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  • Former union official sentenced to probation for embezzling member funds through 51 unauthorized transactions over 2 years

    Former union official sentenced to probation for embezzling member funds through 51 unauthorized transactions over 2 years

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    Former union official sentenced to probation for embezzling member funds through 51 unauthorized transactions over 2 years
    PORTLAND, OH – Former National Association of Letter Carriers Branch 533 treasurer Samantha Zirkle was sentenced to six years of probation and ordered to pay $74,663 in restitution following a federal investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor.The department’s Office of Labor-Management Standards in Cincinnati found that Zirkle, while serving as treasurer of National Association of Letter Carriers Branch 533, signed and cashed at least 51 unauthorized checks worth $64,663 between May 4, 2022, and March 25, 2024. The unauthorized checks were drawn from the union’s account and made payable to Zirkle for her personal benefit. On April 20, 2026, Zirkle pleaded guilty in the Howard County, Indiana Superior Court 4 to theft. The $74,663 of restitution ordered at sentencing includes the full amount stolen and an additional $10,000 in liquidated damages. Zirkle was also barred from serving as a union official for 13 years.“Samantha Zirkle’s coworkers trusted her to maintain sound fiscal stewardship of their hard-earned dues but instead she treated the union as her personal piggybank,” said Office of Labor-Management Standards Regional Director Megan Ireland in Cincinnati. “The Office of Labor-Management Standards will continue to protect unions and their members by holding accountable anyone attempting to use their position for personal financial gain at the expense of union members.” Labor union fraud such as embezzlement, filing false reports, maintaining false records, destroying or concealing records, and other criminal activity can be reported by email to OLMS-Public@dol.gov, to the OLMS National Office at 202-693-0143, or to your local OLMS field office. Find your local OLMS office.

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  • Property tax repeal campaign behind goal as deadline for 2026 ballot approaches

    Property tax repeal campaign behind goal as deadline for 2026 ballot approaches

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    Property tax repeal campaign behind goal as deadline for 2026 ballot approaches

    Les Carrier gathering signatures to abolish Ohio property taxes in Hilliard. (Photo by Nick Evans, Ohio Capital Journal.)

    The organizers leading an effort to abolish Ohio property taxes are coming to a crossroads. By July 1, the campaign needs to decide if it wants to roll the dice and attempt to get on this year’s ballot or keep its powder dry and wait for another election down the road.

    Last month, Ax Ohio Tax President Brian Massie announced they’ve collected 305,000 signatures so far. That puts them on track to clear the statutory minimum for the ballot, but doesn’t account for rejections. To feel confident, the campaign really wants at least 620,000 signatures for their submission.

    They’re not on track for that.

    Organizers can keep gathering signatures for as long as they want. Once they submit them, though, that’s pretty much it. If the campaign falls short there’s a brief, 10-day window to make up the difference. If they can’t, any subsequent effort to make the ballot would have to start over from square one.

    “I want the citizens of Ohio to hear this,” Massie said. “They can rest assured that we will not stop until we get this amendment on the ballot.”

    He said the campaign will announce its plans sometime in the middle of June.

    Les Carrier gathering signatures for Ax Ohio Tax in Hilliard. (Photo by Nick Evans, Ohio Capital Journal.)

    Good news, bad news

    Common Cause Ohio Executive Director Catherine Turcer sees citizen-initiated ballot measures as a central part of our democracy, and she’s been personally involved in several initiative campaigns. While Turcer acknowledged it can be “challenging” to wish the anti-tax campaign well, she said the point of direct democracy is that’s it’s open to everybody.

    And there are some factors working in the campaign’s favor.

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    “We are going into really good signature gathering weather,” Turcer said.

    “We’re going into farmers markets and parades, Memorial Day weekend,” she rattled off. “I mean, you can start to think about the different festivals and different ways that people are out and about outside, which makes signature collection easier than, say, January.”

    Their signature total puts them in “decent shape,” Turcer said. It also doesn’t hurt that the pitch is straightforward: do you want to keep your property taxes or get rid of them?

    But the campaign faces significant challenges, too.

    Every ballot measure sees a vast number of signatures rejected over clerical errors, Turcer said. Information could be illegible or incorrect. Petition circulators could mix up signatures from multiple counties, potentially spoiling otherwise valid signatures. And the process of physically scanning all those documents for submission takes a really long time.

    “In many ways, this is about, can I submit the appropriate paperwork in a really specific way, in a way I have never done before?” she said. “And it’s easy to get caught up in the hurdles.”

    What’s more, the petitions themselves have a kind of shelf life. When elections officials go to validate signatures they’re comparing the petition to current information — not whatever was current at the moment the signature was made.

    Ohio’s governor, lawmakers, and grassroots organizers are all wrestling over property tax reform

    “It’s a good kind of rule of thumb,” Turcer said, “(to) say 20%, 25% of the signatures that we collected a year ago could no longer reflect where the voter now lives, and so they will not count in the total.”

    And that means there are risks in submitting this year, and risks in waiting until next year, too. Turcer said only the campaign knows the quality of the signatures they’ve collected so far, and she’d be shooting for a similar threshold to the one the Ax Ohio Tax campaign has in mind.

    Turcer could imagine going forward with less of a cushion — but not much less.

    “At least over 600 (thousand),” Turcer said, as the absolute minimum she’d be willing to submit.

    Ax Ohio Tax Regional Captain Sue Mazzarini gathering signatures in Hilliard. (Photo by Nick Evans, Ohio Capital Journal.)

