Ohio is dragging its feet now on getting recreational marijuana into the market: Today in Ohio

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Editor Chris Quinn hosts our daily half-hour news podcast, with editorial board member Lisa Garvin, City Hall reporter Courtney Astolfi and content director Laura Johnston.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- June is ending without any marijuana dispensaries open for recreational consumers, as the state continues to process applications.

He’s doing the people’s business, so why does Matt Huffman think he can shroud his work in secrecy? Today in Ohio All sorts of other law changes came from the Legislature in their marathon session. What are the most significant ones? they fixed the very confusing way Ohio numbers ballot issues remember yes on one no one one last year you can figure out what was going on what is their solutionSo the solution is Senate Bill 98, which passed through the Ohio House yesterday, and a 92 to 2 vote. It changes how ballot issues are numbered. So starting with the next ballot issue, they’ll start with number one, and they’ll go all the way through to 500 before the numbers get recycled back to one.

Cleveland won $20 million towards its plans for a land bridge, which are expected to cost about $230 million, so that’s a good chunk of it. They also allocated $8 million for Dan Gilbert’s plan to remake Tower City and the riverfront adjacent to it. $7 million is allocated for the Rock Hall expansion. And then there’s $2 million that they set aside for Irish town, Ben Park. We’ve also got a few sprinklings of other money coming in, including $5 million for Cleveland’s port.

they’ll be too afraid to speak their mind it is it is really turning college campuses fascist is what he wants to do and if you know if you’re a legislator and you know the voters just said we’re done with this we’re not going to have this kind of nonsense anymore i don’t think they’ll pass it again i think they’ll look at that and say all right all right if i want to keep my seat i’d better start moderating a little bit because once the gerrymandering is gone we’ll have a more centrist...

So say they owed like 20 ‚000 dollars on their property tax bill, but their house was worth say, $170 ,000 and that’s what it sold for. They’re claiming they should get the difference there and the county has been keeping the difference. And the really kind of the core of this lawsuit, they’re arguing that this practice is against the Ohio constitution and it’s against the US constitution.

Constitution does prohibit the taking of property. There is a constitutional prohibition of unlawful seizure, unreasonable search and seizure. That’s a seizure of assets.What I’m really kind of scratching my head on here is if this is unconstitutional. I don’t know, like it was County in the wrong to rely on state law in making its decisions. Also, how has it gone 15 years without this coming to the courts until now? This is interesting.But it’s also an issue of basic right and wrong.

that didn’t end up getting signed until right after his deal was over. So he’s saying he should get paid for the work he did for contracts they waited to sign until he was no longer with the company.It’s an interesting lawsuit. These things always seem like they’re geared more toward getting a settlement than to hashing it out. We may never know what really happened if they end up settling it, but by filing a lawsuit, at least he, I think, gets into mediation of some sort.Yeah, yeah.

 

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