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How to vote in 2024

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Lucas Zielinksi, with Turning Point USA, hands Amelia Mathkour, a music, business and tech major at Owens Community College, a pamphlet about voting registration. Zielinksi said he was on campus for the day to help students register to vote. (TFP Photo/Lori King)

Lucas County Board of Elections explains voting details, process

Toledo – With Election Day a month away, preparations are in full swing at the Lucas County Board of Elections office.

“We’re up and running and getting everything ready,” said Timothy Monaco, deputy director of the elections office. “It’s a wonderful time. It’s important to exercise your right to vote.”

Logistics that the staff and officers have been handling for weeks on behalf of Lucas County’s 303 voting precincts include preparing ballots, training precinct election officials, and getting early voting dates and times posted on their website.

Monaco said the most commonly asked question from voters during the past couple of weeks has been when absentee ballots will arrive in the mail. 

Here’s the answer: Ohio voters can look for the absentee ballots starting Oct. 8, which is one day after registration ends for the Nov. 5 election.

The Lucas County Board of Elections staff doesn’t give predictions on voter turnout, Monaco said. But, according to state election records, 67 percent of registered Lucas County voters participated in the 2020 presidential election, and 66 percent did so in the 2016 presidential election. This participation includes absentee voting, early in-person voting and traditional Election Day voting.

Those choices are meant to help all eligible voters participate, whether they prefer going in person to a local polling site or to cast a ballot before they travel out of town.

“It’s important to make your plan as to who you are going to vote for,” Monaco said. “Make sure you make a plan and know what is on your ballot.”

While the presidential campaign is the key race of the Nov. 5 election, there are also races in Lucas County for local judges and city officials. For those who want to see the list ahead of time, ballot proofs are available for review on the election board’s website.

“Ballots will be three pages for everyone and four pages for some,” Monaco said.

While some people remember how they wish to vote when going to the polls, others find it helpful to bring paper notes or refer to a list on their phone, Monaco said. “Some folks really come prepared,” he said.

“It’s also important to be respectful at the location,” he added, referring to an Ohio law that prohibits photos of marked ballots. “We do ask that you limit cell phone use at the ballot.”

Many other election details are explained at lucascountyohiovotes.gov.

Election calendar

Key dates for the November 5 election:

  • Military and overseas civilian voting: Started Sept. 20.
  • Voter registration deadline: 9 p.m. Oct. 7.
  • Early in-person voting season: Oct. 8.-Nov. 3.
  • Absentee ballot postmark deadline: Nov. 4.
  • Election Day: Nov. 5.

CAMPUS TALK

OWENS COMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENTS SOUND OFF ABOUT VOTING

Question: How important is voting to you?

Voting is not my main concern, but it is pretty important because it is the future of America and I would like to have a say in what is gonna be my future. I usually try to vote on voting day, if I can’t I’ll do the absentee ballot.

Oliver Odendahl | EMT Major | Tontogany Resident

I am not a registered voter. If I was to lie to you I’d say yes. But honestly, I don’t have enough time … it’s not really a main priority, even though it should be. I do plan on voting at some point, maybe when I’m in my adult phase. Even though I’m not a registered voter I do think voting is important because it basically determines the society and the rules and regulations we live by.

James Johnson | Broadcast Media Technology Major | Toledo Resident

I’d say voting is very important. There’s certain aspects of it that do feel sort of depressing, when you think about it, because a lot of people would say people voting normally wouldn’t matter because of a small majority in the Electoral College – their votes matter 100 times more than your own. That’s what it feels like at least from what I know. It does feel a little degrading knowing that’s going to happen.

Nivant Dawson | Business Major | Toledo Resident

I think voting is important, but I’m not exactly sure why it’s important. I mean, there’s a lot of things that come from it. You’re voting for someone that you’re putting your trust and you’re faith into to guide us all in the right direction, but we just all don’t know what that direction is yet. So, we’re just kind of free-balling it, in a way. So, I don’t know … I’ve never voted before but this will be interesting. I really don’t know what all is involved. I just have a lot to learn about voting – like what I should be looking for in the leader I’m going to be voting for. So, yeah, it’s coming up soon. There’s a lot to learn.

Sydney Stanley | Chemistry Major | Millbury Resident

Voting is very important, especially in this day and age, when everything’s going on.

David Chase III | Literature Major | Toledo Resident
Registration details

Ohio voters must be registered by 9 p.m. Oct. 7 to be eligible to vote in the Nov. 5 election.

Residents can register to vote, look up voter registration, change their address, find an early voting location, look up Election Day polling location or track an absentee ballot at VoteOhio.gov.

Photo ID requirement

Bring your photo ID when voting. The options are:

- Current Ohio driver’s license or State of Ohio ID card.

- Interim ID form issued by Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles.

- U.S. passport or U.S. passport card.

- U.S. military ID card, Ohio National Guard ID card or U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs ID card.

A registered voter who has changed his or her name since the photo ID was issued will need to show proof of legal name change and sign a form. A photo ID card can show a former address if a current address is on file with the voting records. If you forget a photo ID, you can request a provisional ballot. 

How to vote absentee

An absentee ballot in Ohio needs to be requested, signed, dated and submitted for each election. Military personnel and civilian overseas voters can file one application for all elections happening in a given year.

The application asks for the number on your Ohio driver’s license or Ohio ID card, last four digits of your social security number, or a photocopy of other eligible ID such as a U.S. passport or military ID.

Mailed absentee ballots must be postmarked by Nov. 4 and can be hand delivered to the Board of Elections on Nov. 5.

Additional instructions are on the Ohio Secretary of State’s website.

In-person early voting

Ohio’s in-person early voting season begins Oct. 8 and ends Nov. 3. 

