May 20, 2009 | WKRC-TV Cincinnati
Stabbing Suspect Still on the Loose
It's been one week since two teenagers were stabbed in Sayler park, and the prime suspect is still on the loose.
3 Injured In Sayler Park Brawl
Cincinnati police are investigating a neighborhood fight that turned into a multiple stabbing case.
This was a monster of a storm, and before all was said and done, it would leave four Tri-State residents dead.
Today Marks 10th Anniversary Of Blue Ash Tornado
Ten years have passed since a deadly F-4 tornado struck Blue Ash. The tornado killed four people making it the deadliest tornado in the Cincinnati area since the Super Outbreak of 1974.
County officials have picked the 11 road and bridge projects that will get county money this year.
County IDs brownfield stimulus sites
Nearly 200 acres of land in Hamilton County would be ripe for redevelopment, were it not for a few expensive problems: old buildings and possible contamination.
$100,000 in grants to 7 communities
BLUE ASH - Seven Hamilton County communities will receive a collective $100,000 in grant money to study how to improve their business districts.
Hamilton Co. Awarding Economic Revitalization Grants
The Hamilton County Commissioner will award grants Monday evening to seven communities to help grow their commercial business districts and encourage economic expansion throughout the county.
Hamilton County allocates federal funds
Hamilton County Commissioners said Wednesday that they have allocated the county's federal Community Development Grant funds for 2009.
Toxic chemicals forced closure of Ohio school
ADDYSTON, Ohio - The toxic chemicals that led to the closure of Meredith Hitchens Elementary School here became impossible to ignore in 2004, during the annual Oktoberfest celebration at the school.
Students risk breathing toxic air
ADDYSTON - The growl of air-monitoring equipment has replaced the chatter of children at Meredith Hitchens Elementary School in this suburb along the Ohio River.
Ohio to test air outside schools
WASHINGTON - Two states - Ohio and Pennsylvania - will investigate whether toxic chemicals in the air outside school buildings pose a threat to the health of children.
Thousands of school kids routinely exposed to toxic chemicals
ADDYSTON, Ohio - The growl of air-monitoring equipment has replaced the chatter of children at Meredith Hitchens Elementary School in this Cincinnati suburb along the Ohio River.
Toxics can affect kids, adults differently
Outside almost every school in the country, the model used by USA TODAY indicates the presence of at least one or two chemicals capable of causing a variety of ailments.