Tag: clermont county

  • Milford and Lakota schools become centers of learning for COVID-19 best practices

    Milford and Lakota schools become centers of learning for COVID-19 best practices

    By Susan Tebben and Ohio Capital Journal

    Milford and West Chester, Ohio – Two Ohio school districts with some of the highest cumulative case rates for COVID-19 say as they remained in-person, their safety protocols only got better.

    Milford Exempted Village School District in Clermont County has remained in-person since the fall, and has had to close twice due to staff absences.

    “We simply had too many staff out sick or quarantined and couldn’t find the subs,” Wendy Planicka, director of communications and public relations for the district, told the OCJ. “We have shut down grade levels at a few of our elementary buildings as well, but not an entire elementary building.”

    The school district, like many in the state, provides weekly counts of COVID-19 cases on their website, along with cumulative district-wide data.

    Since Aug. 1, the district has reported 649 total cases in their district of 6,235 students and 810 staff members.

    Currently 4,990 students are enrolled in-person, with 1,245 students enrolled in the district’s virtual program, Eagle Online.

    Planicka said community spread has been the “number one cause of our cases,” followed by spread through athletics or non-school sponsored activities such as family parties.

    “There have been two or three cases where we believe spread happened in an athletic setting — for example when football was in season last fall, at one point almost the entire football team was quarantined due to possible spread,” Planicka said.

    The school implemented protocols that require an investigation into every positive case, including contact tracing in partnership with Clermont County Public Health and a minimum 10-day quarantine period for students and staff who test positive.

    In schools, a mask requirement is in place, and custodians are to disinfect desk areas every evening, along with using an electrostatic sprayer “at least every 30 days” according to Milford’s protocol list.

    Milford’s reopening plan was developed to make the return to school as safe as possible, but not to return the school to exactly as it was, according to the plan itself.

    “School will not look the same as it did prior to March 2020,” the plan stated. “These changes may be temporary or they may be permanent. Time will tell.”

    Milford’s latest COVID 19 Dashboard (https://www.milfordschools.org/services-and-programs/return-to-learning-20/covid-case-reporting-61/)

    Butler County’s Lakota Local Schools had the highest number of cases since the pandemic counts began, with more than 700 total student cases, according to state data. The school is also home to 14,000 students, having reopened to in-person learning on August 17.

    “Since then, our students have had the opportunity to attend school all day, every day,” said Betsy Fuller, community relations director for the district.

    There is a virtual learning option at Lakota, being utilized by 3,000 students, according to Fuller.

    In the five months that made up their first semester, the school reported 5,172 students in quarantine. The worst month for positive cases in students was December, with 221 of the 468 reported in that semester happening then.

    “We traced many of the positive cases to holiday gatherings and celebrations happening outside of school between Halloween and Thanksgiving,” Fuller said. “It is also important to note that very few cases, if any, could actually be linked back to classroom spread.”

    The district had guidelines in place as soon as it reopened, including requiring face coverings for all K-12 students, desk cleanings between classes, assigned seating at lunch, and block scheduling to avoid frequent class changes.

    In the three months of the second semester so far, the district has reported 345 positive cases, but a 93% student attendance rate.

    Lakota’s latest COVID 19 Dashboard (https://www.lakotaonline.com/cms/One.aspx?portalId=216799&pageId=24411613)

    In February, the state implemented a vaccination program specifically for teachers and school personnel, making returning to school or already conducting in-person instruction a pre-requisite to districts receipt of vaccination doses.

  • Loveland school district wants your thoughts

    Loveland school district wants your thoughts

    Loveland, Ohio – This is the “Thought Exchange” survey to build the profile the Board of Education can use for the Loveland City School District superintendent search.

    https://my.thoughtexchange.com/#415463588/hub

    NOTE!  this will be open through tomorrow,  Wednesday afternoon, 3/24.

    You share your own thoughts and rate thoughts from other participants based on how much you agree 1 = strongly disagree or 5 = strongly agree.   


  • You can buy handmade cards made by special needs students at LHS

    You can buy handmade cards made by special needs students at LHS

    by Emily Hicks

    For the past several years, students with special needs at Loveland High School have designed hand-made blank greeting cards to gain valuable work experience. We use the money made from the profit of the sales to  buy supplies for the room, activities, and often celebrations.

