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In this issue

In this Dublin Daily Issue

☘️ Dublin Area Events

☘️ Local Weather

☘️ "My Son Doesn't Have a Voice But I Do"

☘️ Your Chance to Weigh in on Federal Funding

☘️ 250 Years, 250 Books, One Dublin Company

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Local News

"My Son Doesn't Have a Voice But I Do"

I had coffee with Courtney Inglis this week — she's a Dublin mom who was just named Mrs. Ohio American 2026. The title is almost beside the point. What stuck with me was something she said: "My son doesn't have a voice but I do."

Her son Noah has autism and can't speak for himself. So Courtney does. She built a Facebook community called Autism Through Noah's World to share their journey and connect with other families navigating the same thing. She leads a team called Noah's Angels at the annual Autism Speaks walk. And she's in long-term recovery herself, which means she's not just advocating for Noah — she's also showing up for anyone who's struggling and needs to hear that healing is possible.

Professionally she works in behavioral health, so this isn't just personal passion — it's her day job too.

She'll be representing Dublin and Ohio at the Mrs. American National Competition in Las Vegas in August, and she's looking to show up at local events between now and then.

If you want to learn more about autism and follow along with Courtney and Noah's journey, Autism Through Noah's World is a good place to start.

Local News

Your Chance to Weigh in on Federal Funding

Dublin City Schools is holding a public meeting Monday night to take community input on how it uses its state and federal grant money — and the window to participate is short.

Your Chance to Weigh in on Federal Funding

The meeting is Monday, June 29 at 5:30 p.m. at the Emerald Campus, 5157 Emerald Parkway. The grants on the table cover a real range of things that affect Dublin students directly: special education funding, support for English language learners, teacher quality programs, and broader student support and enrichment. If you have kids in the district — or just care about how the schools are run — this is a rare chance to put something on the record.

Can't make it Monday? Written comments are accepted through June 30.

Local News

250 Years, 250 Books, One Dublin Company

Most Dublin residents drive past OCLC's campus on Kilgour Place without giving it much thought. The nonprofit — which manages WorldCat, the world's largest library database, and employs about 800 people right here — just released something worth paying attention to for America's 250th birthday.

250 Years, 250 Books, One Dublin Company

They compiled a list of 250 nonfiction books about America — one for every year since 1776 — identified not by critics or bestseller algorithms, but by looking at which books thousands of libraries worldwide have continued to hold and share across generations. The idea being that a book still sitting on library shelves 50 or 100 years after it was written earned its place in a way a critic's pick never could.

The list runs from Thomas Paine's Common Sense — the 47-page pamphlet that made the case for American independence in 1776 — all the way to Jon Meacham's American Struggle published earlier this year. In between are books that might surprise: Democracy in America by Alexis de Tocqueville, W.E.B. Du Bois on John Brown, Hidden Figures. Some you'll recognize. Some are overdue for rediscovery.

For a company most of us barely know by name, it's a pretty remarkable thing to have put together. The full list is worth a look.

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A Note From Nick

You Asked How to Help. Here’s How.

A few of you have reached out asking how you can support Dublin Daily — and honestly, it means a lot just to hear that. Here's what actually helps.

The single biggest thing: forward this to a neighbor, a friend, or anyone who loves Dublin and might not know we exist yet. Word of mouth is everything for a local newsletter. Or just share dublinohiodaily.com next time Dublin comes up in conversation.

If you ever have a tip — a local business worth spotlighting, an event coming up, something happening in your neighborhood — hit reply and tell us. That's the fuel that keeps this going.

We also have sponsors who make Dublin Daily free. If something catches your eye, click their links — it makes a real difference.

Thanks for being here. Dublin is a better place to live when we're all looking out for each other — and that's really what all this is about.

— Nick

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