55.6 F
Toledo
Tuesday, May 6, 2025

Subscribe

Home Blog Page 3

New life for the Ottawa Tavern?

0
The abandoned Ottawa Tavern at 1815 Adams St. (TFP Photo/Stephen Zenner)

Iconic Toledo club set to reopen, but owner keeps options open

TOLEDO – The Ottawa Tavern, a beloved and historic local nightclub in Downtown Toledo, has a new lease on life.

With their debut show post-reopening now on the books for Thursday, June 12 at 7 p.m. with Gyasi headlining following by Dagger Polyester and Leadfoot Granny, the OT is back in business after a delay early this month.

“I’m not fully sure what we’re doing with it,” said Broc Curry, the new owner of the OT, as it’s fondly called, in an interview. “We’re just playing it very slow.”

Curry has been promoting concerts in Toledo for more than 25 years, most notably at his other iconic club, Frankie’s in East Toledo. He promoted his first concert in his hometown of Bowling Green when he was just 14.

Curry’s track record and connections in the music world would easily pave the way for the Ottawa Tavern’s return to a vibrant music scene – if that’s the path he chooses.

He had planned to hold a pop-up emo concert at the renovated club on April 1 as a way “let people come back into the space,” but had to cancel the show at the last minute when the city’s health department said he needed to file for a new license.

Curry said he is taking “baby steps ” as he looks at all options for the building. “Which direction we go … I’m not too sure yet.”

The Homewreckers, with lead singer Steven J. Athanas, third from left, drew packed crowds to the Ottawa Tavern for more 20 years. (Courtesy Photo/Steven J. Athanas)

He took the same slow approach with Frankie’s, which closed in 2020 and reopened in July 2023. At first, Frankie’s held just a few concerts a month. But the club on East Main Street has gained momentum, and Frankie’s is now hosting 15 or more shows monthly.

“We’re pretty much open half the month right now, which is way more than I expected to be open again,” Curry said of Frankie’s. “But people want to play shows. People want to come to shows. Touring bands want to make a stop in Toledo, and we’re definitely super busy now.”

The reason Frankie’s has been so busy and successful is simple: Curry’s love of music.

“The people that make it a lasting endeavor are truly music people. It can’t be about money. In fact, you can end up losing a bunch of money. It can’t be about anything but the music. I’m just that guy. Since I was a kid, getting my ZZ Top and Stray Cats tapes at Finders Records; I just freaking love music.”

It’s possible the Ottawa Tavern will follow the same slow-but-steady path to building up its live music schedule, but Curry wants to keep his multiple business interests in balance and his options open.

In addition to owning two clubs, Curry owns the record and media store Your Music Exchange on Laskey Rd. in Toledo, two other record and media stores in Ann Arbor, and is getting ready to open a second Toledo shop. On top of that, he sells the most records through his online sites.

“My normal job is my record stores; the concerts are still very much my side business. But we have a small, dedicated staff. They are pulled in all sorts of directions and work long hours, but they love what they do. So you know, when you love what you do it’s not like work, right?”

Uptown building cleaned and painted

Getting the Ottawa Tavern ready was an “all hands on deck” effort by his staff at Innovation Concerts, with the team pitching in to clean and “whitebox” the building by painting the interior a neutral light gray.

There are plenty of options now for the Adams Street building, which has the potential to be a concert venue, a restaurant, a combination of the two, or a retail store run by Curry or another local entrepreneur.

Curry is well aware of the Ottawa Tavern’s place in local history, especially its contributions to the local music scene. “I’ve heard stories over the years. I know it meant a lot to a group of people. It was kind of like the Cheers of Toledo, in a way, where everybody knows your name.”

The OT was one of the most popular clubs in Northwest Ohio at its original location, 1846 W. Bancroft St., near the University of Toledo. For decades it had a diverse clientele, ranging from college students and professors to golfers and tennis players dropping by after playing at nearby Ottawa Park. Monday night poetry readings regularly drew 50 to 60 people.

Originally built as the Commerce Guardian Trust & Savings Bank in 1929, it was transformed into a restaurant and renamed the Westmoreland Inn in 1934. A grand reopening in 1937 featured music by Whitey Walls and his Rhythm Boys, with Chinese and American food on the menu.

Renamed the Ottawa Tavern in 1942

The venue was renamed the Ottawa Tavern by Clarence Bihl, who bought the Westmoreland and held a grand opening of the OT on Jan. 17, 1942.

Its modern heyday as a music venue and social hotspot began in the late 1980s and continued through the mid-90s.

