Your Morning Briefing for Sunday, November 24
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November 24, 2024
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Dayton Daily News

JOSH SWEIGART
Editor of investigations and solutions journalism
Good morning

Happy Thanksgiving week! I hope you find time this week to connect with loved ones and contemplate what you’re thankful for. What am I thankful for? Your support of local journalism.

Welcome to the Weekly Roundup, where we bring you the top stories from today’s Dayton Daily News and major stories from the past week you may have missed.

This week, that includes the debate over mandated family leave, how first-time homebuyers are finding affordable houses in a historically pricey market and what might come out of a divided lame duck Ohio General Assembly.

Our mission is to help you understand what’s really going on in the Dayton region. This includes comprehensive coverage of local governments and agencies, hard-hitting investigations, and in-depth analyses of important issues.

Do you have a news tip or an issue you think our reporters should look into? Contact me at Josh.Sweigart@coxinc.com, or you can use our anonymous tipline.

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Paid family leave debate

A new study by Groundwork Ohio touts advantages of paid family leave.

Credit: Alexis Larsen

A new report calls for a comprehensive paid family leave policy in Ohio, arguing that it is good for families, businesses and the economy. Lynn Hulsey has this story on the debate over the proposal.

• Advocates say: “The benefits are vast, including improved health outcomes for mothers and babies, reduced infant mortality rates, and diminished emotional and financial stress,” said Lynanne Gutierrez, president and CEO of Groundwork Ohio.

• Business concerns: The business community isn’t keen on making it a mandate for employers. State Rep. Tom Young, R-Washington Twp.: “Forcing it on people with a mandate is not something I do believe would pass the (Ohio) House or the Senate.”

• How Ohio compares: Ohio is not among the 21 states and the District of Columbia that have enacted paid leave laws, which vary as far as requirements and funding. The Ohio legislature did approve paid family leave for state employees in 1997, the report said.

First-time homebuyer heartburn

Bradley Kuykendall purchased his Dayton home in May amid a home sales market that has seen the median home sales prices more than doubled in the past decade. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

Credit: Jim Noelker

Eric Schwartzberg has been following the ups and downs (mostly ups) of the housing market for years. This week, he looks at what it means for first-time homebuyers. Read Eric’s full story here.

• The numbers: In the past decade, the median price for a home in the Dayton area has nearly doubled, going from $120,000 in 2014 to $239,900 through October this year, according to data from Dayton Realtors, which includes Montgomery, Greene, Warren, Darke and Preble counties.

• Caveat of little comfort: Despite how much the price of a home has increased in the Dayton area, the region remains among the most affordable in the nation, according to Realtor.com.

• Real people: “I was like, ‘Oh my God,’” said Dayton Bradley Kuykendall on shopping for houses. “Everything was $200,000-plus or too small or too big or I just didn’t have the capital to go ahead and put enough on a down payment.”

• Help available: Kuykendall was able to get a $10,000 downpayment assistance and other help. Eric wrote about resources available for first-time homebuyers here.

That’s one lame duck

 FILE — The Ohio state Capitol building in Columbus, April 13, 2018. Democratic Party leaders said Tuesday, May 28, 2024, that they would nominate President Biden for a second term in office via a virtual roll call of delegates to the party’s national convention, bypassing a glitch in Ohio law that had threatened to keep Biden off the November ballot there. (Ty Wright/The New York Times)

Credit: NYT

It’s been said that no one’s life, liberty or property are safe with the legislature is in session. This is arguably more true of Ohio’s lame duck session.

• Lame duck: Lame duck comes at the end of the Ohio General Assembly’s two-year session, after the election. After two years of wrangling over bills, legislation either passes or dies. And some lawmakers are leaving office so can vote with impunity. It’s usually a hectic period in the Statehouse with controversial legislation fast-tracked or slipped as amendments into other bills.

• A Statehouse divided: This year, things are a little different. Though Republicans have a supermajority, House and Senate leadership don’t see eye-to-eye on legislative priorities.

• Lame duck bills: The list of priorities for lawmakers ranges widely, including bills to address rising property taxes, increase the penalties for repeat domestic abusers, a bill to ask Ohio voters to approve an issuance of $2.5 billion in bonds for capital improvements, efforts to modernize the adoption process in Ohio, and more.