    Students design, create, package, and sell these handmade cards to the community and staff members of Loveland. This year we were unable to attend our biggest sales event, The Loveland Craft Fair, due to the pandemic. 

    The profits from this fair help fund our classrooms and give our students the opportunity to practice social and life skills during outings in our community.  

    We are looking for new ways to get our craft and our students’ experiences out there. 

    The community will be able to meet some of our talented students and purchase these amazing cards this Spring at the Loveland Farmers Market.  We will have cards available for cash purchase for $2.00 per pack of 4.  You can choose from a variety of cards including, happy birthday, thank you, thinking of you, get well soon, tiger paw, and many more.

    They are also available for cash purchase through this sign-up Order Form .

    We look forward to seeing you again in our community!

  • New COVID-19 vaccination site opens at UC Clermont College

    New COVID-19 vaccination site opens at UC Clermont College

    Loveland, Ohio – Clermont County Public Health and the University of Cincinnati Clermont College are partnering to open a new COVID-19 vaccination site at the Student Activities Center on the college’s Batavia campus.

    The vaccination site will open on Saturday, March 13. Appointments must be scheduled. Walk-ins will not be accepted.

    The new site will more than double the number of people who can be vaccinated in one day by the health department. Public Health has been vaccinating up to 300 people per day to date; the new site will accommodate 600 or more people per day.

    Clermont County Health Commissioner Julianne Nesbit

    The quantity of the vaccine that Public Health receives weekly has increased from about 200 doses during the first week of February to more than 1,200 doses during the first week of March.

    “We’re looking forward to working with UC Clermont to get more of our residents vaccinated,” said Health Commissioner Julianne Nesbit. “Throughout this pandemic, we have relied on many of our community partners along the way, and this latest partnership will benefit the entire county. We’re grateful that UC has stepped up to provide the much-needed space.”

    “We are excited to partner with Clermont County Public Health to provide the space for this critical service to the community,” said UC Clermont Dean Jeff Bauer. “The vaccination effort is crucial to guiding us out of the pandemic, and we are proud to be able to help.”

    How to register

    To register for an appointment, residents can use the new online scheduling site, which can be found at https://ccphohio.org/covid-19-vaccine-info/. Anyone without internet access can call 513-735-8500 for assistance with scheduling an appointment.

    Currently, any Ohio resident aged 50 or older is eligible to be vaccinated. Other groups that are eligible include people with certain congenital medical conditions, law enforcement officers, childcare workers and funeral services employees. The full list of eligible people can be found online at www.coronavirus.ohio.gov/vaccine.

  • Participate in the process of selecting a new Superintendent

    Participate in the process of selecting a new Superintendent

    Loveland, Ohio – Four simple and straightforward questions is all you are being asked at this first step. Just check the boxes to provide “important” feedback.

    A press release from the Loveland City School District:

    To: All Loveland Schools Stakeholders:

    Welcome to Loveland City Schools’ search for our next Superintendent. We want you to participate in the process and provide important feedback. 

    This first survey is designed to give us a clear sense of the status of our district from your perspective. It won’t ask about the skills and attributes we should be seeking in our next superintendent. That survey will be coming later.

    Please click on the URL below to complete this district status survey.  We genuinely want to hear from you on this survey and future opportunities as well.

  • Loveland school buildings Closed Friday 3/5 for vaccination clinic

    Loveland school buildings Closed Friday 3/5 for vaccination clinic

    Loveland, Ohio – In order to accommodate a second vaccine clinic day for staff, Friday, March 5 will be an “asynchronous” learning day for Loveland City School District students and staff.

    This means school buildings will be closed; however, students will be given assignments to complete at home on that day and teachers will be available via email to assist them during normal school hours.

