Author: Contributed

  • Take a look: Black Fireman Brought a Pole Into the Firehouse

    Take a look: Black Fireman Brought a Pole Into the Firehouse

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know that David Kenyon of Company 21, an all-African-American firehouse in Chicago “had an epiphany” and they thought the idea crazy—until they saw that Company 21 was often the first to arrive on scene?

    Take a look and welcome to Black history!

    I share with you this story from Smithsonian Magazine:

    https://www.facebook.com/smithsonianmagazine/posts/10157778961568253
  • Take a look: Do you know who created VOIP?

    Take a look: Do you know who created VOIP?

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know about Marian Croak? Take a look and welcome to Black history!

    I share with you this story from BlackHistory.com:

    Meet the Black Woman Who Created VOIP — The Technology Behind Skype, Zoom and More!

    Read on…

    Marian Croak, African American woman who created VOIP
  • Take a look: Do you know who Katherine Johnson is?

    Take a look: Do you know who Katherine Johnson is?

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know Katherine Johnson’s hand-written calculations were critical to America’s success during our first human spaceflight missions? Take a look and welcome to Black history!

    I share with you this Facebook post from the Northrop Grumman Corporation

    In honor of Black History Month, Northrop Grumman announced this week they were proud to name their next Cygnus spacecraft in honor of the groundbreaking mathematician who “time and time again broke through barriers of gender and race.”

    https://www.facebook.com/NorthropGrumman/posts/10157981120560975
  • Take a look: Did you know the Statue of Liberty was created to celebrate freed slaves, not immigrants?

    Take a look: Did you know the Statue of Liberty was created to celebrate freed slaves, not immigrants?

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know the origin of Lady Liberty? Take a look and welcome to Black history!

    The Washington Post wrote, “Of the statue’s long-forgotten history: Lady Liberty was originally designed to celebrate the end of slavery, not the arrival of immigrants. Ellis Island, the inspection station through which millions of immigrants passed, didn’t open until six years after the statue was unveiled in 1886.”

    I share with you this Facebook post from The Washington Post from May 23, 2019:

    https://www.facebook.com/washingtonpost/posts/10158762361917293
  • Take a look: Do you know why the Green Book was created?

    Take a look: Do you know why the Green Book was created?

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know about the Green Book? Take a look and welcome to Black history!

    I share with you this Facebook post from PBS:

    “Victor Hugo Green acknowledged the deep cut of segregation in America while also uplifting the welcoming parts of the country for Black motorists in creating “The Green Book.” Learn more in “Driving While Black,” now streaming: to.pbs.org/36zpkWR

    https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=746768762926136
  • Take a look: Some of the first park rangers were African American

    Take a look: Some of the first park rangers were African American

    by Barbara Kyles

    How many of you have visited Yellowstone? Well, some of the first park rangers were African American. Take a look and welcome to Black history!

    Learn more from the Yellowstone National Park Facebook page.

    https://www.facebook.com/YellowstoneNPS/posts/4338994652782522
  • Apply for Loveland Stage Company Creative Arts Scholarship

    Apply for Loveland Stage Company Creative Arts Scholarship

    Submitted by Nancy Downing

    Loveland, Ohio – Each year the Loveland Stage Company recognizes a graduating high school student with its Creative Arts Scholarship.

    The Loveland Stage Company is offering a scholarship again this year in the amount of $1000. In order to qualify for the scholarship, the graduating student must reside in the Loveland City School District, attend Loveland High School, or be an offspring of a Loveland Stage Company member. This scholarship is intended to be used toward college or university tuition, room and board, or books.

    The Loveland Stage Company wishes to encourage and support young local talent.  Therefore, prospective applicants must be planning to further their education in the Creative Arts. Qualifying areas of study include, but are not limited to: art, music, theater, photography, film, dance, and majors that support these studies. Students are asked to submit examples of their talent in their chosen field and a high school transcript demonstrating the ability to succeed academically as part of the application process.

    Applications are available on the Loveland Stage Company website and are due no later than Sunday March 14.

