Tag: local news

  • Dirty Air Alert for today in Loveland

    Dirty Air Alert for today in Loveland

    Loveland, Ohio – The Southwest Ohio Air Quality Agency has issued an Air Quality Alert for the Loveland Area, including Butler, Clermont, Hamilton and Warren counties in Ohio and Boone, Campbell and Kenton counties in Kentucky.

    The air quality index is predicted to be 105 which is “Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups”.

    Active children and adults, and people with respiratory diseases, such as asthma, should be avoiding all outdoor exertion; everyone else, especially children, should limit outdoor exertion.

    You can track the air quality in real-time by clicking the image below.

    Do Your Share! Take these precautions:

    • Take the bus, carpool, bike or walk instead of driving
    • Refuel your vehicle after 8 p.m.; do not top off when refueling and tighten the gas cap
    • Avoid idling your vehicle
    • Combine trips or eliminate unnecessary vehicle trips
    • Keep your vehicle maintained with properly inflated tires and timely oil changes
    • Avoid use of gasoline-powered lawn equipment on Air Quality Alert days
    • Avoid use of oil-based paints and stains on Air Quality Alert days
    • Never burn leaves or other yard trimmings
    • Always burn clean, seasoned wood in outdoor fire pits, fireplaces and wood stoves
    • Do not use fire pits or fireplaces for non-essential home heating on Air Quality Alert days
    • Conserve electricity

    For more information: With extreme heat expected we’ve reloaded our Ozone Alert widget to…

  • Special School Board meeting tomorrow – Vote scheduled on Operating Levy

    Special School Board meeting tomorrow – Vote scheduled on Operating Levy

    NOTICE FROM THE LOVELAND SCHOOL DISTRICT:

    “Due to unforeseen circumstances, the Tuesday, June 14, 2022 business meeting of the Loveland City School District Board of Education has been canceled. The new meeting date is Thursday, June 16, 2022, at 6 pm in the Loveland Intermediate School Media Center.”

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland Board of Education announced at its March 22 Regular Session that it would have a Special Meeting on June 14, at 6 PM in the Loveland Middle/Intermediate School Media Center.

    The agenda for this rescheduled regular meeting is available on BoardDocs.

    The Board may authorize a Resolution of Necessity to Request Hamilton County Auditor Certification of projected Revenues for a 4.90 Mill Levy for the General Election on November 8.

    Here is the resolution the Board will consider:

  • With extreme heat expected we’ve reloaded our Ozone Alert widget to homepage

    With extreme heat expected we’ve reloaded our Ozone Alert widget to homepage

    Loveland, Ohio – With sunny skies and temperatures expected to be in the mid-90s Tuesday through Thursday and likely associated dangerous levels of ground-level ozone (Smog), we’ve once again loaded our Ozone Alert widget to our homepage.

    Loveland Magazine will continue providing our readers with information when air pollution alerts are issued for our area and this widget on our home page will allow readers the real-time information they need.

    When alerts are issued for our local area we will provide tips you can use to do your share to avoid adding to the dangerous levels of Ozone both at home and at work.

    Click below to give the widget a spin today:

    Active hildren and the elderly are especially affected by high levels of Ozone that causes respiratory harm.

    Ozone worsens asthma and COPD, and can cause early death from both short-term and long-term exposure.

    Ozone can cause cardiovascular harm (e.g., heart attacks, strokes, heart disease, congestive heart failure) and may cause harm to the central nervous system. It may also cause reproductive and developmental harm.

    Because children are so active during the Summer months and their lungs are still developing they are at particular risk when Ozone levels are elevated.

    From the American Lung Association

    It may be hard to imagine that pollution could be invisible, but ozone begins that way. As ozone concentrates and mixes with other pollutants, we often call it by its older, more common name—smog. It is currently one of the least well-controlled pollutants in the United States.1 And it is also one of the most dangerous.