Owner Pat Hanley hired Therese King, who had run a number of restaurants and was plugged into the music scene, to manage the club in April 1991.

“It was very, very slow at the time,” King said. “That’s why he called me to manage it. I booked the bands, did the ordering. Pat gave me free reign to get it going again.”

She booked other top local and regional acts including the Homewreckers, Generra Pantera, The Flecks, Groovemaster, Pat Lewandowski, the Stain, and the Love Zombies.

Tiny Tim relaxes at a house party after his concert at the Ottawa Tavern on West Bancroft Street in 1984. (Courtesy Photo/John Gibbs Rockwood)

National touring band the Dynatones played there, with Toledoan Walter “Shufflesworth” Salwitz on drums, and the famously eccentric singer Tiny Tim performed a concert at the OT in 1984, even getting an honorary key to the city presented by then-Mayor Donna Owens.

“We had the opportunity to back up Tiny Tim at the Ottawa Tavern,” recalled Steven J. Athanas, who was the lead singer of the Homewreckers. “That was a hoot. I remember Tiny Tim giving me a heart-to-heart about relationships.”

The OT had a fire-code capacity of 167 people, which it reached almost every night.

“I did a lot of promoting,” King said. “I’d go to the party in the park and do flyers. It’s so easy now with the internet and social media, but back then it was just handing out flyers. But I loved it.”

She said the Homewreckers played regularly and were one of the club’s biggest draws.

“People would call and say, ‘Are the Homewreckers there tonight?’ There was no internet then, so everybody would just call on the phone.”

Athanas, who fronted a number of popular bands and now is a columnist and cartoonist for the Toledo Free Press, said “it was always fun” to play at the OT.

“Our band was together twenty-bleeping-plus-years and we played the OT a good portion of that time,” he recalled. “They wanted us to be the house band and so did the Pub, which was down the street. They fought over us.”

With a horn section, the Homewreckers had seven or eight people on the stage. Just squeezing everybody onto the OT’s small stage was a challenge.

Holidays were epic at the OT.

“The Wednesday before Thanksgiving and on Christmas Eve people would be lined up out the door and around the building,” Athanas said.

King said there were nights when Generra Pantera was playing at the Ottawa Tavern and The Flecks were playing a few miles away at the Pub, once known as the Brass Bell, “and they would switch for a set. The Flecks would run down to the OT and Generra Pantera would run over to the Pub, play a set, and then go back. Can you imagine?”

The stolen stuffed-crow caper

King recalled some of the unique features of the OT, including a phone booth and a pair of stuffed crows.

“Someone stole one of the crows. Pat was so mad. He made up a wanted poster for the return of the stolen crow. I found out who did it and told him to just bring it back. One night there was a knock on my door and when I opened it, there was the missing crow.”

Hanley closed the Ottawa Tavern on June 30, 1996.

“I was distraught that night,” King said. “Everybody was so sad. People starting taking stuff off the walls that night – people who didn’t care about the place.”

The Bancroft Street building burned down on Jan. 14, 1999. Fire and police officials suspected arson. There was a strong odor of gas and an empty gas can in the basement, according to a police report.

Firefighters were unable to save the building, which burned in the early morning when the wind-chill factor was 30 below zero.

That was the end of an era, but the club experienced new life when accountant Tom Baird bought a building on Adams St. in Toledo’s Uptown neighborhood in May 2006 and found that the name Ottawa Tavern was available.

He tapped into the public’s nostalgia for the Ottawa Tavern when the new incarnation opened at 1817 Adams St.

King credited Adam Sattler for helping Baird get the OT going again as well as developing the Uptown area.

“It was an exciting time when they decided to open the club on Adams,” said King. “It was a very, very vibrant bar.”

The Uptown venue experienced some roller-coaster years until last December, when the former owner, Curry’s predecessor, shut it down with no advance notice.

Patrons and local musicians were left in the dark, stunned and disappointed and wondering what happened. Dozens of people vented their anger and dismay by posting comments on social media sites.

“I think it’s important to move forward and not dwell on the controversy,” Curry said, pointing out that whatever happened occurred before he bought the club. “I think people have forgotten about it, and they just want it back.”

King said she’s glad that the Ottawa Tavern has new life and hopes it becomes a thriving music scene once again.

But nothing will capture the magic of the original OT on West Bancroft, she said.

“So many different personalities brought that place to life. We didn’t know at the time that it was the club’s heyday, we were too busy working and having fun.”