    Or, download the application here.

    For information or questions contact our Scholarship Chair Theresa Kovacs at (513) 697-6769.


  • Marine Corporal Joshua Sust’s home celebration Saturday

    Marine Corporal Joshua Sust’s home celebration Saturday

    Join us in celebrating the building of Marine Corporal Joshua Sust‘s specially adapted custom home in Maineville, Ohio…right from your home or office! Log on to meet Josh, and learn more about Homes For Our Troops.

    Date: Saturday, January 9, 2021 Time: 10:00 a.m. EST 

    RSVP: Please register here

    You will receive an email including the Zoom link for this special event. Location: No need to travel, HFOT is coming to you via Zoom.

    Learn how wounded Vet Joshua Sust will receive “Freedom” with a new home in Mainville

  • Local Conservation of the National Wild & Scenic Little Miami River

    Local Conservation of the National Wild & Scenic Little Miami River

    by Joe Timmerman

    Few leaves are still falling off trees and down the ever-running water of the National Wild and Scenic Little Miami River, where they float through five counties and 111 miles of southwest Ohio, into the Ohio River and toward the Mississippi before eventually finding their way into the Gulf of Mexico. Today, these 111 miles of Little Miami River are the cleanest that they have been in the last 40 years, and as the world may seem largely disconnected due to the coronavirus pandemic, a connection between people over time is helping to create the river’s lasting sustainability. 

    An aerial view of the National Wild and Scenic Little Miami River in Maineville, Ohio, on Dec. 3, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    Since the end of the last Ice Age before this land was known as America, humans have lived along the Little Miami River and enjoyed the resources it provides — drinking the water alongside its banks while hunting for fish within, using the clay to build pottery or structures, and floating on the surface in kayaks or canoes like the leaves still do today. In that time, the river has seen many seasons of change, from shifts in human culture alongside its banks through community development to biological diversities in its rich, natural environment, according to the Little Miami Ecology and History report.

    The Little Miami River at Narrows Reserve Nature Center in Greene County, Ohio, near Beavercreek, on Sunday, Nov. 14, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    When the Little Miami was designated as Ohio’s first State Scenic River and included in the National Wild and Scenic River System in 1973, according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, locals had already been active in its conservation and return to sustainability for more than half a decade. The Little Miami Conservancy (LMC), a non-profit organization fueled by passion for the protection of the river, led the effort in Washington to recognize the importance of protecting the Little Miami River as not only a local hidden gem, but as a national treasure.

    Eric Partee, executive director of the Little Miami Conservancy, holds one of nine water quality sondes that are found all along the length of the river, this one in Milford, Ohio, on Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2020. “96% of the river is in full attainment with exceptional habitat quality, it’s just in fantastic condition. The challenge is to keep it that way,” Partee said. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    The lower section of the river runs right through the heart of Loveland, Ohio, where LMC and its current executive director, Eric Partee, is based. Partee’s passion roots from the original director of the conservancy, Glenn Thompson, who in 1967 embodied the idea that their effort isn’t about one single person, but rather about everyone coming together to save the river. 

    “Someday, a corridor of green will stretch from one end of the river to the other. Individuals and families will enjoy peace and quiet and restoration of spirit that comes with clean water, birds, and trees,” a quote from Glenn Thompson that Partee believes the conservancy has lived up to.

    Since its origin, the conservancy has worked with agencies like the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (OEPA), who records the condition of the Little Miami River every 10 years by sampling fish life. In the 1980s, only 4% of the Little Miami River was in full attainment of water quality health, but in recent years, the chart has flipped, and as of 2007, the river is at 96% attainment of health, according to OEPA research.

    Kenny Boykin (center) baits his hook at Magrish Nature Preserve just north of the Ohio River on Friday, Nov. 27, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    “As early as the turn of the century, this river was very well polluted. (There were) a lot of deformed fish, it was not anything close to exceptional,” Partee said in an interview. “It took a lot of discussion, a little bit of arm twisting, and some local funding to fund improvements to the sewage treatment plants to ratchet down on phosphorus, which was the main culprit … when we got the treatment plants to ratchet down on that, biology basically turned around on a dime —from terrible to exceptional.”

