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What you need to know Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022

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WEATHER AND SCORES

 

Temperatures will spike today, climbing into the low 90s, but with the humidity and sunshine it might feel like it's over 100 degrees. It will remain humid and warm overnight, with temps staying in the mid-70s. There are chances of showers and thunderstorms. Read more.

 

MLB: Arizona Diamondbacks 6, Guardians 3

 

OVERNIGHT

 

Senate race: State Rep. Kent Smith of Euclid was set to defeat John Barnes Jr. in the Democratic contest for state Senate District 21, according to election results Tuesday night. With 97.4% of the precincts reporting in the Cuyahoga County district at 10:40 p.m., Smith was winning 61.1% to 38.8%, Laura Hancock reports. Smith will face Mikhail Alterman, a Republican, on Nov. 8.

 

House race: State Rep. Bride Rose Sweeney has defeated state Rep. Monique Smith in Tuesday’s primary election, in a showdown of two incumbent west side Cuyahoga County Democrats. Andrew Tobias reports that with 97% of precincts reporting, Sweeney was leading Smith by 836 votes, good for a 55% to 45% lead. Sweeney will face Michael Lamb, a retired Shaker Heights police officer who ran unopposed in the Republican primary, in the general election in November.

 

TODAY IN OHIO 

NFL Disciplinary officer Sue Robinson found that Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson committed sexual misconduct with massage therapists. We’re talking about Robinson’s 16-page report and the precedent she followed in her six-game punishment on Today in Ohio, cleveland.com’s daily half-hour news podcast. 

 

STATEHOUSE & POLITICS 

Candidacy challenged: A top official with the Ohio Republican Party is challenging the candidacy of a podcaster and conspiracy theorist who is running as a political independent in a challenge of Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose. Andrew Tobias reports a written complaint from Justin Bis, the Ohio Republican Party’s executive director, challenges the validity of 65 signatures that Terpsehore “Tore” Maras included with her candidacy paperwork filed with state officials.  

GOP ads: National Republicans are getting involved in Ohio’s U.S. Senate race, as they direct resources away from higher-priority states and try to help J.D. Vance’s overcome a fundraising disadvantage against Democratic U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan. Andrew Tobias reports One Nation, a non-profit organization with close ties to Republican U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, will spend $3.8 million on TV and radio ads in Ohio.

 

School safety: As students prepare to return to school, Gov. Mike DeWine announced that 1,183 schools in 81 counties will receive nearly $47 million for physical security enhancements such as security cameras, public address systems and automatic door locks. The state will also hire 16 mobile field trainers, who will work with districts that permit teachers to carry guns, reports Kaylee Remington. 

 

Corruption case: Federal prosecutors are asking a judge to sanction ex-lobbyist Matt Borges, who is charged with bribery in the Ohio House Bill 6 corruption case, for using his legal defense website to publish the personal information of a key witness in the government’s case, Andrew Tobias reports.

 

METRO 

Watson report: The 16-page report from NFL Disciplinary Officer Sue Robinson said Deshaun Watson is guilty of the sexual misconduct he was accused of by massage therapists. The six-game suspension was pulled back by precedent, but not by evidence, writes columnist Doug Lesmerises.  

 

Fan reactions: Many Browns fans expected a far harsher penalty for quarterback Deshaun Watson. John Tucker reports that some Clevelanders were angry, equating Robinson’s punishment to a slap; others said they were prepared to move forward. John Tucker talks to Browns fans, including Watson superfans.

 

Health center: The total cost of proposed improvements to the Global Center for Health Innovation grew from $46 million to $54 million on Tuesday, but Cuyahoga County Council is limiting its contribution to $40.4 million, for now, Kaitlin Durbin reports.

 

Electric vehicles: The city of Cleveland’s Department of Public Utilities is looking to install $1.4 million in electric vehicle charging stations as part of its transition to an all-electric vehicle fleet. Courtney Astolfi reports the city’s three utilities count hundreds of vehicles among their fleet, but the city has already ordered its first batch of all-electric vehicles: 24 SUVs, pickup trucks and other replacements.