  • [Video Interview] Superintendent Neavin discusses what he has learned in first 3-weeks

    [Video Interview] Superintendent Neavin discusses what he has learned in first 3-weeks

    by David Miller

    David Miller is the Publisher of Loveland Magazine

    Loveland, Ohio – On Friday, the Superintendent of the Loveland City School District, Brad Neavin joined me via Zoom for a follow-up discussion about his job so far as the head of the District. ([VIDEO] Interview with Loveland’s new Superintendent of Schools)

    On February 8, the day before he officially took the helm, Neavin told Loveland Magazine readers his number one task was to visit or talk to as many people in the community as he could to get check the pulse, a post-autopsy report, of where the community has been and where it hopes it is going. If needed, Neavin hopes a report to the Board will help get the blood pumping again.

    We discussed those visits, “coffees” as Neavin describes them, and he has done more than 50.

    Neavin said that the schools and all of the Loveland District are alive and well and he is pleased with most of what he has learned so far, very pleased to learn the negative as well as the positive.

    We also discussed the status of State testing and why he made a recommendation to the Board to send a letter of support to add the Loveland District to the growing number of districts around the State that mandated testing be suspended for the current school year. (Loveland Board asks for waiver from state testing)

    Neavin asked me to be sure to include his Email address in this story because he wants to hear from many more residents of the District: He can be contacted at: neavinbr@lovelandschools.org or (513) 683-5600

    Below is the first interview I did with the Superintendent on February 7.

  • John Stowell and Andrew McAfee appointed as Clermont park commissioners

    John Stowell and Andrew McAfee appointed as Clermont park commissioners

    Clermont County Probate Judge James A. Shriver has appointed two new members to the Clermont County Board of Park Commissioners. John Stowell, a long-time resident of Miami Township, and Andrew McAfee, a lifetime resident of Union Township, have joined David Anspach, who has served on the board since 1997. This year, Anspach will serve as chairman and Stowell as vice chairman.

    Stowell and McAfee fill the seats left open by long-time board members Ken Stewart and William Stearns, both of whom retired at the end of 2020.  All three commissioners serve three-year terms without pay and provide stewardship over Clermont County’s six parks, three nature preserves, the Williamsburg-Batavia bike trail and several green spaces.

    Stowell (left) is retired from Duke Energy where he served in a number of executive positions, including leading the company’s government affairs, energy and environmental policy and international policy groups. In his 28 years with the company, he worked with Congress to help shape the Clean Air Act of 1990 and repeal the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935. He is originally from Buchanan, Mich., and is a 1975 graduate of Michigan State University, where he majored in journalism. He lives in Miami Township just outside of Loveland with his wife Marlene. They have two grown children, Maria and Stephen.

    Stowell, who describes himself as an avid bicyclist and outdoors lover, said he was anxious, upon his retirement, to contribute toward improving the community. The opening on the park board, he said, provided that opportunity.

    “My goal as a board member is to help and improve and grow our outstanding county park system,” he said. “I am particularly excited about our latest addition at Grailville, which will bring recreational and educational opportunities to residents in the northern part of our county.”

    McAfee (left) is the Director of Government Affairs for the Clermont County Chamber of Commerce. Prior to joining the Chamber, he was Congressman Brad Wenstrup’s Field Representative in Clermont County and, during the recent election, took a leave of absence to serve as his campaign manager.

    Adopted as a baby from Honduras, McAfee is a lifelong resident of Clermont County and resides in Union Township. He is a graduate of Glen Este High School, the University of Cincinnati, and is currently working towards a Master’s in Public Administration at Eastern Kentucky University.

    McAfee’s interest in Clermont County parks goes back to his childhood.
    “Growing up, I was a frequent visitor of the parks throughout Clermont County,” he said. “During the stay-at-home order early last year, I really got to know all of the parks even better as an alternative to the gym. When I saw the opportunity to join the board, I thought it would be a great way to protect and promote the parks that I have grown to love throughout my life.

    “As a young professional in Clermont County, I’m really looking forward to working with the parks team on ways to promote and highlight all of the great things our parks have to offer, especially to millennials and young families. We have so much to offer here in Clermont County and I cannot wait to help showcase all of our great parks!”

  • How to enroll in LECC Kindergarten for next school year

    How to enroll in LECC Kindergarten for next school year

    YOU are cordially invited to the 2021 LECC Kindergarten Round Up!

