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The amount of money going to private-school vouchers in Ohio has ballooned significantly over the last four years.
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The state budget sent to Gov. Mike DeWine's desk this week includes significant cuts in funding for some schools in Northeast Ohio, with Parma in particular losing about $4 million over the next two years.
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The ruling on the lawsuit, filed by a coalition of more than 300 school districts, will likely be appealed. Meanwhile, Ohio legislators are still working on next year's budget which includes expanded funding for vouchers.
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Faculty at one Ohio college are devising a plan to defend institutions from what they describe as government overreach.
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The group of around 200 public school districts suing the state over private school vouchers got a win in a Columbus court today, as a judge ruled Ohio's EdChoice private school voucher program is unconstitutional.
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Protesters in downtown Cleveland called for Congress not to approve cuts proposed by the Trump administration that they argue would devastate the workforce and research capabilities of the NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.
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Akron Public Schools said delays will mean the new school will be complete by August 2028, although the final cost is unclear.
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Through the internship, the students staff two Port of Cleveland boats called Flotsam and Jetsam to clean up the historically polluted Cuyahoga River.
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An analysis of a Republican-backed bill that seeks to help struggling homeowners by lowering the amount of property tax they pay shows it could be a devastating hit to Ohio’s public schools.
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The increase comes after other administrators in the district got increases on top of their annual raises. Morgan did forgo a raise last year citing the district's financial challenges.
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Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the unanimous opinion, with Justice Clarence Thomas, joined by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, and Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson writing separate concurring opinions.
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The Ohio Senate has passed its version of the budget and teachers widely opposed major parts of it, just as they did with the House version and the initial budget from Gov. Mike DeWine.