Ohio Revised Code Search
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Section 304.01 | Definitions.
...d by electronic means. (E) "Electronic signature" means an electronic sound, symbol, or process attached to or logically associated with a record and executed or adopted by a person with the intent to sign the record. (F) "Information" means data, text, images, sounds, codes, computer programs, software, databases, or the like. (G) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnersh... |
Section 304.02 | County office to adopt security procedure prior to use.
...se of electronic records and electronic signatures by a county office under Chapter 1306. of the Revised Code, and except as otherwise provided in section 955.013 of the Revised Code, a county office shall adopt, in writing, a security procedure for the purpose of verifying that an electronic signature, record, or performance is that of a specific person or for detecting changes or errors in the information in an ele... |
Section 304.03 | Authorized electronic filing to have same effect as paper filing.
...(A) Whenever any rule or law requires or authorizes the filing of any information, notice, lien, or other document or record with any county office, a filing made by an electronic record shall have the same force and effect as a filing made on paper in all cases where the county office has authorized or agreed to the electronic filing and the filing is made in accordance with applicable rules or an applicable agreeme... |
Section 304.04 | Use not required.
...se of electronic records and electronic signatures. |
Section 5.01 | Ohio state flag.
...ts shall be according to the official design on file in the office of the secretary of state. One state flag of uniform dimensions shall be furnished to each company of the organized militia. |
Section 5.011 | Ohio governor's flag.
...five feet six inches fly, of the same design as the flag of the governor of Ohio, with the seal and stars proportionately reduced in size and embroidered. The colors will be trimmed on three edges with a knotted fringe of yellow silk two and one half inches wide. Attached below the head of the pike will be a silk cord of scarlet and white eight feet six inches in length with a tassel at each end. The naval flag of t... |
Section 5.012 | Display and maintenance of state flag.
...(A) Display of the state flag at all state buildings and public institutions, such as public school buildings and state parks, is encouraged. If the state flag is displayed, it may be flown every day when weather permits and shall be flown from sunrise until sunset on all national and state holidays and on any other days that the governor proclaims. The state flag may be flown at night when properly lighted. When the... |
Section 5.013 | Pledge to the state flag.
..."I salute the flag of the state of Ohio and pledge to the buckeye state respect and loyalty" is hereby adopted as the official pledge to the state flag. The pledge shall not replace, preempt, or be recited before the pledge of allegiance to the United States flag. |
Section 5.014 | Procedure for folding state flag.
...The general assembly hereby establishes a recommended procedure for the folding of the state flag by two people. The procedure is as follows: With the flag unfolded, fold the flag in half lengthwise so that the points of the flag are aligned. Fold the flag in half lengthwise a second time to form a long strip with the red disc facing the ground. Next, fold the pointed end back onto itself to form a rectangle. These ... |
Section 5.015 | Suggested ceremonial procedure for retirement of state flag.
...(A) The general assembly recommends the following ceremonial procedure for the retirement of the state flag, to be followed, voluntarily, with respect and dignity, by civilians and civilian groups or organizations. (B) The ceremony shall consist of three parts: a preamble, a pledge, and the retirement by burning of the separated parts of the state flag. (C) Before the ceremony to retire the state flag, the dedica... |
Section 5.02 | State flower.
...The scarlet carnation is hereby adopted as the state flower as a token of love and reverence for the memory of William McKinley. |
Section 5.021 | State wild flower.
...The plant Trillium grandiflorum, commonly known as the large white trillium, found in every Ohio county, is hereby adopted as the state wild flower. |
Section 5.022 | State airplane.
...The 1905 Wright Flyer III, first flown on June 23, 1905, near Dayton, Ohio, is hereby adopted as the state airplane. |
Section 5.03 | State bird.
...The bird, cardinalis cardinalis, commonly known as the "cardinal," is the official bird of the state. |
Section 5.031 | State reptile.
...The snake, Coluber constrictor constrictor, known as the black racer, is the official reptile of the state. |
Section 5.032 | State animal.
...The animal, Odocoileus virginianus, commonly known as the white-tailed deer, is the official animal of the state. Naming the white-tailed deer as the official animal of the state does not relieve the division of wildlife of its duty to manage the deer population and its distribution. |
Section 5.033 | State amphibian.
...The salamander, Ambystoma maculatum, commonly known as the spotted salamander, is the official amphibian of the state. |
Section 5.034 | State frog.
...The frog, Rana catesbeiana, commonly known as the bullfrog, is the official frog of the state. |
Section 5.036 | Official pet.
...A shelter pet is hereby designated as the official pet of the state to raise public awareness of shelter animals. |
Section 5.04 | State coat of arms.
...pond substantially with the following design: 10000000000000A5000000A6409F8ED3.gif image/gif 1 /api/v2/bank/orc/00/5/5.04/image When the coat of arms of the state is reproduced in color, the colors used shall be substantially the same as the natural color of the terrain and objects shown. |
Section 5.05 | State tree.
...The tree, Aesculus globra, commonly known as the "Buckeye" is hereby adopted as the official tree of the state. |
Section 5.06 | State motto.
..."With God, All Things Are Possible" shall be adopted as the official motto of the state. |
Section 5.07 | State gem stone.
...The gem stone "Ohio Flint," a crypto-crystalline variety of quartz, is hereby adopted as the official gem stone of the state. |
Section 5.071 | State invertebrate fossil.
...Isotelus, a genus of extinct marine arthropod of the class Trilobita, that lived in the seas that covered Ohio during the Ordovician period, about four hundred forty million years ago, and represented by the largest known complete trilobite, collected at Huffman dam in Montgomery county, is hereby adopted as the official invertebrate fossil of the state. |
Section 5.072 | State bicentennial bridge.
...oldest bridge in the state, is hereby designated the bicentennial bridge of the state. |