A Yale research paper found found that political affiliation in Ohio and Florida has emerged as a potential risk factor for death with COVID-19 – with Republicans more in danger of dying, likely due to vaccine hesitancy.
Read the automated transcript below. Because it’s a computer-generated transcript, it contains many errors and misspellings.[00:00:00] We’re in the final two weeks of live today in Ohio. Episodes are at least new today in Ohio, episode today in Ohio episodes. We’ll be taking a break over the holidays for a couple of weeks. Still lots of news to talk about on the news podcast. Discussion fromI’m here with Lisa Garvin. Lela Tossi and Laura Johnston all set up for a big week of news. Let’s begin.
She says it’s a correlation study, not a causation, but she said there’s similar results in other studies. Um, The algorithms we know push misinformation and fear to people who are willing to see it. And it kind of puts them in a bubble where they don’t see anything outside of that misinformation, uh, bubble.
You can’t, you cannot be any more sure of what happened these last three years, and it’s been crazy time. It’s today in. NOPEC has been controversial of late. So we went back in time to remember why this thing was created in the first place.
They [00:06:00] were having to buy at more expensive prices while other energy companies had bought at an auction far, far before.Yeah, the story does go into great detail to explain what happened recently. Mm-hmm. , I’m sad to say I remember the creation of it. I didn’t need the prime to get me up to date. I was here when we were having this discussion.
They realized we’re, we’re costing people money this year. Bounce ‘em, let’s get ‘em back to the base rate. They did the right thing.They dropped about a half a million people. And I think there are competitors that don’t want NOPEC to exist anymore. They’re competitors and they wanna make more money. But NOPEC estimates it saved people, um, 300 million up until 2019.
Our stimulus watch reporter, Lucas Dere, went looking for some good news in this and says, sometimes it can be transformative. Layla.Yes, Lucas has watched a lot of ARPA money flow through local governments this past year, and there are ideas that are clear winners and there are those that are big time losers.
If, if the statistic that Lucas cited was true for Cleveland, Then I really think this approach could go further than almost anything has toward meeting the demands of the federal consent decree. Another idea that makes a giant impact is broadband [00:11:00] expansion. Lucas highlights Summit County’s 35 million Arba investment in creating a fiber optic cable ring to help first responders in summit’s 31 municipalities.
Uh, it was nice to see Lucas look for some silver lining, some people doing interesting new things. So it’s a good story. Check it out. It’s on. What is going on at a state run facility for adults with intellectual disabilities in Highland Hills are clients being physically abused? Lisa, I think the most troubling part of this story is the challenge that investigators face in getting reliable witness testimony because of the population they’re having to deal with.
So it’s, if this goes to court, they’re, they’re just going. Be challenged in trying to do it, but if they really do believe there’s this abuse going on, they’ve got to do something about it. So it’s a, it’s one of the more interesting criminal cases that’s come along because it, it shows the difficulties of prosecuting these kinds of crimes.
So the state is trying to work both sides and there’s already been questions saying, you know, a, a normal amount of people who have legitimate claims are getting flagged as fraud, which is the exact opposite of what was happening during the early days of the pandemic when they were [00:17:00] peeling. Paying out just way, way too much money in fraud.
Nobody could get them on the phone. And, and it is a, it’s just a quandary, right? Because if you wanna. Easier for people to access their benefits. You make it easier for the scammers to steal the money and, and you’ve got to, to button it up. Other government agencies don’t really seem to have these problems.
Uh, according to this schema here, this is a project. Estimated to cost three and a half billion dollars, and it’s intended to bring thousands of residential units, office space, public parks and things like that, and lots of recreation opportunities in retail, all along this stretch of the Cuyahoga River.
EastWest traffic would shift a block north and could continue down. Prospect before returning to Huron Canal Road would also need to be rerouted to maximize the potential of the plant. But there’s just so much going on in this plant, gardens, walkways, park spaces, buildings, nestled around the federal courthouse.
But he loves the idea of using Tower City as a public point of connection to the waterfront. And, and unlike, you know, past proposals, this one doesn’t seem too crowded. , but he points out that, that so many have tried and failed to propose a revisioning of, of the riverfront over the years. So he’s, he’s really taking a wait and see approach on whether this one is gonna catch fire.I gotta say, I loved this, this idea. Mm-hmm.
Per thousand births. That’s down from 17.5 in 2018, but it’s still huge. When you look at white Cleveland babies. The infant mortality rate for them last year was 6.3, so that’s almost. Half, you know, half as much as black babies. And the number in 2018 for white babies was three. So we also saw there were certain neighborhoods all on the east side with extremely high rates, including Huff, Buckeye, Woodhill, central and Colinwood.
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