    Bubbles float and fall rapidly surrounding a dissolved oxygen analyzer in a section of the WRRF in Beavercreek, Ohio, on Saturday, Nov. 14, 2020. Measuring dissolved oxygen is one way to determine water quality in water, especially in rivers that contain natural life. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    To make sure the river stays healthy, LMC introduced a set of equipment called YSI Water Quality Sondes, which monitor dissolved oxygen in nine locations throughout the length of the entire Little Miami, according to Partee. Each system monitors oxygen every 15 minutes, allowing for constant awareness of river health to prevent a reversion of quality. The conservancy also takes prides in their work on forest restoration through buying riverfront properties, planting trees, removing invasive species, and working collectively to clean up trash in the effort to grow closer to the initial goal of a corridor of green along the riverbank. 

    Mark Bersani, owner of Loveland Canoe and Kayak, points to plants beyond stacks of kayaks along his riverfront property where his business and home sits next to the Little Miami River in Loveland, Ohio, on Friday, Nov. 19, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    A short walk from the doors of the conservancy is the Loveland Canoe and Kayak Livery, owned by Mark and Robyn Bersani, which is just one of the many businesses along the Little Miami River that rely on its health as their main resource for income. The Bersanis work closely with the conservancy each year by offering and volunteering for cleanups as well as generous donations. This year, along with two other liveries including Rivers Edge and Scenic River, their combined donation to the Little Miami Conservancy’s effort was $56,000, according to Bersani.

    Kayakers float down the Little Miami River in Loveland, Ohio on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020. The Little Miami is popular for its kayaking and fishing. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    “We’re involved from a grassroots portion, to actually helping with cleanups, to keeping an eye on the river, as well as donating and continuing to fund the good work that they do,” Bersani said in an interview. “It comes down to the people that live along the river, people that visit the river, the people in the community, if the river is going to stay clean. This river is very natural, it looks like it did 300 years ago … it is vital that the citizens all realize they have a role in this.”

    Up the road at Loveland High School, Amy Aspenwall, an AP environmental science teacher teaches teenagers the importance of environmental awareness through hands-on experiences in places like the Little Miami River. 

    Perhaps half of the students attending Loveland High School cross over the Little Miami State and National Scenic Little Miami on their way to school each morning.

    A sign in Hamilton County reads, “Little Miami Watershed, Keep It Clean!” as cars cross the bridge above the Little Miami River and into Historic Downtown Loveland on Thursday, Nov. 11, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    In an interview over Zoom, Aspenwall talked about the importance of students getting out into nature to actually see how humans fit in the environment, because “if you don’t see it, it’s really not your problem,” Aspenwall said. From understanding food waste to the water drinking system to sewer treatment facilities, her goal is to allow students the opportunity to realize a sense of civic responsibility. 

    “It’s important for students to start to think of themselves as a bigger picture rather than just someone following teacher instructions,” Aspenwall said. “I want them to start thinking on their own and realize how powerful they are as a consumer.” 

    Steam rises above a section of the WRRF, Water Resource Recovery Facility, in Beavercreek, Ohio, on Sunday, Nov. 14, 2020. The upper Little Miami River water runs through Beavercreek’s WRRF, which discharges 8.5 million gallons of water per day, according to the OEPA. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    Although the Little Miami River is of “exceptional quality,” according to a 2010 water quality monitoring report by the OEPA, “the tributaries were generally of a lower quality.” 

    Michelle Waller, an environmental specialist in the Division of Surface Water at OEPA, discussed the difficulties the river has faced through poor nutrients entering the river due to excess phosphorus from treatment plants and still faces through agricultural runoff from farms, in an interview over Zoom.

