Tag: clermont county

  • Cases of hepatitis A increasing in Clermont County

    Cases of hepatitis A increasing in Clermont County

    Clermont County is experiencing an increase in cases of hepatitis A. The Ohio Department of Health declared a statewide outbreak of the illness in June. To date, there have been 225 cases reported in Ohio.

    Hepatitis A is a virus that affects the liver. It can be spread from person to person, or by eating or drinking food that is contaminated with the virus. Food can become contaminated with the virus when a person doesn’t wash their hands after using the bathroom and then prepares or touches food. Spread of the illness in the current outbreak is primarily occurring from person to person in high-risk groups.

    People at higher risk for getting sick from Hepatitis A during this outbreak include:

    • People who have direct contact with someone infected with the virus
    • Men who have sex with men
    • People who use street drugs, whether they are injected or not
    • People who are incarcerated
    • People experiencing homelessness
    • People who have traveled to areas outside of the U.S. currently experiencing outbreaks

    Symptoms of hepatitis A include fatigue, low appetite, stomach pain, nausea, clay-colored stools, and jaundice (yellowish color to the skin and eyes).

    Clermont County Health Commissioner Julianne Nesbit

    “We are working with at-risk populations to help prevent even more people from getting sick,” said Health Commissioner Julianne Nesbit. “Whether you are considered to be at high risk or not, anyone can get hepatitis A. So we encourage everyone to get vaccinated and wash your hands.”



  • Special Clermont County session Aug. 14 on Milford and FC Cincinnati plans

    Special Clermont County session Aug. 14 on Milford and FC Cincinnati plans

    Proposed FC Cincinnati practice facility in Milford

    Batavia, Ohio – The Clermont County Board of Commissioners will hold a Special Session at 7 PM on Tuesday, Aug. 14, in the Board’s session room to review a development agreement and draft of the Clermont County Port Authority preliminary term sheet relating to the proposed FC Cincinnati practice facility in Milford.

    The Clermont County Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB), the City of Milford and FC Cincinnati will be asked to present the development agreement for the facility.

    The CVB, FC Cincinnati, and the City of Milford have asked the Board of County Commissioners to approve a 1% increase in the lodging tax for Clermont County, which would raise it from 6% to 7%. The City of Milford has asked that the additional revenue be used to help repay city securities that will be used for property acquisition.

    Commissioners said last year that before they voted on any increase in the lodging tax, they would hold a meeting to invite public input.

    Commissioners are not expected to vote on the lodging tax on Aug. 14.

    The County Administration Building is located at 101 E. Main St., Batavia. The Session Room is on the third floor.

    According to FC Cincinnati:

    FC Cincinnati has agreed to enter into an agreement, pending final local government approval, with the City of Milford, Clermont County, Clermont County Port Authority and Clermont County Ohio Convention and Visitors Bureau to develop a team training complex in Milford, Ohio.

    Located on Lila Ave., off Rt. 275 in Milford and on the site of the current Expressway Park softball complex and adjoining property, the FC Cincinnati training complex is expected to fully operational by July 2019 and all site work is expected to be completed by the end of 2019. The FCC first team will relocate to the complex in January 2019 and will utilize temporary team facilities until the training complex is completed later in the summer.



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  • Kaisich approves Disaster Relief Program for Clermont jurisdictions impacted by February storms

    Kaisich approves Disaster Relief Program for Clermont jurisdictions impacted by February storms

    Batavia, Ohio – The Clermont County Emergency Agency was notified on July 25 that Gov. John Kasich approved the implementation of the State Disaster Relief Program (SDRP) for local government agencies in Clermont County impacted by the Ohio River flood and tornado that occurred this past February.

    These jurisdictions have the potential to be reimbursed up to an estimated $943,000. Each eligible agency must submit a letter of intent to apply to the Ohio Emergency Management Agency, which is coordinating this effort, by Aug. 24. The Ohio EMA will then get funding approval from the State Controlling Board, which meets on Sept. 10, before distributing any funds.

    These expenses represent local government outlays during the flood and tornado, including debris removal, life-saving emergency protective measures, and the repair, replacement, or restoration of disaster-damaged publicly-owned facilities. This funding is available to the local political subdivisions and non-profit organizations that participated in the damage assessment process.

