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At a campaign rally in Dayton, Ohio, former President Trump promised a “bloodbath” if he is not re-elected. Dayton was the site of a mass shooting in 2019, after which the Republican-dominated Ohio legislature, along with the state's Republican governor, caved to the extremists in the gun lobby and within their own ranks to further loosen gun laws. Ken shares clips of an interview with Nan Whaley, who served as mayor of Dayton at the time of that shooting. Learn more about the award-winning documentary film, Against All Enemies, here: www.AgainstAllEnemiesFilm.com Credits: Producer and Host, Ken Harbaugh Producer, Mikel Ellcessor Associate Producer, Isabel Robertson Theme music by Stephanie Kowal & Seowon Hyun Theme music produced by Tony Morales Motion Designer, Joe Vaccarino
Wednesday, November 9, 2022: Post-election, we have your results for key Ohio races and the margins of victory for JD Vance over Tim Ryan and Governor Mike DeWine over Nan Whaley. Plus, we look at the passing of Jayland's Law in Akron. We also share how much money two men who were wrongfully imprisoned could seek in a civil lawsuit. In sports news, we share the odds that the Guardians sign free agent Aaron Judge from the New York Yankees, give an updated on José Ramírez's thumb surgery, and explain the running back love fest happening between Nick Chubb, Derrick Henry and Saquon Barkley. We also let you know how many Ohio winners took home prizes in the record-breaking Powerball drawing, and more on 3News Daily with Stephanie Haney. Connect with Stephanie Haney here: http://twitter.com/_StephanieHaney http://instagram.com/_StephanieHaney http://facebook.com/thestephaniehaney Read more here: Ohio 2022 Election Results https://www.wkyc.com/elections Northeast Ohio issues tracker: Akron voters approve police oversight board; East Cleveland mayor survives recall attempt https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/politics/elections/northeast-ohio-issues-tracker-issue-5-passing-with-commanding-margin/95-2420bbc4-a5a6-42bd-9946-9e11ea7f46a8 What are the Cleveland Guardians' odds of signing Aaron Judge? https://www.wkyc.com/article/sports/mlb/cleveland-guardians/cleveland-guardians-odds-signing-aaron-judge/95-555ffd1b-1902-4693-a65e-55670bb9f446 Here are all the winning Powerball prizes sold in Ohio for the record-breaking $2.04 billion jackpot https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/lottery/winning-powerball-tickets-ohio-lottery-prizes-2-billion-dollar-jackpot-november-8/95-d0ea88e0-8e8a-454f-8938-80ecb9ee3593
Tuesday, November 8, 2022: What we know about a bomb threat at a Bath elementary school, explaining Issue 1 and Issue 2 on the Ohio ballot, what you need to know to protect your voting rights, why election day is always on a Tuesday in November, where a $1 million winning Powerball ticket was sold in Northeast Ohio, where the $2 billion jackpot winning ticket was sold, and more on 3News Daily with Stephanie Haney. Connect with Stephanie Haney here: http://twitter.com/_StephanieHaney http://instagram.com/_StephanieHaney http://facebook.com/thestephaniehaney Read more here: Winning Powerball ticket worth $1 million sold in Lakewood: See where the winning ticket was purchased https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/lottery/winning-powerball-numbers-ohio-lottery-drawing-november-7/95-58a35c49-4f45-47ac-9440-23d15a86bfd7 Live election updates: Ohio Nov. 8 midterm election https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/politics/elections/ohio-midterm-election-november-8-results-live-updates/95-db279ef4-408d-4173-a3b8-0a3ce159ec67 The race for Ohio Governor: Here's what you need to know about candidates Mike DeWine and Nan Whaley https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/politics/elections/race-ohio-governor-candidates-mike-dewine-nan-whaley/95-aeaebf98-5dfd-4736-87a6-c1c674a9ac67 VOTER GUIDE | November 8 general election in Ohio: See what's on the ballot and how to find your polling place https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/politics/elections/ohio-general-election-november-2022-vote-issues-ballot-polling-place-governor-mike-dewine-nan-whaley-us-senate-tim-ryan-jd-vance/95-1dcb7a39-3c05-44c8-aaf7-dde2a16dfd51
Voters are about to head to the polls on Tuesday, Nov. 8, to make some big decisions. Crain's government and policy reporter Kim Palmer joined The Landscape to preview some of the key issues and races, including the U.S. Senate contest between Democrat Tim Ryan and Republican JD Vance, and the gubernatorial matchup of incumbent Republican Michael DeWine and his Democratic challenger, Nan Whaley.
Friday, November 4, 2022: See Kyrie Irving's apology for posting a link to an anti-Semitic film after the Brooklyn Nets suspended him, where fallen Cleveland police officer Shane Bartek will be honored this weekend, what family members of slain 15-year-old Jaiden Rentas are saying about violence in Cleveland, where COVID-19 spread is considered ‘high' in Northeast Ohio, what you need to know about the governor's race in Ohio, and more on 3News Daily with Stephanie Haney. Connect with Stephanie Haney here: http://twitter.com/_StephanieHaney http://instagram.com/_StephanieHaney http://facebook.com/thestephaniehaney Read more here: Fallen Cleveland police officer Shane Bartek to receive honorary street https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/cleveland/fallen-cleveland-police-officer-shane-bartek-receive-honorary-street/95-aebb8310-4b63-4da1-bcc2-e49df9835db1 'She didn't deserve this': Community remembers murdered Cleveland teen Jaiden Rentas https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/crime/family-friends-remember-murdered-cleveland-teen-jaiden-rentas/95-8214413f-6c94-4f8b-9f9d-22ba5cd26bb8 Kyrie Irving posts apology after Nets suspend him for 5 games https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/nation-world/kyrie-irving-suspension/507-e3265746-0818-45aa-bac2-4081913dacdc CDC once again recommending face masks for several Northeast Ohio counties due to high COVID-19 community levels https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/several-northeast-ohio-counties-cdc-high-community-level-covid-19/95-36e40655-c272-4134-828b-ecfc3e68fe4c US House races in Northeast Ohio: Here's what you need to know about the candidates prior to Nov. 8 election https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/politics/elections/us-house-elections-northeast-ohio-candidates-most-notable-races/95-581693ec-4629-43fb-9a18-a19005169265 The race for Ohio Governor: Here's what you need to know about candidates Mike DeWine and Nan Whaley https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/politics/elections/race-ohio-governor-candidates-mike-dewine-nan-whaley/95-aeaebf98-5dfd-4736-87a6-c1c674a9ac67 City of Cleveland listens to residents, resumes traditional leaf collection program in designated high-generation areas https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/cleveland/city-of-cleveland-leaf-collection-mayor-bibb/95-e7baade6-6ab4-49c2-b1e0-cd3f9a8e96a1 Viral Twitter thread suggests Taylor Swift's 'Midnights' album is actually about Cleveland https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/cleveland/viral-twitter-thread-suggests-taylor-swift-midnights-album-actually-about-cleveland/95-2d2b5a1a-17e9-4a60-bc1a-d84915639533
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Former Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley talks about her Ohio gubernatorial campaign. Nan Whaley was first elected to the Dayton City Commission in 2005, and was one of the youngest women ever chosen for the seat. In 2014, she became the Mayor of Dayton, and held that position until earlier this year when she decided to run for governor. Nan is facing incumbent Mike DeWine this November, and abortion has become a key issue in the race. During the interview, she said this about the upcoming election: “Look, I think Ohio is definitely at a crossroads this election cycle. It has a choice to be a place where we can be inclusive, and we can protect freedoms, and women can grow and thrive in this state. Or it's going to be a place where women will run away from. If Mike DeWine is elected, that's what's going to happen. We're going to see even more population loss in the state, and it is going to be the doing of the sitting governor.” To learn more about Nan, or support her campaign, visit nanwhaley.com. You can also follow her on Twitter at @nanwhaley. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode we briefly discuss the platform of Nan Whaley and Mike DeWine who are both running for Ohio Governor.
This week, CMC extended an invitation to both the Republican and Democratic candidates in the 2022 Ohio governor's race to talk on our stage about their visions for Ohio's future. Republican Mike DeWine didn't accept our invitation, but Democrat Nan Whaley did. Today's speaker is: Nan Whaley, Former Mayor of Dayton and the 2022 Democratic Candidate for Ohio Governor. The host is Colleen Marshall, Anchor, NBC4. CMC's political series is sponsored by Hannah News Service. The forum partners were King Business Interiors and NBC4. This forum was recorded live at The Boat House in Columbus, Ohio on Wednesday, October 19, 2022.
