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Parents, officials come out against Instagram for kids idea

Why state officials and parents are concerned over the proposal. Author: Romney Smith Updated: 8:21 PM EDT May 11, 2021 OHIO, USA Instagram can be fun, informative, and, of course, a time drain while mindlessly scrolling. And while the app is loved by many, there is currently a major push to stop it from ending up in the hands of children.  Facebook, which owns Instagram, recently announced plans to create a space for kids ages 13 and under, news that has Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, along with 43 other state attorneys general, saying “absolutely not. “They’re basically making an online playground, an electronic playground here. Anybody who is interested in preying on children will know that they’re all together in one place here,” says Yost.

Ohio Asks Sixth Circuit to Order Quicker Release of Census Data

Ohio Asks Sixth Circuit to Order Quicker Release of Census Data
courthousenews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from courthousenews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Megan s life mattered : Police turning 2013 disappearance of southern Ohio mother over to BCI Cold Case Unit

Megan Lancaster was 25 when she vanished in Portsmouth, Ohio on April 3, 2013. (Source: Provided) By Jennifer Edwards Baker | May 12, 2021 at 3:25 PM EDT - Updated May 12 at 7:08 PM SCIOTO COUNTY, Ohio (FOX19) - Police said Wednesday they plan to turn over the 2013 case of a young southern Ohio mother who vanished to a state cold case unit. Portsmouth Police Detective Steve Brewer reached out to Megan Lancaster’s sister-in-law, Kadie Lancaster, and notified her Tuesday that he was contacting the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI). Megan Lancaster was 25 when she disappeared April 3, 2013. Her white Ford Mustang was found parked outside a fast food restaurant in Portsmouth with her wallet on the front seat.

In his ruling Wednesday, Judge Cole concluded that Ohio had established a substantial likelihood of success in part of its case, and that

A federal judge has denied a request from Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost to block the U.S. Treasury Department from enforcing restrictions on how states spend dollars from the latest federal coronavirus relief package. U.S. District Court Judge Douglas R. Cole ruled the preliminary injunction Yost sought was not needed at this time, but the state would likely succeed in its challenge of the constitutionality of tax provisions included in the American Rescue Plan Act. Cole wrote “Ohio has established a substantial likelihood (although by no means a certainty) of success on at least an aspect of its Spending Clause claim, and that Ohio is currently suffering irreparable harm.”

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