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  • Technology's carbon footprint is a growing concern locally as major tech companies – from Intel to Microsoft – put down roots in central Ohio.
  • Access to healthcare can be difficult for marginalized communities including people who identify as LGBTQ. We discuss health resources available for the central Ohio LGBTQ community, how anti-trans legislation impacts mental health and what providing gender-affirming care looks like in Ohio.
  • Ohio lawmakers reached a budget deal June 30, the deadline for passing a two-year spending plan. The contentious process resulted in significant income tax cuts for people and businesses, universal vouchers for Ohio K-12 students, parental consent for minors creating social media accounts and about $1.5 billion in new spending for public schools.
  • Access to healthcare can be difficult for marginalized communities including people who identify as LGBTQ. We discuss health resources available for the central Ohio LGBTQ community, how anti-trans legislation impacts mental health and what providing gender-affirming care looks like in Ohio.
  • Access to healthcare can be difficult for marginalized communities including people who identify as LGBTQ. We discuss health resources available for the central Ohio LGBTQ community, how anti-trans legislation impacts mental health and what providing gender-affirming care looks like in Ohio.
  • New York City is the Big Apple. Denver is the Mile High City and Philadelphia is the City of Brotherly Love. But, what is Columbus’ identity? As the city experiences growth and greater diversity we’ll explore what’s being done to craft an identity for the city and whether it even needs one.
  • Shaker Heights, the affluent Cleveland suburb, voluntarily desegregated neighborhoods and then schools. In the process, it became a national model for integration. And yet, decades into it, the academic gap between Blacks and whites has grown.
  • Five of the nation’s largest and most profitable companies have roots in the South. We discuss how the region and societal conditions shaped their development as well as how they continue to shape our economy.
  • An estimated 4,000 people die by drowning a year across the U.S. A coalition of experts, calls it a public health crisis. They released a report that also acknowledges the history and racism responsible for disproportionate rates of drowning among people of color.
  • From flooding in Vermont to record days of heat in the Southwest, it’s been a summer of extreme weather. These events are making the realities of climate change hard to deny. We’ll discuss the effects climate change is having on the country and what it means for the future.
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