    Campaign check-in

    About a week after Massie’s announcement, Les Carrier joined a handful of other organizers to gather signatures at a community event in Hilliard. The former city councilman called out passersby by name and had a minute to chat with every one of them.

    Carrier seemed energized by Massie’s update. Three hundred thousand signatures isn’t halfway from their goal, it’s halfway there. He used terms like “skyrocketing” or “snowballing” to describe interest in the campaign.

    To him, the math is pretty simple.

    “A $160,000 home in Old Hilliard now is worth $300 (thousand),” Carrier said. “Their taxes have doubled. Their income hasn’t. So, I mean, something’s got to give.”

    Counterintuitively, he said enthusiasm began growing after Gov. DeWine’s administration warned eliminating the roughly $24 billion property taxes generates each year would lead to dramatic increases in sales or income taxes.

    Carrier downplayed the loss in revenue — “Chicken Little is what I called it” — and said making up the difference would be simpler and fairer with consumption taxes.

    “Everybody consumes at a certain level, everybody pays, and it broadens the tax base from which everything’s drawn,” Carrier said. In contrast, with property taxes, “what you’ve done is you’ve narrowed it down to those that have worked to build up equity and build up home valuation, and now they’re being punished for it.”

    Consumption taxes, like sales or value-added taxes, are regressive, meaning they fall more heavily on those with lower incomes because those households spend a greater share of their income to get by.

    And although Carrier thinks the solution is simple, that doesn’t mean everyone is on board. Massie, for instance, was blunt about his plans for replacing revenue. “We’re not going to,” he said, insisting instead that lawmakers need to cut spending, and “start a DOGE” in Ohio, referring to Elon Musk’s failed federal cost-cutting effort.

    Carrier remains optimistic about the campaign’s chances of making the ballot this year, but he has no problem with waiting.

    “I think we could make it for this year,” Carrier said. “But my personal opinion, I haven’t talked to Brian (Massie) about it yet, is if we don’t make 600 (thousand), we just keep on charging into next year.”

    Suzi Remick, left, and Andrea Beeson speaking to Ax Ohio Tax organizers in Hilliard. (Photo by Nick Evans, Ohio Capital Journal.)

    Andrea Beeson and Suzi Remick signed the petition after speaking to Carrier, and both expressed concerns about property taxes pushing people out of their homes.

    “I feel bad for the aging people,” Remick said. “If they have to lose their homes, that would be horrible.”

    Ohio farms get a significant property tax break because their valuation is based on agricultural use, but Beeson still worries about farmers near her home in Madison County getting priced out.

    “Who do they sell to? Developers that can pay more than another farmer,” she said. “And now we’re getting houses and houses and houses and our schools can’t hold them all.”

    Beeson and Remick said they’re still weighing whether it’s a good idea to abolish property taxes. They signed the petition because they want to give the campaign a chance to convince them and then have the chance to decide if and when the measure appears on the ballot.

    “Right now, they don’t know how it would work, where the money would come from for schools and everything else,” Beeson said. “I want that option, and I want to see how they would do it.”

    Follow Ohio Capital Journal Reporter Nick Evans on X or on Bluesky.

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  • Trump Administration proposes rule to expand access to fertility benefits with new legal pathway for employers to offer benefits directly to employees

    Trump Administration proposes rule to expand access to fertility benefits with new legal pathway for employers to offer benefits directly to employees

    Trump Administration proposes rule to expand access to fertility benefits with new legal pathway for employers to offer benefits directly to employees
    WASHINGTON – The U.S. departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Treasury announced a proposed rule that would create a new category of limited excepted benefits to further expand the ability of employers to offer meaningful fertility benefits to their employees. The proposed rule is a central component of the Trump administration’s efforts to expand American families’ access to fertility benefits. It builds upon President Trump’s Executive Order “Expanding Access to In Vitro Fertilization,” which announced that it is the policy of the administration to ensure reliable and affordable access to in vitro fertilization to support American families.“Under President Trump’s leadership, we are delivering on our promises to the American worker and their families,” said Acting Secretary of Labor Keith Sonderling. “President Trump is committed to expanding access to fertility benefits so that more American families can have children, building on his longstanding efforts to support family formation and stability. The Department of Labor is proud to have led this important initiative on behalf of the President and his administration.” “The decline in birth rates is a serious challenge for our nation,” said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “Under President Trump’s leadership, this rule expands access to fertility care and gives more Americans a real path to starting and growing their families. I appreciate my colleagues at the Departments of Labor and Treasury as we work together to deliver on this critical issue.”This proposal addresses employers’ sparse coverage of fertility-related treatments for the American worker and increases benefit options by easing statutory and regulatory burdens to make IVF and other fertility treatments more affordable. Though most workers of reproductive age receive healthcare coverage through their jobs, the majority do not have robust fertility coverage. The proposed rule would establish a new category of limited excepted benefits. Excepted benefits are generally exempt from the market reforms under the Affordable Care Act and certain other federal health care coverage laws. This new category would apply limiting principles similar to those already in place for other limited excepted benefits. The proposed rule sets a few main requirements for the benefits: Substantially all of the benefits must be for diagnosis, mitigation, or treatment of infertility or related reproductive health conditions.Benefits are capped at a combined lifetime maximum of up to $120,000 for the participant and their beneficiaries, indexed for inflation for plan years starting after 2028.Employers must provide a notice that clearly describes the coverage and meets other specified requirements.Comments are due 60 days from its publication in the Federal Register. Read the notice of proposed rulemaking on limited excepted fertility benefits.