-
The series is titled "Neepwaantiinki." That translates to learning from each other in the Miami language. Each episode seeks to describe the history and contemporary life of the tribe today.
-
Cicadas from Brood XIV will soon become abundant in Southern Ohio, with smaller populations to be present in the Southern Miami Valley. The next time this specific brood will be observed is 2042.
-
StoryCorps' One Small Step program brings people with different views together to record a conversation, not to debate politics, but to get to know each other as people.
-
Regenerate Garden Company is parking its truck for landscaping maintenance in urban and suburban Dayton neighborhoods to cut back on emissions. It will use a bicycle services to meet its neighborhoods where they are and provide regenerative landscaping services.
-
The nonprofit will receive $100,000 a year for up to two years.
-
The box tree moths which hail from Asia are known to destroy the Boxwood plant which is a unique resource in Ohio. Ohio has an online tool to report moth sightings.
-
Officials say the tax credits represent an investment in more than $141 million in new payroll and spur more than $2.5 billion in investments across Ohio.
-
Following the fatal shooting in the store on Monday, locals offer their thoughts on the tragedy.
-
The invasive box tree moth was spotted in Hamilton and Clermont counties. That’s after a resident submitted a photo of the insect to the U.S. Department of Agriculture earlier this month, according to the Ohio Department of Agriculture.
-
Some farmers in Ohio are shifting their practices and being part of the climate change solution. They do that through regenerative agriculture that seeks to restore and build on farming’s pre-industrial practices. Some small farmers are leading that change.
-
Southwest Ohio is going through an abnormal drought period right now, that's according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Some of those droughts are even more severe toward the Great Plains and Midwest.
-
One expert predicts gas cost could surpass five dollars a gallon in Ohio by mid-June