Tag: Hannah Roberts Gwynne

  • OHSAA Announces Tigers will play Little Miami in 1st-round of State Tournament

    OHSAA Announces Tigers will play Little Miami in 1st-round of State Tournament

    by Cassie Mattia

    Loveland, Ohio – The 2020 Ohio High School Athletic Association Football postseason is finally here! On October 1st, OHSAA announced the regional brackets for the football playoffs, which currently includes 648 schools.

    During a normal OHSAA Football season, 224 schools typically qualify for the playoffs, with eight schools from each of 28 regions earning a bid through the OHSAA’s Harbin computer ratings system. This season the Harbin system will not be used. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the playoffs will begin in Week 7 (Oct. 9-10) and all teams could potentially opt-in.

    The Loveland Tigers will travel to Little Miami High School this Friday, October 9. Game time is 7 PM. Little Miami has a 15 seed and Loveland is seeded 18.

    The Panthers beat the Tigers in Tiger Stadium on September 18th, 55-20.

    The Tigers lost at Kings last Friday night 63-32 and play the last game of their announced schedule on Friday, October 16th at Milford. All teams have the option of playing more games if or when they are eliminated from the State Tournament. The Milford game scenario would change depending on tournament first-round game results.

    Below is the Region 8 Bracket for Div II. (Right-Click the Bracket and open in a new tab or window for a larger view)

    (Continue reading about the State Tournament below the Bracket…)

    The head coaches in each region voted to determine the seeding in their region. OHSAA placed teams in particular brackets according to their seeds. In most regions, the higher seeds will have a first-round bye.

    All playoff tickets will be sold online through www.OHSAA.org/tickets and will be available starting Tuesday, October 6.

    Divisions, I, II, III, and VII will play on Friday nights. Divisions IV, V, and VI will play on Saturday nights. All games will kick-off at 7 p.m.

    For each game through at least the regional semifinals, the higher seeded team will have the first opportunity to host the game. If the higher-seeded team cannot host, the other team will host the game. The OHSAA will determine sites for the regional finals, state semifinals, and state championships. If a team is unable to play a playoff game on the assigned day according to the bracket, its opponent will advance on the bracket.

    Schools eliminated from the playoffs or that chose not to enter have the option to schedule additional regular-season contests through Saturday, November 14 (maximum of 10 regular season contests permitted).

    All sports in Ohio – at all levels – are under the direction of the latest Ohio Department of Health order, which was signed on August 19th by Governor DeWine. The order and additional guidance from the ODH and OHSAA are posted at:https://www.ohsaa.org/Home/OHSAA-COVID-19-Correspondence

    STATE CHAMPIONSHIP GAMES

    The Division I State Championship Game will be played Friday, November 13th. The specific dates and times for the state championship games in Divisions II through VII will be announced at a later date but will be played within the November 19th-22nd date range. Sites will be announced at a later date, as well, but it is unlikely that all seven games will be played at the same venue according to the OHSAA. There will be no state championship games that happen simultaneously, as each game will have its own time slot

    Spectrum News 1 will be the official television partner of the OHSAA and will select several playoff games each weekend to televise live. Only Spectrum can provide live television coverage of the OHSAA Football Playoff Games. All other television broadcasts can start at 10 P.M. on the same day as the game. Live video streaming will be permitted for games not selected by Spectrum News 1 at rates set by the OHSAA.


    For more of your Loveland Sports 411 With Me, Cassie Mattia, stay tuned!

  • [Photo Album] Loveland Men’s Soccer Team shuts-out Moeller

    [Photo Album] Loveland Men’s Soccer Team shuts-out Moeller

    by Cassie Mattia

    Loveland, Ohio – Victory is ours! The Moeller Crusaders 1-1-2 in the Greater Catholic League, 2-3-3 overall traveled to Tiger Trail to face the Loveland Men’s Soccer Team on Thursday where the Tigers captured a win with a 0-4 shut-out!

    Many of the Tigers contributed to the victory as Zach McHenry scored on a penalty kick with 19 minutes left in the 1st half, Kees Ciric scored twice and Helge Harris scored once in the 2nd half.

