61.8 F
Toledo
Sunday, April 27, 2025

Subscribe

Home Blog Page 2

UToledo to cut multiple undergrad programs to comply with SB 1

0
About 175 University of Toledo students, faculty and staff protested Ohio SB-1 at the University of Toledo on March 20. (TFP Photo/Lori King)
This story was originally published on WTOL, a media partner of the Toledo Free Press.

By Troy Gingerich | WTOL

TOLEDO — The University of Toledo announced plans to suspend admission to several undergraduate degree programs to comply with recently passed Senate Bill 1 in Ohio, and cuts to other degree programs as part of a “prioritization process.”

UToledo plans to phase out several low-enrollment degree programs starting with the 2025-26 academic year. While admissions to these programs will be suspended, the university says students already enrolled in these programs will be able to finish their degrees without interruption.

The university says the prioritization process is in response to a “challenging time in higher education,” as colleges are dealing with a declining population of high school graduates entering college, current student retention challenges and rising costs of operation.

Nathan Araiza, a sophomore mechanical engineering major, chants “DEI has got to go.” (TFP Photo/Lori King)

“This effort is aligned with the UToledo Reimagined strategic plan that includes the stated goal to deliver relevant and innovative academic programs,” the university’s website says.

“While there may be some immediate cost savings, the goals of this effort are more focused on growth as UToledo’s student enrollment, retention and graduation rates improve as the University becomes more competitive.”

UToledo says the Office of the Provost worked alongside college deans to evaluate programs based on several factors, such as student and workforce demand, accreditation requirements and the potential to offer courses as minors or certificates instead.

Courses in the affected areas will still be available as part of the university’s core curriculum or as components of minors and certificates, the university says.

The timing of these moves coincides with new state requirements. Ohio Senate Bill 1, recently signed into law by Gov. Mike DeWine, mandates that universities eliminate undergraduate programs that consistently graduate fewer than five students per year over a three-year span.

Undergraduate programs being suspended to comply with SB 1:

  • Bachelor of Arts in Africana Studies
  • Bachelor of Arts in Asian Studies
  • Bachelor of Arts in Data Analytics
  • Bachelor of Arts in Disability Studies
  • Bachelor of Arts in Middle East Studies
  • Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy
  • Bachelor of Arts in Religious Studies
  • Bachelor of Arts in Spanish
  • Bachelor of Arts in Women’s and Gender Studies

The programs remain available as minors for students still interested in these areas of study, the university says.

Several other degree programs will be suspended as part of the provost’s review of the recommendations of the Program Reallocation and Investment Committee:

  • Bachelor of Business Administration in Organizational Leadership and Management
  • Bachelor of Science in Health Information Administration
  • Master of Arts in Philosophy
  • Master of Arts in Sociology
  • Master of Education in Educational Research and Measurement
  • Master of Education in Educational Technology
  • Master of Education in Educational Psychology
  • Master of Music in Music Performance
  • Master of Science in Geology
  • Ph.D. in Curriculum & Instruction: Early Childhood
  • Ph.D. in Curriculum & Instruction: Educational Technology
  • Ph.D. in Foundations of Education: Research and Measurement
For more information on the Academic Program Prioritization, visit the university's website.

Ohio’s Reagan Tokes law acts as a ‘one-way ratchet’ for prison time

0
Lamont Clark Jr. is among 700 incarcerated people denied release from Ohio prisons each year under Senate Bill 201, better known as the Reagan Tokes law. (Courtesy Photo/Da'Shaunae Marisa for The Marshall Project)
This story was originally published by Signal Statewide. Sign up for free newsletters at SignalOhio.org/StateSignals. Statewide is a media partner of the Toledo Free Press.

OHIO – In the final month of his two-year prison term, a guard ordered Lamont Clark Jr. into a cramped office.

Against the blurred background of a computer screen, a professionally dressed woman appeared on camera and explained that Clark would not be going home to Cleveland. A new state law required that he spend another year in prison.

The reason: Another incarcerated person claimed that Clark had attacked him in 2023 during a riot at Lake Erie Correctional Institution.

“They never told me who I allegedly assaulted. They just said, ‘Somebody said you assaulted them, and you’re guilty,’” Clark told The Marshall Project – Cleveland this year, after serving the extra time.