    Particles of sediment floats on the surface of the Little Miami River near a bank in Loveland, Ohio, on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020. Runoff is one of the biggest threats to the Little Miami River, usually from agriculture, which makes up nearly half of the lower Little Miami’s watershed. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    Waller said that placing phosphorus limits on the main stem’s water treatment plants in recent years proved to show major improvements in river nutrients after the OEPA performed sampling, but other negative sources are out of their reach. “We do not have authority over agriculture the way we do with what we call point sources, the treatment plants,” Waller said. “We try to work with local Soil and Water Conservation Districts, they try to get the word out about good farming practices … but there is no real regulatory authority which is a really big problem.” 

    Tree branches are reflected in a section of the Water Resource Recovery Facility, WRRF, in Beavercreek, Ohio, on Sunday, Nov. 14, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    The majority of land along the Little Miami River is agricultural, unlike other major rivers in Ohio that have industry running alongside their waters. And just like the branches of community that have come together to help preserve the river, many tributary streams and creeks branch out from the Little Miami, though those tributaries can be overlooked. 

    People bike on a section of the Loveland Bike Trail alongside the Little Miami River in Loveland, Ohio, on Monday, Nov. 8, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    As most organizations, including the OEPA and LMC, focus their efforts on upholding the exceptional quality of the main stem of the Little Miami River, there is still work to be done in the tributaries. Partee talked about how there just isn’t enough time for LMC to visit every tributary and talk to every landowner. However, near Beaver Creek in Greene County, there is an organization called the Beaver Creek Wetlands Association, which has adopted that very issue. “I think that’s probably the best future for the watershed, to have local citizens dealing with multiple tributaries and try to restore or protect it,” said Partee. 

    Between the shared relationships of the Little Miami Conservancy, OEPA, local government officials, developers, landowners, non-profits, teachers, and local business owners, a community has come together and worked toward the common effort to make a positive, sustainable change in the health of the river. 

    Kenny Boykin carries a net with a couple bait fish he plans to use to catch catfish in the Little Miami River at Magrish Nature Preserve just north of the Ohio River on Friday, Nov. 27, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    The timelessness of the Little Miami River will carry on as long as its water continues to run. And as it always has been, it’s still up to the people alongside the riverbank to make sure that the water runs clean for generations to come. As the late author Nelson Henderson said, and Eric Partee paraphrased when we talked together, “The true meaning of life is to plant trees, under whose shade you do not expect to sit.”

    Kenny Boykin struggles to pull his cast back in after the hook got stuck in the bottom of the river at Magrish Nature Preserve just north of the Ohio River on Friday, Nov. 27, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    Note: The next OEPA Little Miami River Watershed TMDL Report will be produced and published by 2022, according to the last OEPA TMDL report

    Sunlight breaks through the river’s surface in an underwater view of the Little Miami River near Nisbet Park in Loveland, Ohio on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)

    Currents of the Little Miami River from sunlight reflect onto the bridge that connects Hamilton County and Clermont County in Loveland, Ohio, on Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2020. (Photo © 2021 Joe Timmerman/Loveland Magazine)
  • Great Oaks associates and Board member chosen for nationwide inclusion and equity program

    Great Oaks associates and Board member chosen for nationwide inclusion and equity program

    Two Great Oaks associates and a Great Oaks Board member have been chosen to be part of the new Inclusion, Access, Equity and Diversity (IAED) Mentorship Program launched by the Association for Career and Technical Education.

    Ramona Beck, Assistant Dean at Scarlet Oaks Career Campus and “AL” Long, Great Oaks Board member representing North College Hill, were among 32 educational leaders selected as mentors.  Scarlet Oaks English instructor Emma Godfrey is one of 36 mentees in the program. 

    Long is also a member of ACTE’s IAED Advisory Group, which helped develop the Mentorship Program and other activities.

    The IAED Mentorship Program was created to further inclusion, access, equity and diversity in career-technical education in the United States.  Mentors and mentees will be encouraged to take on leadership roles in the national ACTE organization and advised current career-technical leaders on IAED issues.

    Participants in the program will meet monthly and take on such activities as reviewing current best practices in IAED, developing statements and documents for career-technical schools and organizations, and helping to shape national policies and procedures.