    The win against Moeller took the Tiger’s record to 8-1-2 (4-1-0 in the ECC). Loveland was scheduled to play Winton Woods on Saturday however because there was a shortage in officials the game was not played.

    Currently, in the ECC in regards to Men’s Soccer Walnut Hills is undefeated with 4 victories and both Anderson and Turpin are 5-1. Loveland is sitting in 4th place in the ECC out of 10 teams.

    On Tuesday the Tigers will host Anderson who is 8-2-2 overall (5-1-0 in the ECC) and on Thursday, September 15th Loveland will travel to Lebanon (0-5-0 in the ECC, 3-8-1 overall) to play another ECC match. 

    The following is the Southwest Ohio D1 Men’s Soccer poll results for Week 7:

    Please enjoy the Tiger photo compilation below that Loveland Magazine’s very own David Miller put together from the Loveland Men’s Soccer Team’s big win against Moeller!

    These photos are © protected and all rights reserved. They can be purchased by contacting lovelandmagazine@cinci.rr.com.

    Want more Tiger sports updates?! Stay tuned to the Loveland Sports 411 With Me, Cassie Mattia!

  • School District delays return to full in-person learning for PK-4 students

    School District delays return to full in-person learning for PK-4 students

    Loveland, Ohio – After learning from Loveland Magazine of the number of COVID 19 cases at the Loveland Health Care Center (Cumulative cases of COVID 19 at Loveland Health Care go from 60 to 85) and citing that Hamilton and Clermont Counties have returned to the RED “Very High Exposure and Spread” level of the Ohio Public Health Advisory System the Loveland School District has just announced that the return to a full in-person learning schedule for PK-4 students will be delayed. They have decided to “temporarily pause any changes and remain on the blended learning model for now for all students, to allow us additional time to evaluate.”

    The Board of Education had previously approved (September 22) that PK-4 grades would return on Monday, October 5 to a full in-person learning schedule. (Board approves schedule for 5-day full capacity learning)

    “Transportation will not change at any grade level including grades 5-8 as has been communicated this week. Next week will operate like this week,” the District said in a release.

    The District also said, “The time is not right to take a step toward bringing more students together. Maintaining the schedule that our families, students and teachers have been operating under will allow us to maintain student and staff safety while we await more data.”

    The District said in a release. “After the state updates their COVID-19 data on Thursday of next week, a decision will be made about our PK-4 and grades 5-8 students and whether to continue on blended learning or transition to full capacity (5-day) in-person for those grades beginning Monday, October 12,” the release also said.

    “We have 11 red counties, which is more than we’ve seen at any point in September,” said Governor DeWine on Thursday. “Although many Ohioans are working hard to keep this virus in check, unfortunately, we are seeing a rebound in some areas of the state. This pandemic isn’t over, so please continue to stay home if you’re sick, wear a mask when you’re out, and keep at least six feet between you and those outside of your household.”

    On Thursday DeWine also announced:

    There are 155,314 confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 in Ohio and 4,817 confirmed and probable COVID-19 deaths. A total of 15,606 people have been hospitalized, including 3,297 admissions to intensive care units. In-depth data can be accessed by visiting coronavirus.ohio.gov

    There is no change for the Loveland Remote Learning Academy.

    Below is the timeline to return to full capacity (5-day) in-person previously approved (September 22) and is apparently completely put on pause after today’s announcement:


  • Power company says utility commission has no power to investigate role in bailout scandal

    Power company says utility commission has no power to investigate role in bailout scandal

    An Akron-based utility company that figures prominently in a massive nuclear bailout scandal is saying that state regulators don’t have the authority to investigate whether the company improperly financed the bailout effort.

    Over the past week, FirstEnergy Corp. has filed two documents with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio saying that the commission and the state’s consumer representative don’t have standing to investigate whether FirstEnergy and affiliated companies improperly used ratepayer money in what has been called the largest bribery scandal in state history. 

    Marty Schladen

    Marty Schladen has been a reporter for decades, working in Indiana, Texas and other places before returning to his native Ohio to work at The Columbus Dispatch in 2017. He’s won state and national journalism awards for investigations into utility regulation, public corruption, the environment, prescription drug spending and other matters.