The Lucas County Early Vote Center is at 3737 W. Sylvania Ave. Suite 121 Entrance C (at the rear of the Lucas County Board of Elections building) in west Toledo.

Voting times and dates can be found at LucasCountyOhioVotes.gov.

Election Day voting

Polling sites are open in Ohio from 6:30-7:30 p.m. on Nov. 5. You can look up your polling location at VoteOhio.Gov.

What’s on the ballot?

A “ballot proof” is available for review on the Lucas County Board of Elections page. It lists candidates and ballot issues by precinct, so voters know what to expect.

For example: Six president/vice president candidate teams have declared in Ohio, with an additional write-in option available. Other candidate races include U.S. Senator, Lucas County Sheriff and openings on Toledo City Council.

Ohio Issue 1 is a proposed state constitutional amendment that has gained a lot of attention. This issue, if approved, would designate a redistricting commission to draw state legislative and congressional districts.

There are other issues locally, such as a proposed bond issue for the Toledo-Lucas County Public Library and a tax renewal request from the Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority.

Are ballot “selfies” allowed?

Ohio does not permit photos to be taken of a marked ballot. It’s actually a fifth-degree felony should that take place, according to Ohio law.

The “I Voted” Sticker

A traditionally popular way to showcase voter participation is through an “I voted” sticker, picked up on Election Day at the polling site.

Ohio’s current “I Voted” sticker design was adopted in 2019 through a student art contest. A red squiggle depicts a map of Ohio, nestled in a blue circle outline, with the phrase “Ohio Voted.”

Voters are invited to download the image to share on social media at the Ohio Secretary of State website. That website also has also a “future voter” coloring page for children available for download.

Is campaigning allowed at election sites?

Ohio does not allow election campaigning, also known as electioneering, within 100 feet of a voting site. This means no campaigning messages on attire such as shirts or hats, Monaco said.

Two small United States flags are placed at each voting site to designate the “neutral” zone where this applies. 

Where is the Board of Elections office?

If you need to visit the Lucas County Board of Elections regarding a voting matter, that office moved about two years ago from its former location at One Government Center to 3737 W. Sylvania Road in West Toledo.

When are election numbers official?

Ballots cast on Election Day will be delivered in person to the Lucas County Board of Elections for the counting procedures.

There will be numbers reported after that count is complete. 

The Ohio Secretary of State does not consider voter counts to be official until two or three weeks later, after provisional ballots are accounted for and to give time for absentee ballots to arrive that met the postmark deadline.

First Quality Tissue invests in Defiance

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Mega-site outline of First Quality Tissue facility in Defiance, OH. (Courtesy Photo/John Gibney)

DEFIANCE First Quality Tissue, a paper product manufacturer, is set to open a 1.6-million-square-foot production facility in Defiance County in 2025, a $985 million investment. 

Erika Willitzer, executive director of Defiance County Economic Development, noted that this facility will bring 407 new jobs to the region over an eight-year ramp-up period.

The decision to expand to Defiance was largely influenced by existing infrastructure and the availability of a contiguous 1,000-acre mega site.

The site is conveniently located right off U.S. 24, adjacent to CSX’s mainline, and in close proximity to two transmission gas lines, Willitzer noted.

John Gibney. (Courtesy photo)

John Gibney, chief marketing officer at Regional Growth Partnership (RGP) in Toledo, said that having the First Quality facility is critical for Defiance, and that this location is within 60 percent of the U.S.-Canadian marketplace. This makes it an easier task for businesses to reach their customers.

Local officials and economic leaders worked extensively to attract First Quality Tissue to the area, including multiple site visits and a delegation trip to Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, where company representatives operate another facility.

“It is literally a team effort,” said Defiance County commissioner Dana Phipps. “Defiance County commissioners have worked with Defiance County Economic Development, Defiance City, Utility Partners and Regional Growth Partnerships/JobsOhio.”

Despite enthusiasm surrounding the project, officials acknowledged several challenges that nearly derailed negotiations.

“There were many times this project came to a boiling point, where we thought it wouldn’t be announced or the project would die,” Willitzer acknowledged. “It truly took the state and locals, along with First Quality, working together to come up with creative resolutions to issues that would arise.”

Dana Phipps, Defiance County)

The company is in the process of purchasing land between Krouse and Whetstone roads, Phipps said. Truck traffic will enter via County Road 424 (formerly U.S. 24), while employee access will be from Krouse Rd.

Products that the First Quality Tissue will produce includes toilet paper, paper towels, adult incontinence products, feminine hygiene products, baby wipes, adult washcloths, and consumer paper products, according to rgp.org

The arrival of First Quality Tissue is expected to spur regional economic growth, with developers already expressing interest in building homes and businesses in the area.

“It’s going to be an economic boom!” Willitzer said. “Already, we are seeing housing developers coming in and other businesses wanting to establish themselves in Defiance County.”

Phipps said that several industries will benefit, from construction and excavation companies to restaurants and stores.

Additionally, more than 800 construction workers will be involved in building the facility, prompting local leaders to work with hotels, campgrounds and long-stay facilities to ensure adequate accommodations.

Defiance County commissioners agreed to participate in the Ohio Governor’s All Ohio Future Fund, committing $16 million to bring water and sewer infrastructure to the site. The county will take out a $7 million loan, with half forgivable upon meeting project benchmarks.

Erika Willitzer. (Courtesy Photo)

In addition, local schools have also agreed to a 100 percent tax abatement with school donations for Phase 1 and Phase 2 of First Quality’s build-out, Phipps said, as well as a substantial incentive package from the state.

“Locally, the Defiance County Commissioners are the biggest reason this project is happening,” Willitzer said. 