    Scientists have studied the effects of ozone on health for decades. Hundreds of studies have confirmed that ozone harms people at levels currently found in the United States. In the last decade, we have learned that it can also be deadly.https://www.youtube.com/embed/7c2w1eATkro?rel=0

    Breathing in ozone is like getting a sunburn on your lungs.

    What Is Ozone?

    ozone chart

    Ozone (O3) is a gas molecule composed of three oxygen atoms. Often called “smog,” ozone is harmful to breathe. Ozone aggressively attacks lung tissue by reacting chemically with it. When ozone is present, there are other harmful pollutants created by the same processes that make ozone.

    The ozone layer found high in the upper atmosphere (the stratosphere) shields us from much of the sun’s ultraviolet radiation. However, ozone air pollution at ground level where we can breathe it (in the troposphere) causes serious health problems.

    Where Does Ozone Come From?

    Ozone develops in the atmosphere from gases that come out of tailpipes, smokestacks and many other sources. When these gases come in contact with sunlight, they react and form ozone smog.

    The essential raw ingredients for ozone are nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). They are produced primarily when fossil fuels like gasoline, oil or coal are burned or when some chemicals, like solvents, evaporate. NOx is emitted from power plants, motor vehicles and other sources of high-heat combustion. VOCs are emitted from motor vehicles, chemical plants, refineries, factories, gas stations, paint and other sources.2

    If the ingredients are present under the right conditions, they react to form ozone. Sunlight is key. And because the reaction takes place in the atmosphere, the ozone often shows up downwind of the sources of the original gases. In addition, winds can carry ozone far from where it formed, even internationally across borders and across the oceans.

    You may have wondered why “ozone action day” warnings are sometimes followed by recommendations to avoid activities such as mowing your lawn or driving your car. Lawn mower exhaust and gasoline vapors contain nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that are key to the formation of ozone in the presence of heat and sunlight.

    Who Is at Risk from Breathing Ozone?

    Anyone who spends time outdoors where ozone pollution levels are high may be at risk. Four groups of people are especially vulnerable to the effects of breathing ozone:

    • children and teens;3
    • anyone 65 and older;4
    • people with existing lung diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (also known as COPD, which includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis5; and
    • people who work or exercise outdoors.6

    In addition, some evidence suggests that other groups—including women, people who suffer from obesity and people with low incomes—may also face higher risk from ozone.7 More research is needed to confirm these findings.

    The impact on your health can depend on many factors, however. For example, the risks are greater if ozone levels are higher, if you are breathing faster because you’re working or exercising outdoors or if you spend more time outdoors.

    Again, the impact of even short-term exposure to ozone pollution on healthy adults was demonstrated in the Galveston lifeguard study. In addition to the harmful effects of particle pollution, lifeguards had greater obstruction of their airways at the end of the day when ozone levels were high.8

    How Ozone Pollution Harms Your Health

    Premature death. Breathing ozone can shorten your life. Strong evidence exists of the deadly impact of ozone from large studies conducted in cities across the U.S., in Europe and in Asia. Researchers repeatedly found that the risk of premature death increased with higher levels of ozone.9 Newer research has confirmed that ozone increased the risk of premature death even when other pollutants also are present.10

    Immediate breathing problems. Many areas in the United States produce enough ozone during the summer months to cause health problems that can be felt right away. Immediate problems—in addition to increased risk of premature death—include:

    • shortness of breath, wheezing and coughing;
    • asthma attacks;
    • increased risk of respiratory infections;
    • increased susceptibility to pulmonary inflammation; and
    • increased need for people with lung diseases, like asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), to receive medical treatment and to go to the hospital.3,4,5

    Long-term exposure risks. New studies warn of serious effects from breathing ozone over longer periods. With more long-term data, scientists are finding that long-term exposure—that is, for periods longer than eight hours, including days, months or years—may increase the risk of early death.