 

Billboard: E.F. Boyd & Son Funeral Home, the oldest Black-owned funeral home in Greater Cleveland, is trying to raise awareness about inner-city violence with its most recent billboard, reports Alexis Oatman. The funeral home has been working with local families since it opened its doors in 1905. As the decades have gone by, violence has gone up, and it’s time someone addressed the issue of inner-city youth violence, said Marcella Boyd Cox, vice president and chief of community engagement. 

 

Saving butterflies: We don’t know exactly how much the monarch butterfly population has fallen or what part of its short but wide-ranging life cycle is most dangerous to its survival as a species. One well-known factor, however, is that monarch caterpillars can only eat milkweed leaves, and adult monarchs rely on nectar from native wildflowers for feeding. Susan Brownstein writes that most of us grew up viewing the ideal garden as a collection of plants from around the world, cultivated to maximize their appeal to humans and withstand local conditions. As a result, butterfly habitat is shrinking.

 

COVID-19 & HEALTHCARE 

Mental health: Unprecedented demand and a sparse employee pipeline are adding stress to Ohio’s already strained behavioral health system, reports Eye on Ohio. From 2013 to 2019, demand for behavioral health services rose 353% statewide, and in 2021, providers reported a 70% hike in need for adult and youth mental health services and a 60% increase in need for addiction services.

 

Biden COVID: President Joe Biden’s second round of COVID-19 has many wondering if rebound infections are a unique feature of the antiviral drug Paxlovid that the president was taking. Gretchen Cuda Kroen reports that a Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine study found that rebound infections are not unique to Paxlovid.

 

BUSINESS 

Marathon profits: Marathon Petroleum said Tuesday its per barrel profit margin for oil tripled during the second quarter, when gas prices reached nearly $5 a gallon. Sean McDonnell reports that overall, Marathon Petroleum reported an adjusted net income of $5.7 billion for the second quarter, up from $437 million in the second quarter of 2021. 

 

Church Residences: A senior-living high-rise on the East Side has a new name and much, much more - like updated kitchens and bathrooms - after a multi-year renovation. Megan Sims reports that National Church Residences, a Christian-based organization aimed at creating communities for seniors around the country, has completed a $34 million renovation of Antioch Towers, now Carnegie Towers, with millions of dollars in federal loans and tax credits.

 

CRIME

Shane Bartek: The most damning witness against Tamara McLoyd in her trial on murder charges in the slaying of off-duty Cleveland police officer Shane Bartek was McLoyd herself, both prosecutors and defense attorneys told jurors Tuesday. Cory Shaffer reports jurors watched video and heard recorded jail calls of McLoyd confessing three separate times to killing Bartek during a botched carjacking at his Rocky River Drive apartment complex. Jurors will return today to begin deliberations.

 

Ponzi scheme: A former Westlake financial adviser who stole $9.3 million from dozens of mostly elderly clients, some of whom died before seeing him convicted, will spend the next 21 years in prison. Adam Ferrise reports Raymond Erker, 51, of Avon Lake, stole from widows, family members, friends, police officers, machinists and lawyers in a Ponzi scheme he ran after initially lying about the way he invested money from 54 clients.

 

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 

Giving book: Marcy Campbell penned her new book “The More You Give” in response to Shel Silverstein’s popular, divisive children’s book “The Giving Tree.” Annie Nickoloff reports the book focuses on ideas around delayed gratification, kindness and family – a marked departure from themes of giving and taking that dominate the story in Silverstein’s 1964 classic. 

 

Football HOF: The Pro Football Hall of Fame inducts its Class of 2022 on Saturday. But Joey Morona reports that the ceremony is only part of the fun. Enshrinement Week is packed with events that bring NFL fans from across the country and more than 100 Hall of Famers to Canton.

OTHER HEADLINES

Canton man involved in Capitol riot pleads guilty to felony charge Read more

 

Motorcyclist who crashed during pursuit in Parma dies of injuries, police say Read more

 

Broadview Heights residents to vote on 7 proposed charter amendments in November Read more

 

Cleveland Heights launches traffic calming program Read more

 

Cleveland Heights council returns from July recess to a chamber full of concerns Read more

 

Brecksville voters will decide in November whether to allow homes on former Highland school site Read more

 

Nonprofits reach ‘agreement in principle’ on rescuing Shaker Square Read more

 

Mayfield, Highland Heights, RTA to provide shuttle buses to workplaces along Alpha, Beta drives and SOM Center Read more

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