Wrongful death lawsuit filed on behalf of Galloway nurse killed in medical helicopter crash
Pilot Jennifer Topper and flight nurses Bradley Haynes and Rachel Cunningham were killed in the crash on January 29, 2019.
Credit: Submitted photos Author: 10TV Web Staff Updated: 6:20 PM EST January 26, 2021
COLUMBUS, Ohio A wrongful death lawsuit has been filed on behalf of a Galloway nurse, Rachel Cunningham, who was among three killed in a 2019 medical helicopter crash in Vinton County.
Cunningham, pilot Jennifer Topper and flight nurse Bradley Haynes were killed in the crash on January 29, 2019.
The Survival Flight helicopter was traveling from Mount Carmel Grove City hospital to Holzer Meigs hospital in Pomeroy for a patient transfer back to Columbus.
Ohio Supreme Court mulls whether Volkswagen should pay state hundreds of billions for emissions scandal
Updated Jan 26, 2021;
Posted Jan 26, 2021
In this Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2018, file photo a logo of the car manufacturer Volkswagen is pictured on top of a company building in Wolfsburg, Germany. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn, file)AP
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COLUMBUS, Ohio Volkswagen should pay the state of Ohio hundreds of billions of dollars in penalties for the automaker’s 2015 emissions cheating scandal, a lawyer for the state argued Tuesday before the Ohio Supreme Court.
Volkswagen’s attorney, meanwhile, argued that if Ohio wins the lawsuit, it would create “regulatory chaos” for the auto industry and might open the company to lawsuits from other states, as well as thousands of local governments, for intentionally violating clean-air laws.
Tax tangle: Small businesses should brace for the possibility of withholdings that follow employees to their homes
JUDY STRINGER
Small businesses may have one more COVID-fueled operational headache coming their way.
Ohio employees currently are regarded as working from their employer s principal place of business for tax purposes, even if they are really working from home.
That s thanks to House Bill 197 passed in March. Among a number of pandemic emergency measures, the bill temporarily suspends the state s 20-day rule, which requires employers to begin withholding tax for a municipality when an employee has been working in that municipality for more than 20 days.
Jan 21, 2021
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost continues to fight the damaging effects of House Bill 6, which is at the center of a $60 million federal bribery investigation, and was intended to bail out FirstEnergy Corp. subsidiary Energy Harbor.
This time he has asked the Franklin County Common Pleas Court to block FirstEnergy from collecting special fees from customers which were established as part of the effort to shore up Energy Harbor’s two nuclear power plants even if energy prices fall. Yost correctly asserts customers should not have to pay the $102 million the company would collect this year because of a “perverse” form of decoupling, which unlinked how much the company makes from how much electricity it sells, and guaranteed it would maintain a record-high level of profit.
Jan 19, 2021
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost continues to fight the damaging effects of House Bill 6, which is at the center of a $60 million federal bribery investigation, and was intended to bail out FirstEnergy Corp. subsidiary Energy Harbor.
This time he has asked the Franklin County Common Pleas Court to block FirstEnergy from collecting special fees from customers which were established as part of the effort to shore up Energy Harbor’s two nuclear power plants even if energy prices fall. Yost correctly asserts customers should not have to pay the $102 million the company would collect this year because of a “perverse” form of decoupling, which unlinked how much the company makes from how much electricity it sells, and guaranteed it would maintain a record-high level of profit.