Phipps added that this development will shape the region’s long-term growth.

“When a facility of this size comes to an area, others will follow,” Phipps said. “We have already been approached by others seeking opportunities.”

Gibney emphasized that it’s the perfect opportunity for the people of Northwest, Ohio, as well as for local graduates who want to get involved in the workforce.

“They’re trained, they’re educated and they’re willing to work hard,” Gibney said. “Northwest, Ohio has an outstanding workforce, and this work ethic that’s built in our DNA. You go to other parts of the country, you won’t find that.”

While an official groundbreaking date has not been announced, First Quality aims to begin construction this year, with expectations of hitting job creation targets ahead of schedule.

For more details, visit the First Quality Tissue project FAQ.

Ohio could ban Medicaid, sports for certain youth

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More than 50 people turned out for the National Day of Protest in front of the Government Center in Toledo on President’s Day. (TFP Photo/Lori King)
This story was originally published by Signal Statewide. Sign up for free newsletters at State Signals. Statewide is a media partner of the Toledo Free Press.

By Zake Zuckerman | Signal Ohio

OHIO – Ohio’s Medicaid program could not by law cover the costs of gender affirming mental health care for transgender adults under the currently proposed version of the state budget. 

Medicaid, the state and federally funded health insurer for 3 million low-income Ohioans, would be unable to pay for any mental health services that “promote or affirm social gender transition” if the budget becomes law as written. 

The Senate still needs to finalize its version of the legislation, negotiate its changes with the Ohio House, and win approval from Gov. Mike DeWine, who can veto individual line items at his discretion. 

The provision marks a significant escalation in the Republican supermajority’s years-long campaign of restricting rights, recognition and health care access of transgender people. Republicans have focused their rhetoric around the bills in terms of “protecting” children from “experimental” health care or unfair athletic competition involving transgender people.

But the latest budget language goes as far as restricting widely accepted health care options for consenting adults. 

Both the Medicaid program and the private companies that provide care to its enrollees must follow state and federal laws, according to department spokeswoman Stephanie O’Grady.

“Current policy and billing codes do not indicate mental healthcare for social gender transition is being covered by Ohio Medicaid,” she said. 

She didn’t respond to follow up questions.

Gender affirming mental health care is similar to traditional therapy, with the caveat that practitioners encourage patients to define their own gender identity without judgment or efforts to change it. A 2022 study of 104 transgender youths (aged 13-20) from the Journal of American Medicine found gender affirming mental health care was associated with lower odds of depression or suicide, findings that align with prior research. The practice is accepted by, among others, the American Psychiatric Association and the American Psychological Association.  

A spokesman for Equitas Health, a major provider serving the LGBTQ community in Ohio, declined an interview or specific questions about Medicaid coverage of mental health care. But he provided a statement from CEO David Ernesto Munar.

“We ask everyone who supports our patients and communities to immediately raise their voices,” he said in the statement. “Tell elected officials that our communities need the services that organizations like Equitas Health offer. We cannot afford to turn our backs on the patients and clients who need us most.”

Budget also cuts shelter funds for transgender youth 

The new health insurance rules come within a budget that contains at least five separate provisions that either limit transgender people’s access to social services, block them from legal recognition, or sequester books “related” to them. 

The budget prohibits any state funds flowing to homeless shelters for children “that promote or affirm social gender transition.”

The language doesn’t specify which specific facilities might lose funding to house the estimated 25,000 homeless students enrolled in Ohio schools. The LGBTQ Center of Greater Cleveland advertises homelessness response and housing services on its website. A spokesperson there couldn’t be reached for comment. 

Kaleidoscope Youth Center provides a range of social services for LGBTQ kids in Columbus, including behavioral health and housing. Director Erin Upchurch said the organization is currently housing 19 people, but unrelated budget cuts are set to decrease that figure to 10 by the end of the month. She doesn’t believe Kaleidoscope will be affected (its clients are usually aged 18 to 24) by the youth homeless shelter rules. 

Regardless, she said the budget is a showing of “unchecked extremism” and a rising tide of anti-transgender legislation from the statehouse. 

“It’s cutting off lifelines to basic human needs, housing and medical care,” she said in an interview. “We’ve seen over the years how this is escalating.”

Government ID, adults-only reading sections for LGBTQ titles

The budget contains a grab bag of other anti-transgender provisions. 

For one, it requires all public libraries in Ohio to place material “related to sexual orientation or gender identity or expression” into a section of the library that’s not open to minors. 

The language is vague enough to potentially wrap classic literary titles into its folds. For instance, “The Color Purple” by Alice Walker,  involves a romantic relationship between two women; “And the Band Played On” is a critical nonfiction account of state and federal governments’ failure to prevent the AIDS epidemic among gay men in the 1980s; and the main character in the teen classic “Catcher in the Rye” has a brief, nonsexual interaction with a young prostitute. 

Under the budget, some librarians may feel obligated to remove these works from general circulation sections and tuck them away in adults-only rooms. Critics of the idea say this suggests to children there’s something wrong or lewd about depictions of gay or trans people. 

Michelle Francis, executive director of the Ohio Library Council, asked that it be removed from the budget. 

“We feel parents know what is best for their children and consider this an unfunded mandate,” she said in written testimony to lawmakers. 

Lastly, the budget requires that driver’s licenses or birth certificates reflect transgender people’s sex assigned at birth, not any assumed gender identity. And more broadly, the budget states that it “establishes state policy recognizing only two sexes, male and female, which are not changeable and are grounded in fundamental and incontrovertible reality.”

Dwayne Steward, executive director of Equality Ohio, said Republicans are using the budget to push an agenda of “erasure and control” against gay and trans people. 