    The jurisdictions and potential reimbursement amounts are:

    Batavia Township – $104,000

    Clermont County Engineer – $266,139.63

    Clermont County Sheriff – $9,237.95

    Washington Township – $58,719.40

    Village of New Richmond – $124,811.80

    Clermont County Commissioners – $11,351.34

    Franklin Township – $246,277.44

    Monroe Township – $18,081.46

    Pierce Township – $44,601.78

    Village of Moscow – $30,000

    Clermont Municipal Court – $5,089

    Clermont County Park District – $3,500

    Adams-Clermont Solid Waste District – $21,000

    Countywide Total                                            $942,809.80

    Previously, these Clermont County jurisdictions had submitted an application to the Federal Emergency Management Agency for disaster relief through its Public Assistance Program. FEMA denied certain expenses that it considered ineligible as FEMA was unable to determine that the damage was caused specifically during the February storms.

    Under the SDRP, the state will reimburse 75% of eligible expenses. Each government agency will be responsible for the balance of the expenses.



  • OhioMeansJobs/Clermont County will open at a new location on July 2

    OhioMeansJobs/Clermont County will open at a new location on July 2

    Batavia, Ohio – OhioMeansJobs/Clermont County will open at a new location at the Clermont County Family Support Center, 2400 Clermont Center Drive, Batavia, on Monday, July 2. Its last day at its current location at756 Cincinnati-Batavia Pike,behind Eastgate Mall, is Monday, June 25.

    OhioMeansJobs/Clermont, which provides services to both job seekers and employers, will reinvest the money it will be saving in overhead costs, such as leasing the current location, toward services for its customers, said Ted Groman, Assistant Director, Clermont County Job & Family Services. It has been at the Batavia Pike location for 15 years.

    During the move, staff members can still be reached through the general phone number, 513.943.3000.

    OhioMeanJobs/Clermont’s partners will also be moving. These include Greater Cincinnati Behavioral Health Services, Easter Seals Tristate, Vantage, Clermont County Probation, and Ohio Department of Job & Family Services.

    Off-site partnerships include the University of Cincinnati-Clermont, Grant Vocational, Great Oaks, Adult Basic Literacy Education, the Literacy Council of Clermont and Brown County, and the Clermont County Chamber of Commerce.

    “We look forward to serving customers in our new location,” Groman said. OMJ’s hours will be 8 AM – 4:30 PM Monday-Friday. Its office is on the 2ndfloor.



  • Overdose deaths decline for 2nd straight year in Clermont County

    Overdose deaths decline for 2nd straight year in Clermont County

    Batavis, Ohio – Deaths due to drug overdoses declined for the second straight year in Clermont County, according to the Clermont County Coroner’s Office.

    In 2017 76 deaths were caused by accidental drug overdoses.

    In 2017, the Coroner’s Office, under the direction of Dr. Brian Treon, ruled that 76 deaths were caused by accidental drug overdoses. This compared to 83 in 2016, and 94 in 2015 – the highest number since Clermont County began to see the effects of increased opioid use in the late 2000s.

    “We are encouraged by these numbers,” said Karen Scherra, the director of the Clermont County Mental Health & Recovery Board (MHRB). “These numbers indicate that the comprehensive measures we as a county have taken to address this issue are working.” The MHRB, the county hub in the fight against opioid addiction, is the lead organization in Clermont County’s Opiate Task Force, a collaborative that began in 2013 to address the opioid crisis in the county.

    In 2017, more medication-assisted treatment and other kinds of treatment became available to more people suffering from substance abuse disorder, Scherra said. In 2017, MHRB spent over $1.9 million on addiction treatment services.

    Other advances in 2017 included more Quick Response Teams.

    Other advances in 2017 included more Quick Response Teams, which go to the homes of those who have survived overdoses to connect them to recovery resources; and more police/fire/EMS departments carrying Narcan, which can reverse overdoses.

    In addition, a long-term recovery home for men was opened in 2017 in Clermont County. MHRB is now working on funding to open a similar home for women. Clermont County also opened a women’s wing in the Community Alternative Sentencing Center. This jail alternative connects clients with multiple treatment options.

    Funding for these initiatives are provided through a combination of MHRB levy funds, federal and state grants.

