Today From The Ohio Newsroom

Sick of winter? One Ohio city’s solution is to burn it to the ground

At the end of February, Port Clinton residents hold a bonfire like no other in the state: they set a 30-foot snowman on fire.

It’s the Ohio city’s way of saying goodbye to the bitter cold of winter, and a nod to the famed “Burning Man" festival, hosted in the blistering heat of Nevada’s Black Rock Desert.

How Ohio mothers secured their children’s education – with two years of marching

Virginia Harewood was eight years old in 1954 when the Supreme Court Case Brown v. Board of Education supposedly ended segregation in schools. But despite that, her elementary school in the southwestern city of Hillsboro was still divided.

Haitian-Americans in Springfield tell their own stories in new series

The Haitians in the Heartland series is a result of six months of close collaboration between the Eichelberger Center for Community Voices at WYSO with a group of Springfield residents from Haiti, who had been involved in an Internet radio station in Springfield called New Diaspora Live.

This 170-year-old structure houses Ohio's abolitionist history

Walking through the doors of the Cozad-Bates House, visitors embark on a journey into the past, a step closer to understanding the struggles that paved the way for freedom and equality.

Why is Hamilton County getting so much opioid settlement money?

Over the course of 18 years, Ohio and its communities are receiving nearly $2 billion from pharmaceutical companies to compensate for harm caused by opioids. The Ohio Newsroom is following the money. This is our settlement story of the month.

Sweet harmony rings as Ohio singers hone their barbershop performances

Barbershop harmony had its heyday over 100 years ago, but enthusiastic performers keep the tradition thriving in Ohio. Singers from around the state find camaraderie and healthy competition through participation in the Barbershop Harmony Society (BHS).

The BHS is the chief governing organization for international competitions and has over 16,000 members all over the world.

A tiny Ohio town is honoring its Black history for the first time

On a snowy December day, Terry and Gwen Shavers are putting the final touches on a small home in Braceville, cleaning up the kitchen and arranging black and white photos along the home’s bright yellow walls.

Ohio drivers face wait times as auto shops search for mechanics

It’s hard to jam all the cars into the lot at Weber Road Auto Service on a busy day.

And they’re basically all busy days.

The local auto shop has been serving Columbus’ North Linden neighborhood for 23 years. With four technicians, including shop owner Eric Easley, and four service bays, the automotive technicians fix between 15 and 25 cars a day.

Garrett Morgan’s long road to inventing the modern-day traffic light

Garrett Morgan was born in 1877 in Paris, Kentucky. His parents were Sydney Morgan and Elizabeth Reed, who were both formerly enslaved.

Quitting vaping is hard. New research shows quitline coaching helps

In an effort to identify ways to help young people quit vaping, researchers at Ohio State University launched a study.

They recruited more than 500 participants between the ages of 18 and 24, most of whom vaped every day, and offered them up to two quitline coaching calls.