This article was published in partnership with The Marshall Project – Cleveland, a nonprofit news team covering Ohio’s criminal justice systems.

Hundreds of incarcerated people like Clark are denied release from Ohio prisons each year under Senate Bill 201, better known as the Reagan Tokes law. Tokes was raised in Maumee, Ohio in Monclova Township (near Toledo, Ohio) and graduated from Anthony Wayne High School.

Enacted in 2019, the law was designed to protect the public with a carrot-and-stick approach to incarceration. It gave prison administrators exclusive powers to add time for people who misbehave behind bars, or to recommend early release for those who follow the rules.

But as critics predicted, the law has only led to longer incarceration.

Not a single person has been released early, according to a Marshall Project – Cleveland review of prison records for the past six years. Meanwhile, 700 people — mostly Black men — have been denied release due to added time.

The Marshall Project – Cleveland investigation found no external oversight or internal auditing of administrative decisions to lengthen incarceration. People accused of violating prison rules are not afforded basic legal rights to have access to lawyers, to challenge their accusers or to review evidence.

“When you give this kind of unchecked power to people, it’s going to be abused,” said defense attorney Andrew Mayle, who fought for the law’s constitutionality to be challenged in the Ohio Supreme Court in 2023. 

Nearly a third of Ohio’s prison population sentenced under new law

The law was the legislative reaction to the 2017 murder of Reagan Tokes, a 21-year-old Ohio State University student, by a man recently released from prison.

Lawmakers sought to ensure public safety by keeping other potentially violent people locked up longer.

This latest pendulum swing in Ohio’s criminal sentencing laws created a new class of incarcerated people who risk not only solitary confinement and loss of privileges, but also longer prison stays for violating rules. It’s a partial return to the indefinite sentencing that Ohio legislators replaced with fixed prison terms during the popular truth-in-sentencing movement of the mid-1990s.

Under the Reagan Tokes law, judges must again give minimum and maximum prison terms for first- and second-degree felonies.

More than 14,500 people, nearly a third of Ohio’s current prison population, have been sentenced under the Reagan Tokes law. 

Critics argue that with no requirement to notify elected judges before adding some or all of the maximum term, lawmakers handed unchecked, extrajudicial power to unelected prison administrators. 

Defense lawyers and advocates for incarcerated people had warned that prison officials would likely abuse the power to keep people beyond their minimum prison terms. But they remained cautiously optimistic that the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction might also reward people who follow rules and complete programming by reducing their terms.

But the agency’s reading of the law — choosing a more burdensome requirement for early release — has denied all of the more than 120 petitions by incarcerated people to reduce their minimum prison terms.

Meanwhile, alleged rules violations resulting in added time have amounted to about 830 more years of incarceration, costing taxpayers $32 million based on total operational costs per prisoner.

“This was never pitched as a one-way ratchet, where sentences only get increased and not decreased,” said Matthew Ahn, director of the Beyond Guilt project at Ohio Justice & Policy Center. “…What we have is just another accelerator toward runaway incarceration, toward runaway spending on corrections and imprisonment.”

The law’s implementation also tracks racial disparities that worsen the deeper people move into the criminal justice system. Black men make up less than 7 percent of Ohio’s population and a staggering 59 percent of those given additional prison time under the law. Cuyahoga County is home to just 10 percent of Ohio’s population and nearly 23 percent of those kept beyond their minimum sentences.

Ohio prison spokesperson JoEllen Smith said that director Annette Chambers-Smith “carefully reviewed and considered” each petition for early release before denying them all. Chambers-Smith declined to comment.

The denial of more than 120 requests for sentence reductions hinges on prison officials’ interpretation of the Reagan Tokes law, which established two criteria for early release: adjustment to incarceration or exceptional behavior. Nothing in state law or prison policy requires administrators to pick one or the other before recommending that sentencing judges shave up to 15 percent off minimum prison terms.

State rules define adjustment to incarceration as good conduct, a low security level and no affiliation with prison gangs. Prison administrators, however, say lawmakers set unattainably high standards for exceptional conduct, which include voluntarily completing community service and rehabilitative programming, keeping positive relationships with the outside world and mentoring others.