• What we’re watching: Our Statehouse reporter Avery Kreemer has a run-down of bills he’s watching and how they fare in a split General Assembly. Read that story here.

A new study by Groundwork Ohio touts advantages of paid family leave.
Does Ohio need a paid family leave policy? New report says yes
New Groundwork Ohio report says a mandatory paid family leave policy would be good for parents and kids, businesses and the economy.
Bradley Kuykendall purchased his Dayton home in May amid a home sales market that has seen the median home sales prices more than doubled in the past decade. JIM NOELKER/STAFF
Skyrocketing prices a challenge for first-time homebuyers
FILE - A sign announcing a home for sale is posted outside a home, Feb. 1, 2024, in Kennesaw, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart, File)
Programs make homeownership affordable for first-time homebuyers
There are local, state and federal programs available to support first-time homebuyers....
The Ohio Statehouse in May 2023.
Bills to watch as Ohio lawmakers rush out legislation in ‘lame duck’ session
With about a month to go in Ohio’s 135th General Assembly, lawmakers are scrambling to get their legislative priorities ...
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
The clinic at Public Health - Dayton and Montgomery County. CONTRIBUTED
Multiple agencies make pitch for bigger slice of $127.5M Human Services Levy
Several agencies funded by $127.5 million in Montgomery County Human Services levies are reporting financial crises or obstacles ahead as the council that oversees the funding looks toward recommending allocations.
First grade students in Sarah Jacobs math class work on addition and subtraction skills Monday, April 22, 2024 at the Primary Village North school in Centerville. MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF
Ohio bill would increase base teacher salaries to $50K
A proposed bill in the Ohio House to bring the minimum Ohio teacher’s salary to $50,000 from $35,000 has both proponents...
Amazon Web Services data center in Plain City, Ohio. Photo contributed by Amazon Web Services
EXCLUSIVE: Amazon considers building Ohio data center in Fayette County
Amazon is considering building another data center in Ohio, exploring a site in Fayette County and prompting concerns by the Ohio Consumers' Counsel that residential customers not have to share in the cost of electricity infrastructure for the possible data center
FILE - Tom Homan speaks as Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump listens at a primary election night party in Nashua, N.H., Jan. 23, 2024. President-elect Donald Trump says that Tom Homan, his former acting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement director, will serve as border czar in his incoming administration. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
Trump border czar: Protection for Haitians in Springfield can ‘end tomorrow’
Haitians are reportedly considering fleeing Springfield as President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming border czar Tom Homan...
Northmont football coach Tony Broering
Longtime area high school football coach announces retirement
Northmont is searching for a new football coach after Tony Broering announced his retirement this week
Police respond to the scene of a shooting on Monday, Nov. 20, 2023 in Beavercreek, Ohio. Police say a shooter opened fire at a Walmart, wounding four people before apparently killing himself. The attack took place Monday night at a Walmart in Beavercreek, in the Dayton metropolitan area. (Marshall Gorby/Dayton Daily News)
One year after Beavercreek Walmart shooting, few changes in ‘pink-slip’ system
One year ago today, a Dayton man entered the Walmart on Pentagon Boulevard in Beavercreek, armed with a Hi-Point .45 cal...
Montgomery County Auditor Karl Keith held a press conference Wednesday November 20 kicking-off 2026 property reappraisal project. Jim Noelker/Staff
Montgomery County begins 2026 property revaluation project
Contractors will be driving around Montgomery County taking photos of properties as the start of the process to reappraise real estate in the county.
A Canadian National Railway freight train rolls through the heart of Dayton Wednesday February 22, 2023. JIM NOELKER/STAFF
Dayton passenger rail discussion will explore possible station locations
Dayton passenger rail discussion will explore possible station locations
Final count: Republican McDonald elected to county commission in historic win
Final, official election results in Montgomery County show new Republican leadership in the county commission and recorder’s office.
Mayor Rob Rue during a City Commission meeting in Springfield, Ohio, Aug. 27, 2024. (Maddie McGarvey/The New York Times)
Rue: Springfield will follow immigration law; Moreno, Trump send mixed signals
Rough estimates say there are 10,000 to 15,000 Haitians living in Springfield, and they have a variety of immigration statuses, which means different levels of protection from deportation depending on what the Trump administration does in 2025.
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