    Loveland, Ohio – Read below to learn more about the Loveland Early Childhood Center’s registration for the 2021-2022 school year. Here is their announcement:


    This year’s Round Up is going virtual!​ The Round Up will be an asynchronous event in the form of a slide show presentation with videos and information about LECC Kindergarten for the 2021-2022 school year. Within the presentation there will be an opportunity for you to share your thoughts and questions.

    You can work your way through the Round Up at your own pace and at your convenience. We are excited to welcome you to LECC and we are looking forward to walking alongside you throughout your child(ren)’s educational journey.

    Sit back, relax, grab some popcorn, and click on the link below to join the 2021 LECC Kindergarten Round Up Virtual Presentation!

    LECC 2021 Kindergarten Round Up (click here to participate)

    ~If you are planning to be part of the Full Day Kindergarten Lottery, registration must be completed and all documents received by noon on March 12th~​ ​Click here to enroll

    The Loveland Early Childhood Center (© 2021 Loveland Magazine)
  • Loveland FIRST LEGO League Challenge teams are heading to the Ohio FLL State Championship!

    Loveland FIRST LEGO League Challenge teams are heading to the Ohio FLL State Championship!

    Team 4075 Striped Might members Aaron Frazier, Brennan Kosht, Grant Macura, Tucker Freve, Isabel Combs, Ethan Pachmeyer, and Lauren Skinner

    Team 4075 Striped Might won the Champion’s Award, which recognizes a team “that embodies the FIRST LEGO League experience, by fully embracing our Core Values while achieving excellence and innovation in both the Robot Game and Project.”

    Loveland, Ohio – Five Loveland FLL Challenge teams of students in grades 4-8 competed in January in tournaments across Ohio. The teams began their season in August, and have been working to design, build and program a LEGO robot to complete the missions of this year’s robot game.

    As part of Challenge, teams also participate in a research project to identify and solve a relevant real-world problem, helping people in their community be more active.

    All FLL Challenge tournaments were held remotely this year, and to compete, teams submitted 3 videos of their robot runs and presented to judges over Zoom about their Innovation Project, their robot design, and the Core Values they practiced throughout the season.

    All five Loveland FLL Challenge teams qualified to advance to the Championship based on their performance in their qualifying tournaments.  The Ohio FLL Challeng Championship will take place in March.


    Team 38182 Masked Mechanics won the Engineering Excellence Award, which celebrates a team with “an efficiently designed robot, an innovative project solution that effectively addresses the season challenge and great Core Values evident in all they do.”

    Team 38182 Masked Mechanics
    John Paul Galles, Elijah Eppley, Jacob Drown, A.J. Drown, Owen Helms, and Luke Varadachari

    Team 50712 Exploding Watermelonzz won the Innovation Project Award, which recognizes a team that “utilizes diverse resources for their Innovation Project to help them gain a comprehensive understanding of their problem, have a creative, well-researched solution and effectively communicate their findings to judges and the community.” 

    Team 50712 Exploding Watermelonzz
    Owen Ewald, J.T. Brinkman, Izzy Bisogni, Bryce Hemphill, Nolan Hicks, Cameron Dickey,  Eloise Young , and Charlotte Kady.

    Team 45562 The Growling Gears, which is sponsored by Girl Scouts of Western Ohio, and Team 51294 RobotActiveX each won the Robot Design Award, which celebrates a team that “uses outstanding programming principles and solid engineering practices to develop a robot that is mechanically sound, durable, efficient and highly capable of performing challenge missions.”

    Team 45662 Growling Gears
    Sarah Papsdorf, Caroline Chesar, Abigail Boyle, Mia Ireland, Ellie Livingston , Caitlin Ryan

    Team 51294 RobotActiveX also won the Robot Design Award at a separate tournament.  The Design Award is given to a team that “uses outstanding programming principles and solid engineering practices to develop a robot that is mechanically sound, durable, efficient and highly capable of performing challenge missions.”

    Team 51294 RobotActiveX

    Back row from left to right: Anderson Hunt, 4th grade at LES, Logan Pape, 5th grade at LIS, Sam Herber, 4th grade at LES

    Front row from left to right: Hunter Hodgson, 4th grade at LES Maddie Dougherty, 4th grade at LES Nicholas Gatsos, 4th grade at LES