Downtown Toledo developments: Partnerships with ConnecToledo

0
Cheryl Hardy-Dillin, community engagement specialist for ConnecToledo, speaks during a press conference at the Glass City Pavilion in the Glass City Metropark in Toledo, Ohio on April 23. (TFP Photo/Stephen Zenner)

TOLEDO – Outside the Glass City Pavilion, the progress of the Glass City Metropark was on full display as Cheryl Hardy-Dillin spoke on improvements to Toledo’s downtown experience.

“We want downtown Toledo to be a place where you choose to come and enjoy yourself,” she said, highlighting the parks, sports events and musical happenings on the docket for this summer season. 

“Events are not new to downtown,” Hardy-Dillin said, but admitted that the coordination between venues, businesses and other organizations has not always made the most of people’s time at the city center.

Hardy-Dillin, the community engagement specialist for ConnecToledo, spoke on economic development that could be easily accessed through creating reasons for people to come and stay — downtown.

“When you take the people that you bring to that entertainment venue, and then push them into the businesses and restaurants and buildings here intentionally…that then drives economic development.

For example, she said concerts in Promenade Park will begin at 6 p.m. and end at 9 p.m. which leads into other happenings. “We’re designing experiences that tie together.

“When the Metroparks has something going on over on this side of the river, we’ll be announcing what’s happening over here on our side of the river,” Hardy-Dillon said.

These planning initiatives were unveiled just as Toledo City Council approved $50,000 from the city’s general fund the day before for the 2025 Concert Series at Promenade park, under Oordinance 164-25. 

Michael Keedy, chief engagement and enterprise officer for Metroparks Toledo. (TFP Photo/Stephen Zenner)

The Promenade Park free concert series is a stimulus effort, in coordination with ConnecToledo, to get people downtown. City leaders and investors are hoping these kinds of events will lead to further revitalization of Toledo.

“Every concert, every gathering, every celebration, is intentional. It’s meant to draw people into the heart of the city and then push them into our local businesses,” Hardy-Dillin said, and then she pointed to the effect these kinds of coordinated programs could have. 

“If we got a couple thousand people a week [downtown], and each person spent $35, we would reinvest a million and a half dollars [a year] into downtown Toledo.”

Matt Rubin, chairman of the Downtown Toledo Improvement District, said these kinds of reinvestments create civic pride for Toledo. 

He noted that there’s been significant investment into downtown, over $2 billion over the last five years. 

“We really need these events and activation efforts to bring people downtown so they can see and can be proud of their city,” he said.

Toledo Mayor Wade Kapszukiewicz weighed in with his own experience about being ‘nagged’ to bring back Party in the Park.

Truly, for eight years: ‘When are we going to bring Party in the Park back?’ It takes a little coordination and momentum to pull it off, but we’re finally doing that. It’s more than just nostalgia: It’s forward looking.”

Mayor Wade Kapszukiewicz

A number of new events are on the horizon, including Party in the Park, Lunch at Levis and Wellness at the Square schedules. 

Toledo Mayor Wade Kapszukiewicz highlights local staples of the 419 and touted new economic development plan for downtown. (TFP Photo/Stephen Zenner)

For a more expansive list of events happening in Toledo, checkout downtowntoledo.org

2025 Party in the Park Schedule

Free Concert Series & Family-Friendly Events

Where: Promenade Park | When: Friday Evenings

Opening Acts: 6–7 p.m., unless otherwise noted

Main Acts: 7:30 – 9:30 p.m., unless otherwise noted

Friday, May 30 | Zack Attack Band & Opener: Triplette’s

Friday, June 6 | Beef Carvers & Opener: The 25’s

Friday, June 13 | Hot Air Balloon Glow collaborative event at Promenade Park & Glass City Riverwalk Promenade Park: The Grape Smugglers (8-10 p.m.) & Opener: Mizer Vossen Project (6 p.m.);

Glass City Riverwalk: Hollywood Connection Band (7-10 p.m.)

