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Recovered gloves, wanted Ring doorbell footage highlight Guthrie case latest; Georgia's 988 crisis line faces gaps as demand grows; IL college works to close the rural pharmacy gap; NC explores child care solutions for community college students.

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The EPA rescinds its long-standing authority to regulate greenhouse gases, Congress barrels toward a DHS shutdown and lawmakers clash with the DOJ over tracking of Epstein file searches. States consider ballot initiatives, license plate readers and youth violence.

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The crackdown on undocumented immigrants in Minneapolis has created chaos for a nearby agricultural community, federal funding cuts have upended tribal solar projects in Montana and similar cuts to a college program have left some students scrambling.

Ohio EV fans concerned as federal tax credits face elimination

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Monday, June 9, 2025   

One thing prompting some Ohioans to make the switch to an electric vehicle has been a $7,500 federal tax credit for the purchase but it might be going away.

As part of the big budget reconciliation bill now in Congress, the EV credit would be phased out. President Donald Trump has pledged to dismantle what he refers to as the "electric vehicle mandate," challenging goals set during the Biden administration aiming for half of new vehicle sales to be electric by 2030.

John Higham, board member of the Electric Vehicle Association, believes that would definitely slow EV growth.

"It's not going to kill the electric vehicle," Higham asserted. "It might slow the acceleration of the adoption of the electric vehicle but it's certainly not going to reverse the trend."

More than 76,000 electric vehicles were registered to Ohio drivers as of last year, less than 3% of all vehicles in the state. Most are plug-in hybrid models.

The legislation could also affect EV manufacturers like Tesla, which has significant investments in Ohio. Higham noted the economic effects of repealing the tax credit might be most pronounced in areas which have benefited from EV-related manufacturing jobs.

"That economic engine that is in those 'red' districts -- where there's new battery manufacturing put in, new automotive manufacturing put in -- those are the voters that are going to feel it the most, are in those red districts," Higham projected.

Ohio does not offer state-level EV tax incentives, but residents may be eligible for federal tax credits if the vehicle qualifies, at least for now, as the U.S. Senate debates the contents of the budget reconciliation bill.


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