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Dozens of alumni sign letter in support of Ohio University s Center for Law, Justice and Culture

Editor’s note: This is a letter addresses to the Ohio University Board of Trustees, Dean Florenz Plassman and Provost Elizabeth Sayers. The NEWS received a copy of the letter. We are a group of Ohio University alumni writing to express our urgent concerns about the proposed budget cuts and restructuring that essentially defund the Center for Law, Justice & Culture (CLJC). As proud OU graduates, we are exasperated at the news that yet another essential university unit is facing these cuts from an administration that does not seem to understand how central these departments and units are to the Bobcat experience. We echo the concerns raised by current students, faculty, individual alumni, and organizations like ACLU Ohio. Each and every one of us found a home with the students, faculty, and community members engaged with the critical study of law, society, and politics at the CLJC. Since graduating, the concepts learned, connections made, and opportunities pursued through the CL

Unpaid bills leave Malvern mobile home residents in legal limbo

MALVERN  Sandy Tucker and her neighbors were surprised when their sewer bills went unpaid, threatening them with a shut-off. The most frustrating part for Tucker and others living in the Klotz mobile home park about a mile east of Malvern: They believed they were paying their bills. And now they re stuck in legal limbo. The operator of the mobile home park failed to follow the rental agreement and take a portion of the tenants rent payments and apply it to the sanitary sewer bill.  We were all a nervous wreck, said Tucker, 58, whose home is in the 8000 block of Curry Drive. It was like, Where do we go? What do you do? I think we only had a three-week notice that they were shutting if off.

Grants awarded to strengthen youth resiliency in Appalachian Ohio

Grants awarded to strengthen youth resiliency in Appalachian Ohio NELSONVILLE The I’m a Child of Appalachia® Fund at the Foundation for Appalachian Ohio (FAO) and the Osteopathic Heritage Foundation of Nelsonville (OHFN) are pleased to announce $350,000 in grant awards to strengthen youth resiliency in Appalachian Ohio. Given the critical role of childhood development on lifelong wellbeing, and the extraordinary challenges youth face as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, grants address the social, economic, educational, and health challenges faced by young people in the region. FAO’s I’m a Child of Appalachia Fund and OHFN partnered to fund organizations serving youth across Appalachian Ohio.

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