Friday, June 20 | Distant Cousinz & Opener: Wall Music – Juneteenth Celebration presented by TARTA

Friday, June 27 | North of Nashville & Opener: J.T. Hayden

Friday, July 4 | City of Toledo Fireworks*

Friday, July 11 | Arctic Clam & Opener: Nikki D and the Sisters of Thunder

Friday, July 18 | The Day Drinkers & Opener: Funk Factory

Friday, July 25 | The Skittlebots & Opener: Daisy Chain – Christmas in July

Friday, Aug. 1 | Jeep Fest Activities*

Friday, Aug. 8 | Greggie and the Jets (Elton John Tribute) & Opener: Venyx

Friday, Aug. 15 | Toledo Pride Activities*

Friday, Aug. 22 | 90s R&B Jam – DJ Lyte N Rod, Wall Music & Friends, Hosted by Big Trice

Friday, Aug. 29 | The Ultimate Garth Brooks Tribute Band & Opener: Ashley Martin Band (8–10 p.m.); Drone Show at 10pm – “Thank You Toledo” Appreciation Night

*Note: Events marked with an asterisk are supported, but not directly programmed by ConnecToledo

20th Anniversary of Lunch at Levis

Grab takeout from a local restaurant or food truck and enjoy free live music and fun at this lunchtime event series!

When: June 5 to Oct. 2, 2025
Every Thursday afternoon from 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.

Where:  Levis Square Park

2025 Food Truck Lineup

Baba’s Eats, Beastro Burger, Deets BBQ, Falafel King, Fat Boyz, Lyles Crepes, The Loaded Chicken, Wanna Make ‘Er Loaded, Trip ‘n Biscuits, Stubborn Brother, Naan Stop Kebap, Better Than Yo Mama’s, Casero Kitchen, PM Frosted Fantasies, BD’s Lemonade King, Bean Crazy 419 & Guac Shop

Thursday, June 5 – Kickoff Event | DJ Jon Zenz

Thursday, June 12 | Michael Corwin

Thursday, June 19 – Juneteenth Celebration | Distant Cousinz Trio

Thursday, June 26 | Chris Knopp

Thursday, July 3 – Independence Day Event | Shane Piasecki

Thursday, July 10 | New Moon

Thursday, July 17 | Ben DeLong

Thursday, July 24 – Christmas in July Event | Arctic Clam

Thursday, July 31 | Chloe & The Steel Strings

Thursday, Aug. 7 | Mud Hens Hype Bash

Thursday, Aug. 14 | Chavar Dontae

Thursday, Aug. 21 – Local Vendor Market | Tim Oehlers

Thursday, Aug. 28 | Water Street Band

Thursday, Sept. 4 – UT Football Hype Bash | DJ Super Nathan

Thursday, Sept. 11 | Terry & Charlie

Thursday, Sept. 18 | Ora Pettaway

Thursday, Sept. 25 | Tony Salazar

Thursday, Oct. 2 | DJ Jon Zenz

Wellness at the Square Schedule

Free yoga and fitness classes. All fitness levels welcome!

When: Saturday Mornings from 11 a.m. – noon

Where: Levis Square Park

Saturday, Aug. 9 | Yoga led by Toledo Mindfulness Institute

Saturday, Aug. 16 | Strength Training led by The Standard Fitness Academy

Saturday, Aug. 23 | Yoga led by Danielle Nolff

Saturday, Aug. 30 | Strength Training led by Gamefit HQ

Saturday, Sept. 6 | Mindful Fitness led by Toledo Mindfulness Institute

Saturday, Sept. 13 | Yoga led by Parting Clouds Yoga

Saturday, Sept. 20 | Strength Training led by The Standard Fitness Academy

Saturday, Sept. 27 | Yoga led by Parting Clouds Yoga

Announcement Briefs

0
Pexels photo by Markus Winkler

(Announcements are compiled from press releases and in order received)

NEWS SHORTS BRIEFS ARE UPDATED DAILY


ANNOUNCEMENTS

Toledo Alliance for Performing Arts announces new season

TOLEDO – The Toledo Symphony Orchestra (TSO), Toledo Ballet and Toledo Jazz Orchestra (TJO), together as the Toledo Alliance for the Performing Arts (TAPA), announced their dynamic 2025–2026 performance season.

Season subscriptions are now available, with exclusive subscriber benefits including discounted pricing, priority seating and free concert exchanges. The deadline to subscribe and retain 2024–2025 seats and pricing is June 10, 2025.

The 2025–2026 season is a celebration of artistry, tradition, and innovation—featuring major works by Berlioz, Mahler, Brahms, and Copland; dynamic performances from guest artists including Olga Kern, Angela Meade, Emilie-Claire Barlow, and Arturo Sandoval; and the milestone 85th annual presentation of The Nutcracker, the longest-running production in North America.

“This is a season filled with unforgettable moments,” said Alain Trudel, music director of the Toledo Symphony. “From Symphonie fantastique to Appalachian Spring, our audiences will experience the emotional power of music in every performance. My wonderful colleagues in the Toledo Symphony and I are thrilled to welcome extraordinary soloists, and I’m excited to continue growing our partnerships across music, dance, and jazz.” (05/05)

Go to TAPA homepage for the full schedule.