Critics have maintained all along that, to reduce returns to prison, lawmakers should have addressed the lack of positive programming in prisons. 

“The problem with the Reagan Tokes Act has always been that it is more stick than carrot,” said attorney Nicole Clum, who advocated for a more balanced approach as a former legislative liaison at the Office of the Ohio Public Defender.

“If individuals are always given their maximum sentence and never given relief for good behavior, they have no incentive to engage in rehabilitative efforts,” she said. “Ohioans are better served if incarcerated individuals have hope.” 

Otherwise, she added, there’s “no reason to engage in rehabilitation. Inevitably, this makes Ohioans less safe.”

Prisons don’t track the reasons people get additional time. So, The Marshall Project – Cleveland spoke to dozens of incarcerated people and reviewed documents in 30 recent cases through a public records request that took officials six months to fulfill. Rule violations for assaults and other sexual misconduct — up 45 percent and 75 percent, respectively, since 2019 — appear to be driving much of the additional time, the limited analysis found.

Prison administrators could not say whether the threat of longer sentences under the Reagan Tokes law might counter rising levels of violence in Ohio prisons. One official suggested that the law would have to apply to half of Ohio’s prison population in order to study its effect.

Those punished by the law describe being locked up with cellmates who violently lash out during mental health episodes or while abusing drugs.

Lifers with little or no chance of parole extort money and commissary funds from people marked by Reagan Tokes sentences. They’re easy prey, some men said. If they fight back, they risk more time in prison. Their aggressors know that, so they pay up or take their beatings.

“Somebody with life said they were going to stab me because we kept arguing. … So, I had to punch him. I had to defend my life in those circumstances,” said Edward Navone, who is spending an extra year at a maximum-security prison in Lucasville after correctional staff found him guilty of assault.

The new law isn’t just impacting prisoners, but taxpayers as well.

Some sentenced under the law say they are denied basic due process protections

When lawmakers introduced the Reagan Tokes Act in 2017, prison officials told the legislature that additional costs would be minimal if sentencing courts accepted their recommendations to reduce sentences for good behavior. But no such recommendations have been made

Instead, Gary Daniels of the Ohio ACLU more accurately predicted what would happen when he testified in a 2018 committee hearing on the proposed bill.

“Under a more realistic scenario, (the law) will dramatically increase our prison population by hundreds per year for the next several years,” Daniels said.

Former Ohio Sen. Kevin Bacon and Rep. Jim Hughes, Republicans who co-sponsored the Reagan Tokes Act with state Senate and House Democrats Sean O’Brien and Kristin Boggs, said any law is worth revisiting.

Bacon said he was “surprised” to hear that all requests to reduce prison terms have been denied.

“I’m hoping that it’s a case where … if it is imbalanced, it’s imbalanced to protect the public,” said Hughes, adding that the state is “dealing with the worst of the worst.”

Boggs and O’Brien are now judges. Neither would talk publicly.

The law provides no checks on how public or private prison staff allege and investigate misconduct, or determine guilt. There’s no external oversight and no annual auditing.

Disciplinary decisions made behind closed doors by appointed members of the Ohio Parole Board may be appealed to lawyers who work for the state prison system. But documentation from those decisions is exempt from public records laws. Judges, who would be required to approve early release, have no say in whether time should be added. They’re not even notified.

“Certainly the judge should have a say if you’re going to be held over,” said Mayle, the defense attorney who argued against the law. 

Mayle said he could not think of a political or legal reason for removing judicial oversight other than to give unilateral authority to state prison officials.

“But then again, prisoners are not a very influential body politic. They are easy to dump on,” Mayle said, adding that “there is an economic incentive for people who work in the prison business, whether they work for private or public prisons, to have prisoners.”

Those most affected by the law say they’ve been denied basic due process protections.

Clark, like other men accused by fellow prisoners of rioting at Lake Erie Correctional Institution and later given extra time, was found guilty under a veil of legal and literal darkness. 

Lamont Clark Jr. in February 2025. Clark was released from an Ohio prison in January after serving an extra year after being accused of participating in a riot. (Courtesy Photo/Da’Shaunae Marisa for The Marshall Project)

A power outage hit the privately owned and operated prison in August 2023. The lights and camera went dark when the backup generators failed. Concerned for their own safety, correctional officers abandoned their patrols inside pitch-black pods.