“These policies threaten free access to information, the mental health of houseless and vulnerable youth, and even the ability of trans people to access medical care and social support,” he said. 

Restricting transgender children’s health care and sports

Republicans realized their first major policy win in terms of targeting transgender people in early 2024 with the passage of the “Saving Adolescents from Experimentation Act.” This required overriding a legislative veto coming from DeWine, a Republican. 

For children, the law prohibits doctors from administering a broad range of gender affirming care. Specifically, it blocks gender reassignment surgeries, prescribing puberty-blocking drugs and other treatments, all of which are generally accepted medical practices by physicians’ groups such as the American Medical Association. 

The law contains legislative findings expressing interest in “protecting the health and safety of its citizens, especially vulnerable children.”

Along with the health restrictions, the new law also prohibits male-to-female transgender athletes from playing for any women’s high school or collegiate teams.  

Two transgender children, backed by legal support from the ACLU, have challenged the health care provisions of the legislation. At first, lower courts froze enforcement of the law while that lawsuit played out. Judges with the 10th District Court of Appeals deemed it violated two constitutional provisions, including the Republican-backed Healthcare Freedom Amendment, an Obama-era measure that says no law shall “prohibit the purchase or sale of health care.”

The Ohio Supreme Court reversed the decision, allowing the law to go into effect while the legal process unfolds. The court hasn’t issued a final ruling on the merits of the case. 

Bathroom politics

Late last year, Republicans passed more restrictions on transgender people – the so-called “bathroom bill.”

It requires all K-12 schools, colleges and universities to offer only single-sex facilities based on one’s assigned sex at birth, not any assumed gender identity. 

That took effect in February 2025. 

(This article was updated Tuesday morning with comment from Equitas Health.)

Signal Statewide is a nonprofit news organization covering government, education, health, economy and public safety.

Navigating HB 68 (SAFE) Act

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Kurt Landis is the executive director and a therapist at the Center for Greater Healing. (TFP Photo/Allyson Ritchey)

TOLEDO – House Bill 68, in effect since April 24, 2024, has dramatically changed how both patients, healthcare workers and schools approach medical care and sports participation for trans-identifying youth.

Gary Click. (Courtesy Photo)

According to Bill Track 50, the Enact Ohio Saving Adolescents from Experimentation (SAFE) Act, sponsored by Gary Click (R-Vickery), prohibits physicians from performing gender reassignment surgery or prescribing cross-sex hormones or puberty-blocking drugs for the purpose of assisting minors with gender transition, with limited exceptions; requires mental health professionals to obtain parental consent before diagnosing or treating a minor for a gender-related condition, and to screen for other potential underlying issues; prohibits Medicaid coverage for gender transition services for minors, with exceptions.

The bill also enacts the Save Women’s Sports Act, which requires schools, state institutions of higher education, and private colleges to designate separate single-sex teams and sports for each biological sex, and prohibits individuals of the male sex from participating on female sports teams.

Since the bill has been in effect, practices and programs that seek to treat patients have sought legal counsel and direction from organizations like the National Association of Social Workers (NASW), which has helped organizations define how their programs can move forward after new regulations from HB 68. 

Kurt Landis, executive director and therapist at Center for Greater Healing, said his practice has participated in training sessions with NASW. “They’ve been extremely helpful in navigating changes from this bill. They’ve come into our office to train staff on changes and how to best move forward.” 

According to Mary M. Wesley, of Rainbow of Hope Counseling, the help provided by NASW has allowed her to keep the doors of her practice open.

“I’ve had to work with the NASW and other lawyers [concerning liability] to have the wording in my consent form that allows me to do my job.”

Welsey’s practice touts itself as a safe place for LGBTQ+ patients. Because minors need to receive permission from their parent or guardian(s) to attend therapy, most of the patients she sees have already come out to their parents. Despite this demographic, she said she has had to go to great lengths to educate herself on how to run her program safely.

Patient safety is paramount to these practices, making the bill a grave concern in its requirement that healthcare programs out their patients.

“It quite literally goes against our code of ethics,” says Wesley. “It’s not my job to out patients. They’re scared to come to therapy because they may say something that outs them to their parents, who may or may not be abusive. It’s a safety risk for someone to be out.”

Because Ohio and Indiana have prevented the request of hormones from minors’ physicians, patients receiving testosterone or estrogen supplements sometimes need to travel to other states in order to receive their medication.

“Depending where you live, you will need to go out of state to receive hormones,” said Wesley as she describes how her patients lives have been changed since the bill’s enactment.

“There are other ways people can get hormones that aren’t so safe. People will go to extremes if they need to because it’s that important to them. It’s important to be themselves and not be forced to live in a way they’re not comfortable [with], and, in some cases, it can make them not want to live.“

Having to travel upwards of 45 minutes to seek medical care that may or may not be covered by their insurance incurs more costs and accessibility barriers. To address this, some organizations have started funds for individuals to get to appointments and medication, though this is a temporary solution. 

The NW Ohio LGBTQ+ Coalition is working on implementing a program to address patient concerns surrounding safety and health when seeking a provider. The program addresses changes and concerns in the wake of the bill, creating a certification that identifies a medical practice or program as having gender identifying care.

Landis volunteers for the Coalition and describes what the rating system entails. “We look at things like what kinds of bathrooms are available, the layout of the space, and we also talk with staff of the facility regarding steps they take in their practice.” 

Wesley is also a volunteer for the Coalition and looks forward to the positive impact the gender affirming certification will make. “I get so many clients that have been just treated like crap, whether that be mental health professionals or medical doctors. This program will be such a huge help to people looking for safe healthcare.”