BGSU alumnus supports university with $3 million gift

BOWLING GREEN – Deeply committed to his alma mater, Paul J. Hooker ’75 is continuing his legacy of support for Bowling Green State University with a transformational $3 million donation to enhance the university’s top-ranked student experience.

Hooker, a national trustee on the BGSU Board of Trustees, is generously supporting enhancements to the Falcon Marching Band’s practice/multipurpose field and the BGSU baseball team’s facilities, further elevating the University’s commitment to the arts and athletics. He designated $1.5 million to each project. 

The Board of Trustees approved naming the Falcon Marching Band’s practice/multipurpose field The Student Green in honor of Hooker’s support during their May 2 meeting. 

The new state-of-the-art turf field will provide durable and efficient practice, performance, competition and gathering space for the Falcon Marching Band, the university’s club sports teams and other activities.  

With an affinity for baseball and a former player in high school, Hooker said he was thrilled with the opportunity to support BGSU baseball through the Steller Field Improvement Fund. He followed the team during their record-breaking 2024 season, attending games in Tennessee and Michigan, and formed a relationship with head coach Kyle Hallock. (05/05)

Schmidt, Poore joint TARTA board of trustees

The Toledo Area Regional Transit Authority (TARTA) welcomes Zachary Schmidt as the City of Rossford’s representative on its board of trustees, and Karen Poore as a representative of Lucas County.

Schmidt is a grant coordinator at Bowling Green State University. He also serves as a board member for both the Wood County Board of Elections and the Rossford Public Library. Schmidt earned a Bachelors Degree in philosophy, politics, economics and law from BGSU in 2018, and his Masters of Public Administration from BGSU.

Poore is a business navigator and Lucas County’s Department of Economic Development, and previously served as deputy mayor in the Kapszukiewicz administration. She had been a public servant in different posts with Lucas County and Toledo and has more than 30 years of experience in government. (05/01)

TARTA launches new website

Toledo Area Regional Transit Authority (TARTA) launched a new website in late April. The new tarta.com is designed to provide easier navigation and a faster path to providing the information. 

Created in a collaborative process with Station Four of Jacksonville, Fla., TARTA’s new site has the following features:

  • *A trip navigator on the front page of the site
  • *Real-time arrival information of TARTA buses
  • *Streamlined navigation, making it easier for visitors to find what they want
  • *Enhanced options and better visibility for those viewing the site on a mobile device
    (Posted 4/30)

TPS CEO/Superintendent Dr. Romules Durant awards scholarships

Durant awarded two $5,000 scholarships to students at the Celebration of Excellence Dinner at Premier on Heatherdowns Blvd. on Tuesday, April 29. These scholarships were awarded as a result of Dr. Durant winning the Green-Garner Award as the 2024 Urban Educator of the Year at the Council of the Great City Schools annual fall conference back in October.

Receiving the scholarships are Jermel Bolden, a senior at Waite High School, and Nathan Sadowski, a senior at Start High School. Dr. Durant will present a “big check” to both students. Both students plan to attend college to become educators. The scholarship money was donated by the Scholastic Corporation. (Posted 4/30)

TPS high schools host “Declaration Day” events

Each school will celebrate all seniors who have determined their next step following graduation, whether it’s to enroll in college, enlist in military service or gain employment to begin a career. Students will be recognized and will receive their “E certificate” during the event.
Declaration day schedule:
Bowsher High School: Monday, May 5 at 12:30 p.m.
Waite High School: Tuesday, May 6 at 8:15 a.m.
Westfield/Virtual Academy: Tuesday, May 6 at 10 a.m.

TPS Celebration of Excellence honors students

TOLEDO – TPS CEO/Superintendent Dr. Romules Durant will host a dinner at The Premier on Heatherdowns on Tuesday, April 29 at 6 p.m. to celebrate this year’s high school valedictorians and salutatorians, and students receiving scholarships from the TPS Foundation. Below is the list of honorees:

