Dayton Public Schools students wonât be able to use RTA bus passes at the downtown hub next school year.
In todayâs Morning Briefing, we go over the broader impacts of the busing restrictions laid out in the Ohio budget bill signed by Gov. Mike DeWine and what the alternatives may be. We also tell you about charges facing the owner and operator of two Dayton drug and alcohol recovery centers.
⢠Why it matters: The change cuts off a way that many DPS high school students currently get to school.
⢠How will those students now get to school? Dayton Public Schools Superintendent David Lawrence said itâs not clear yet how high school students will get to school next year. He said there will be multiple meetings with school board members, high school principals and community members before those decisions can be made.
⢠Effect on jobs: The move will negatively impact students, many of whom use the school-issued bus passes to get to work, not just to school. Roughly half of the districtâs high school students have jobs.
⢠What Superintendent David Lawrence is saying: âProbably, itâll trigger an attendance decline which could affect academic outcomes, unless we rally around the students with community support and figure out an efficient way to make sure that they get to school.â
⢠Possible workarounds: Some ideas the district already has include encouraging more high school students to attend their home schools and walk to school, using rideshares or an extension of the school day and bringing students home on yellow buses.
Man operating 2 Dayton recovery centers accused of Medicaid fraud
⢠Indicted: Terry Hill Jr., 59, was indicted on healthcare fraud, making false statements relating to healthcare matters and conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud in the U.S. District Court, Southern District of Ohio.
⢠The crime: Hill reportedly illegally owned and operated Recovery Street Central and Clearview Treatment Services. He was convicted of Medicaid fraud in Franklin County Common Pleas Court, which excludes him from Medicaid.
Hill is also accused of transferring more than $1 million of Medicaid payments in the centersâ bank accounts into his personal accounts.
⢠The cover up: Hill was part of the operational functions at the recovery centers, including hiring and firing employees, establishing and paying employees and controlling the centersâ finances. The U.S. Attorneyâs Office claims Hill had others sign and submit Medicaid applications to cover up his ownership and involvement.
⢠Next step: Hill has a pretrial conference scheduled for Aug. 18.
⢠Person to know today: Main Line Supply is celebrating its 70th anniversary this year. Sales representative Linda Zierolf, 80, has worked for the company for 56 of those years.
⢠Big move of the day: A year and a half after a debilitating cyberattack, the city of Huber Heights has revamped its cybersecurity system.
⢠Dayton Food & Dining:Kawa Revolving Sushi has opened its first location in the Dayton region.
⢠Inside Ohio Politics: Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine signed into law on Monday a two-year state budget that includes numerous changes to K-12 education across the state.
⢠Athlete of the week:Mikaela Holp. This 2025 Miamisburg High School grad was named Greater Western Ohio Conference player of the year; leading the league with 28 stolen bases and 40 runs in 26 games.
Moraine police have released more information and cruiser camera video from a pursuit of a stolen U-Haul truck that ended with a crash on Interstate 75.
A judge on Wednesday granted Montgomery County Clerk of Courts Mike Foleyâs request to withdraw his plea of no contest, vacating his criminal sentence and reinstating previously dismissed felony counts against the elected official.
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost has announced Wednesday that the state is suing a New-Jersey-based âtimeshare exitâ company in Montgomery County Common Pleas Court as part of a trio of âfailure to deliverâ lawsuits.