Today From The Ohio Newsroom

Calling all tossers: the Scottish Games really do welcome all

Cultural festivals are a common thing in a melting pot like the United States. The act of showcasing the best, most colorful, fun, delicious and awe-inspiring traditions of one's culture has long proven a draw.

But not every cultural display is as open to active participation as the one that happens at the Cuyahoga County Fairgrounds in Berea every summer.

With a federal LGBTQ+ hotline offline, Ohio advocates fear the worst

Content Warning: This article mentions suicide.

When the LGBTQ+ Community Center of Darke County was still in the works, a local resident in the LGBTQ community died by suicide.

The Youngstown Lifeguard Academy is teaching teens to swim against the tide

When Kevin Tarpley was a young lifeguard in the '70s, the city of Youngstown had almost a dozen public swimming pools.

"You had a pool on every side of town — maybe one or two pools, one side had three," he said.

Can corncobs help clean Toledo's drinking water?

Algal blooms have plagued Lake Erie for decades.

Ohio nonprofits lose staff, capacity amid $9 million cuts to state AmeriCorps programs

Hira Siddiqui felt she was making a real impact through AmeriCorps.

She spent her days researching rural vaccine hesitancy and tackled the health needs of refugee high schoolers through Ohio State University Extension's Public Health program.

Then suddenly, she was told to stop.

A new film commission hopes to bring Hollywood to Ohio's rolling hills

This weekend, "Superman" soars into theaters. And Ohioans may find some of the scenery the superhero flies over familiar: the movie was filmed in parts of Cleveland and Cincinnati.

Now, another region of Ohio is hoping to bring Hollywood to their neck of the woods.

The climate is changing. What's at stake for Ohio?

Climate change will affect Ohio in a myriad of ways: it could alter farmers' growing seasons, increase energy bills, change the price tag on food and lessen the biodiversity Ohioans see on walks a

Here's how proposed federal funding cuts could affect your Ohio public radio station

Editorial Note: The Ohio Newsroom was started with a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and is supported by NPR member stations. 

Hocking Hills is grappling with the challenges of booming crowds

Hocking Hills sees more than 4 million visitors every year — a number that exploded in recent years. One 2023 study found the area gained popularity faster than almost any other state park in the country, based on an analysis of web searches.

Ohio urban homesteaders are transforming their yards into a sustainable food source

The latest data from a Map the Meal Gap study shows that more than 1.8 million people in Ohio are food insecure, which accounts for over 15% of the population. As hunger rises and food access shrinks, some Ohioans have taken matters into their own hands—and yards.