The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recently announced that the Groundwork Ohio River Valley in Cincinnati has been selected to receive a $500,000 environmental job training grant as part of President Biden’s Investing in America agenda.
A Cincinnati man was sentenced to at least four years in prison recently after pleading guilty to his role in an organization charged with trafficking drugs into Brown County.
A former United States Postal Service employee this month pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to selling a postal key that was then used to steal mail from collection boxes.
A Cincinnati woman was arrested recently on federal charges alleging she stole the identity of a deceased child and used it to avoid a pending criminal prosecution and to obtain thousands of dollars in government benefits.
A federal workplace safety investigation at one of the world’s leading suppliers of processed foods found a temporary worker’s finger amputation occurred when they reached into a meat grinder’s discharge port that allegedly lacked required safety guards.
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine, Lt. Governor Jon Husted, JobsOhio president and CEO J.P. Nauseef and Ohio Department of Development Director Lydia Mihalik announced Monday that Worldpay, a leading global provider of payment processing solutions, will reestablish its global corporate headquarters in Cincinnati, bringing more than 500 new jobs and $56 million in associated payroll to southwest Ohio.
On a Friday night, a Butler County man, joined by his wife and friends, went to a casual restaurant he frequented. He ordered his usual “boneless chicken wings.” He swallowed a sliver of a nearly two-inch chicken bone. It tore his esophagus, which led to internal infections that damaged his heart and lungs.
A Cincinnati man who filed for relief under the Paycheck Protection Program and fraudulently claimed that he was running a business during the time he was incarcerated was sentenced in U.S. District Court recently to 12 months and one day in prison.
Ryan R. Goldschmidt, 39, of Cincinnati, and Aaron Pitman, 35, of Morrow, were recently sentenced to five years of community control, 90 days in jail and to pay $796,000 in restitution.
Green Umbrella is the lead investigator of a cohort of research institutions recently awarded a US Environmental Protection Agency grant to study how electrification and weatherization of homes affect energy consumption and indoor air quality for residents of affordable housing.