Tag: local news

  • Scandal-ridden FirstEnergy agrees to give up new upcharge

    Scandal-ridden FirstEnergy agrees to give up new upcharge

    By Marty Schladen and Ohio Capital Journal

    Many FirstEnergy customers weren’t recession-proofed when the coronavirus pandemic hit, but Akron-based FirstEnergy made sure that it was.

    Now, after firing its top management in the wake of a corruption-riddled 2019 law championed by the Akron-based company, FirstEnergy has agreed to stop collecting an upcharge that was part of it, Attorney General Dave Yost said Monday. As it currently stands, the charge is worth about $102 million a year to the company, Yost said.

    “A private company, probably as a matter of morality, shouldn’t be able to guarantee its profits against the marketplace by operation of the law,” Yost said in a virtual press conference.

    Yost last year sued FirstEnergy after federal authorities arrested then-House Speaker Larry Householder and four associates — two of whom later pleaded guilty — in connection with the 2019 passage of House Bill 6. The bill forced all Ohio utility customers to pay more than $1 billion over 10 years to bail out two failing nuclear reactors owned by a former FirstEnergy subsidiary. It also forces ratepayers to pay hundreds of millions propping up two aging, coal-fired power plants — including one that isn’t even in Ohio.

    Prosecutors say FirstEnergy and related groups funneled $61 million through 501(c)(4) “dark money” groups and into an effort to make Householder speaker and to pass and protect the utility bailout. U.S Attorney David DeVillers said it was likely the biggest bribery scandal in Ohio history.

    The bill also contained the mechanism that FirstEnergy agreed to stop collecting from on Monday. 

    In an email, FirstEnergy spokeswoman Jennifer Young said, “FirstEnergy’s Ohio utilities filed an application on Feb. 1 with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to end the collection of decoupling revenues permitted by HB 6. This will need to be considered and approved by the PUCO and is the first step toward a partial resolution with the Ohio Attorney General and other parties, subject to court approval. Working to constructively resolve this matter in cooperation with the Ohio Attorney General and other parties is part of decisive actions the board and management are taking to position FirstEnergy for the future and continue to deliver safe, reliable electric service to our customers. FirstEnergy’s leadership is committed to transparency and integrity in every aspect of its business.”

    Even by the standards of arcane utility regulation, “decoupling rider” can make the eyes glaze. But the context in which this one came about might make them pop.

    FirstEnergy’s board last year fired CEO Chuck Jones after an internal investigation found that the company in January 2019 had paid $4 million to a former lobbyist who had just taken a position with the state’s regulator — the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. That’s when Gov. Mike DeWine appointed Sam Randazzo, a former FirstEnergy lobbyist, to chair the commission.

    Randazzo resigned after federal agents raided his Columbus house in November and DeWine is still looking for a successor. Even though he was supposed to be regulating utilities, emails released in January show that Randazzo played a role in shaping HB 6, the massive energy bill.

    Perhaps not coincidentally, bill’s decoupling rider guaranteed revenue for the company for which Randazzo had previously lobbied and from which Randazzo collected $4 million as he took his seat on the utility commission. 

    The decoupling mechanism was created in 2008 to offset electric company revenue losses due to energy efficiency programs. For example, if an electric company gives away or subsidizes things like LED light bulbs, such a rider would allow the company to recoup revenue it loses from selling less electricity. 

    The kicker with the FirstEnergy decoupling rider is that HB 6 gutted Ohio’s energy efficiency programs at the same time that it all but required the PUCO to approve it. The rider set the high-consumption year of 2018 as the baseline and allowed the company to upcharge its customers to meet that baseline.

    A tracker maintained by the state’s official utility watchdog, the Ohio Consumers’ Counsel, indicates that FirstEnergy has collected $27 million from the rider over the past year.

    “Two million consumers will be paying FirstEnergy about $310,722 per day in 2021, compared to about $51,259 per day in 2020,” consumer counsel spokesman J.P. Blackwood said in a statement issued before Monday’s news. “In other words, every day the legislature delays repealing HB 6, FirstEnergy gets another $310,722 from consumers. What a deal!”

    In a 2019 earnings call, then-First Energy CEO Jones seemed to think it was a good deal. He said the rider made the company “somewhat recession-proof.”

    In a statement issued after his press conference, Yost said the rider was the product of corruption plain and simple.

    “Under its now removed prior leadership, FirstEnergy built a feeding trough that it thought would guarantee it record profits year after year, filled with unearned money out of Ohioans’ pockets,” he said. “This agreement recognizes the corrupt influence used to guarantee a for-profit company above-market returns for years to come by operation of law.”

    Last Wednesday, as he introduced a bill to eliminate the decoupling charge, state Rep. Mark Romanchuk, R-Ontario, noted that it allowed FirstEnergy to lock in nearly $1 billion in annual revenue based on its best earnings in a decade. 

    “This transfers the risk of weather and economic conditions to the ratepayers,” Romanchuk said. “The nation and Ohio are currently experiencing an economic slowdown due to the pandemic. Because the decoupling rider did not account for weaker consumption due to economic conditions, the utility will continue to receive $978 million in distribution revenue at a time when businesses were shut down and families are struggling to make ends meet.”

    A judge has already stopped collection of nuclear bailout funds because of the criminal allegations against Householder and others. But that doesn’t mean FirstEnergy and other Ohio utilities haven’t profited from charges that were later declared to be unlawful.

    There’s no mechanism to recoup the $27 million FirstEnergy has already gotten from the decoupling rider. 

    That’s in addition to more than $1 billion collected from Ohio residents and businesses since 2009 that the state Supreme Court later ruled to be unlawful. Of that, more than $400 million was collected by FirstEnergy that was supposed to upgrade its distribution system but at least some of which was shared with out-of-state utilities.