    • Examining the records from a long-term national database, researchers found a higher risk of death from respiratory diseases associated with increases in ozone.14
    • New York researchers looking at hospital records for children’s asthma found that the risk of admission to hospitals for asthma increased with chronic exposure to ozone. Younger children and children from low-income families were more likely than other children to need hospital admissions even during the same time periods.15
    • California researchers analyzing data from their long-term Southern California Children’s Health Study found that some children with certain genes were more likely to develop asthma as adolescents in response to the variations in ozone levels in their communities.16
    • Studies link lower birth weight and decreased lung function in newborns to ozone levels in their community.17 This research provides increasing evidence that ozone may harm newborns.

    Breathing other pollutants in the air may make your lungs more responsive to ozone—and breathing ozone may increase your body’s response to other pollutants. For example, research warns that breathing sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide—two pollutants common in the eastern U.S.—can make the lungs react more strongly than just breathing ozone alone. Breathing ozone may also increase the response to allergens in people with allergies. A large study published in 2009 found that children were more likely to suffer from hay fever and respiratory allergies when ozone and PM2.5 levels were high.18

    Research shows lower levels of ozone cause harm. EPA released their latest complete review of the current research on ozone pollution in February 2013.19 EPA had engaged a panel of expert scientists, the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, to help them assess the evidence that was brought together by EPA; in particular, they examined research published between 2006 and 2012. The experts on the committee and EPA concluded that ozone pollution posed multiple, serious threats to health. Their findings are highlighted in the box below. Based on that review, EPA strengthened the official limit on ozone, called the National Ambient Air Quality Standard, in 2015.

    However, new research provides evidence that ozone can cause serious harm even at much lower levels.  In a 2017 scientific paper, researchers provided further evidence in a nationwide study that older adults faced a higher risk of premature death even when levels of ozone pollution remained well below the current national standard.20

    EPA Concludes Ozone Pollution Poses Serious Health Threats (2013)

    • Causes respiratory harm (e.g., worsened asthma, worsened COPD, inflammation)
    • Likely to cause early death (both short-term and long-term exposure)
    • Likely to cause cardiovascular harm (e.g., heart attacks, strokes, heart disease, congestive heart failure)
    • May cause harm to the central nervous system
    • May cause reproductive and developmental harm

    —U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Integrated Science Assessment for Ozone and Related Photochemical Oxidants, 2013. EPA/600/R-10/076F.

  • Date change and “Deeply discounted” tickets available for HOMEARAMA

    Date change and “Deeply discounted” tickets available for HOMEARAMA

    Loveland, Ohio – The Besl, Baden & Christy Jones Team has “deeply discounted” tickets available for the 2022 Homerama Tour. Contact them HERE.

    The 59th annual HOMEARAMA has been rescheduled to Sept. 3-18, 2022. The show was previously scheduled for Aug. 6-21. 

    The full show, featuring six fully decorated and landscaped homes in a variety of architectural styles, will take place at the City of Loveland’s new ChimneyRidge subdivision. ChimneyRidge sits high on 26 wooded acres off Butterworth Road on the Warren County side of the city.

    For the latest show updates, visit https://www.cincyhomearama.com/

    In this LOVELAND MAGAZINE TV episode, Sue Besl Price talks specifically about the homes and sites available at Homerama’s ChimneyRidge development.

  • Local election workers tell secretary of state they can’t be ‘complicit in illegitimate elections’

    Local election workers tell secretary of state they can’t be ‘complicit in illegitimate elections’

    BY: SUSAN TEBBEN – Ohio Capital Journal

    A group of election precinct officials have sent a letter to the Ohio Secretary of State say they “cannot defend democracy” when the Ohio Redistricting Commission, including Secretary of State Frank LaRose, aren’t doing the same, they say.

    Election workers in 23 counties signed on to a letter asking the commission and LaRose to heed their warnings that the maps adopted by the commission and pushed along by a federal court are unconstitutional, and therefore would push precinct workers to be a part of elections “when the outcomes of those elections have already been predetermined by politicians who manipulated districts to prevent fair competition.”

