Axios Columbus

March 25, 2026
Happy Wednesday! It's Women's History Month, and today we've got an update on Ohio's long-awaited Statehouse monument honoring women.
☁️ Today's weather: Partly cloudy, maxing out in the 60s.
🎵 Sounds like: "Rebel Girl" by Bikini Kill.
Today's newsletter is 839 words — a 3-minute read.
1 big thing: Ohio's new women's monument takes shape
Decades before women won the right to vote, Ohio was a hub for progressive conventions where they pressed for equal rights.
Why it matters: That history of activism isn't reflected on Capitol Square, where monuments and portraits mostly honor men. But soon, that will change.
The latest: Officials will break ground at 10am today on the Statehouse's newest public monument — its first honoring women's achievements and first addition in 12 years.
Catch up quick: The display will put Ohio at the forefront of another modern push for equality. Nationwide, just a sliver of public statues depict real women from history.
- It's the result of years of planning and nearly $2 million in Capitol Square Foundation fundraising tied to the 100th anniversary of women's suffrage in 2020.
- The monument will feature nine bronze sculptures on the Statehouse's south side, across from the Ohio Theatre.
- The goal is to unveil it later this year and connect it to educational programming.

Behind the scenes: Ahead of the groundbreaking, Axios visited the Zanesville art studio where artist Brenda Councill has spent the past year bringing her vision to life.
- Seven statues will go atop three granite pillars engraved with quotes and names that, until now, had largely been lost to history.
- The monument represents eras of progress rather than specific individuals, allowing visitors to "identify with it on a personal basis," Councill tells Axios.
The intrigue: The artwork challenges the idea of "putting women on pedestals," Councill says. That's why a fourth pillar is intentionally empty.
- That woman has stepped off her pedestal, energized by a re-creation of a poster advertising Ohio's first women's rights convention in 1850.
- The empty space also represents gender equality progress still happening today.
Last week, surrounded by her clay creations, Councill refined facial details on a symbolic ninth and final statue: a young girl gazing upward and reaching out to a suffragist.
- Ohio Arts Council executive director Donna Collins, whose agency helped guide the artist selection, tells Axios she thinks of her granddaughter when she sees the child.
The bottom line: "She's passing the torch so the movement can continue," Councill says, smiling.

2. Flashback: Back where it all began
"Resolved, That all rights are human rights, and pertain to human beings, without distinction of sex; therefore justice demands that all laws shall be made, not for man, or for woman, but for mankind ..."— An excerpt from the April 27, 1850, Anti-Slavery Bugle, recapping the proceedings of the Ohio Women's Convention in Salem.
Flashback: "On the score of numbers, intellectual force, moral courage, dignity and enlightened zeal, it exceeded our most sanguine anticipations and surpassed our highest hopes," the Bugle reported.
- The convention was among the country's earliest, held just two years after the pivotal gathering in Seneca Falls, New York.
Fun fact: The Bugle later published the first record of Sojourner Truth's famous "Ain't I A Woman?" speech, delivered extemporaneously at the 1851 Women's Rights Convention in Akron.
3. Nutshells: Your local news roundup
💰 A new bipartisan bill would provide paid parental and medical leave to millions of Ohioans currently lacking such benefits, funded through a statewide program. (WSYX-TV)
Bruce Foster III, accused of murdering two coworkers during last year's mass shooting at a New Albany warehouse, is scheduled to stand trial in August. (WCMH-TV)
🚓 Columbus police have been writing fewer traffic tickets in recent years, records show. (Dispatch)
🌮 Local Cantina will expand into Pickerington on Friday. (614 Magazine)
4. ⛽ Sticker shock at the pump


Most Americans will likely soon be paying over $4 per gallon as the war in Iran drives one of the sharpest gas price surges in recent history.
Zoom in: Locally, prices typically trend slightly lower than the U.S. average, but they're still spiking sharply with no signs of falling down.
- Prices had plummeted to their lowest in about three years at the start of 2026.
Between the lines: Gas prices go up during wartime due to concerns about the disruption of crude oil supplies in the Middle East.
- The record average national price of gas was $5.02 in June 2022, impacted by post-pandemic inflation and the recently ignited Russia-Ukraine war.
What they're saying: The White House insists prices will fall rapidly once Trump's military objectives in Iran are achieved.
Yes, but: Analysts say it could take weeks to months for prices to ease, even after the war begins to wind down. That could keep gas prices elevated into the summer.
5. 📸 2 doggos to go
Thanks to all our four-legged readers who brightened a gloomy Monday with their photos.
🥺 These adorable pups are "ready and waiting for snacks and hoping to go on an adventure," their human reports.
Reality check: With such perfect puppy pouts, we're certain they got their wishes!
Thanks to Tyler Buchanan for editing today's newsletter.
Our picks:
😬 Alissa and Andrew's families are no match for day care germs.
😕 Tyler's kid isn't sick ... for now.
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