ANSAT Aviation: Valedictorian-Cole Herzog Salutatorian-Connor Williams
ANSAT Natural Science: Valedictorian-Alisa Sauerwein Salutatorian-Reese Henneman
Bowsher: Valedictorian-Heaven Sweeney Salutatorian-Alexandria Moran
Jones: Valedictorian-Kiersten Mathis Salutatorian-Stephanie Williams
Rogers: Valedictorian-Marianna Colton Salutatorian-Allen Powers
Scott: Valedictorian-Mahsi Scott Salutatorian-Jamel Allison
Start: Valedictorian-Bailey Clark Salutatorian-Talyssa Atkins
Toledo Early College: Valedictorian-Hadley Case Salutatorian-Ainoor Garguri
TTA: Valedictorian-Sean Steedley Salutatorian-Katelyn Baringer
Virtual Academy: Valedictorian-Claire Wolff Salutatorian-Pearl Vallejo
Waite: Valedictorian-Emma Phillips Salutatorian-Nataly Diaz-Sanchez
Woodward: Valedictorian-Tony Haase Jr. Salutatorian-Naseemah Baksh
(Posted 4/28)

Happenings Calendar

0
Pexels photo by Bich Tran

(Happenings are compiled from press releases and placed in order of occurring dates)

NEWS SHORTS BRIEFS ARE UPDATED DAILY


HAPPENINGS

TARTA Walleye shuttle connects fans to 2nd round of tournament

TOLEDO – With Toledo Walleye in the second round of the ECHL playoffs, fans can hop on the Toledo Area Regional Transit Authority (TARTA)’s Walleye Shuttle for every home game of the series against the Fort Wayne Komets.

The Shuttle provides a $3 round-trip ride to the Huntington Center from five area park-and-ride locations. Shuttles will depart for the game on the following timetable:

  • Sylvania, Lourdes University Franciscan Center, 6832 Convent Blvd., pick-up 5:45 p.m.
  • Waterville, Kroger, 8730 Waterville Swanton Road, pick-up 5:50 p.m. 
  • Miracle Mile Shopping Center, 1727 West Laskey Road, pick-up 6:15 p.m.
  • Maumee, Lucas County Recreation Center, 2901 Key Street, pick-up 6:15 p.m.
  • Oregon, Starr Elementary School, 3230 Starr Avenue, pick-up 6:15 p.m.

Sabira Restaurant celebrates grand opening with ribbon cutting

TOLEDO – The team behind the beloved Souk Mediterranean Kitchen & Bar is unveiling their newest culinary venture, Sabira Restaurant, with an official ribbon cutting
ceremony hosted by the Toledo Regional Chamber of Commerce.

Chef Moussa Salloukh, a driving force behind the region’s modern Mediterranean food scene, invites the community to experience Sabira, a dazzling new concept under the Culinary Mavericks umbrella. Rooted in bold creativity, timeless flavors and elevated hospitality, Sabira brings a fresh and unexpected dining experience to the Toledo culinary landscape.

The ribbon cutting marks the official opening of the restaurant, which has already generated buzz for its stylish ambiance, innovative menu and commitment to high-quality, globally inspired cuisine. Local dignitaries, Chamber members and community supporters are expected to attend.

All are welcome to join the celebration, explore the space and enjoy what Sabira has to offer. The event will include remarks from Salloukh and Chamber leadership, and a look at one of Toledo’s most anticipated new dining destinations.

Wednesday, May 7 at 3:30 p.m. at Sabira, located at 139 S. Huron St., Unit 102

Junior Achievement holds 4th Annual JA Inspire event

TOLEDO -Junior Achievement of Northwestern Ohio (JA) will present its 4th annual JA Inspire event. Sponsored by Mercy Health and Mercy College of Ohio, this dynamic, hands-on career exploration experience will bring together more than 1,300 high school seniors and 95 leading employers from across Northwest Ohio.

JA Inspire provides immersive, interactive exhibits that connect high school juniors, seniors and recent graduates with representatives from local companies and industries. The event helps students explore in-demand careers, build professional connections and take steps toward their future success.

This year’s event will also celebrate a major milestone: the graduation of the inaugural 5th Year class. The JA team will highlight the program’s impact through personal testimonials from graduates, parents and business partners to show the transformative power of real-world career exploration and mentorship. The incoming JA 5th Year Class of 2025–2026 will also be formally recognized during the program.

Expect over 1,500 students from 25 schools across Northwest Ohio; more than 95 local businesses; and 115 hands-on exhibits and community leaders.

Wednesday, May 7 from 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Glass City Center main hall.
• 9 a.m.- Doors open for JA Inspire Student event
• 2 p.m. - Event concludes

Revival Now More Than Ever: A Voice for Justice

The International Ministerial Alliance of Toledo and Vicinity is hosting a three-day event. Present will be Pastor Dr. Cedric Broc, IMA president, Mt. Nebo Baptist Church; Bishop Talmadge Thomas, City of Zion, the Mount Zion Church; and Pastor Wallace Mills, Puritan Ave. Baptist Church.

