CINCINNATI ( Cincinnati Business Courier) - The city of Cincinnati plans to spend more than $1.1 million changing streets and ...
Three days after a winter storm blanketed Cincinnati, people on the city’s residential streets were still digging out of the snow and awaiting crews to plow the roads. While many of the main ...
City staff cite staffing, resources, technology and communication as spaces that must be improved to prepare for the next ...
A s a part of USA Today’s 10Best Readers’ Choice Awards, Cincinnati is once again among the top contenders for the title of Best City for Street Art as part of USA Today’s 10Best Readers’ Choice ...
The city of Cincinnati saw almost a foot of snowfall over the last two days. If your street hasn't been plowed yet, here's why.
Cincinnati's Department of Public Services maintains an interactive map that shows when and where plows have been out on city streets, and the distance covered by them since the winter weather event ...
There are still more questions than answers about why the Cincinnati snow removal process failed after a heavy snowfall ...
If you live in Cincinnati and are wondering why your street hasn't been plowed yet, you likely live on a residential street. City of Cincinnati officials said Monday at 5 p.m that since the snow storm ...
The city of Cincinnati plans to spend more than $1.1 million changing streets and sidewalks in Corryville to slow down traffic and make the area safer for pedestrians to complement new development.
Fallout from the winter storm that hit earlier this month is still coming down as Cincinnati City Hall is looking for answers about why it took so long for roads to be cleared.