Loveland, Ohio – Last Tuesday night, our enchanting romance took a significant turn at the Love-Land city hall. Despite the frigid temperatures, 65 individuals gathered to affirm something that should be held in the highest regard and too precious to be tampered with. It was what should be sacrosanct; too important or valuable to be interfered with.
A full-capacity, standing room only, flowing into the hallway crowd.
Not all came with the same sentiment, however the size of the crowd on a night when nary a person wouldn’t have preferred to be somewhere else was telling. What became apparent was that we have something flowing between and through us. How do we protect our eldest, centuries-mature loved one?
Our water has a memory, and it flows through Loveland because the spiritual H₂O means everything. Destroy its soul? Cannot. Dirty it and it’s banks we can. Diminish the life within and on its shores, we can. Our State and National Scenic, Little Miami River sends us messages to heed and pass along to generations, but we don’t always listen. Tuesday, we did. Tell your children and grandchildren.
A bridesmaid with bigamist-many suitors was honored with a renewal of noble, exalted, and sacred vows.
Some took advantage of their 65 friendly neighbors to bloviate in inflated and empty ways with their superior knowledge and self-aggrandizing wisdom. They went on and on because what they tried to convince needed too many-worded-attempts. Perhaps they were the only ones listening and they needed so many phrases to convince even themselves. The audience listened with a third ear as if they could decipher how in the end the bloviators might end up voting. One heartless resident did the same but in the end had no vote, yet surely went to sleep Tuesday night with dreams of grander of saving the day.
Thankfully, all others told of their love affair.
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BACKGROUND:
Public hearing set for 12 single family homes being proposed along State and National Scenic Little Miami River
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Planning and Zoning Commission reverses course from their December 3 decision
Near the end of this week’s public hearing to consider whether 12 homes should be built on Riverside Drive in the West Loveland Historic District on the bank of the National and State Scenic Little Miami River, Planning and Zoning Commissioner Rob Weisgerber made a motion to not recommend the zoning map change to City Council. Weisgerber, Andy Bateman and Chairman Mark Redmond agreed with Weisgerber and voted “Yes” David Parker voted “No”. Commission Member Brian O’Neill did not attend the meeting.
The P&Z recommendation will now be delivered to City Council where there will be another public hearing. Upon completion of the public hearing, City Council may approve or disapprove the recommendation of Planning and Zoning Commission by a simple majority. Council may modify the recommendation of Planning and Zoning Commission by a 3/4 majority vote.
Video of speeches by the public and the discussion and vote of the Commission coming soon…