There’s no current standard of certification that healthcare programs could accredit themselves with as LGBTQ+ affirming practices. The one certificate option available is exorbitantly expensive. The Coalition’s approach to identifying healthcare programs that are LGBTQ+ affirming is low-cost and relatively easy to implement. 

Despite the fear and constant change the trans community is facing, programs and mental health practices, like those mentioned here, are working to help mitigate negative impacts.

“With the changes going on, patients are expressing concern with maybe this space not being here or our practice shutting down,” says Landis. “I reassure them, we’re not anywhere near that right now; we’re dedicated to be here and keep doing what we’re doing.”


LC4: New director, direction, building

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The new Lucas Canine Care & Control in Toledo. (TFP Photo/Allyson Ritchey)

TOLEDO – The clang of tools and hum of machinery at 1301 Monroe St. will soon be replaced with barks and tail wags as construction on the new Lucas County Canine Care & Control (LC4) facility nears completion. What’s being built here isn’t just a shelter—it’s a reset. 

Designed with both humans and animals in mind, the $35 million, 40,000-square-foot project facility will replace the current Erie Street building and bring a host of long-overdue improvements. 

The building includes 177 total kennels divided between adoption and intake wings, along with 23 play areas and a garage for animal transport. Each kennel is double-sided, allowing dogs to relieve themselves on one side and sleep on the other, promoting cleanliness and comfort. The dogs will be housed in small pods of no more than 10 with separate ventilation and outdoor access to reduce stress and minimize the spread of illness.

The new Lucas Canine Care & Control in Toledo. (TFP Photo/Allyson Ritchey)

According to LC4, the new space offers more natural light, expanded outdoor play areas, larger kennel rooms, an expanded vet clinic, better laundry facilities and modern ventilation systems. For the staff, it means safer workspaces and a layout designed for efficiency and care.

“Our little furry friends will not be so cramped and stressed out,” Lisa Sobecki, Lucas County commissioner, said of the upgrades. “This is going to be just a great environment for them to be in.”

At the helm of the facility’s next chapter is Dave Blyth, whom the Board of Lucas County Commissioners appointed as director in March 2025. Blyth previously worked at the agency as a deputy dog warden from 1981 to 2008 before moving on to a role with American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Ohio. 

“So, I got a call from a commissioner. ‘I want to talk about LC4,’ and we did–we talked,” Blyth recalled. ”They described the problems as they existed. I said, you know, I have a few ideas. And what it boils down to is, with my experience level as a deputy dog warden for Lucas County and with my law enforcement background, I think, they felt that that would be a good fit as we move into the new building.”

LC4’s Dave Blyth, left, and Terra Bundy watch the media tour the new LC4 facility. (TFP Photo/Allyson Ritchey)

Blyth’s appointment, alongside the selection of Terra Bundy as LC4’s inaugural deputy director, follows the firing of the previous director and the suspension of the shelter’s volunteer program amid multiple complaints of poor treatment of both staff and animals, as reported by WTOL

“We’re here to move forward,” Blythe said. 

The key to moving forward? Outreach. Blyth is particularly interested in expanding community-facing programs that get dogs out of the shelter and into public view, even if just for a few hours. One such initiative is Dogs on the Town, a short-term fostering program that allows residents to take adoptable dogs on day trips for socialization. 

In fact, this is how his daughter got her dog. “They brought it back and paid for it,” Blyth said.

He also hopes to continue growing LC4’s network of rescues and nonprofits, like Friends of LC4, who support adoption efforts.

“Before they go to a dog breeder or a pet store, please come down to LC4,” Blyth encouraged. “We’ve got some great candidates down here.”

Crews have been working on this project for over a year, and it is expected to be completed in August. LC4 hopes to open to the public in September.

Construction workers build the foundation for the new LC4 building. (TFP Photo/Allyson Ritchey)

While the facility represents a fresh start, it also follows a period of public scrutiny. Allegations of mismanagement and mistreatment in recent years have put LC4 under the spotlight. Blyth acknowledges that history but emphasizes a focus on what’s ahead.

“I have an open-door policy,” he said. “If there’s a problem, we deal with it. There’s no need to take anything to extremes.”

Sobecki echoed that sentiment, saying Blyth’s deep knowledge of the agency and its mission made him the right leader for the moment.

“He really does understand the mission of this program, and he understands the importance and the care for our dogs,” she said. “So, he’s just really been the perfect fit for this opportunity. I’m excited for him. I’m excited for Terra. But most importantly, I’m really, really excited for our furry friends.”


The current LC4 facility

Photos by Lori King

Photos by Lori King

An LC4 employee monitors the large dogs.

Cassie Bloomfield, LC4 Community Outreach coordinator, interacts with Judo, a male neutered Pit Bull. The staff predicts the stray is eight months old. He’s been waiting for a home since Christmas Day.

Cassie Bloomfield gives attention to Charm, a 7-year-old neutered male Pit Bull. Charm has been waiting for a new home since Jan. 28.

Sphynx is available for adoption. Sphynx is a 4-year-old spayed female Pit Bull mix who has been waiting for a home since April 12.

A husky howls for attention.

Dozens of dog cages fill a room inside LC4.

The current Lucas County Canine Care & Control facility in Downtown Toledo.

Rob Reinstetle | UToledo BBall Coach

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Toledo starting pitcher Nathan Leininger delivers a pitch during the game between the Michigan Wolverines and the Toledo Rockets on April 15. (TFP Photo/Scott W. Grau)

TOLEDO – On this episode of the Flyby Sports Podcast, host Max Alfonso is joined by Toledo head baseball coach Rob Reinstetle, recorded last week after the Rockets wrapped up a thrilling season.