Today's episode is part of the Candidate Conversation series leading up to the midterms, where we talk to candidates from across the country who might not be getting the attention they need, to win the races they could absolutely win. Today's we talk to two amazing gubernatorial candidates, Chris Jones for Arkansas and Nan Whaley for Ohio. Both candidates are pro-choice, pro-democracy, out of the box thinkers who are ready to lead. Chris is the most accomplished and extraordinary candidate running against darling of MAGA world Sarah Huckabee Sanders, and Nan is the wildly accomplished former Mayor of Dayton running to clear up Ohio against anti-choice, pro-gun, corruption riddled incumbent Mike DeWine. These are candidates you should know about, and races Democrats should care about. We can compete in these states. We have the talent. Let's give them the money and the voice! Guest social: https://chrisforgovernor.com/ Twitter: @JonesForAR https://nanwhaley.com/ Twitter: @nanwhaley Please RATE and SUBSCRIBE so we can grow the show, open the dialogue, and inspire change moving forward! All show links here!: https://linktr.ee/politicsgirl Thank you to today's sponsors! www.aspiration.com/politicsgirldebit www.athleticgreens.com/politicsgirl
Heartland POD on Twitter - @TheHeartlandPOD Co-HostsAdam Sommer @Adam_Sommer85Rachel Parker @RaichetPSean Diller @SeanDillerCO Opening Statement - 2min 45 secTrue False - 13 min 15 secYeah ... NO - 26 min 40 secMid Term Check In - 49 min TRUE OR FALSE - Climate activists with “Just Stop Oil” throwing soup on a priceless work of art was low key brillianthttps://twitter.com/damiengayle/status/1580864210741133312?s=20&t=DgeaKW1bq-hHwYYW4svXaQBest things to throw on something? Yeah… NOEric Schmitt was born to followhttps://twitter.com/TheHeartlandPOD/status/1580921223927644162?s=20&t=SolFnJrWPSTuTJ8UUQYI3gBonus: ALEX JONES OWES A BILLION $Oof, the judge: “willful non-compliance” in the discovery process. (I would like the attorney to talk about what an appeals process for a default judgment looks like, please).https://www.npr.org/2021/11/15/1055864452/alex-jones-found-liable-for-defamation-in-sandy-hook-hoax-caseMIDTERM DECISION DESK CHECK INQuick rundown - according to Cook Political Report of the ratings of all of the close raceshttps://www.cookpolitical.com/ratings/senate-race-ratingsBTW Missouri in that list is in the SOLID R ratingEasy way to understand this race - if you are a Missouri voter, w/o using your computer or phone at all, just right now, can you tell me the name of the Republican running against Tammy Duckworth in Illinois https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/senate/MO and IL are basically statistical flips of each otherGrassley in a tight race against former U.S. Navy Admiral https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/politics/iowa-poll/2022/10/15/iowa-us-senate-race-chuck-grassley-mike-franken-poll-election/69562063007/Picked three states that are good snapshots of national trendsIf the polling and predictions hold appears there will be a LOT of ticket splitting, or at least folks who vote in one race but perhaps not anotherWisconsin Senate and Governor's RaceRon Johnson (R) v. Mandela Barnes (D)https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/senate/wisconsin/Tony Evers (D) v. Tim Michels (R)https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/governor/wisconsin/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/laura-kelly-ap-donald-trump-pennsylvania-democrats-b2173311.htmlGeorgia Senate and Governor's RaceRapheal Warnock (D) v. Herschel Walker (R)https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/senate/georgia/Brian Kemp (R) v. Stacey Abrams (D)https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/governor/georgia/Kansas: Laura Kelly doing well: https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/governor/kansas/FiveThirtyEight gives Senate Dem candidate Mark Holland a >1 in 100 chance of beating out Jerry Moran. Tim Ryan doing better than Nan Whaley (governor, D) in polls: https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/3685481-ryan-vance-locked-in-dead-heat-in-ohio-senate-race-poll/
Heartland POD on Twitter - @TheHeartlandPOD Co-HostsAdam Sommer @Adam_Sommer85Rachel Parker @RaichetPSean Diller @SeanDillerCO Opening Statement - 2min 45 secTrue False - 13 min 15 secYeah ... NO - 26 min 40 secMid Term Check In - 49 min TRUE OR FALSE - Climate activists with “Just Stop Oil” throwing soup on a priceless work of art was low key brillianthttps://twitter.com/damiengayle/status/1580864210741133312?s=20&t=DgeaKW1bq-hHwYYW4svXaQBest things to throw on something? Yeah… NOEric Schmitt was born to followhttps://twitter.com/TheHeartlandPOD/status/1580921223927644162?s=20&t=SolFnJrWPSTuTJ8UUQYI3gBonus: ALEX JONES OWES A BILLION $Oof, the judge: “willful non-compliance” in the discovery process. (I would like the attorney to talk about what an appeals process for a default judgment looks like, please).https://www.npr.org/2021/11/15/1055864452/alex-jones-found-liable-for-defamation-in-sandy-hook-hoax-caseMIDTERM DECISION DESK CHECK INQuick rundown - according to Cook Political Report of the ratings of all of the close raceshttps://www.cookpolitical.com/ratings/senate-race-ratingsBTW Missouri in that list is in the SOLID R ratingEasy way to understand this race - if you are a Missouri voter, w/o using your computer or phone at all, just right now, can you tell me the name of the Republican running against Tammy Duckworth in Illinois https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/senate/MO and IL are basically statistical flips of each otherGrassley in a tight race against former U.S. Navy Admiral https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/politics/iowa-poll/2022/10/15/iowa-us-senate-race-chuck-grassley-mike-franken-poll-election/69562063007/Picked three states that are good snapshots of national trendsIf the polling and predictions hold appears there will be a LOT of ticket splitting, or at least folks who vote in one race but perhaps not anotherWisconsin Senate and Governor's RaceRon Johnson (R) v. Mandela Barnes (D)https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/senate/wisconsin/Tony Evers (D) v. Tim Michels (R)https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/governor/wisconsin/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/laura-kelly-ap-donald-trump-pennsylvania-democrats-b2173311.htmlGeorgia Senate and Governor's RaceRapheal Warnock (D) v. Herschel Walker (R)https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/senate/georgia/Brian Kemp (R) v. Stacey Abrams (D)https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/governor/georgia/Kansas: Laura Kelly doing well: https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2022-election-forecast/governor/kansas/FiveThirtyEight gives Senate Dem candidate Mark Holland a >1 in 100 chance of beating out Jerry Moran. Tim Ryan doing better than Nan Whaley (governor, D) in polls: https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/3685481-ryan-vance-locked-in-dead-heat-in-ohio-senate-race-poll/
Former Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley seeks to become just the third Democrat elected Ohio governor in the last 40 years. Whaley talked with The Landscape about the need for more economic investment to create jobs statewide, her "One Good Job Pledge" program that she says will provide the state with the trained workers it desperately needs, and more.
Gov. Mike DeWine declined our offer to join the program, so we talk with Democratic candidate Nan Whaley then our political panel breaks down the race.
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Nan Whaley: A conversation about her campaign for Ohio governor: https://www.richlandsource.com/news/elections/nan-whaley-a-conversation-about-her-campaign-for-ohio-governor/article_79b4ee64-2ec5-11ed-8c5d-9f67fbef2726.html Bellville woman adds Raising Roots Coffee roastery to home decor business: https://www.richlandsource.com/business/bellville-woman-adds-raising-roots-coffee-roastery-to-home-decor-business/article_2f00a1a8-33a5-11ed-9777-b78337f18af1.html Today – A conversation with Democratic gubernatorial candidate Nan Whaley. Whaley is the former mayor of Dayton and the first woman ever to win a major-party nomination for Ohio governor. She also briefly ran for governor in 2018. Support the show: https://www.sourcemembers.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
An Ohio judge pressed pause on the state's abortion law. Polling puts Gov. Mike DeWine way ahead of Democrat Nan Whaley. Most people don't know the name Larry Householder, but they do want to see debates.
Suspect arrested, classes cancelled after shots fired on Ohio Christian University campus this morning; Toledo city leaders and community members hold panel discussion about violence; some Ohio teachers are ready to be armed in the classroom; new poll shows Mike DeWine leading democratic opponent Nan Whaley by 14 points in race for governor.
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The Conservative Crusader is 16-year-old GOP Josh's radio show. Josh's unfiltered, uncensored, and unapologetic view of Ohio & US politics makes his show the largest teenage-conservative radio show in all of Ohio. Listen Monday & Thursday at 8:00PM wherever you get your podcasts, or at GOPJosh.com. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Show Notes and Sourced Stories Rep. Liz Cheney loses her primary in Wyoming to Trump-backed challenger - NBC News Liz Cheney Abraham Lincoln Joe Biden called Liz Cheney after her primary election defeat: report - Fox News Producers Confirm Liz Cheney Will Not Be Back For Season 2 Of January 6 Hearings - Babylon Bee Pence: 'I would consider' testifying to Jan. 6 committee - POLITICO Massacre: Nearly Half of Pregnant Women in Pfizer Trial Miscarried - The Florida Standard Brian Stelter to depart CNN as it cancels 'Reliable Sources' media show - NPR Texas Democrat PAC Releases Back-To-School Ad Showing Child In Body Armor - The Daily Caller Texas school district removes the Bible, 'All Boys Aren't Blue' from library shelves for content review - Fox News Big Ohio donors to GOP group behind Nan Whaley attack ad include DeWine appointees, state contractors - cleveland.com Top Ohio Senate Republican wants to appeal congressional map to U.S. Supreme Court - Cincinnati.com ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Follow me on Twitter! http://twitter.com/gopjosh20 Join our Patreon! http://patreon.com/gopjosh Join our Discord for FREE! https://discord.gg/zde5y6saUn ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Call or Text the GOP Josh voicemail, just dial 57-GOPJOSH-7 (574-675-6747) ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theconservativecrusader/message
Leading up to the election on November 8, 2022, The City Club of Cleveland extended invitations to the Republican and Democratic Party candidates running for Ohio Governor. Join us in-person at the City Club to hear from the Democratic Candidate for Governor of Ohio, Nan Whaley.rnrnWhaley grew up in a small town in Indiana and moved to Ohio to attend the University of Dayton, becoming the first person in her family to graduate from college. In 2005, she became the youngest women ever elected to the Dayton City Commission. She then served on the Montgomery County Board of Elections and as a deputy to the Montgomery County Auditor.rnrnIn 2013, Nan Whaley was elected as the 56th mayor of Dayton, and remained in that role after winning reelection in 2017. She left her position in 2022 to run for Ohio Governor. During her time as Mayor, Dayton became the first major city in Ohio to offer paid family leave for all municipal employees, and made high quality preschool available to every 3 and 4-year-old. Whaley was selected as the President of the United State Conference of Mayors from 2021 to 2022.