    “As precinct election officials, we cannot in good faith participate in a primary election on August 2 if it proceeds with unconstitutionally gerrymandered districts, and we advise our fellow poll workers to not be made complicit in illegitimate elections,” the letter stated.

    The officials said they are continuing to collect signatures on the letter, and cite Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost in arguing more time exists for the General Assembly to change election dates and methods before the November general election.

    The Ohio Redistricting Commission has also been given a June 3 deadline by the Ohio Supreme Court to resubmit a legislative district plan, after finding the maps adopted invalid for the second time.

  • Brian Conatser will be Loveland High School’s New Assistant Principal

    Brian Conatser will be Loveland High School’s New Assistant Principal

    Loveland Magazine file photo

    Loveland, Ohio – Current Loveland High School District Director of Student Athletics Brian Conatser will move into the role of LHS Assistant Principal beginning in the 2022-2023 school year. Conatser will take over as Assistant Principal as Eric Fry moves to a similar position at Oak Hills High School. 

    “I am excited and grateful for the opportunity to serve Loveland City School District in a new capacity. We have an incredible student body, staff, and community, and I am very fortunate to have experienced this as a Loveland classroom teacher, coach, Athletic Director, and now as an Assistant Principal. I look forward to the new challenge and am thrilled to continue to be a part of an amazing district,” Conatser said.

    Conatser has served as the District Director of Student Athletics for four years. He was Loveland’s Assistant Director of Student Athletics for two years and spent 15 years as a science teacher and coach at Loveland and Sycamore High Schools. 

    A search will now begin for the next Athletic Director. 

    In the meantime, it has also just been announced that Clay George, the current Assistant Athletic Director will be leaving to become the head athletic director at Ansonia JH/HS.

  • “Tornado Watch” vs “Tornado Warning.”

    “Tornado Watch” vs “Tornado Warning.”

    Tornado season in Ohio typically lasts from April through July. It may be important that everyone understand the difference between a “tornado watch” and a “tornado warning.”

    Tornado Watch: Tornadoes are possible. Remain alert for approaching storms. Stay tuned to NOAA Weather Radio, commercial radio or television for information.

    Tornado Warning: A tornado has been sighted or indicated by weather radar. Take shelter immediately.

    Information provided by Clermont County.

    Read more about “Preparing for a Tornado” from www.ready.gov.

  • How to: Surviving your first year of college

    How to: Surviving your first year of college

    Olivia Rohling

    by Olivia Rohling

    As of April 29th my freshman year of college officially came to a close. I have compiled a list of handy dandy advice for the typical freshman that I’d like to share. First, I want to start off with a little background.

    As a senior in high school, I was so incredibly excited to start my college career. I was excited for the dorm experience, to have a roommate, and meet girls on my floor during move in and all that. Friends the year ahead of me looked to be having an amazing time in college and I hoped the same for me.

    My freshman year did not start off the way I would have hoped. I didn’t hit it off with my roommate and in fact she moved out a few months into the semester. All the doors in my hall were always kept shut despite me keeping mine open in hopes of meeting other people, and I didn’t have the luck of being a part of one of those friend groups that form the first few weeks of the semester. I was so overwhelmed with the whole college experience that I didn’t join any clubs, and I didn’t have the money to join a sorority. Everyone always talked about college being the best four years of your life, but as I sat in my dorm nearly every day in tears, I very quickly did not believe anyone who said this. So, take it from me, the girl whose college experience started out being pretty less than desirable and the girl who just wanted to drop out.