Reinstetle reflects on the team’s impressive late-season surge, reaching the MAC Championship game after swinging the bats exceptionally well and finding their rhythm on the mound. He opens up about a pivotal moment in the season—the tough loss to Michigan at Fifth Third Field—and how the team bounced back with a renewed mindset and a sweep of Western Michigan.

Reinstetle also shares insight into the midseason coaching shakeup that brought in two new hitting coaches, and gives a candid look behind the scenes of a resilient squad that found its identity just in time for a memorable postseason run.

Rob Reinstetle. (Courtesy Photo)

The coach also talks about:

  • how the Rockets found their rhythm after a turbulent start of the season
  • the positive impact of a grueling non-conference schedule, the mental grind of the MAC Tournament and pivotal moments that shaped Toledo’s run to the MAC Championship game.
  • the Rockets’ pitching success in 2025. With the MAC’s best ERA and a staff built on returning talent and strategic additions, Reinstetle breaks down how new pitching coach Ethan Landon helped the group thrive.

He also reflects on the challenges and opportunities of the transfer portal era, how exit interviews now double as recruitment pitches, and why depth and seeding are critical in a grueling MAC Tournament. Plus, we get a look at Toledo’s future: upcoming scheduling shifts, portal strategy and how the Rockets plan to take the next step in 2026.

The Flyby Sports Podcast is a production of the⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Toledo Free Press⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and is always be available in the TFP ⁠⁠Pod Station⁠⁠ page.

Coach Rob Reinstetle on the field during the Toledo vs. Oregon NCAA baseball game at PK Park in Eugene, Oregon on Feb. 15. (Courtesy Photo/Craig Strobeck-Toledo Athletics)

The pro-life options in Toledo

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Pro-life advocates attend the March for Life win Washington D.C. on Jan. 24. (Courtesy Photo/Toledo Catholic Diocese Office of Life/Sophia Bauer)
This is the third of a limited series about reproductive healthcare options and care for women in the Toledo area. 

The pro-life/pro-choice debate goes back as far as most of us can remember. As political polarization increases in the U.S., so does the gap between members of these conflicting ideologies.

In his book, Persuasive Pro-Life, pro-life advocate Trent Horn explains why the stakes are so high for people on either side.

“If pro-choicers are correct, and abortion is a routine medical procedure, then pro-lifers oppress women and falsely accuse them of homicide. But if pro-lifers are correct, and abortion ends the life of a human being, then pro-choicers are guilty of defending the killing of millions of people.”

While this debate is certainly a hot topic, for many of the pro-life facilities in Toledo, the issue is less about partisan politics and more about caring for a pregnant woman in need and safeguarding a life.

Heartbeat of Toledo

Executive director of Heartbeat of Toledo Gina Borino said the nonprofit has brought together employees and patients of all different backgrounds, religions and political ideologies.

Gina Borino, executive director of Heartbeat of Toledo, touts the Heartbeat’s resource store. (TFP Photo/Mary Helen DeLisle)

Heartbeat is a pro-life organization in Toledo that provides free, confidential services to those who are pregnant, think they may be pregnant or have a child under the age of two. It has three programs: Your First Look, Heart to Heart and Catalyst.

  • Your First Look provides free and confidential pregnancy testing, ultrasounds and STI testing
  • Heart to Heart offers prenatal and parenting education, including free classes that can be taken in-person or online, and can explain changes to the body during pregnancy, the delivery process, self-care postpartum and childcare postpartum  
  • Catalyst is a program that targets younger demographics and teaches individuals how to build self-worth and cultivate healthy relationships.

These various programs all have a different focus, whether medical or personal.

“Some women will come in and say, ‘I want this baby, but it’s the finances, the relationship, housing, childcare.’ Those reasons keep her from feeling like she can go through the choice that she really wants to make. So, it’s not about changing her mind. It’s about meeting the resources that allow her to have that choice,” Bonino said.

Heartbeat provides free clothing and other resources for clients, such as formula, baby bottles, nursing pumps, blankets, shampoos, toys and more.

Bonino said clients who come to Your First Look can choose to see their ultrasound photos and hear the fetal heartbeat, or to decline both.

Heartbeat of Toledo’s counseling room provides a place to talk clients through their options. It even has complimentary saltines, peppermints and ginger chews. (TFP Photo/Mary Helen DeLisle)

In addition to these services, Heartbeat also offers counseling, which presents their clients with all three options once a positive pregnancy is confirmed: parenting, adoption and abortion.

“We have a very come-as-you-are, non-judgmental, non-coercive space,” Bonino said.

She emphasized that, unlike other pro-life pregnancy centers, Heartbeat is not affiliated with a religious group.

“That does not mean that we don’t have faith-filled people here, or that we don’t view it as important,” Bonino said. “I kind of view this [Heartbeat] as the safety net that catches those women that may fall through the cracks, that won’t go to an organization because they know they’re religious.”

Clients are welcome regardless of income or relationship status and can come at any point from suspected pregnancy to having a child up to two years of age.

Heartbeat also recently opened a location in Maumee, which they rent from St. Joseph Catholic Church, where the Heart to Heart program offers classes (like cooking classes), and there is an extension of Heartbeat’s store, which has free supplies for clients.

With so many women feeling challenged and alone in their pregnancy, Bonino hopes Toledo can continue to grow in support for women in need.

“One day, we can get the childcare covered, we can get housing covered. What other ways can we, as Toledo, come together to help these moms and support them when they are in these situations?”

Laurie’s Place

Laurie’s Place is another pro-life resource center in Toledo that helps fill one of those care gaps.

