-
City of Trotwood approves agreement with Gordon Food Services to open new full-service grocery storeThe City of Trotwood recently approved an agreement with Gordon Food Services to open a new full-service grocery store. That’s after the city’s only supermarket, Foodtown, closed in 2019, leaving residents without a traditional grocery in the community.
-
The State of Ohio plans to install Direct Current (DC) Fast Charging stations every 50 miles along most interstates within a couple of years.
-
The Municipal Court in Montgomery County has opened a new Western Division. It will serve the Cities of Trotwood and Brookville, as well as numerous surrounding villages and townships.
-
On March 2, Trotwood school teachers and support staff staged a 'Walk-In' at several schools.
-
News Update - Montgomery County to Demolish Hundreds of Buildings; Company Says Contract for Base Housing Improperly Awarded; Trotwood Fire and EMS Tax Levy on May Ballot
-
The Funk Music Hall of Fame and Exhibition Center will occupy the old Sears building in Trotwood, Ohio.
-
Students at Westbrook Village Elementary School in Trotwood are learning how to grow and harvest leafy greens through science, math and reading lessons. They’re also learning about where food comes from, and how to cook it.
-
Trotwood's wetland restoration will reverse historic changes to the area's water features and allow the streams to return to their original form. In other news, former public employee Robert M. Vanderhorst pleaded guilty last week to stealing one point eight million dollars.
-
Republican gubernatorial candidate Joe Blystone is questioning the integrity of the primary lection. But Ohio’s Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose says he’s confident the election wasn't rigged. Meanwhile, both Beavercreek and Trotwood, Ohio both failed to pass income tax levies in the recent election.
-
Voters across the state will head to the polls May 3rd to vote in the primary election. And on the ballot for voters in the city of Trotwood is a temporary income tax increase.
-
High school graduates from the Dayton, Trotwood-Madison, Xenia and Springfield public school districts are eligible.
-
Ohioans are not only worried about the deep and bitter divisions separating Americans, they’re fearful about where the country is heading even as the deadly pandemic -- which has already killed more than 5,075 Ohioans -- rages on.