Guest: Nan Whaley, former mayor of Dayton
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00:00 Show Open / Governor Mike DeWine discusses the U-S Supreme Court's overturning of Roe vs. Wade. 08:00 Nan Whaley, a Democrat and former mayor of Dayton who is running against DeWine, discusses the Court's opinion. 13:00 Mike Gonidakis, President of Ohio Right to Life 30:00 Kellie Copeland, Executive Director of Pro-Choice Ohio 53:00 Courtesy of our sister station, WBNS 10-TV, Tracy Townsend takes a look at the recent controversial power outages in the city of Columbus.
Doug Pagitt and Robb Ryerse sit down with Candidate for Common Good Nan Whaley, the former Mayor of Dayton who is the Democratic nominee for Governor of Ohio. For the last eight years, Nan had the honor of serving as the mayor of Dayton, Ohio. She faced some of the toughest challenges — a mass shooting, the opioid epidemic, tornadoes, a broken economy, and now, the COVID-19 pandemic. Through it all, Dayton has come out stronger and more resilient thanks to her leadership. Now she's running for Governor. nanwhaley.com Join our Vote Common Good Email List to be part of the Common Good movement: https://www.votecommongood.com/signup Robb Ryerse is a pastor, author, and Political Organizer at Vote Common Good. You can find his book about running for congress as a Progressive Republican in Arkansas here: Running For Our Lives @RobbRyerse Doug Pagitt is the Executive Director and one of the founders of Vote Common Good. He is also a pastor, author, and social activist. @pagitt Daniel Deitrich is a singer-songwriter, former-pastor-turned-activist, and producer of The Common Good Podcast. @danieldeitrich Our theme music is composed by Ben Grace. @bengracemusic votecommongood.com votecommongood.com/podcast facebook.com/votecommongood twitter.com/votecommon
Today is June 17, 2022, and that means it's your weekly news roundup episode. There's a lot that happened this past week and a lot on tap, as always, but I'm very excited to let you know that in this episode I let you know about our first affiliate marketer, the Daytonian Beard Company, so be sure to listen so you can find out how to get your 10% discount! Or, I'll just tell you now - you can visit https://thedaytonianbeardco.com/ and use the code “discoverdaytonpod” to get 10% off your purchase of any online order! Here's your transcript for this week's episode: Hello and welcome to the Discover Dayton podcast, the show that's all about the Gem City's past, present, and future. My name is Arch Grieve and I'm your host, and today is Friday, June 17th, so it's your weekly news roundup episode, where I read the news so you don't have to. As always a great deal happened last week and even more is on tap for next week, so stay tuned to hear all about it in just a moment. Also very briefly before I get to your news I wanted to let you know that it was such a nice day outside today when I recorded this on Thursday that I decided to sit out on my front porch with an ice cold old fashioned to read the news to you, and I'm also doing it on TikTok and Instagram live when I can now, so if you want to get the raw, unedited news roundup podcast on Thursdays before anyone else, join me on those platforms moving forward! HB 583, a bill concerning multiple K-12 education laws in Ohio, has been approved by the state legislature and is set to arrive on Governor DeWine's desk soon. The bill contains changes to laws concerning students receiving EdChoice private school scholarships and parents of dyslexic students. It also extends districts' ability to hire substitute teachers with only a high school diploma by another two years. The bill expands EdChoice to include some families whose children previously received state funding for private education or whose siblings received such funding. HB 583 has drawn criticism from the Ohio Education Association, who are opposed to the idea of forcing taxpayers to pay to send children to mostly religious private schools which tend to under-perform compared to their public school counterparts. HB 583 also loosens requirements for charter school sponsors in Ohio, a move that has earned them some criticism from both charter school critics and advocates. Both groups raise issue with the lowered accountability this will allow school sponsors to get away with in the state. The bill also pushes back the start of dyslexia screening requirements by one year. Electric company AES Ohio, formerly Dayton Power and Light, is currently seeking approval from the state to disconnect customers remotely for non-payment. Duke Energy Ohio and AEP are already exempt from the in-person notification that AES is currently required to give before shutting off service. A spokesperson for the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio said Tuesday that there is no timeline as yet for when we can expect to see a ruling on this case. The move has drawn criticism from the Office of the Ohio Consumers' Council, Advocates for Basic Legal Equality, and the Ohio Poverty Law Center. These groups raise concerns over the language AES uses regarding “vulnerable customers;” AES has proposed “limiting” the number of such customers who would be subject to remote disconnection, which the OCC argues is insufficient. All vulnerable customers, such as people with disabilities or the elderly, should be exempt from the remote disconnection process, they argued in their recent filing. PUCO staff have also recommended against the proposal, saying it does not sufficiently communicate the change in disconnection practices to customers. Currently AES gives customers two notices before disconnection in the winter months but only one notice in the summer, which may be particularly troubling. Tuesday, June 14, was the hottest day Dayton has seen in nearly ten years. Temperatures soared to a peak of 95 degrees at the Dayton International Airport, with a heat index of 107 and humidity in the 70s. Closer to the city center, temperatures rose even one or two degrees higher due to the urban environment. This coming at the same time as power outages across Ohio has put many Daytonians in a precarious position, with National Weather Service meteorologist John franks calling the heat “oppressive.” Nighttime lows stayed above 70 degrees, depriving residents of what would typically be a welcome respite from the daytime heat. Cooling centers have opened across the Dayton metro area for those affected. There are locations in Dayton, Oakwood, Riverside, Moraine, West Carrolton, Washington Twp., and Warren County. As Dayton and Montgomery County Public Health tells us, the three most important things are to stay cool, stay hydrated, and stay informed. Visit www.phdmc.org/extreme-heat for more information. A fire broke out Tuesday on the roof of the Mendelson Liquidation Outlet building downtown, producing large clouds of black smoke that were spotted around 11:30 a.m. The building is currently undergoing major renovations to be converted into apartments, offices, and retail space. Dayton fire chief Jeff Lykins reported that the blaze likely started when construction crews cut into or worked on an object with rubber or fuel inside. The fire was small and quickly extinguished, but produced the aforementioned smoke that chief Lykins said made the fire look “more impressive than it actually was.” The damage was contained to roofing and the damaged vessel, and nobody was injured. Find delicious, sustainable, and affordable veggies each week from the Mission of Mary Cooperative, a group looking to provide sustainable urban development in Dayton. Their community supported agriculture program runs from May 25 until November 2, and pickups happen on Wednesdays from 2 to 6 p.m. at 619 Silver Lane in Dayton. Proceeds from the CSA go to supporting food access programs. E-mail team@missionofmary.org with questions or visit their website for more information. Gem City Market is providing a bit of extra assistance to children receiving pandemic EBT payments. Sign up for the Produce Perks Program at their Customer Service Desk to receive $1 toward produce on your next shopping trip for every dollar you spend on produce, up to $25. Visit their Facebook page or gemcitymarket.com for more details. Governor Mike Dewine on Monday announced that he has signed HB 99 into law, allowing teachers and other school personnel to carry firearms in classrooms. The bill goes into effect 90 days after being signed. This has been met with significant pushback from Ohio Democrats including former Dayton mayor Nan Whaley, who is also the Democratic nominee running against DeWine for the office of governor of Ohio. Governor DeWine admitted on Monday in his press release that there is no data to support the idea that arming teachers will reduce school shooting incidents, but said he has been told “anecdotally” that it will work. HB 99 also includes $6 million for school safety centers across Ohio, a continuation of the governor's previous efforts to expand behavioral health care across the state. The decision to arm teachers was influenced by the impracticality of schools training and arming hired school security personnel according to the state's current standards, which requires such personnel to have 700 hours or 20 years of law enforcement experience. In contrast, under HB 99, teachers will require only “up to” 24 hours of firearm training before being permitted to carry weapons in the classroom. Schools across the state have responded in various ways to the announcement; some saying they will arm teachers, some saying they won't, and many offering no comment at this time. School districts are not required to arm teachers under HB 99, and those that do are allowed to demand stricter requirements than those set forth by the state government. On the subject of Mike DeWine's repeated loosening of Ohio gun laws, HB 215 went into effect as well on Monday, allowing concealed carry of handguns without a license in the state of Ohio. Any Ohio resident otherwise allowed to carry a gun will not be required to seek a concealed carry license, and Ohioans with existing licenses will not be required to renew them. With this, Dayton Police has announced changes to the way officers will interact with the public, particularly during traffic stops. Officers will be encouraged to regularly ask motorists and residents if they are carrying a firearm, as civilians are now not required to disclose this information to police. Dayton Police Chief Kamran Afzal also encourages the public to volunteer this information to officers during stops and other encounters with law enforcement. The policy of asking civilians to disclose the possession of firearms is not new among certain departments, but it will now be more widely practiced, according to Chief