Savannah Marten, right, speaks at the Laurie’s Place grand opening on May 9. (Courtesy of The Pregnancy Center)

Laurie’s Place opened on May 9 with more than 500 people attending the grand opening. The facility is a collaboration between The Pregnancy Center and Mom’s House that helps provide free childcare for low-income women pursuing any level of school degree.

The goal of Laurie’s is to make keeping and raising a child easier for women with lower incomes, and to reduce their burden as they finish their schooling.

Programming for Laurie’s begins in August, with applications currently available for the start of the school year.

In addition to childcare, Laurie’s also offers pregnancy and parenting classes and mental health counseling.

Executive director of the Bella Vita Network, Savannah Marten, said Laurie’s Place was first conceptualized during a meeting between Marten and the director of Mom’s House.

“We kind of talked about it in the context of, ‘How do we make the path to parenthood sustainable?’” Marten said. “We [The Pregnancy Center] wanted to reach out and actually form partnerships with these other amazing agencies in our community and build a really great referral network so that we could easily help our moms navigate this.”

The heart of the movement

“In a polarized world over a polarized topic like abortion, we are led to believe that it is impossible for us to cross religious boundaries, political boundaries. And we saw at the grand opening that people of different faiths, different denominations, different political associations, all came together.

“And we believe that’s actually what brings change in the community, is when we’re willing to say there’s more that we agree on together. We live in a world that wants to pit us and leave us in separate corners. And I think Laurie’s Place proves that our community is better when we work together,” Marten said.

In 2023, there was a 26 percent decrease in the number of abortions performed in Lucas County compared to the previous year, according to the Ohio Department of Health. Lucas was also the only county in Ohio that decreased its abortion numbers from 2022, compared to other counties that also regularly perform abortions.

For 40 Days For Life sidewalk counselor Joan Stowell, this means the pro-life movement in Toledo is doing its job.

Joan Stowell prays outside of the Toledo Women’s Center. (TFP Photo/Lori King)
Joan Stowell, left, prays with the mother of a woman who entered the clinic. (TFP Photo/Lori King)

“I believe that all life has value and it’s a gift that our creator gave us. The decision of abortion, I’m sure, is one of the hardest decisions any mother made,” Stowell said. “It’s a very painful process and very difficult. And we just want them to know that they are loved and there’s help out there, and if they want it, we will be there for them.”

Stowell has been a sidewalk counselor for the past seven years and is present at the Toledo Women’s Center about 90 percent of the time it’s open.

“[We] pray and offer love and hope and assistance to people that are contemplating abortion. We feel that they are our neighbors, our brothers and sisters that need help and so we offer a loving presence out there for those that want our assistance,” Stowell said.

She’s not the only one who prays outside, however. 40 Days For Life has a group of about 80 other volunteers who come to pray outside the clinic and counsel clients entering, whenever the Toledo Women’s Center is open, rain or shine.

“We want to make sure that people that need assistance, whether it’s financially or emotionally or spiritually, they have somebody to talk to. We like to slow them down enough to know that there is a free ultrasound and a free consultation at our pregnancy resource centers, and that there are plenty of people that want to help; they don’t have to do this alone,” Stowell said.

To mothers without vehicles, parents who can’t pay rent and families struggling to get by on food stamps, Stowell said the pro-life volunteers help in any way they can to make supporting a child easier.

“The world would be a different place if we learn to help each other instead of judge them or accuse them. And a lot of people have a false perspective of what we do out there. We’re not there to judge them,” Stowell said. “We’re there to offer help and love and prayer and assistance if they need it. And if they don’t want it, ultimately that’s their choice.”

Joan Stowell prays near a vehicle at the Toledo Women’s Center in Toledo. Stowell considers herself a sidewalk counselor and offers “love, support and prayer” for women who arrive at the clinic. (TFP Photo/Lori King)

A testimony

“I hope resources like this don’t go away under the current administration,” said Heartbeat of Toledo client Brittnay.

Despite being personally pro-choice, Brittnay emphasized the benefits of local life-affirming pregnancy centers.

“Heartbeat is a really good program with people who really care,” Brittnay said. “They’re dedicated.”

When she first discovered she was pregnant, Brittnay called pregnancy centers in the area, hoping to be set up with resources and connected to an obstetrics nurse (OB).

“Everything was really quick paced,” Brittnay said.

From her first appointment to the approach of her daughter’s first birthday next month, Brittnay said Heartbeat has been there to provide her with the resources she needs.

“When I run out of diapers, my Heartbeat appointment comes up,” Brittnay said.

Not only have free pregnancy and parenting resources benefited her financially, but she said these services have also helped her be a better parent and increase the quality of her daughter’s childhood.

“Heartbeat cares, and it’s really kind of them to do so,” Brittnay said.

Though many think of pregnancy resource centers as political in nature, for the staff and clients, they are community resources that exceed partisan politics.

Pro-life advocates attend the March for Life win Washington D.C. on Jan. 24. (Courtesy Photo/Toledo Catholic Diocese Office of Life/Sophia Bauer)

Abortion Fact Sheet

  • In 2024, there were more than 1 million abortions in the U.S., according to the Guttmacher Institute.
  • There are four types of abortion procedures: Medical/chemical abortions, vacuum aspiration, dilation and evacuation (D&E) and labor induction abortions. Information about all four types, including advantages and disadvantages, can be found on the Medical News Today website.
  • The 2022, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization Supreme Court case ruled that abortion is not a constitutional right, leaving the decision to legalize abortion up to the states. Click here for more information.
  • According to the National Library of Medicine:
    • [abortion] Complication rates depend on the procedure type, gestational age, patient comorbidities, clinician experience and, most importantly, whether the abortion was performed in a safe or unsafe manner.
    • The majority of complications associated with abortion are minor, but major complications can occur including severe hemorrhage, endometritis, non-uterine organ injury, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. A study evaluating 54,911 abortions found an overall complication rate of 2.1 percent. Medication abortions had a 5.2 percent complication rate (4.9 percent minor, 0.3 percent major), with rates of 1.3 percent in the first trimester and 1.5 percent for the second trimester. First-trimester aspiration had a complication rate of 2.3 percent.

