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Columbus man indicted on 37 counts for unlicensed funeral business
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Policy Matters State of Working Ohio 2021
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Gi FlyBike, the Most Beautiful e-Bike That Never Was, Was Not a Scam 15 Apr 2021, 11:07 UTC ·
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Crowdfunding campaigns always present some risk for backers, whether in terms of the actual finished product or smaller stuff, like delivery times. In some cases, they might not even get a product at all, and their money will still be gone. 12 photos
In June 2020, we ran a cover story on an e-bike that was a hit on crowdfunding sites but that never materialized, save for a few early pledgers who got it. It was called the Gi FlyBike and was the brainchild of Lucas Toledo, Eric Sevillia, and Agustin Agustinoy from Argentina. They set up Bignay Inc. in 2014 and introduced the absolutely gorgeous bike to the world (of crowdfunding) in 2015.
As COVID-19 deaths spiked in December, Ohio planned for worst case scenario Randy Ludlow, The Columbus Dispatch © Kevin Whitlock/IndieOnline.com The Stark County coroner s office used a state trailer to temporarily store bodies.
As several dozen died from COVID-19 each day in December, refrigerated trailers were rolled out to county coroners across Ohio to store any overflow of bodies.
The if-needed body storage space marked the activation of the first phase of Ohio s contingency plan to deal with mass coronavirus casualties as outlined in a document developed by state officials, county coroners, funeral directors and others.
The refrigerated trailers, with most capable of containing 54 to 72 bodies on racks, were sent to county coroners in designated regional cities: Lima, Cleveland, Toledo, Canton, Athens, Bucyrus, Cambridge, Marysville, Georgetown and Vandalia.
As several dozen died from COVID-19 each day in December, refrigerated trailers were rolled out to county coroners across Ohio to store any overflow of bodies.
The if-needed body storage space marked the activation of the first phase of Ohio s contingency plan to deal with mass coronavirus casualties as outlined in a document developed by state officials, county coroners, funeral directors and others.
The refrigerated trailers, with most capable of containing 54 to 72 bodies on racks, were sent to county coroners in designated regional cities: Lima, Cleveland, Toledo, Canton, Athens, Bucyrus, Cambridge, Marysville, Georgetown and Vandalia.
Two of the coroners, in Stark and Lucas counties, have intermittently used the trailers to temporarily store bodies from their region, a state health department spokeswoman said.
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