Toledo City Council heard from the Ohio Consumers Council regarding FirstEnergy's proposed increase to its base rates.
Judges ruled that pharmacy chains cannot be held liable for allegations they violated an Ohio public nuisance law by flooding communities with pain pills.
The Ohio Supreme Court's decision on Tuesday could impact other opioid litigation and possibly influence other mass torts, like those over social media or mass shootings.
CINCINNATI (WKRC) - If a n Ohio Senate bill is passed, some of the state's "poorest performing schools" could see major ...
A new distribution rate increase from Toledo Edison is on the table. This is for the rate that gets the electricity to your home. Toledo Edison’s parent company, First Energy, has been in hot water ...
The Ohio Supreme Court has ruled that Ohio's product liability law prohibits counties from bringing public-nuisance claims ...
A former FirstEnergy executive wouldn't answer questions about company's pay-to-play scandal or a conflict of interest with ...
President-elect Donald Trump has named Andrew Ferguson to be the next chair of the Federal Trade Commission. Ferguson is already one of the FTC's five commissioners. He will replace Lina ...
Luigi Mangione’s face is now familiar worldwide, following his arrest for allegedly murdering UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson last week in Manhattan. But new details on the life and background of ...
Sidney city council approved four resolutions during its meeting on Monday and heard from an employee of the Ohio Consumers Counsel on proposed rate increases by AES Ohio and CenterPoint that would ...
A 4-3 Ohio Supreme Court decision against reconsidering its ruling that “boneless” chicken wings may indeed have bones drew fierce criticism, with a dissenter labeling the logic as “asinine.” Robert ...