SNAP benefits are vulnerable to theft. In Ohio, there's no recourse for victims
Ohioans who rely on SNAP benefits, also known as food stamps, pay for groceries with cards that are lacking a vital protection against cybercrime: a chip.
Ohioans who rely on SNAP benefits, also known as food stamps, pay for groceries with cards that are lacking a vital protection against cybercrime: a chip.
Yarenci Hernandez's abuse started the night she met her father. Born in Mexico City, she lived with neighbors until, when she was about seven or eight, her father came to take her to Columbus, Ohio.
"Even from the moment that I met him – because that was really the first time I had met him – I can remember the uncomfortable feeling I felt," said Hernandez.
Across the country, children and teenagers are being strip searched by school administrators and staff, who are often looking for vape pens or other minor contraband.
Community members in Steubenville are working together to help unhoused people, after the eastern Ohio city's homeless shelters closed.
Urban Mission Ministries shuttered both its emergency shelter and one for women and children in October, citing financial strain.
Now, three months later, the community has yet to find a long-term solution to shelter people in need.
In 1978, residents in the small community of Winameg in rural northwest Ohio discovered several bones of a mammal dating back to the Ice Age: a mastodon.
Bowling Green State University studied the mastadon skeleton, then sent it to the University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology collection, where much of it still resides today.
But not every bone made it out of Fulton County.
Last July, a short notice appeared in the back of the Marietta Times.
When the Ohio Department of Natural Resources issued permits to construct two injection wells, to store waste from oil and gas drilling, within two miles of the city of Marietta's aquifers, residents in the area grew concerned.
Hydraulic fracturing, particularly on public lands, has spurred protests across Ohio.
Three years ago, when people called 911 in Tiltonsville, they didn't know if anyone would show up.
This story is part five of our five-part series "Sound the Alarm." This long-term investigation reveals the crisis facing volunteer fire departments in Ohio and digs into potential solutions.
In the back of the ambulance, Peg Dugan could feel her husband's pulse fading under her fingers. She called out his blood pressure levels — not to the crew she usually ran calls with as a volunteer firefighter, but to her nine-year-old grandson Owen, whose shoes she hurriedly helped put on as she explained they had to save PapPap.