Luncheon on Wednesday, May 7 (11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.); Full Gospel on Thursday, May 8 (7 p.m.); and Pastor's Night on Friday, May 9 (7 p.m.)
> Held at Warren AME Church, 915 Collingwood Blvd., Toledo

Water Safety in Toledo – Free Family Event

TOLEDO – The Josh Project has partnered with SafeSplash SwimLabs (Holland & Perrysburg) to host a Water Safety Day.

This free, family-focused event is designed to educate families on drowning prevention and safe practices around water—just in time for summer. The day will feature:

  • Live CPR demonstrations by Camisha Mincey of A Wyse Choice Homecare
  • Safety tips from organizations like Toledo Fire and Rescue, Safe Kids Greater Toledo, the Coast Guard Auxiliary and more
  • Interactive activities, giveaways, and educational resources for all ages

The Josh Project has been a vital part of the Toledo community for years, offering affordable swim lessons to reduce drowning rates, particularly in underrepresented communities.

Saturday, May 10 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at St. Francis de Sales School (2323 W. Bancroft St., Toledo).

Food for Thought holds 10th annual Jam City fundraiser

TOLEDO – Food for Thought is continuing a Toledo tradition again this year. Join the party to benefit the important work Food for Thought does in the community.

This event brings together 15-20 of the best local restaurants Toledo has to offer, each one
creating and serving their own gourmet take on the lunchtime classic: Peanut Butter & Jelly. There will be signature cocktails, a silent auction, 50/50 raffle, photo booth, and live music featured throughout the evening.

Jam City has been a sell-out event almost every year in the past. This year will be no
different as the event is expected to bring in more than 200 people to come together for an evening of food and fun!

May 15 from 6-8 p.m. in the Fifth Third building lobby at One Seagate, Downtown Toledo

Imagination Station May events: Hockey, Wicked, art and music

> HOCKEY: Faster Than Ever | All Day | Free for Members, $5 for non-members | Buy Tickets

Don’t hang up your skates just yet, T-town! HOCKEY: Faster Than Ever is now extended through August 31. You can score a visit to the coolest exhibit all summer long and see a power play of science and sport.

> Master the Force: Lightsaber Workshop | May 4 from 2 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. | $20 for members, $23 for non-members | Buy Tickets

Before you join the Resistance, you must build the most precious tool—your lightsaber—before going against the First Order. Harness the power of science and be ready for battle because the First Order is waiting.

> Wicked Sing-Along | May 17 from 2:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. | Buy Tickets

Imagination Station is turning into Shiz University for one day only that will give you a chance to fly! Join us for two special sing-along showings of the most pop-u-lar movie out there.

> Colleen Welsch: May 16-18 | All Day

Step inside a real music production studio at Imagination Station with music producer, singer-songwriter Colleen Welsch. Visitors will explore the technology and science behind sound recording as they make their very own song.

Toledo Opera to Hold Children’s Chorus Auditions for Carmen

TOLEDO – Toledo Opera is seeking boys and girls ages 9-14 with unchanged voices to sing in the children’s chorus of Carmen (August – October 2024 commitment).

Bizet’s sizzling epic of dark passion, Carmen, tells the story of a fierce woman who lives life on her own terms – and the men who can’t let her go. Don José, a soldier drawn into her orbit, abandons everything for Carmen’s love, only to find himself consumed by jealousy when her attentions shift to the dashing bullfighter, Escamillo.

With its twisting tale of romance, deceit, and disaster set to magnetic melodies, Bizet’s masterpiece, Carmen, has become one of the world’s most celebrated operas. Featuring some of the most popular music to ever grace the opera stage, Carmen brings every aspect of Bizet’s thrilling tale to life, from its tantalizing beginning to its devastating climax. Under the baton of Adam Turner (Toledo Opera’s Il Trovatore and Roméo & Juliet), Toledo Opera’s vibrant original production is not to be missed.

Rehearsals will take place on Sundays from 4 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. at the Toledo Opera Offices. To schedule an audition, please email James Norman at jnorman@toledopera.org.

Auditions: Saturday, May 17 from 10 a.m., and on Sunday, May 18 from 3 p.m. until 6 p.m.
> Auditions will be held at Toledo Opera Offices, 425 Jefferson Ave., Suite 601.

