logo
Local school levy fails, recount scheduled

Local school levy fails, recount scheduled

Yahoo21-05-2025

After weeks, the results for a local school levy are in.
[DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks]
Voters rejected the 6.9 mill property tax levy that would benefit Huber Heights City Schools.
Three votes made the difference.
TRENDING STORIES:
10-month-old K-9 puppy finds missing 5-year-old girl
NATO: What you need to know; Road closures, detours, and parking
Local man dead after car overturns, hits ditch
Initial election results indicated that voters had passed the levy by just 10 votes.
Due to the final results being so close, a recount has been scheduled for June 5 at 9 a.m.
Huber Heights City Schools Superintendent Jason Enix previously told News Center 7 the district is prepared to cut more than $7 million of its budget if the levy doesn't pass.
[SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russia's lead negotiator in Istanbul claims Russia's terms at 2022 talks with Ukraine were "softer"
Russia's lead negotiator in Istanbul claims Russia's terms at 2022 talks with Ukraine were "softer"

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Russia's lead negotiator in Istanbul claims Russia's terms at 2022 talks with Ukraine were "softer"

Vladimir Medinsky, the head of the Russian delegation at recent peace talks in Istanbul, has said that if Ukraine had agreed to Russia's terms in 2022, its terms would have been less harsh. Source: Medinsky in an interview with RT, the Russian state-controlled international news television network, as quoted by Russian media Details: Medinsky claimed that if Ukraine had been ready and "if it had been making its own decisions", a peace agreement could have been signed as early as 28 February 2022 and would have had "softer" terms than in 2025. After all, the pseudo-historian claimed, "all they wanted was for Ukraine not to join NATO and to say no to the deployment of foreign military bases on its territory". There had also been discussions about making Russian an official language in Ukraine, recognising the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP) and officially recognising Crimea as Russian, because, in Medinsky's fantasies, "that was the most democratically held referendum imaginable". Medinsky said that after the Russian delegation presented the draft treaty in 2022, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy "kept silent for two weeks" and met with representatives from the UK and the US during that time. The Russians were then told "Our foreign partners are opposed to us entering into the agreement – which we had already agreed on," Medinsky claims. Background: After the second round of talks on 2 June, Russian state news agencies published the text of Russia's "memorandum of settlement" with proposals for a ceasefire. In the memorandum, Russia has demanded the withdrawal of Ukrainian troops from Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, Luhansk and Kherson oblasts. It also calls for Ukraine's neutrality, a ban on the deployment of foreign troops on the territory of Ukraine, and its rejection of nuclear weapons. The New York Times reported, citing sources and the relevant draft agreements, that in April 2022, Russia effectively disrupted peace talks with Ukraine by inserting a clause in the draft agreement stating that it would have the right to veto the international community's response in the event of a repeat attack on Ukraine. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

Sweden Ready to Borrow to Fund Military Expansion, Minister Says
Sweden Ready to Borrow to Fund Military Expansion, Minister Says

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

Sweden Ready to Borrow to Fund Military Expansion, Minister Says

Sweden's rapid increase to its defense spending will be financed with debt in the coming years, the fiscally conservative Nordic state's finance minister said. The government in NATO's newest member is boosting military outlays as the bloc is expected to agree on a goal of spending 5% of economic output on defenses at a summit later this month. Sweden foresees allocating 300 billion kronor ($31 billion) in the next decade.

NATO Chief Urges Members to Spend Far More on Military
NATO Chief Urges Members to Spend Far More on Military

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

NATO Chief Urges Members to Spend Far More on Military

The chief of NATO on Monday called on the alliance to make a 'quantum leap in our collective defense,' committing to increases in military spending that far outstrip what Britain and most other members have yet pledged. Speaking in London, Mark Rutte, NATO's secretary-general, laid bare the budget pressures that will face Britain and its European neighbors as they confront the aggression of Russia and the retrenchment of the United States. Mr. Rutte, a former prime minister of the Netherlands, is pushing for members to commit to spending 5 percent of their gross domestic product on military and defense-related activities, a target promoted by President Trump, who complains that the alliance has long unfairly burdened the United States. Mr. Rutte hopes to enshrine the new benchmark at a NATO summit meeting in The Hague on June 24 and 25. But he has yet to set a timeline for when members would be required to meet it — and the goal still seems elusive. Britain has pledged to increase military spending to 2.5 percent of gross domestic product by 2027, paid for by diverting funds from overseas aid. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has set a goal of 3 percent within a decade, though he has refused to give a more specific date without knowing where the money will come from. Ramping up to 5 percent, analysts say, would necessitate politically painful trade-offs for Britain, which is already dealing with straitened public finances. Britain currently spends 2.3 percent of its economic output on defense, more than France or Germany but less than the United States, at about 3.4 percent. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store