Afzal. He also encourages gun owners to still opt into the firearm training that comes with a concealed carry license, which HB 215 waives. This Saturday, June 18, there will be a free health fair hosted at New City Church from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Services provided will include COVID vaccines, a1c testing, vision screenings, various weight loss resources, oral health resources, and more. Dayton is currently developing its first Active Transportation Plan; a program which will seek to identify and prioritize projects to improve Dayton's bicycle and pedestrian networks. The plan will also be an essential part of securing infrastructure funding for such projects. Community members are asked and encouraged to be a part of the planning process throughout the month of July, with various outreach programs and online surveys planned. Visit walkbike.info/Dayton for more information. The Miami Valley Alzheimer's Association Chapter has announced the dates for its five Walks to End Alzheimer's, the largest event to raise funds and awareness for Alzheimer's in the world. The Miami Valley walks will be happening on September 10th, 17th, and 24th, and October 1st and 8th, at various locations around the Valley. For more info on specific locations and to register as a team or individual, go to alz.org/walk. After five years, the 416 Diner on East Fifth Street has closed its doors. Owner Guy Fragmin announced the decision last Thursday, saying “[they] hope to continue the tradition of great food and service in the near future.” Fans of the 416 on Facebook have expressed their words of sadness, support, and well wishes for the Diner's staff. The Five Rivers MetroParks are ready to restart a variety of projects that were put on hold by the COVID-19 pandemic. Among these are the Taylorsville MetroPark and Sugarcreek MetroPark, which the agency received public feedback on at the end of last year. Another major project going forward soon will be a park-over-the-river between the Third Street Bridge and Wolf Creek Bridge, announced in March of this year. According to MetroParks spokesperson Carrie Scarff, the park and footbridge will seek to unite East and West Dayton, as well as showcase the Great Miami River. The project has been named, appropriately, Unity Bridge. Five Rivers MetroParks also announced plans to make improvements to Sunrise Park and construct bikeways linking West Third Street to the riverfront below the Dayton Art Institute at Monument Avenue. Angie's Firehouse Tavern on Watervliet Avenue is up for sale after being revived by retired fire captain Patrick Reed in 2010. The restaurant first opened in 1938 as the Hungarian restaurant Angi's (pronounced AHN-ji's), but came to be known as Angie's among locals who were unsure how to pronounce the name. Quickly gaining a reputation for delicious cabbage rolls and other home-cooked Hungarian meals, Angi's became a fixture of the community for decades. Patrick Reed and his family and friends bought the vacant Angi's in 2010 to keep the spot they loved alive. Now he's looking for new ownership with creative ideas to continue their work so he can relax after 12 years of hard work. He also cites frustration with staffing shortages and rising production costs as factors in his decision. Angie's is considered a historic Dayton landmark and is listed for sale at $475,000, including the building, equipment, recipes, and decorations within. And, of course, a 1970 Porsche Firetruck that can be used for advertising. Lynda Suda, market manager of 2nd Street Market, announced that the market has reached 100% indoor capacity. All 44 spaces have been filled by various growers, producers, bakers, artisans, and restaurants. There are spots still available for weekend-only vendors, however. Suda is always looking for passionate entrepreneurs to bring their craft to the community through 2nd Street Market. Many weekend-only vendors at the market are first-time business owners, and 2nd Street helps educate them on what licenses they'll need and how they can get them. Weekend-only vendors can apply by filling out an application and meeting with market organizers, but the process for indoor permanent vendors is both more involved and more competitive. The market has also become more diverse in the past five years, with more minority vendors filling weekend and permanent spots. To learn more about the market and see the various weekend events they hold, visit metroparks.org/places-to-go/2nd-street-market. It is now estimated that Dayton Public Schools will spend $62 million more than they have available in the next two school years and will run out of general fund money in 2024-25. While labor costs are expected to rise significantly, the bigger problem starts in September 2024 when the district will have to have spent its remaining $140 million in federal COVID-19 relief money. This money has been used for many projects in the Dayton Public School system, and the school board doesn't plan to end these projects when the federal relief money that was used to start them runs out. This leaves the district with a projected $73 million deficit in 2024-25. The Board of Education is looking to approve a $230 million general budget for the next school year, which is expected to be temporary until late September. They've also said they're not planning any staff cuts, and are in fact planning to hire for several positions. DPS Superintendent Elizabeth Lolli is meeting with the district's department heads to discuss what projects will be delayed and ensure that nothing is done that will negatively impact instruction or staffing numbers. Immigration attorney and former Dayton Public Schools president Mohamed al-Hamdani was selected as the chairman of the Montgomery County Democratic Party last Thursday. Al-Hamdani is the first Muslim to lead a county Democratic party in Ohio, replacing Mark Owens, who served as chairman for 15 years before his recent retirement. He is a Dayton Public Schools and Wright State University graduate, and earned his law degree from University of Dayton after working as a cultural advisor for the Department of Defense during Operation Iraqi Freedom. Like most politically-savvy people, al-Hamdani has his sights set on this year's elections, hoping to get Democrats into leadership positions at the local, state, and federal levels. Montgomery County has approved a new $6 million Environmental Services Lab in Downtown Dayton. The new lab will make sure drinking water and discharged wastewater are compliant with state regulations for over 80,000 homes in the county. The current lab in Moraine has been in place for decades and is in need of replacement as the county seeks to update aging infrastructure. The new lab will be state of the art and is being paid for by the American Rescue Plan, from which the county received $103 million. On Saturday, June 18, Hospice of Dayton will be holding a butterfly release to remember and honor loved ones lost in Dayton. The event will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Hospice location on Wilmington Avenue. You can register for a $15 donation to have a butterfly released in a loved one's name; you can register online at hospiceofdayton.org, or you can call Marsha Bernard at 937-671-3119 for more information. The Good Samaritan Hospital site in northwest Dayton has a new facility opening, exciting partners with the project. The closing of the hospital was upsetting to many Dayton residents, who understandably believed it would have a negative impact on the community's health and well-being. The new facility is planned to be two stories, half of which will be occupied by the Dayton YMCA, including a pool, fitness center, and gym. Premier Health, which is putting forward about $15 million to fund the project, will occupy about a quarter of the facility. The project sought community feedback to learn what Daytonians wanted to see on the former hospital campus, which will also include an urgent care clinic, physicians' offices, and medical imaging services. Goodwill Easterseals will also have an office in the space to run their economic self-sufficiency and employment program. Construction is expected to begin this Fall and take about 14 months. Spokespersons with the project have said there will be more information in the coming weeks. Among the producers for the now Tony Award-winning “A Strange Loop” are Wright State University graduate Tony Monda and West Milton-born Jimmy Wilson. The show took home Best Musical and Best Book of a Musical at the 75th annual Tony Awards on Sunday. It was Wilson's first Broadway production as an associate producer with Barbara Whitman Productions. This is Monda's third Tony, previously having been involved in Hadestown, which took Best Musical in 2019, and The Inheritance, which won Best Play at last year's awards. In 2020, he also received the Graduate of the Last Decade Award from the Wright State Alumni Association. Wilson will be moving on to produce “Good Night, Oscar” for Broadway and Monda will be returning to Dayton to work with the Human Race Theater Company, where he interned in college. If you're looking for outdoor activities on the Great Miami this summer, Taiters Kayak Solutions will be offering kayak rentals Thursdays from 4 to 8 p.m. through September. Interested kayakers will launch from under the Riverside Bridge after setting up their rental and going through brief instructions and safety training at River-Scape MetroPark. Five Rivers MetroParks also runs several paddling programs, and the more adventurous among us may be interested in group whitewater rafting with Whitewater Warehouse. The kayak rental programs seek to lower the barrier to entry for the sport and encourage more Daytonians to experience our many lovely waterways. More information is available at metroparks.org. Tonight, Friday, June 17th, We Banjo 3 will be performing at the Levitt Pavilion at 7 p.m. The event is free, and features the band's unique blend of Irish folk music and Nashville bluegrass. If you find you're thirsty for a more traditional Irish music experience- and some beer- Bock Family Brewing will be hosting the debut of The HitchHikers Band, playing Irish jigs from 7 to 10 p.m. tonight. And finally tonight, the Schuster Center will be hosting a Juneteenth event from 8 to 10 p.m. celebrating the life of Dayton-born poet Paul Laurence Dunbar with the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra. Tickets range from $26 to $85. Looking to tomorrow, the 18th, the Oregon District has its own Juneteenth celebration starting at 11:00 a.m. The free family-friendly event will feature face painting, games and activities, and black-owned food trucks from around the Dayton area. Jay's Seafood on East Sixth Street will