
Terry DeMio
News Reporter at Cincinnati Enquirer
Enterprise & Investigations editor, The Enquirer.
Articles
-
Nov 27, 2024 |
yahoo.com | Quinlan Bentley |Erin Couch |Terry DeMio |Patricia Gallagher Newberry
The Daniel Carter Beard Bridge is expected to reopen in March after crews repair the damage caused by an intense fire, but for those whose day-to-day lives have been inconvenienced by the closure, several more months feels like too long a wait. Jill Dunne of Fort Thomas is senior director of marketing and communications at ArtWorks, a nonprofit in Walnut Hills, and is among the 100,000 drivers whose daily commute has been upended by the bridge's closure.
-
Oct 30, 2024 |
yahoo.com | Terry DeMio
A new wave of immigrants from West Africa that has settled in the Cincinnati suburb of Lockland is struggling to get work, according to The Cincinnati Enquirer. It's to a point where village officials are seeing declining income taxes and resources — and grappling with safety concerns. Here's why Lockland is overwhelmed.
-
May 27, 2024 |
news.yahoo.com | Terry DeMio
Hadley Dueling, 9, of Fort Thomas, helps with the flag display at The Arlington Memorial Gardens in Springfield Township on Wednesday. The 1,000 flags are part of the 9th annual Field of Memories to honor, remember and celebrate men and women who died defending the nation. The public is invited to take part in activities through Memorial Day. Money raised goes to “Operation Ramp It Up," a local nonprofit that builds mobility ramps for veterans.
-
May 27, 2024 |
cincinnati.com | Terry DeMio
Mostly sunny skies greet Cincinnati area residents on Memorial Day following a cloudy and rainy Sunday. A cold front is moving through the region, according to the National Weather Service in Wilmington, bringing the low chance of rain and possibly breezy conditions. Morning temperatures were in the low 60s, and highs in the upper 70s were predicted by the National Weather Service, with the cold front marking the beginning of a cooldown this week.
-
May 13, 2024 |
yahoo.com | Elizabeth B. Kim |Terry DeMio
Fake prescription pills containing fentanyl are pouring into the United States, a new study shows, magnifying the threat of death from overdose nationwide. In the Cincinnati region, though, the fentanyl-tainted pills have seen a downturn among seized drugs analyzed by the Hamilton County Crime Laboratory. Even so, they remain a deadly threat – especially to people who do not have an opioid addiction, experts say.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →Coverage map
X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 3K
- Tweets
- 16K
- DMs Open
- No

RT @ScottWartman: https://t.co/2r5K563xeo via @enquirer

Kroger shares hit all-time high as Trump tariffs pound stock market; P&G also up via @alexcoolidge https://t.co/EdbCFwOc08 via @enquirer

Visas of 'a small number' of University of Cincinnati international students revoked @davidferrara23 reports https://t.co/efBQWQSAS9 via @enquirer