With no surveillance footage or official witnesses, investigators relied solely on confidential sources — other incarcerated men — to identify the alleged rioters and swiftly move them into solitary confinement cells.

Until then, Clark had a clean disciplinary record. But investigators never asked him what happened the night of the riot. Instead, he and others received nearly identical conduct reports from the same investigator. Each report referenced confidential statements as the only evidence against them. 

One incarcerated man told officials he was with Clark “all night and he never touched anyone.” It didn’t matter. Disciplinary records show that administrators believed the confidential sources. 

Clark was loaded onto a bus as waves of men left Lake Erie Correctional Institution for higher-security and more violent prisons. As their scheduled release dates neared, one by one, they received their extra time.

Dozens of incarcerated people told The Marshall Project – Cleveland that the law’s lopsided rollout and its empty promise of rewarding good behavior had left them demoralized.

“It is frustrating,” said Jose Padilla III at Belmont Correctional Institution. “People get discouraged. When they find out they’re not getting out, that’s when they get a ticket (or rule infraction). People just give up. What’s the point?”

Several men said violence breeds violence. Fists and weapons are survival tools. More prison time doesn’t deter their use when people are threatened with physical harm or worse.

“They put a lot of people in bad situations and expect them to be angels,” said Clark, who was finally released from the notoriously violent Lebanon Correctional Institution in January after serving his extra year.

The Marshall Project – Cleveland also spoke to dozens of people who appear to meet the minimum eligibility requirements to petition for early release. At least four, including two who filed after being contacted by a reporter, were denied for reasons that included the crimes for which they are serving time.

“It just says past criminal history,” James Fleming said of the denial letter he received in June.

Fleming said he’s had no tickets in his three years of imprisonment. He’s been trusted with a maintenance job at Belmont Correctional Institution, a minimum security prison in southeast Ohio. He said he wants to better himself and atone for his mistake. 

“I’ve done pretty much any programming I can get into since I’ve been in here,” Fleming said.

Several men said they did not previously know that they could ask for reduced sentences. Others were discouraged from applying by staff.

“I could never get anyone here to help me fully understand it,” said Padilla. “So, I gave up on trying to get what paperwork I would need.

“I’m not saying I’m not sorry about my crime,” he continued. “But I do want to get out and better my life. That’s what I’ve been working on in here.”

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

Don Lee: RIP Pope Francis

0
Pope Francis ascents to the light after death on April 21, 2025.

Pope Francis, leader of the Roman Catholic Church and pope to the people, dies April 21 at the age of 88.

Toledo man invents exercise machine

0
Eddie Jones with his Easy Jump workout machine. (Courtesy Photo)

TOLEDO – In 2022, Toledo native Eddie Jones was at his home when an idea struck him. Three days later, he had the Easy Jump sketched out – the impetus for a workout machine that doesn’t require laying down or standing up, and you can do workouts in any position. 

Jones is a 15-year U.S. Coast Guard veteran. Once he left the military, he then worked 30 years as a locomotive engineer and retired last May.

When describing Easy Jump, one phrase comes to his mind: You can work your core without the floor. The workout offers a new alternative for people who can’t get on the floor very easily.

“You can work your core in an upright or midrange position very easily [with the machine],” said Jones, adding that it’s helpful to people who are working from home. If someone wants to get a quick workout, they can swiftly move from exercise to exercise.

David Hitt, who has known Eddie for a long time, was a big help in the testing of the product, which can be installed at home, the office or a gym.

Eddie Jones works out on the Easy Jump that he invented. (Courtesy Photo)

“Myself and several fitness trainers went through the evolution of different exercises that can be performed using the Easy Jump to see how effective the exercises were, and everything seemed to go really well with that process,” Hitt said.

Easy Jump also offers many other features, like tension bands to do bicep and triceps workouts, as well as bars on the side that are popular for dips. There are also tension bands on the bottom for leg workouts. 

Jones said he designed the machine for more “seasoned” exercisers, but says anyone can get use out of the Easy Jump, even for rehabilitation. But younger people typically don’t have issues getting on the floor.

“You can sit in a basic household chair and do these exercises with ease,” Jones said.