be hosting a five-course wine luncheon at 12:30 tomorrow. The cost is $75 plus tax and gratuity, and you can call for reservations at 937-222-2892 or e-mail jaysrestaurant@yahoo.com. Moving on to Saturday evening, Grammy-nominated indigenous singer and Emcee Mumu Fresh is headlining a Juneteenth concert event starting at 5 p.m. at the Levitt Pavilion. The event starts with community-curated opening ceremonies with the Mumu Fresh concert starting at 7. Admittance is free. For a different kind of musical experience, check out the Dayton Woman's Club at 6 p.m., where Dayton area kirtan band Shakti & Bhakti will be hosting a spiritual music event until 8 p.m. Kirtan is a type of religious chanting originating in India, singing praises in a call and response style to create union through music. This event is also free. Sunday is Father's Day, so if your dad likes beer, maybe bring him down to Front Street Sunday at 11 a.m. for a market and art hop with craft beer from Devil Wind Brewing. The event will feature live music and over 200 local artists and vendors. Moving on to Tuesday the 21st, Wiley's Comedy Club is hosting the GRANDSLAM event for Dayton Story Slam 2022. This event runs from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and brings together the season's best storytellers for one culminating show. Tickets are available for $5 at planned2give.networkforgood.com/events/41654-the-grandslam. On Wednesday the 22nd at 3 p.m., the Summer Market Day will be returning to the Dayton Arcade. Show up to the Rotunda for food trucks, local vendors, live entertainment, and more to be announced. More information is available at arcadedayton.com. Drinks and professional development are up next on Thursday the 23rd with Happy Hour and Headshots from PRSA Dayton. Register for a ticket ranging from $5 to $35 at prsadayton.org/meetinginfo.php. There are 16 slots open for headshots, but you're free to just join for Happy Hour at a reduced ticket price. There is also a discount for active students. The event starts at 4:30 p.m. The Home Builder's Association of Dayton will be holding their 2nd annual cornhole tournament Thursday at 7:00p.m. at 84 Lumber on Poe Avenue. Teams can register for $50, with an early bird discount available, and will be guaranteed at least two games over the course of the tournament. There will be food and drinks provided and prizes for winning. Look for the 2nd Annual HBA Cornhole Tournament on Eventbrite.com for more information. For music Thursday evening, the John Doe folk trio out of Austin, Texas will be performing for free at the Levitt Pavilion starting at 7:00 p.m. The American Czechoslovakian Club. will be hosting a steak fry and dance next Friday evening starting at 6 p.m. Reservations must be made by Wednesday the 22nd and are $20 for club members or $21 for non-members. You can contact Mary Chidester at 937-287-4275 or by e-mail at reservations@accdayton.com for reservations or questions. Another free concert at the Levitt on Friday, this time featuring Altered Five Blues Band, a tough Milwaukee quintet with hard-hitting original songs from a 20-year career with no signs of stopping. Rise early on the morning of Saturday the 25th for Goat Yoga and Brunch at Secret Eden. Arrive between 8:30 and 8:45 a.m. to play with the goats and attend a low-impact, beginner-friendly yoga class starting at 9. Full brunch will be served after the class, followed by an optional goat walk of the property at no extra charge. Tickets are $50 per person and you can find more information at secreteden.net. The Redefining You School of Etiquette is having its grand opening event on Saturday at noon. The school is opening at 205 North Williams Street and will be hosting a raffle, opening day specials, and more. Visit redefiningyouSOE.com for more information or to sign up for classes. Saturday afternoon you can tour the stunning private gardens of the Oregon Historic District during their 2022 annual garden tour. The tour runs from 2 to 5 p.m. and tickets are $15. Proceeds go directly to the Oregon Historic District Society, the neighborhood's non-profit. Look for the Oregon Historic District Garden Tour on Eventbrite.com for info and to purchase tickets. In the evening of the 25th, the Dayton Liederkranz Turner German Club will be hosting a German wine tasting, featuring eight wines made either in Germany or in Ohio from German grapes. Tickets are $45 and include pairings for each wine sample and a souvenir DLT glass. The tasting starts at 6 p.m. Visit the DLT website at dayton-liederkranz-turners-inc.square.site for information and tickets. Also on Saturday the 25th the Dayton South Slavic Club, which I am a member of, will be hosting a picnic at the Polish Club Park on Needmore Rd in Dayton. Vatra Ziva will be providing the music. Doors open at 3pm, and the kids will do a short performance at about 4:30, then the band starts at 5. The event closes at 9pm. It's free, they just ask for an RSVP by emailing picnic@southslavicclub.org and for you to bring a finger food to share. It's also BYOB, although there will have non-alcoholic drinks there as well as ice, coolers, and dinnerware. At 7 p.m. Saturday Joslyn and the Sweet Compression will be performing at the Levitt Pavilion. The eponymous Joslyn Hampton and her band delivered dynamic funk and soul-inspired tunes on their debut album in 2019 and are set to tour across the country this year. The big event capping off the week on Sunday the 26th will be Wright Dunbar Day Block Party starting at 2 p.m. The event will feature food trucks, vendors, live DJs and other live performances, and runs until 7 p.m. The block from Williams Street to Third Street in the Wright Dunbar Historic District will be closed off for the event. Also, I am now a weekly sponsor of the Twosday Tuesdays event at the Oregon Express, where my friend Rich Hopkins hosts trivia every week. If you win round two, you get a free pitcher of beer (or $11). If I win, I get to keep my money! I won't be there this next Tuesday, so you have better odds, but I'll be back to defend my cash on Tuesday the 28th, so I hope to see you there! And finally, I am happy to announce that we have our first sponsor! It's an affiliate sponsor of the show, and it's the Daytonian Beard Company, which is an excellent local small black-owned business that makes beard care products. If you order from them online (not in store) you can get 10% off your order by using the code “discoverdaytonpod,” so I hope you'll visit them online at https://thedaytonianbeardco.com/ or check them out in-person at The Entrepreneurs Marketplace, although the discount code does not work for in-store purchases. All right, that's it for this week's news roundup episode, and just as a heads up I will have some big news coming up soon that you're going to want to hear about related to some cool ways you can support this show while also getting some cool benefits in return, and if you're a business owner I may have some cool news about Bosnia and Herzegovina you're going to want to hear about, so stay tuned for that possibly as soon as next week. If you enjoyed this episode, please be sure to subscribe and leave a review and share this episode with a friend. Thanks so much for listening, and stay funky, Dayton.
Democratic candidate for governor and former Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley talks about her plans for the state including her plans for a $350 inflation rebate for Ohioans. Lake Erie Waterkeeper Sandy Bihn talks about the new documentary the Erie Situation and what has led to the algae blooms in Lake Erie.
Thank you for listening and helping us become one of the largest teenage conservative podcasts in the nation! Share The Conservative Crusader to your friends, and make sure you subscribe and rate TCC 5 stars! ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Show Notes and Sourced Stories Pelosi says House will move on assault weapons ban - TheHill Biden says there's nothing he can do to bring down gas or food prices in the near term - CNN Politics Poll: Most Americans Believe Children Should Not Be Able to Choose ‘Preferred Pronoun' - Breitbart Jury sides with Depp on lawsuit, Heard on counterclaim - POLITICO Bill to make it easier to arm teachers in Ohio passes Senate - The Ohio Press Network Ohio lawmakers debate proposed ‘Don't Say Gay' bill during first hearing - WCMH NBC 4 Columbus Ohio governor poll shows Mike DeWine leading Nan Whaley in 2022 race - The Columbus Dispatch Ohio Senate race poll: J.D. Vance, Tim Ryan in close race as economy drives votes to GOP - The Columbus Dispatch ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Follow me on President Trump's TRUTH SOCIAL! ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Follow me on Gab! ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Follow me on Twitter! ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Record a message for the show, GOP Josh will play it on air! ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ The Conservative Crusader is 15-year-old GOP Josh's daily podcast. Josh's unfiltered, uncensored, and unapologetic view of the government and politics makes his show the largest teenage-conservative podcast in all of Ohio. Listen everyday at 11:00AM EST wherever you get your podcasts, or at GOPJosh.com/show. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theconservativecrusader/message
Statehouse shooting victim identified as 16 year-old boy; holiday weekend more deadly than last year's on Ohio roads; Cuyahoga County government offices now requiring masks in response to high Covid transmission status; Nan Whaley wants to send you a check.
This is the latest episode of the Chocolate News Podcast. We bring you news that discusses issues affecting the Black community. This week's podcast is sponsored by the Ohio Lottery. Keep it fun Ohio. Play responsibly.On today's show we will be discussing the Ohio Primary Election, the potential end of Roe V. Wade, and the 20th anniversary of the Collaborative Agreement.Joining us today is Digital Correspondent Andria Carter (The Cincinnati Herald) and Activist Iris Roley.This week's episode is hosted by John Alexander Reese (Digital Editor, The Cincinnati Herald).Originally recorded on Wednesday, May 4th, 2022.Make sure to check out the stories we talked about today on our website at www.TheCincinnatiHerald.com.Follow us at The Cincinnati Herald on FacebookFollow us @CinciHerald on Twitter and Instagram.Follow us on YouTube, just search for The Herald TVMake sure to check out the stories we talked about today on our website at www.TheCincinnatiHerald.com. You can also follow us on social media. We're on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. We also have our own YouTube channel. Just search for The Herald TV.
