A Toledo couple said they’re living a nightmare after a contractor ripped off their home’s siding and, months later, still has not replaced it.
City of Toledo leaders said they’ve heard plenty of frustrations from their constituents about local convenience stores.
Toledo's public utilities director, Doug Stephens, says the city's delinquency rate jumped from 3% before the COVID-19 pandemic to more than 4% after.
Traditional brick-and-mortar stores have taken a hit in the last decade or so. Meaning sometimes empty parking lots. It has some in the city asking if that can be replaced with housing.
For one half Feb. 26, Mentor hung tight with visiting Toledo Whitmer, a state semifinalist last season, in a Division I ...
When Petaluma’s Olivia Manz saw the uproarious musical “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” for the first time – in ...
Jared Courtright, 20, reportedly threatened to show up to class at the University of Toledo with a bomb strapped to his chest ...
The two projects will create hundreds of construction jobs and 70 units of affordable housing, according to city officials.
Join author Joseph Fulton this Saturday, March 1, at 11 a.m. for a journey into the past with his new book, “Oregon’s Little ...
Toledo Post of Ohio State Highway Patrol probing double fatality traffic crash. Safety belts, clear intersections key in ...
Toledo’s football program plucked an analyst from Michigan’s staff to fill its defensive line coach opening. LaTroy Lewis, a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results