    Federal prosecutors say $60 million in utility money was used to pass a $1.3 billion nuclear bailout into law. But FirstEnergy says the utility commission lacks the authority to investigate whether it improperly used ratepayer funds in the affair.

    “The commission lacks any statutory basis to conduct an investigation of FirstEnergy Corp. with respect to the alleged expenditures or to order FirstEnergy Corp. to show cause that it has not violated Ohio utility law,” FirstEnegy said in a Sept. 23 filing. 

    It was in response to an order by the utility commission that it show “that the costs of any political or charitable spending in support of (the bailout bill), or the subsequent referendum effort, were not included, directly or indirectly, in any rates or charges paid by ratepayers in this state.” 

    Federal prosecutors in July charged then-House Speaker Larry Householder and four associates with using $60 million from FirstEnergy and related interests in a scheme to make Householder speaker and pass a $1.3 bailout of two failing nuclear plants owned by FirstEnergy Solutions, a successor company to FirstEnergy Corp.

    The effort was successful, although there is an effort in the legislature to repeal it before the charge hits ratepayers’ bills on Jan. 1.

    FirstEnergy and associated companies haven’t been charged, but in announcing criminal charges against Householder, U.S. Attorney David M. DeVillers stressed that the investigation was far from over. An affidavit supporting the criminal complaint also refers repeatedly to “Company A,” or FirstEnergy, and it makes reference to its CEO.

    In addition, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost last week filed a civil suit that names FirstEnergy, a subsidiary and its successors — as well as Householder and his associates — as defendants.

    The Ohio Consumers’ Counsel, the state’s official consumer representative in utility matters, has asked for an independent investigation into whether FirstEnergy improperly used ratepayer funds in the dark-money scheme to pass House Bill 6, the bailout legislation. The agency was disappointed when the utilities commission only directed the company to show that it had not acted improperly.

    But even that is too much for FirstEnergy.

    In documents filed on Monday with the utility commission, it said it was legally entitled to a reasonable profit. The company also seemed to argue that what it did with much of its money was nobody’s business.

    “Beyond the investment necessary to provide adequate service, a public utility may spend its funds in the best interests of the utility as determined by its management.,” the company argued, later adding, “To the extent the Companies use a portion of their revenues to make political or charitable contributions, this is not improper or illegal.”

  • Section of Price Road will close Oct. 12 through Nov. 6

    Section of Price Road will close Oct. 12 through Nov. 6

    Miami Township, Ohio – Landslide repairs will require the closure of Price Road in Miami Township according to the Clermont County Engineer.

    The closure is located between 5970 and 6040 Price Road.

    The road will be closed to through traffic on Monday, October 12, through Friday, November 6.

    Right-click to open map in a new tab or window to see a larger view. The length of the detour is a little over 8-miles.

  • Cumulative cases of COVID 19 at Loveland Health Care go from 60 to 85

    Cumulative cases of COVID 19 at Loveland Health Care go from 60 to 85

    Loveland, Ohio – The Ohio Department of Health released new data for COVID 19 cases at the Loveland Health Care Center (LHCC) today revealing the total cumulative cases of COVID 19 at LHCC went from 60 to 85 in the past week. The health department releases data each Wednesday.

    The numbers Loveland Magazine reported yesterday which was from the previous week’s report was 37 residents and 11 staff members with COVID 19 at LHCC. The cumulative case report revealed 39 residents and 21 staff members have had the virus. That was a total 60 of cumulative cases.

    Today’s report is 4 residents and 0 staff members with COVID 19 at LHCC, however, today’s cumulative case report reveals 64 residents and 21 staff members have had the virus. That total is 85 cumulative cases.

    LHCC is a 99-bed nursing home located at 501 North Second Street (St. Rt. 48) in Loveland.

    BACKGROUND

  • Media statement from the Loveland Health Care Center about COVID 19 “crisis”

    Media statement from the Loveland Health Care Center about COVID 19 “crisis”

    We know that this crisis is particularly challenging for our residents and their families. – Greg Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – After Loveland Magazine learned of the high number of COVID 19 cases at the Loveland Health Care Center, their spokesperson Greg Miller with Health Care Management Group said he would send an email response to our questions. (60 cases of COVID 19 at Loveland Health Care Center)

    Miller responded by sending this statement to Loveland Magazine this evening at 8:01 PM.