The Governor also discusses the SCOTUS Leak and how he plans to move forward taking care of Ohioans
Nan Whaley makes history in Ohio's primary election; Ohio GOP candidates benefit from Trump endorsements; tornado touchdown confirmed near Findlay; Yellow Springs resident Dave Chappelle attacked on stage.
Who won the May 3 Ohio primaries, and what does that mean for the general election in November? We're talking about the winners, the losers and the next round on Today in Ohio. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dr. John Green joined Ray to break down the results of Tuesday's Primary Election. They discuss Governor candidates Mike DeWine and Nan Whaley, candidates for Senate JD Vance and Tim Ryan, the impact of endorsements from Trump, and what is to come.
A break down of the races with WVXU Senior Political Analyst Howard Wilkinson.
Amanda Hunter, the Executive Director of the Barbara Lee Family Foundation, discusses the unique challenges women face in gubernatorial races. We discuss upcoming gubernatorial races like Stacey Abrams in Georgia and Nan Whaley in Ohio, as well as, biases in the way voters view a woman's preparedness to lead when seeking election to an executive level position. Listen to All Electorette Episodes https://www.electorette.com/podcast Support the Electorette Rate & Review on iTunes: https://apple.co/2GsfQj4 Also, if you enjoy the Electorette, please subscribe and leave a 5-star review on iTunes. Also, please spread the word by telling your friends, family and colleagues about The Electorette! WANT MORE ELECTORETTE? Follow the Electorette on social media. Electorette Facebook Electorette Instagram Electorette Twitter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In their gubernatorial campaigns, former Dayton mayor Nan Whaley and former Cincinnati mayor John Cranley have been cordial, but that's changing. In this week's episode of Snollygoster, Ohio's politics podcast from WOSU, hosts Mike Thompson and Steve Brown talk about how the democratic primary is heating up as election day approaches.
Chief political writer Seth Richardson asks about the big issues See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Candidate Conversation: Nan Whaley - Season 2, Episode 27So much of what happens in Ohio's classrooms depends on who is leading the state as governor. That's why OEA has invited all of the declared candidates for Ohio governor - both Democrats and Republicans - to speak with Ohio's educators about where they stand on the public education issues. The two Democrats in the race accepted OEA's invitation, and we will hear from both of them in this two-part Candidate Conversation series. This is part one.MORE | Click here to subscribe to Education Matters on Apple Podcasts. Click here to subscribe on Google podcasts.Featured Education Matters guest: Nan Whaley Democratic candidate for Ohio governor Former Dayton mayor Nan grew up in a small town in Indiana. She learned the values of hard work, strength, and resilience from her dad, a union autoworker who lost his job but never lost his dignity, and her mom, who went to work at the laundromat behind their house to help make ends meet. Back then, Ohio was where people went for opportunity, so she attended the University of Dayton, becoming the first person in her family to graduate from college. She met her husband, Sam, and fell in love with her adopted hometown, eventually running for City Commission and mayor. When Nan was first elected Mayor in 2013, Dayton was at a low point. The factories had moved out and the opioids had moved in. But in Dayton, folks don't run away from their problems. Under her leadership, Dayton has turned a corner. She brought folks together to take on the community's toughest challenges, including tackling the opioid crisis, cutting overdose deaths by half and saving hundreds of lives. She led the fight to take on a broken education system and provide quality pre-k to every three- and four-year-old in the city. Dayton has become vibrant again as new people and businesses move into the city. When you're the mayor, you don't have the luxury of saying, “that's not my problem.” Over the last two years, Dayton has been tested again and again with crises like a KKK rally, a series of devastating tornadoes, and a senseless mass shooting that left 9 people dead. Each time, Nan stepped up and led her city through its hardest moments. Now, Nan is running for governor because she knows our state is fundamentally broken and Ohioans deserve better. The same special interests and corrupt politicians have been in charge for 30 years as our state has fallen further behind. Rich campaign donors get rewarded while the rest of us fall further behind. The only answer is a total overhaul. Nan knows we can build a better Ohio. An Ohio where one job is enough to provide for your family. An Ohio where your kids have real opportunities. An Ohio where everyone — no matter your zip code — can thrive.Source: About - Nan Whaley For Ohio MORE | Ohio's gubernatorial primaries will be decided on May 3rd. Polls are open from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m that day, but early voting is underway now. Here are the declared candidates: Democrats Nan Whaley John Cranley (who will be featured on the next Education Matters episode) Republicans Mike DeWine Jim Renacci Joe Blystone Ron Hood Connect with us: Email educationmatters@ohea.org with your feedback or ideas for future Education Matters topics Like OEA on Facebook Follow OEA on Twitter Follow OEA on Instagram Get the latest news and statements from OEA here Learn more about where OEA stands on the issues Keep up to date on the legislation affecting Ohio public schools and educators with OEA's Legislative Watch About us: The Ohio Education Association represents about 120,000 teachers, faculty members and support professionals who work in Ohio's schools, colleges, and universities to help improve public education and the lives of Ohio's children. OEA members provide professional services to benefit students, schools, and the public in virtually every position needed to run Ohio's schools. Education Matters host Katie Olmsted serves as Media Relations Consultant for the Ohio Education Association. She joined OEA in May, 2020, after a ten-year career as a television reporter, anchor, and producer. Katie comes from a family of educators and is passionate about telling educators' stories and advocating for Ohio's students. She lives in Central Ohio with her husband and two young children. This episode was recorded on March 26, 2022.
Missouri Supreme Court takes CAFO case | TN might stop shackling pregnant women | Gov Mike Parson's plan to raise teacher pay gets nixed | Ohio Governor candidates Nan Whaley, John Cranley, and Gov Mike DeWine debate | Missing Trump phone records from Jan 6th | Far-right candidates have some wins in MN, Fully inclusive amusement park in St Charles County MO | Nebraska and Iowa experiencing bizarre cat rumor phenomenon https://heartlandpod.com/Twitter: @TheHeartlandPOD
Missouri Supreme Court takes CAFO case | TN might stop shackling pregnant women | Gov Mike Parson's plan to raise teacher pay gets nixed | Ohio Governor candidates Nan Whaley, John Cranley, and Gov Mike DeWine debate | Missing Trump phone records from Jan 6th | Far-right candidates have some wins in MN, Fully inclusive amusement park in St Charles County MO | Nebraska and Iowa experiencing bizarre cat rumor phenomenon https://heartlandpod.com/Twitter: @TheHeartlandPOD"Change The Conversation"
On tonight's show I will discuss the new polls in the Ohio Governor race. I will give the primary breakdown for the Republican candidates Mike Dewine, Jim Renacci, Ron Hood, and Joe Blystone. As well as the Democratic candidates primary breakdown between John Cranley and Nan Whaley. I will discuss the fallout with the Joe Blystone campaign and the FBI probing the GOP Gubernatorial on campaign finance violations and unprecedented level of illegal activity (cash contributions to facilitate theft). I will talk about the war between Russia, Ukraine, and all of Europe. The "sanctions" or lack their of that will do nothing. And I will discuss the convoy heading to Washington D.C. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/charles-nash6/message
Promedica becomes Title sponsor of the U.S. Women's Open in Toledo. Supreme Court rules to end Gerrymandering. Guests Ohio Gubernatorial Candidate Nan Whaley and Promedica CEO Randy Oostra
On this week's Community Focus, I go one-one-one with gubernatorial candidate and current Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley to discuss her run for governor. I also get her reaction to the state's redrawn congressional district maps.
Dayton is most recognizable for being the home of aviation pioneers, the Wright brothers, but did you know that it is also the home of the first-ever NFL game, the longest professional sports sellout streak in the world, and host of more NCAA tournament games than any other city? We speak with Dayton's mayor and candidate for governor of Ohio, Nan Whaley, about the incredible sports history and environment of this midwestern town, and how minor league baseball led to a revitalization of the city's downtown. Visit Nan Whaley for Governor at NanWhaley.comFollow Nan Whaley on Twitter or Instagram @NanWhaleyFollow us on Twitter or Instagram @SportsTownsPodQuestions, comments, recommendations? Email us at GreatestSportsTowns@gmail.com!Hosts: Billy Puckett and Alex KacikProducer: Tim Corpus (timcorpus.net)Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
For more perspective on infrastructure spending, Judy Woodruff turns to two mayors who were at the White House Monday afternoon and are on the front lines of the new infrastructure law: Nan Whaley is a Democrat serving Dayton, Ohio, and David Holt is a Republican leading Oklahoma City. The two co-chaired the United States Conference of Mayors effort to get the infrastructure bill passed. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
(Featuring Nan Whaley, Mayor, Dayton, Ohio) The discussion on recovery as COVID begins to decline often focuses on larger US cities. So what's next for the mid-sized markets, and could Dayton, Ohio have some answers? https://www.afire.org/podcast/developingdaytoncast/ How have mid-size cities with less density responded to the pandemic? Are there advantages or disadvantages to living in smaller urban areas in the COVID times? Most importantly, what opportunities can these areas offer investors? On this episode of the AFIRE Podcast with Gunnar Branson, Nan Whaley, mayor of Dayton, Ohio, explains the challenges and advantages Dayton has experienced during the last two years. Because of its lower density, Dayton was uniquely situated for social distancing protocols, experiencing growth during the pandemic-related migration out of larger gateway markets. Combined with a very open attitude toward land development, the local market is bouncing back quickly—though housing availability and labor shortages remain as barriers to more expeditious growth. Mayor Whaley shares her goals for increasing density, fostering growth, and creating more equity in housing—and how these goals could inform the future of real estate in other mid-sized US cities.
Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley, a Democrat, wants to be Ohio's next Governor. But so do a lot of other people, including Cincinnati's Democratic Mayor, John Cranley, incumbent Republican Governor, Mike DeWine, and two other Republican candidates so far; former Congressman, Jim Renacci, and Joe Blystone, who is a farmer from Canal Winchester. Listen now, to Jeanne Destro's conversation with Whaley, to find out why the Mayor who may be “Great in Dayton” thinks she has what it takes to be the first Democrat to take back the Governor's seat, since 2011.
Sen. Rob Portman sees a path to victory on the infrastructure deal he negotiated See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
What are the takeaways from our special podcast episodes about each Cleveland candidate for mayor? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We talked to the mayor of Dayton, OH Nan Whaley, about her upcoming run for Governor of Ohio in 2022. We also got to know her on a personal level & what her plan would be to improve the state should she win the election.
On today's episode, Amanda Weinstein, Jasmine Clark and Rachel Vindman talk about taking our involvement to the next level— whether that means running for office, supporting a candidate, joining a grassroots organization, or hosting a podcast! Jasmine discusses what drove her to run for state representative in Georgia, while Amanda mentions her dedication to local issues and Rachel talks about why she joined The Suburban Women Problem. Our hosts also chat with Maya Guy, a suburban mom from Virginia who recently decided to run for school board. Then Jasmine gets the chance to sit down with Nan Whaley. Nan has served as the mayor of Dayton since 2013 and she's now running for Governor of Ohio. Nan and Jasmine share stories of why they ran for office and hope to inspire other women to do the same… but they also find time to bond over karaoke, 80s movies, Tina Fey, and ice cream.Then Amanda, Jasmine and Rachel raise a glass to teachers, taking time for family and friends, and saying “why not” to opportunities in this week's “Toast to Joy.”Suburban women helped decide the 2020 election. But we're just getting started. Are you ready to be part of The Suburban Women Problem? Sign up here to join our amazing community of women.For a transcript of this episode, please email theswppod@redwine.blue.
Tonight on the Last Word: President Biden urges Congress to pass voting rights bills. Also, Texas Democrats meet with Vice President Harris in Washington, D.C. Plus, a federal judge grills Trump lawyers on their bogus election claims in a contentious hearing about possible sanctions. And a bipartisan group of mayors urge Congress to take ‘immediate actions' on the infrastructure plan. Texas State Rep. Alex Dominguez, Texas State Rep. Julie Johnson, Derrick Johnson, Beto O'Rourke, Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson and Mayor Nan Whaley join Lawrence O'Donnell.
Can Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley lead a Democratic resurgence in Ohio? How did Indiana native go from chemistry major to running for Ohio governor? And what's it going to be like facing good friend John Cranley in the 2022 primary? Whaley has the answers and more on The Enquirer's That's So Cincinnati podcast.
We talk about Whaley's announcement and Stivers' decision. Thanks for listening to the podcast. Help us out by sharing the episode, subscribing to the podcast, supporting our sponsors and joining our listener support program. You can also leave a voice mail for our show here. Check out past episodes and enter to win contests on our show page here. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chris-pugh6/message
We talk about Nan Whaley's announcement and Steve Stivers' decision, Bob Evans' employees in Canton showing support for slain co-worker Rebecca Rogers and we interview "The One Way Ticket Show" podcast host Steven Shalowitz. Thanks for listening to the podcast. Help us out by sharing the episode, subscribing to the podcast, supporting our sponsors and joining our listener support program. You can also leave a voice mail for our show here. Check out past episodes and enter to win contests on our show page here. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chris-pugh6/message
Rep. Steve Stivers resigning to take Ohio Chamber of Commerce’s top job. Cuyahoga County Executive Armond Budish wants county workers back in the office. Cleveland Indians increase capacity at Progressive Field to 40% for May. State board votes to increase Ohio medical marijuana dispensaries to 130 from current 57. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Has Ohio's mini-surge with the coronavirus already peaked? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Are we going to do anything about the recent spike of mass shootings in Ohio and through the country, sports gambling and Nan Whaley running for Ohio governor with Ohio Capital Journal's Tyler Buchanan and Columbus Dispatch reporter Max Filby talks about tips from an Ohio State doctor on tips that can help ease COVID-19 side effects. Thanks for listening to the podcast. Help us out by sharing the episode, subscribing to the podcast, supporting our sponsors and joining our listener support program. You can also leave a voice mail for our show here. Check out past episodes and enter to win contests on our show page here. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chris-pugh6/message
Talked with Tyler Buchanan of the Ohio Capital Journal about an update on sports gambling in Ohio and reports of Nan Whaley announcing a run for Ohio governor. Thanks for listening to the podcast. Help us out by sharing the episode, subscribing to the podcast, supporting our sponsors and joining our listener support program. You can also leave a voice mail for our show here. Check out past episodes and enter to win contests on our show page here. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chris-pugh6/message
On April 1, Business Forward hosted a briefing on manufacturing in the Heartland. White House Associate Director of Public Engagement Will McIntee joined for introductory remarks on how the Biden Administration’s American Jobs Plan will impact the Heartland. After these remarks, Mayor Nan Whaley of Dayton, Ohio moderated a discussion between CEO of Heartland Forward Ross DeVol and CEO of Heath-Newark-Licking County Port Authority Rick Platt on manufacturing in the Heartland, answering questions from business leaders on entrepreneurship, reshoring jobs, and how climate concerns affect electric vehicle suppliers and the manufacturing sector, overall. 01:12 - Will McIntee's remarks 13:47 - Ross DeVol's opening remarks 18:22 - Rick Platt's opening remarks 20:35 - Q&A moderated by Mayor Nan Whaley
Host Ryan Coonerty talks to Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley about the challenges she's steered her city through, including the tragic mass shooting in 2019 that claimed 9 lives, and her work to use government as an instrument for good.
On February 22, the Initiative hosted two mayors to discuss how quality of life can be improved for the middle class at a local level. Mayor Greg Fischer of Louisville, Kentucky, and Mayor Nan Whaley of Dayton, Ohio, shared the experiences they've had in their communities and what a path forward could look like. https://www.brookings.edu/events/middle-class-well-being-at-a-local-level-what-role-can-mayors-play/ Subscribe to Brookings Events on iTunes, send feedback email to events@brookings.edu, and follow us and tweet us at @policypodcasts on Twitter. To learn more about upcoming events, visit our website. Brookings Events is part of the Brookings Podcast Network.
In this episode, I spoke with Mayor Nan Whaley of Dayton, Ohio, about her thoughts on the COVID-19 pandemic, how Dayton is making vaccine distribution more equitable, reflections on public service, and the importance of local governments in tackling the pandemic and improving health and well-being moving forward.
Part 1: Sully and Chip Mikesell recap the Flyers win against Eastern Illinois Part 2: (32:30) Sully sits down with Nan Whaley, the Mayor of Dayton to get her perspective on Flyers hoops Part 3: (57:30) SMU Preview with Damon Sayles @damonsayles on twitter
OUT Cincinnati welcomes City of Cincinnati Health Commissioner Dr. Melba Moore with an update on the COVID19 outbreak. Then Dayton, Ohio Mayor and VP of the US Conference of Mayors Nan Whaley has an update on the COVID19 situation there and police relations since the death of George Floyd.
KGAF welcomes the incomparable Mayor Nan Whaley of Dayton, OH. Mayor Whaley is a leader among mayors, a driver for change, and a genuine soul in American politics. We talk about her life; how she got into elected office and how her friendships with mayors across the country have impacted her personally and professionally. She also has the best answer of the season explaining her first ever job.
The mayor of Dayton, Ohio, on how badly America's cities need a bailout—and how painful the impact could be if they don't get one. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Our second in a three-part series highlighting the voices of city leaders and citizens as they reflect on the KKK visit to Dayton on March 25, 2019. This interview of Mayor Nan Whaley from the City of Dayton brings insight into her actions and reactions toward the rally.
COVID19 Update - Cincinnati Health Commissioner Dr. Melba R. Moore updates us on Cincinnati’s response to the virus. We also talk to Mayor Nan Whaley of Dayton, OH about how they are doing. Pastor Todd Peterson from Lakeview United Church of Christ talks about faith in response to this crisis.