Toledo native serves up a Number Six with Cheese food review show

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Some things just don’t add up.

For instance, how does a young man who grew up in West Toledo earn an electrical engineering degree, never use it, become best pals with a sportswriter from Redford, Mich., and ultimately have success as a food reviewer on YouTube?

Corey Wagner, a 2005 graduate of Cardinal Stritch High School, joined the United States Air Force as a computer, network, switching and crypto graphic technician. He spent a year of boot camp in San Antonio, Texas, and was sent to Germany. He lived in Qatar for four months and moved to Idaho after four years in the military.

Wagner, 38, returned to Toledo and enrolled at the University of Toledo, earning an electrical engineering degree in 2014. Comedy, however, was in his blood. He moved to Chicago and began attending The Second City comedy club.

Enter Sean Ely, 38, who met Wagner at Second City in 2016. The two often did improv and comedy sketches together and realized they had the same interests.

“We hit it off right away,” Wagner said. “We both came from pretty similar cultural places. Sean is from [suburban] Detroit and I’m from Toledo, and we both came from Catholic high schools. We went to Second City, we both played sports in high school and we liked razzing each other. We had similar sensibilities.”

Ely earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Michigan State University in 2009 and became a sportswriter. He wrote for the Lansing State Journal and freelanced for the Detroit Free Press and the Detroit News before moving to Oklahoma.

“Journalism was my life,” Ely said. “I moved to Chicago in 2013 and got a job at the Tribune. I got to do all the things I wanted to do. That’s where I met my wife. When I was at the Tribune I started taking classes at Second City and met Corey. We did sketch comedy on stage every night.”

Ely, who began making YouTube videos in 2011, said he left the Tribune in 2015 to start his own social media marketing business.

“I wanted to be my own boss and do my own thing,” he said. “Number Six With Cheese started during that. I told Corey we could do these funny food reviews, and Number Six fell in with the timing of that.”

Sean Ely, left, and Corey Wagner record a show in a vehicle in 2024. (Courtesy Photo)

Ely came up with an idea to do food reviews inside their car, pitched the idea to Wagner, and their Number Six With Cheese vlog was born. Their first review, in 2016, was called “Grilled cheese stuffed crust pizza at Pizza Hut.”

Wagner estimates he and Ely, who both live in Chicago, have since done more than 1,500 Number Six vlogs in the last eight years, and they now have more than 45,600 subscribers. Many of their vlogs have more than 35,000 views on YouTube.

“The way it started, the first felt like a one-off,” Wagner recalled. “We had made a sketch comedy channel and Sean said ‘let’s do a food thing.’ We didn’t know if we were going to keep doing it. We were throwing darts at a board to see if it worked. We did another one two weeks later and kept ramping up another one, and it wasn’t that long before we were doing 4-5 a week.

Sean Ely, left, and Corey Wagner record a show for the Deep Dish Crawl in 2022. (Courtesy Photo)

“Within the first three months, we had people pitching us for TV shows,” Wagner added. “Because it was doing so well so early, we were all in. We were just having fun in the beginning. When I graduated high school, YouTube wasn’t even a thing. I was going down the comedy path making comedy short films for YouTube.”

Number Six With Cheese has a clever premise. Wagner and Ely taste test various food — they eat a lot of pizza, burgers, chicken and hot dogs — from national and local restaurants and give their opinions and grades.

The hook: They film the videos while sitting in the front seat of Wagner’s wife’s car — which is parked, of course — and Wagner always drives. Wagner’s wife, Kylie Hayes, is also from Toledo.

“I never really knew how long it would go,” Ely said. “We did the first one and got such a good response. I had a YouTube channel already and we uploaded it there. People at Second City said, ‘You two in the car together is good.’ In the first year, we signed a holding deal with an agency that wanted to make a TV show about us … we’re not going to stop doing this. It never made sense to stop, and now it’s been nine years.”

Wagner and Ely were posting as many as five videos a week for several years, but now they post two per week. They have added an Eat Local Chicago channel, where they only review Chicago-area restaurants. Wagner and Ely also have their own personal food/travel YouTube vlogs (CoreyWagnerChicago and HeySeanEly).

“It’s pretty crazy,” Wagner said. “Eat Local has 7,000 subscribers and we have our core audience of 5,000 to 8,000. It blows my mind that four days a week we put something out and 5,000 people are watching it. That’s a lot of eyeballs.”

Wagner and Ely have also partnered with companies to produce their own hot sauce and clothing merchandise. They have filmed several Number Six With Cheese videos in Toledo, but not for a few years because of their busy schedules.

The two have done food reviews on Toledo-area restaurants such as Pizza Cat, Rudy’s Hot Dogs, Tony Packo’s, Barry Bagels, J&G Pizza Palace, Netty’s and Inky’s Pizza. Seven years ago, Wagner and Ely were guest judges at Pizza Palooza at Centennial Quarry in Sylvania.

All of their videos come across as fun, informative, entertaining and unpretentious. Wagner and Ely’s on-camera chemistry and sense of humor are undeniable. They are just as comfortable talking to each other as they are their audience.

Ely said he and Wagner get asked if they are brothers “all the time.”

“We got along right away as friends,” Ely said. “We laughed at the same things; we both had non-traditional jobs and we hung out during the day. We got to do so many reps together and we played into each other’s character. It becomes second nature to do it.”