    “In response to the rise in drug overdose deaths, we created an Overdose Death Review Committee in 2014,” said Public Health Commissioner Julianne Nesbit.

    Clermont County Public Health, a member of the Opiate Task Force, is also on the forefront of the opioid battle. “In response to the rise in drug overdose deaths, we created an Overdose Death Review Committee in 2014,” said Public Health Commissioner Julianne Nesbit. “We look at aggregate level data to see if there are any trends that we can address to help reduce future deaths in the community.

    “Since we first saw the increase in drug overdose deaths, we have had a full-time Injury Prevention Coordinator who works to educate the community and work with our partners on the drug epidemic.”

    In March, Hamilton County reported that overdose deaths for 2017 had increased 31 percent over the previous year to 529. Butler County reported a 20% increase to 232.

    More information on Clermont County’s Opiate Task Force can be found on its website, www.getcleannowClermont.org.

    For more information, contact MHRB Executive Director Karen Scherra, kscherra@ccmhrb.org, 513.732.5407.



  • OhioMeansJobs/Clermont is moving

    OhioMeansJobs/Clermont is moving

    The last day to visit OhioMeansJobs/Clermont at its current Cincinnati Old SR 74/Batavia Pike location is June 22.

    The staff is moving to 2400 Clermont Center Drive, Batavia 45103, and will be open for regular business on Monday, July 2. OMJ’s phone number is not changing. If you need to reach an OMJ staff person during the week of the move, call 513.943.3000 or call them directly and leave a message.



  • Clermont’s annual motor vehicle registration fee increases by $5

    Clermont’s annual motor vehicle registration fee increases by $5

    Clermont County Commissioners on May 23 approved a $5 increase to the annual motor vehicle registration fee for County residents. It will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2019, and will fund the county’s road improvement program.



  • 56th Annual Frontier Days Parade and Festival FREE Family Event

    56th Annual Frontier Days Parade and Festival FREE Family Event

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    May 31 – June 3

    Riverside Park American Legion Ground and Riverside Park, 450 Victor Stier Dr, Milford, Ohio 45150

    The City of Milford will be celebrating with Frontier Days Inc. the 56th Annual Frontier Days Parade and Festival May 31 through June 3. The festival is located along the banks of the Little Miami River.

    The Frontier Days Committee is excited to bring back Milford’s hometown parade and festival that has been taking place for 56 years. This is one of Clermont County’s oldest parades.

    This year’s Grand Marshal is Milford Head Football Coach, Tom Grippa. This year’s parade theme is “Fly Like An Eagle”.  The Parade begins at 746 Lila Ave and ends at Main and Locust Street in Historic Milford. Cash Prizes for Float entries. Best Themed and Judges Choice. 

    The Festival will have Live Music each night from 8-12 PM, featuring The Mondays on Thursday, Nick Netherton on Friday, and Naked Karate Girls on Saturday. 

    The ever popular, Frontier Days Annual Frog Jumping Contest, will take Saturday at 1:30 PM sponsored by All About Kids, Wards Corner. Cash prizes for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place.  And returning this year will be the Decorated Bike Parade on Sunday. Prizes will be awarded.

    Please join us for lots of great food, live music and rides. For more information please visit www.frontierdaysmilford.com or on Facebook.

    Schedule of Events

    Frontier Days Parade

    Directions

  • A Letter to Rob Portman from the Grief-Stricken

    A Letter to Rob Portman from the Grief-Stricken

    Dear Senator Rob Portman:

     get to decide whether it is appropriate to play Bruno Mars at my daughter’s funeral.

     get to decide if I should bury my son in his soccer jersey.

    make the call about which organs my wife would want me to donate after she has been declared brain dead.

    tell my four-year-old niece why her beloved uncle won’t be coming to her birthday party.

    decide which meds are best to address the PTSD the librarian who held a dying child now suffers from.

    figure out what order the caskets should come into the shared church of the five victims whose funerals will be held there.

    decide if the cost of metal detectors at my child’s middle school is justified as it is now known there are none.

    donate blood to save my critically-injured grandson’s life.

    .