Carrie and Sky are still trying to navigate social distancing during the COVID 19 pandemic. Dayton Ohio Mayor Nan Whaley joins the podcast this week and discusses everything from how she got involved in politics to how she became a national voice for gun control. About our Guest: Nan Whaley is the Mayor of Dayton, Ohio. Her career is distinguished by her commitment to public service, civic involvement and interest in local government. First elected to the Dayton City Commission in 2005, Nan was the youngest woman ever chosen for a commission seat. She was proud to be elected as Dayton’s mayor in 2013 by a double-digit majority. As mayor, she has focused on the areas of community development, manufacturing, and women and children. Nan is a national leader among her peers serving as the Second Vice President for the US Conference of Mayors as well as the Chair of the International Committee for the conference. Nan is also a founding board member for the Ohio’s Mayor Alliance, a bipartisan coalition of Ohio’s 30 largest cities. This is a Girl’s Girls Media Production. Want more? Check out girlsgirlsmedia.com Got questions? Send them to wevegotissuespod@gmail.com Like the Show? Leave us a Review on iTunes. More info about Nan and headshot: https://www.daytonohio.gov/548/Meet-the-Mayor
Mayor Nan Whaley is the perfect illustration of Chasing Change. She consistently steps out of her comfort zone in order to achieve new goals, overcome obstacles, as well as, finding ways to improve her community! Her career is distinguished by her commitment to public service, civic involvement and interest in local government. First elected to the Dayton City Commission in 2005, Nan was the youngest woman ever chosen for a commission seat. She was elected Mayor of Dayton in 2005 by a double-digit majority! Nan is a national leader among her peers serving as the Second Vice President for the US Conference of Mayors as well as the Chair of the International Committee for the conference. Mayor Whaley is also a founding board member for the Ohio’s Mayor Alliance, a bipartisan coalition of Ohio’s 30 largest cities. Follow along as we discuss her journey as a two term mayor, her passions, and words of wisdom applicable for all individuals! Follow her on Twitter @nanwhaley Instagram : nanwhaley --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chasingchange/support
Normally, being the mayor of Dayton, Ohio, means paying attention to everyday issues, from garbage pickups to municipal budgets. But in the early morning hours of August 4, 2019, a gunman opened fire at a downtown bar in the city, and Nan Whaley’s role as mayor immediately shifted. She found herself thrust into the national spotlight as all eyes turned to Dayton. And it wasn't long before she was face-to-face with President Donald Trump.
Normally, being the mayor of Dayton, Ohio, means paying attention to everyday issues, from garbage pickups to municipal budgets. But in the early morning hours of August 4, 2019, a gunman opened fire at a downtown bar in the city, and Nan Whaley’s role as mayor immediately shifted. She found herself thrust into the national spotlight as all eyes turned to Dayton. And it wasn't long before she was face-to-face with President Donald Trump.
Dayton has had a challenging year. In May, it was a controversial KKK rally in that garnered national coverage for its drama as much as the community's anti-hate response. Just a few days later, it was the tornadoes the wreaked havoc in area, causing widespread destruction, injuries, and even deaths. And then came August 4th. Nine lives ended, a community in shock, and suddenly Dayton, in tandem with El Paso, was being discussed the world over. Was it finally the tipping point for gun violence in America? In the two months since the shootings, Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley has been thrust into the forefront as not only an advocate for massive changes to gun laws, but a model of leadership and the kind of old school, community-focused mayor that seems fairly absent in modern times. She's been profiled in the Washington Post, interviewed by countless news outlets, and now CMC is pleased to welcome Mayor Whaley to our stage to discuss her reflections on the past year, what change she hopes to see as a result, and what the future holds for Dayton. Jerry Revish (Co-Anchor at WBNS 10TV) will host. Recorded on October 2, 2019 at the Boat House at Confluence Park in Columbus, Ohio.
Somehow saying 2019 has been a hell of a year in Dayton is an understatement. There was a water crisis, an FBI investigation and then a Klan rally followed days later by 15 tornadoes. As the city climbed back to its feet, it was punched in the gut by extreme trauma when a 24-year-old opened fire in the Oregon District, killing nine and causing more than 30 others to be injured. The city’s strength has been tested, but as Dayton Mayor Nan tells What Had Happened Was host Amelia Robinson, the Gem City is far from broken. They talk about the tragedies, the community’s spirit, Dave Chappelle, gun control, national news, why a Hoosier became a Buckeye and what Nan has in store next. The episode was recorded the day after Chappelle hosted the Gem City Shine block party in the Oregon District and brought in Chance the Rapper, Kanye West, Jon Stewart and other celebrities. Cox Media Group Ohio, including WHIO, Dayton Daily News and Dayton.com, has partnered with the Dayton Foundation in the Dayton Oregon District Tragedy Fund. The fund allows individuals to make charitable contributions to help the families directly affected by this terrible tragedy. For more information about the Dayton Foundation, go to DaytonFoundation.org. To make a $10 donation, text “Dayton” to 20222. Information about the Dayton Foundation’s Tornado Relief Fund can also be found on daytonfoundation.org) and The Foodbank (thefoodbankdayton.org).
Earlier this month, a gunman killed nine people and injured nearly thirty more in Dayton, Ohio. The shooting in Dayton, the 251st mass shooting in the United States this year, took place only hours before an even deadlier mass shooting in El Paso, Texas. As the city reeled, its mayor, Nan Whaley, was suddenly rocketed into prominence as both a spokesperson for Dayton and a figure in the national conversation about gun violence. Paige Williams, who met with Nan Whaley after the shooting, joins Eric Lach to discuss the role of local officials in times of national tragedy.
In this episode of Prognosis Ohio, host Dan Skinner interviews Nan Whaley, Mayor of Dayton. Topics include the recent tornado and recovery efforts, the opioid and broader addiction crisis, housing, food, and the role of mayors in national health care politics. Plus, a news roundup. See www.wcbe.org for show notes.
Is tech making it easier for us to talk to our cities? Changed bus routes. A shuttered park. How many times has your city made a decision affecting you that you didn't know about until after it happened? This persistent communication gap is one of the great conundrums for many city leaders. And it hasn't necessarily gotten any better just because we're on apps and social media. What are cities doing to find us where we are? And is using tech a more effective way to get our feedback about proposed changes? Molly and Jim talk to Eyal Feder-Levy, whose startup ZenCity tracks opinions about city government through our online comments, including public social media posts; and Mayor Nan Whaley of Dayton, Ohio, who is on the front lines of this communications struggle. For more information on this episode, visit citylab.com/podcasts/technopolis. And email us your feedback to technopolis@citylab.com.
Nan Whaley has always known she was a democrat. Her father was a union worker and her mother was a local official in their small Indiana town. She got into politics after going to Dayton for college, and she became the youngest woman elected to the Dayton City Commission, at age 29. She offers her perspective on how to get comfortable with asking for political donations -- "You’re asking people to invest in you and invest in the vision that you’re trying to move forward" -- and what she learned from her failed campaign to be Ohio's governor.
It is the way things have always been done in Dayton. Neighbors talk to each other over fences and on porches about what they are really thinking about. Tapping into that dynamic helped Nan Whaley become mayor in 2013. Even after she won, she still keeps in touch with the Ohio city’s 140,000 residents through "porch tours." Whaley says she listens fearlessly because she has learned that in public service, you cannot be afraid of failure. Before becoming mayor, she served as one of the city's youngest commissioners. On this episode of "In the Arena," a podcast about public leadership, Whaley talks about her porch tours and what she has learned from them. There's more at www.governing.com/podcasts
Episode Notes Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley joins Ohio Matters this week to give some insight on women in politics and what role mayors play in the state. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Greg interviews Nan Whaley, the Mayor of the City of Dayton, Ohio. Out of the top 10 cities in the U.S. marred by the opioid epidemic, three are in Ohio and one of the top ones is Dayton. Since her election, Mayor Whaley has worked to aggressively combat the crisis sweeping the state and affecting her community. Listen to the podcast to discover how the City of Dayton has also filed a lawsuit against the pharmaceutical companies responsible for the spread of opiates throughout the community
Tune in for the FULL, second gubernatorial debate with Ohio Democrats four great candidates for governor: Rep. Connie Pillich, Sen. Joe Schiavoni, Congresswoman Betty Sutton and Mayor Nan Whaley!
This week’s Ohio Democratic Podcast is an audio rebroadcast of the first debate between the Democratic candidates for Ohio governor -- Rep. Connie Pillich, Sen. Joe Schiavoni, Congresswoman Betty Sutton and Mayor Nan Whaley.
Regular listeners know that we often dig into the politics, economics and social issues centered along Ohio’s back roads. I mean, we’re Farm Bureau, so it’s no surprise that we talk a lot about rural issues. Today though, we get into some of those same topics with representatives of Ohio’s biggest cities. Mayors Lydia Mihalik, Findlay and Nan Whaley, Dayton are members of a new coalition of Ohio’s 30 biggest cities. On this episode of Town Hall Ohio, we hear about and from the Ohio Mayors Alliance.
Mayor Nan Whaley is a fighter for the working people of Dayton. Hear about her work championing universal pre-K and paid family leave, the many things she's proud of and the challenges still being tackled in the Birthplace of Aviation.