    Loveland Health Care Center

    MEDIA STATEMENT

    September 29, 2020

    Our facility appreciates the interest in the COVID-19 status of our residents. We can confirm that we do have staff and/or residents who have tested positive, or who are deemed positive, for COVID-19.

    Please note that out of respect to those impacted and, in accordance with privacy laws, we will not be sharing any details regarding the positive cases publicly.

    When these cases first developed, we notified our residents and their families, and we immediately involved the appropriate authorities. We continue to work with our local and state departments of health to monitor our active cases, and we have a plan in place to try to limit additional exposures. Our plan includes continuing our no visitor policy, enhanced health screening of residents and staff, and other measures informed by guidance from federal agencies, such as the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). New cases are reported to residents, families and local and federal agencies as required by law. 

    We know that this crisis is particularly challenging for our residents and their families. We empathize with their feelings of separation and vulnerability, and we want to thank them for their ongoing support and trust. The positive energy they provide to us every day is invaluable.

    We also want to thank and acknowledge our heroic staff. While many people are staying home during this crisis, our staff show up every day to do the essential work of caring for our vulnerable residents with dedication and purpose for the greater good.

    Thank you as well to our broader community for your concern for the well-being of our residents and our staff. It means so much to us to have the backing of our community at this difficult time.


    Here are the questions posed to Miller earlier this afternoon:

    How many patients are normally at LHCC? (bed count?)

    How many staff are normally at LHCC?

    The stats from the Ohio Department of Health from the last reporting date (9/23/20)are – 37 residents and 11 staff members with COVID 19. The cumulative case report reveals 39 residents and 21 staff members.

    • Are those the current numbers?

    • Has the count increased since that report (9/23/20)?

    • Can you give an update on the numbers as of today?

    • Can you tell us how you or LHCC reports cases? Who do you report to? Ohio Department of Health? Hamilton County Health? Warren County Health? Other?

    • Have there been deaths from COVID 19 among residents or staff?

    • It is our understanding that Ohio has eased visiting restrictions for Ohio nursing homes. Have you eased or otherwise changed visiting protocol at LHCC in light of the State’s new orders or the case count at LHCC?

    • Are you currently accepting new residents?


  • Heidi Weber is excited for her 3rd graders and the amazing skills they are learning!

    Heidi Weber is excited for her 3rd graders and the amazing skills they are learning!

    Provided Photo

    by Heidi Weber

    Hello! I am responding to your request to hear from teachers about Loveland Online learning. (Tell Us: How is remote learning going in the Loveland District)

    I am teaching 3rd grade through our online academy. I want to share that I am having a great deal of success because of the training opportunities made available through the district instructional technology coaches for years. While these coaches were lost due to cuts from the levy failure, our coaches offered training in many tech skills including the use of Google tools. They even offered support becoming certified as a Level 1 Google educator.

    I was able to take advantage of the training offered by the district for years and I earned this certification. The training helped me be highly skilled in the use of Google tools and applications in my classroom prior to COVID. This has made online teaching smoother for myself and my students. My skill with the tools has helped me teach these skills to my students and after 4 weeks, they are confident and capable learners!

    I am also supporting several children on IEPs. Between myself, an intervention specialist, and one of our paraprofessionals working remotely, my students have access to an adult all day long. I’ve created a schedule that links every meet into it for ease of access for families. I believe that all of my learners are thriving because technology lets me adapt for their needs in many ways such as providing audio recordings of directions or videos that students can pause or review again. You can’t put a live teacher on pause or listen again! So in many ways, I find the environment more supportive.

    It has been about re-imagining what we do as educators. There hasn’t been anything that I would have done in person that I haven’t figured out how to adapt to remote learning.