Miller Ferries honor American veterans on Memorial Day weekend

Put-in-Bay – Miller Ferries will offer active U.S. military personnel and American veterans free passenger fare in honor of Memorial Day. Military personnel and veterans are asked to please present military identification at the Miller Ferry ticket booths in order to receive a free round trip passenger ticket to Put-in-Bay or Middle Bass Island.

On May 26, the National Park Service’s Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial on Put-in-Bay will have a Memorial Day Ceremony. It will pay tribute to everyone who has defended the United States of America – from the Revolutionary War to the Afghanistan War.

Saturday, May 24 through Monday, May 26. 
> For ferry schedules, visit MillerFerry.com.

TPS rallies to combat absenteeism

0
Oakdale Elementary gym teacher Steve Thurn demonstrates how to use Lü Interactive Systems. (TFP Photo/Mary Helen DeLisle)

Oakdale Elementary participates in “making every day count”

TOLEDO – Public school attendance has dropped nationally since the COVID-19 pandemic and, for most schools, has never returned to pre-COVID levels. Toledo Public Schools (TPS) decided it was time for that to change.  

TPS started an attendance incentive program in elementary schools, called Let’s Make Every Day Count, which rewards students for consistently showing up to class. 

These incentives range from tickets to professional basketball games and ice skating trips to prizes, like drones.

Let’s Make Every Day Count is provided by a grant partnership program that uses outside funds rather than district tax dollars.

“I’m not going to turn down an incentive program for any kid. And if the district wants to be a part of it and it helps us save funds, we’re going to be a part of that process here at school because we are always looking for funds here at East Toledo,” said Oakdale Elementary principal Robert Yenrick

Oakdale Elementary principal Robert Yenrick has been working to increase attendance in Toledo Public Schools. (TFP Photo/Mary Helen DeLisle)

 Yenrick said these programs have occurred for the last two years but have picked up significantly this past year.

Chronic absenteeism, characterized in Ohio as missing 15 or more days of school, has many negative outcomes for a child’s learning experience.

Rates of illiteracy and dropping out of school greatly increase for chronically absent students, the AP News reports. Oakdale’s 35 percent chronic absenteeism rate is caused by many factors.

“Homelessness is a big issue for some schools and families,” Yenrick said.

With homelessness and poverty often comes a lack of transportation. Oakdale has worked to fill this need with a behavior partners group called New Concepts, which helps impoverished students and/or students who lack transportation get to school. But without community support, programs like New Concepts cannot succeed.

“There are all kinds of needs people have. And we have needs as a school, too,” said Yenrick.

Community members can get involved by making meals for food-insecure families, participating in the New Concepts program, tutoring, moderating recess, or making meals for Teacher Appreciation Week.

Without community support, extra work and financial burden falls on Oakdale teachers.

“We had a Lego club with no Legos,” Yenrick said.

Lego purchasing was left to the Lego Club teacher’s own dime.

Yenrick encouraged community involvement, saying it could help support student education and well-being and alleviate some of the burden that falls on teachers.

Kenise Winfree works in the kindness room at Oakdale Elementary, a place where students can come to do crafts and unwind if they’re having a rough day. (TFP Photo/Mary Helen DeLisle)

While community involvement can be increased with a little encouragement, some factors of absenteeism, such as illness, are a little harder to control.

Yenrick said that for students who get multiple viruses during the academic year, those 15 absent days add up quickly. Despite the challenges, Oakdale works to make learning fun for students and encourages them to attend class.

One way Oakdale has done this is by implementing Lü Interactive Systems, a learning game system that projects onto the gym wall.

“It [Lü] is the first one in an urban school in the northern part of the state. All the others are [in] suburban schools,” Yenrick said.

Students can play games on Lü that have learning or exercise benefits, such as interactive math games and dance games that can be played during gym class.

Oakdale gym teacher Steve Thurn said he watches the kids come alive when they play the Lü dance game.

Thurn said tutors also use the game to help children struggling with particular school subjects, such as memorizing multiples of five. Lü’s interactive math games help students have fun while also improving their education.

Oakdale Elementary School in Toledo. (TFP Photo/Mary Helen DeLisle)

Oakdale also encourages the balance of learning and fun by sending kids to camp through a YMCA program.

“We’re looking to get businesses to do sixth-grade camp,” Yenrick said. “I’m trying to raise money for the majority of the Eastside schools to go to camp through sixth grade. I want these kids to experience a portion of life that’s just different than what they see every day, and give them the chance to say ‘Hey, there’s a different world out here that I don’t know.’”

Don Lee: Neighbors

0

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, supports keeping DEI. (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.