The Easy Jump is mounted against a wall, so it won’t take up any unnecessary space no matter where you have it.

Jones said he is taking the process day by day. He has sent out letters and contacted many places about his product. He said just recently he has reached out to Dicks Sporting Goods and is awaiting their response.

The Easy Jump. (Courtesy Photo)

Jerry King: Sugar Diet

0

Dark-eyed juncos soon to flitter north

0

Winter meets spring in this image, as a handsome dark-eyed junco perches in a cherry
tree dripping in blossoms.

Dark-eyed juncos are common here throughout our colder months, but the species is moving north for the summer nesting season. They are nicknamed “snowbird” because when they return after September, our first snowfall typically isn’t too long after. Juncos are common in our metroparks in the winter.

Juncos are sparrows that eat seeds, nest on the ground and live in the forests. They are identified by a rounded head, a short, stout bill and fairly long, bright white tail feathers.

This one was photographed in the Oak Openings.

Jefferson Center renovated, renamed

0
(left to right) Mike Smith, Bob Staifer and William McGuire, furniture installers for G.D.Y. (Gary Dean Young) Furniture Installations, setup work stations for Wurtec, a leading provider of elevator components and tools, inside the newly renovated Jefferson Center/Innovation Post. (TFP Photo/Stephen Zenner)

TOLEDO – For nearly a quarter century, the stone building on Jefferson Ave. has remained vacant, until now. 

Bitwise Industries, a company dealing with computer programming, was working on turning what was the Jefferson Center, a vocational school for Toledo Public Schools that closed in 2000, into its Toledo campus. But that plan ended when the founders of Bitwise Industries were sentenced to federal prison for wire fraud. 

“There are a lot of people that felt once this Bitwise thing collapsed that this building was doomed, and that it would just sit unoccupied and deteriorate,” said Tim Schlatler, managing director of SVN Ascension Commercial Realty, who manages and leases the property for its owner, ProMedica. 

“Our role started once the building [renovation] was complete, and our role was to identify and secure tenants for the space,” he said. 

Tim Schlachter, the managing director for SVN- Ascension Commercial Realty, inside the newly renovated Jefferson Center/Innovation Post. (TFP photo/Stephen Zenner)

After laying low since the Bitwise deal fell through, a ribbon cutting ceremony was held at the end of February with the mayor, Lucas County commissioners and representatives from the first four tenants: Wurtec, WorkSpring, Junior Achievement of Northwest Ohio and SEGULA Technologies USA. 

A new name for the building was revealed at the ribbon cutting: The Innovation Post. 

“There’s 110,000 square feet of space that’s finished inside the building, of which 77,000 square feet would be occupiable office space,” Schlatler said. “The difference between 110 and 77,000 [square feet] would be restrooms, pantry areas, circulation areas [and] mechanical, so we’d call that the common space.

“Of the space we have available to lease, we have now 65 percent of it leased, so we have 35 percent remaining. That’s what we continue to work on, to fill the remaining space,” he noted.

The main atrium inside the newly renovated Jefferson Center/Innovation Post. (TFP photo/Stephen Zenner)

Securing those first four tenants were necessary to meet the operational cost of the building, and since the announcement more companies have signed on, excited to see what’s next for Toledo. 

“We had these conversations, and said to them [the first four] as a group, ‘If all of you commit, we can get this done,’” said Schlatler. 

Schlatler’s own company, SVN, will be moving into the Innovation Post, along with Presidio (an IT company), Mud Maintenance (the janitorial staffing company for the Innovation Post and other properties), ProMedica’s IT training division, ProMedica’s security training division and groundUp Creative Agency (a marketing company).

“Business cards have been traded,” said Blake Pilgrim, president of Wurtec, the company taking up the entire third floor, which is the largest amount of space in the Innovation Post. “It’s important for us to be a part of a community that drives innovation, and it’s equally important to see Toledo prosper.”

The entrance to the third floor where Wurtec, a leading provider of elevator components and tools, will move in. (TFP Photo/Stephen Zenner)

“It’s the start of a new community, really. This innovative community is coming together under one roof to cross-pollinate,” Pilgram added.

The large atrium of the Innovation Post is marked by a downstairs cafe, a large stairwell with sitting areas along its side and glass walls, fostering a sense of community across the three floors. 

