency.” Today’s plenary session focused on lingering impacts of the Oregon District Shooting that took place on Aug. 4, 2019.
-
Gov. Mike DeWine and Attorney General Dave Yost announced an initiative to help Ohio police officers solve gun crimes Thursday.
-
Gov. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio) says there are measures in the legislature that can help reduce gun violence while noting that the permitless carry bill he signed into law is simply "consistent" with the U.S. Constitution.