    1. Join a learning community if your school offers them! – Joining a learning community was one of the better decisions I made as a freshman. You get put in a learning community class that essentially teaches you how to be a freshman and you have all the same classes as the other students in the community so faces become familiar. The first few friends I made were from my learning community and I still talk to some of them. The learning community leader can also be an incredible role model and someone you can ask questions to about certain classes and college life in general. Join a learning community.
    2. Get a darn planner. – College is different than high school in the sense that syllabi are thrown at you the first week of class and you are then responsible for knowing all the important dates and deadlines. Get a planner. Put those dates in there and color-code them by class. Thank me later.
    3. Check your email frequently, and it wouldn’t be a bad idea to have your email go to your phone as well. Some professors can and do cancel class at the last minute and you’ll want to be in the know.
    4. Save yourself the embarrassment and don’t ask your professor to go to the bathroom in the middle of class. Just get up and go.
    5. Seniors can be your friend! They aren’t scary. – Yes they’re seniors, but get this: They’re also humans. You can find some really nice ones. Bonus points if you find one within your same major who can help you with what classes to take with what professor. Don’t be afraid to reach out. The whole reason I ended up writing for a publication, didn’t spend all of homecoming weekend and my birthday alone in my dorm, and didn’t transfer schools was because of simple kindness shown to me by a senior who took me under her wing.
    6. DO NOT live on a floor above the 2nd floor if your building doesn’t have an elevator. Move in and out is guaranteed to be hell otherwise.
    7. FOR MOVING IN AND OUT: BAGS NOT BOXES!
    8. Kind of a given but walk your schedule a day or two before, so you know where you are going! Your GPS is going to be an even better friend to you than it was in high school.
    9. At some schools, breakfast isn’t offered through the dining halls, but that doesn’t mean you should skip it! Buy some instant oatmeal or at the very least some breakfast bars.
    10. Literally no one will judge you and literally no one cares if you are eating alone in the dining hall.
    11. Syllabus week is going to be very overwhelming so be prepared. You can take things one day at a time and still be in the know about upcoming assignments and due dates.
    12. Sometimes you’ll be more productive if you’re doing work some place other than your dorm. Do some exploring in the library or find a coffee shop you can claim as your workspace.
    13. End every email with “thank you.”
    14. As far as shower caddies go, don’t get a bulky hard plastic one. Get one like this.
    15. For laundry, get a hamper that has straps on it. Like this. You’ll want this, especially if you go against tip number 6.
    16. GET AND USE SHOWER SHOES.
    17. Research your professors on ratemyproffesor.com before making your schedule
    18. There’s no need to buy a brand-new textbook, renting or buying used will work just fine
    19. Ctrl + F. Enough said.
    20. Take a deep breath and take it one day at a time. You got this!
  • GOP passes bill aiming to root out ‘suspected’ transgender female athletes with genital inspection

    GOP passes bill aiming to root out ‘suspected’ transgender female athletes with genital inspection

    BY: MORGAN TRAU –  Ohio Capital Journal

    The following article was originally published on News5Cleveland.com and is published in the Ohio Capital Journal under a content-sharing agreement. Unlike other OCJ articles, it is not available for free republication by other news outlets as it is owned by WEWS in Cleveland.

    House Republican lawmakers in Ohio passed a bill at 11:15 p.m. Wednesday night that would ban transgender girls and women from participating in high school and college athletics. It also comes with a “verification process” of checking the genitals of those “accused” of being trans.

    “I struggle to understand why we keep discussing bills focusing on children’s genitals.”

    Rep. Dr. Beth Liston

    The ‘Save Women’s Sports Act,’ or House Bill 61, wasn’t supposed to be on the schedule for legislators originally. However, at the last minute, Republican representatives added the language to a completely different bill.

    Read on at Ohio Capital Journal…

  • [Video] SVI refurbs Loveland Symmes Fire Department’s heavy rescue truck

    [Video] SVI refurbs Loveland Symmes Fire Department’s heavy rescue truck

    Loveland, Ohio – Here’s a look at work recently completed for the Loveland Symmes Fire Department. The department contacted SVI Refurb to repurpose and rechassis its high-mileage technical rescue into a multi-purpose Heavy Rescue on a new Sutphen chassis with a refurbished body. SVI used the truck’s existing crane to remove the apparatus’ own body before eliminating the under-utilized crane from the truck.