“There’s no doubt that some of our engineers will be talking with other engineers [from another company], and they’ll be like, ‘Oh, wow, you guys invested in this software, you know; we should look at that,’” Pilgrim said, about his hope for building community innovation.

Pilgrim thanked SVN and Brandon Sehlhorst, the commissioner of economic development for the City of Toledo, for vision casting what the area around the Innovation Post may begin to look like with the development of these companies downtown. 

“We’re bringing 60 to 70 high paying, office positions into that area of our community, and their ability to spend money, whether it be on restaurants or shopping or those sort of things I think, drives other people to continue to invest in that portion of our community,” Pilgrim said. 

Wurtec and WorkSpring are preparing to move into the new space May 1. 

“The first install is Wurtec,” said John McNerney, owner of McNerney and Sons, who oversees the installation of the office space. 

“Each business has their own look and feel of how they want it,” he said, as workers secured workstations on the third floor of the Innovation Post.

Schlatler provided the following diagrams of the Innovation Post, illustrating available areas for rent that range from $375 to $3,925 per month.


Learn more about the property here.

Garden Level
First Floor
Second Floor
Third Floor

Literature, caffeine: The perfect blend

0
Novel Blends carry a large variety of books, from faith-based nonfiction to popular bestselling fiction. (TFP Photo/Andrew Helkowski)

Christian-based bookstore open to everyone

BOWLING GREEN – Coffee is indispensable for many, and it is especially so for college students, like those at Bowling Green State University. Coffee and reading…what could be a better fit for a college town?

Novel Blends, a local shop, has hit on the perfect niche.

Novel Blends is downtown BG coffee shop with a Christianity-centric atmosphere. (TFP Photo/Andrew Helkowski)

In an average coffee shop, there’s the counter to order and a handful of tables and chairs, but not much else. But upon entering this store, there are books lining the walls on both sides, and heading back there are more places to sit. It feels like stepping into a library, where the possibilities for reading are endless.

April Hickman, a frequent customer at Novel Blends, said she loves it here “because it’s beautiful, I really like the rustic feel.” 

Many coffee shops aren’t looking to keep people staying around longer than their last sip, and that is what manager Sean Stoepler believes sets Novel Blends apart from the rest.

Stoepler said, “We have a homey vibe, and we don’t want anybody to feel uncomfortable here.” Along with the bookshelves in the store, there are several comfortable chairs and even a few couches spread around.

Novel Blends carry a large variety of books, from faith-based nonfiction to popular bestselling fiction. (TFP Photo/Andrew Helkowski)

Stoepler also spoke about the history of the shop. Business has been growing slowly, but they are busy, with customers coming in consistently. “It opened in 2021, and we’ve been steadily growing since – up 20-30 percent since we opened.”

The idea for Novel Blends was spawned by Stoepler’s father, Michael Stoepler, who wanted a place for his children to go. He wanted the spot to appeal to all sorts of people, including Christians.

“He wanted a shop that could act as a safe place for Christians to go and feel comfortable, and of course we’re welcoming to everybody,” Sean explained. 

The owners of the shop are Christians, and they wanted their shop to fit that vibe for others who share their beliefs. There are some religious books stocked on the shelves, and Bible study groups love to meet in Novel Blends. Visitors will even hear contemporary Christian music piping through the speakers.

“We’re Christians and I really like how this place makes me feel welcome. I also think it’s good that they’re inclusive of everybody, not just Christians,” Hickman said. Novel Blends extends their hands to everybody who comes in.

Novel Blends offers coffee selections from a few producers, including Catholic Coffee Roasters. (TFP Photo/Andrew Helkowski)

Novel Blends carry a large variety of books, from faith-based nonfiction to popular bestselling fiction. The large sitting area is very inviting and encourages people to relax. The guitar and art on the wall attract people to the shop. 

Students come to study, bringing their laptops and drinking coffee. Many other people come to find a good book from the shelves and read to unwind from the stressors of life. Some parents like to bring their kids, and some people like to go on their own.

Novel Blends hosts a variety of events, as well. Those events include, but are not limited, to Bible studies, book clubs and counseling groups. You can follow them on Instagram for more information on upcoming events and new menu items.