    Sincerely,
    Dianne Decker Bomar

     

     

     


    Dianne Decker Bomar is a resident of Miami Township, Clermont County, Ohio


     

  • Clermont Law Library offers resources for all

    Clermont Law Library offers resources for all

    Law librarians Debbie Smith, left, and Kim Crowthers 

    Batavia, Ohio – Tucked into a wing of the Clermont County Common Pleas Courthouse is the Law Library. Its 15,000 legal volumes and online resources are the domain of Director Kim Crowthers and library assistant Debbie Smith.

    Not that Crowthers thinks of it as her domain. She is the first to tell you that she and Smith are there to serve their constituents – which include county government and all other jurisdictions within Clermont County – cities, villages and townships – that need legal resources and services. As well as, of course, judges, magistrates, prosecutors and public defenders. And, not least, the public.

    “We provide equal access to justice,” Crowthers says.

    “We provide equal access to justice,” Crowthers says. “We provide resources to both public defenders, whose clients are not able to afford an attorney, and the Prosecutor’s Office, allowing for more equal footing. And we provide resources to people who may technically be able to afford an attorney, but in reality can’t.”

    The Ohio Revised Code (ORC) requires that every county have a law library, although in small counties it may only be a shelf or two of books. They are typically found at the county courthouse, to ensure easy access for judges, magistrates and lawyers. A law passed in 2010 required that law libraries permit access to the public, but Crowthers said that was a longstanding practice in Clermont County.

    The library offers small conference rooms, which are frequently used by public defenders meeting with their clients. Its large conference room often is used for depositions, and for other meetings of a legal nature. “There is total privacy and confidentiality in this room,” she said. “There are no cameras or microphones.”

    Helping people

    Crowthers and Smith are frequently on the phone or helping people face-to-face, answering questions and directing people to the right place.

    “We get a lot of questions from local attorneys  – can you send this specific citation to me, or provide this particular resource,” she said. “Judges will call us or come in if they need to consult the ORC or the rules of professional conduct; or if they need to check on civil or criminal procedures or Ohio jury instructions.”

    Richard P. Ferenc, Administrative Judge of Common Pleas Court, acknowledges that the Law Library is crucial to the courts in Clermont County. “For over 80 years the Clermont County Law Library has been an integral partner in our county’s justice system,” he said. “It is the only county library that provides the critical legal resources judges, attorneys, and citizens require to make informed and thorough decisions.

    “The library is able to provide these resources and services at a cost significantly lower than could any judge individually,” Judge Ferenc added. “As there are nine judges in the county that the library serves, the savings are indeed substantial.”

    The library offers self-help books and legal forms.

    As for the general public, the library offers self-help books and legal forms. “We get requests for power of attorney, health care power of attorney, expungement forms. We frequently get requests for specific motions, such as a motion for discovery,” Crowthers said. She and Smith are just as eager to help the public as they are the courts. “We can’t give advice, but we can point them in the right direction,” she said.

    The staff prides itself on its user friendliness – in fact, that is in its mission statement. “I have a service-oriented heart,” Crowthers says. “I love being able to help people in as many ways as possible. I fell into the right job.”

    Crowthers has worked at the Law Library for 30 years, having begun there part-time after leaving an unsatisfying job in banking. She learned under the tutelage of longtime director Carol Suhre, who retired late last year. Carol, said Judge Ferenc, transformed the library “from what one might call a ‘mom and pop’ operation into a state-of-the-art operation.”

    Crowthers became director at the end of 2017, when Suhre retired.

    Smith and Crowthers are just as eager to help the public as they are the courts.

    Funded by fees, fines

    The county Law Library is funded through a percentage of traffic fines and bond forfeiture fees paid to the county. Funding has declined over the years, Crowthers said, beginning during the recession. The operation is lean; staffing has gone from three to two. The 2018 budget is approximately $300,000, and of that, $170,000 is for legal resources.

    All resources in the library are free to the courts and government staff, including copy and faxing services. The library does charge the public and outside attorneys for copy and fax services – although there is no charge for access to the library and its resources.

    Even after 30 years, Crowthers’ dedication and enthusiasm for her job – and the mission of the Law Library – has not waned. “I have no doubt that Kim will continue to maintain the outstanding resources and services to the justice system that has become the hallmark of this most important county library,” Judge Ferenc said.

    The Clermont County Law Library is open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. It is located at Common Pleas Courthouse, 270 E. Main St., Batavia. Phone: 513.732.7109.



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