Nearly half of Ohio workers hold jobs that a University of Oxford study identified as likely to be automated in the future, including tens of thousands of cashiers, truck drivers, fast-food workers and warehouse laborers.
As frustrated Franklin County officials continue to push Kroger to keep its North Linden store open, the leading U.S. grocer announced a free bus program Tuesday to take former customers of that store to another Kroger for at least the next 30 days and potentially up to 60 days.
A shootout following a home invasion in London Monday night left two men dead and two others injured.
At Denison University, they’re hanging effigies in trees and using pyrotechnics to move destructive vultures off campus.
Six-year-old Mia Tardivo joined her parents and thousands of other people Saturday in downtown Cleveland for the city’s Woman’s March while holding a sign that proclaimed: “I can be president.”
Columbus is expected to add about 30 additional police officers to two recruit classes already scheduled for 2018.
Columbus finished 2017 with a record number of homicides, blamed on the opioid epidemic and related gang rivalries and on the ready availability of guns.
Central Ohio residents with emergencies will soon have the option to text 911 instead of placing a call.
A disgruntled mail carrier facing dismissal has been charged with aggravated murder for fatally shooting his supervisor at a suburban Ohio post office and with murder for killing a postmaster outside of her apartment complex.
Columbus Humane, with assistance from Gahanna police, found 55 dead cats at an Olde Ridenour Road house where they also removed 111 live cats Wednesday morning.