    My goal has been for students to be independent so that all I need parents to do is make sure there is a strong solid connection and devices that work at home (and if they don’t, we work with the district to help figure that too). If a child struggles with a task, then I figure out how to adapt it or support them more. I wouldn’t expect a parent to come to school and ‘teach’ their child under normal circumstances, so why would I ask them to ‘teach’ at home?

    I am excited for my 3rd graders and the amazing skills we are learning! I think we are ROCKING it!

    Sincerely,

    Heidi Weber


  • Ohio schools ask state supreme court to support armed personnel

    Ohio schools ask state supreme court to support armed personnel

    Pictured is the Thomas J. Moyer Ohio Judicial Center where the Ohio Supreme Court meets. Photo courtesy Wikimedia Commons..

    Arguing for their right to arm school personnel, 17 schools from 11 counties in Ohio asked the Ohio Supreme Court to allow them to continue using firearms as an option for student safety.

    Susan TebbenSusan Tebben is an award-winning journalist with a decade of experience covering Ohio news, including courts and crime, Appalachian social issues, government, education, diversity and culture. She has worked for The Newark Advocate, The Glasgow Daily Times, The Athens Messenger, and WOUB Public Media. She has also had work featured on National Public Radio.

    The schools are asking for the state’s highest court to reverse an appeals court decision that said state law did not allow boards of education to allow armed personnel without training on the same level as police and security officers.

    Four of the schools came from Shelby County, two each represented Hardin and Montgomery counties, and one district each from Tuscarawas, Williams, Adams, Morgan, Noble, Coshocton and Portage counties were listed on a brief to the court.

    Boards of education or governing boards for all but one of the districts have authorized certain staff members to carry weapons within school zones as long as they have concealed handgun licenses.

    One school, Shelby County’s Jackson Center Local Schools, “is currently taking steps in the process of considering the authorization of staff members to become part of its school safety team and to carry a weapon into a school safety zone,” according to court documents.

    The school districts argue that Ohio Revised Code allows anyone to carry a firearm into a school safety zone with the written authorization from the board of education. But they argue, just as Madison Local Schools and Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost argued, the law does not require teachers or anyone other than police and security personnel to be trained to the standard of the Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy (OPOTA).

    “By its plain terms, this would apply to law enforcement but not to administrators, teachers, or support staff authorized to carry a firearm in a school safety zone,” the districts wrote in their brief to the court.

    The school representatives urged the court to recognize that decisions about student safety “are best left to locally-elected boards of education.”

    The schools said giving board of education the right to govern in varying ways is “simply federalism,” calling boards “laboratories of democracy.”

    Furthering that argument, the schools said boards were entrusted by the state and the legislature to “serve as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of (Ohio),” quoting a U.S. Supreme Court decision in an unrelated case.

    Photo by Dan Galvani Sommavilla from Pexels

    They criticized the 12th District Court of Appeals decision in the case, saying the court took away the meaning of the Ohio law regarding firearms allowances in schools, and made “arming staff entirely impractical.”

    “As a result of the 12th District’s decision, if an Ohio school district desires to arm any administrator, teacher, or support staff, the district is left with two options: (1) hire a police officer to teach English; or (2) send an algebra teacher to the police academy,” the brief from the districts stated.

    The schools went so far as to say schools will be “less safe” if the supreme court agrees with the 12th District’s decision, because of the varying amount of resources from school to school. Hiring more school resource officers isn’t always in the budget, they wrote.

    They estimate a school resource officer’s salary to be $50,000 per year. They also say sending a school employee to FASTER, a training given by pro-gun lobby Buckeye Firearms Association and marketed specifically to teachers and school staff, costs “a couple thousand dollars.”

    “Unsurprisingly, the resource discrepancy between districts in Ohio is largely exacerbated between larger, suburban and urban districts and smaller, rural districts,” the brief states. “This money gap, though, has a direct impact on the ability of a school district to safely protect its students and staff.”

    The FASTER program is later called the state’s and country’s “preeminent active school shooter training program” more than once, and the districts say nearly 200 school districts in Ohio have been sent to it. The attorney writing on behalf of the districts, Jonathan Fox, is named as Buckeye Firearms Association member in a story on the BFA website.

    The court case is running parallel to proposed legislation that recently passed a state Senate committee regarding armed school personnel