    Yost said it’s up to the legislature to make well-connected utilities refund money from charges that are declared illegal.

    “It strikes me as fundamentally unjust,” he said. “The law is what it is and we’re stuck with the law until it’s changed.”

  • The Laundry Project celebrates a successful Saturday in Loveland

    The Laundry Project celebrates a successful Saturday in Loveland

    Loveland, Ohio – Eighteen families washed 252 loads of laundry at the first #LaundryProject of 2021. On FaceBook the project announced, “The Loveland Laundromat was busy today as families experienced the hope that comes with clean clothes! We heard so many stories of families finally being able to do their laundry after it piling up for far too long. It truly was a day of #SoapandHope!”

    They also give a shout-out to their local partner, the Loveland Care Center. “A big shout out goes to our incredible partners: @carecenterloveland – who truly know what it means to partner with your neighbor!”

    All photos by Current Initiatives of Ohio

    This was a very popular story when Loveland Magazine told the community about it last week. Read more:

    The Laundry Project assists low-income families with meeting a basic need…

    David Miller –  Jan 29, 2021

  • Tennis courts at Boike Park removed

    Tennis courts at Boike Park removed

    by David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – City Manager Dave Kennedy told Loveland Magazine that the demolition of the public tennis courts at the city-owned Steven Boike Park at #1 Tiger Trail will not impact the existing parking lot used by high school students.

    Loveland City Manager Dave Kennedy (Loveland Magazine file photo)

    “The intent is that the area where the Boike Courts are will be used for a half-soccer field. They can then be used for soccer practices for the younger age groups,” explained Kennedy.

    There were 5 five unlighted tennis courts at the park.

    Kennedy added, “We also have courts at Lever Park which just got approval from Council for a repair, resurfacing, and re-striping like McCoy Park did in 2019.’ The work on the Lever Park Courts is scheduled to begin this spring.

    McCoy Park after the recent improvements

    There are two public tennis courts at Leever Park on Heidelberg Drive and two at McCoy Park on Oak Street.

  • Interim superintendent hire: $600/day plus perks

    Interim superintendent hire: $600/day plus perks

    Loveland, Ohio – On Wednesday, January 27 the Loveland City School District made official the hire of Bradley Neavin as an interim superintendent. Neavin’s contract runs from February 10 until the Board hires a permanent superintendent or until July 3.

    The Board will pay Neavin a daily rate of $600 and his contract says that the Board may increase the salary, but cannot reduce it. Neavin will also be provided medical, dental, and life insurance. He will also be provided a cell phone “stipend and such other leaves and benefits he is entitled to as set forth in the Administrative Handbook”. The Board will also pay Nevin’s share of mandatory State Teachers Retirement System payments. He will not be entitled to severance at the end of his employment.

    Neavin is entitled to 15 vacation days as well as paid holidays. He will be required to work a “maximum of 123 days”.

    Neavin will be paid mileage at the IRS rate and will be provided with professional liability insurance. Neavin can begin on February 1 at the $600/day to familiarize himself with the District.

    The Board also encourages Nevin to attend professional meetings that he deems appropriate and will pay his expenses. The District will also pay for Neavin’s membership in the Ohio Association of Local School Superentents, the Buckeye Association of School Administrators, and any other professional organizations approved by Board President, Dr. Kathy Lorenz.

    During a meeting on Tuesday, February 2 at 6 PM, the Board of Education will hear presentations from potential search firms who will be conducting the search for a permanent superintendent.

    Read background:

    School Board hires Bradley Neavin as Interim Superintendent

    David Miller –  Jan 22, 2021

  • Loveland City School District included in COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution Week 2

    Loveland City School District included in COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution Week 2

    * Story up-dated at 6:10 PM on 1-30-2021

    by David Miller

    David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – Ohio K-12 schools, including public, private, and career-tech entities, yesterday learned when their teachers and staff necessary for in-person learning are able to begin receiving vaccines.

    Loveland City School District is included in COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution Week 2 of first doses, starting February 8 as well as Indian Hill, Moeller, St. Xavier, Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy, Forest Hills (Anderson), Great Oaks Career Campuses, and Sycamore.

    Included in Distribution Week 3 are, Kings, Lebanon, Little Miami, Mason, and St Margaret Of York.

    Included in Distribution Week 4 are, Children’s Meeting House, Goshen, Milford, Ohio Valley Voices, and St. Columban.

    Cincinnati Public Schools were able to jump the line and began their vacinations yesterday.

    Loveland’s schools remain in hybird-learning at all buildings, a combination of some students and staff attending in-person five-days per week and some students and staff teaching or learning in Loveland’s Remote Academy five-days a week.*

    Ohio Governor Mike DeWine has said that he is making it clear his “goal of Ohio returning to in-person learning either full-time or in a hybrid model by March 1st.” In order to do this, the governor identified teachers and school personnel necessary for in-person learning as Phase 1B recipients as part of the Ohio COVID-19 Vaccination program.

    “Vaccine is incredibly scarce, and we simply don’t have enough to vaccinate everyone at the same time. Therefore, this will be a rolling process, just like it has been during other vaccination phases, with a goal of administering all first doses by March 1st,” said Governor DeWine. “This rollout schedule is a heavy logistical lift that aims to ensure the maximum number of people can be vaccinated in the shortest amount of time.”

    In a news release, Dewine said, “The plan also makes the process as simple as possible for staff to be vaccinated and is organized to allow most K-12 staff in a county to be vaccinated within seven days of their assigned vaccination start date. For the limited number of counties where vaccinations will take place over multiple weeks, local leaders will make the logistical and scheduling decisions.”

    Eligible school employees will learn more about the locations and times of the vaccination sites from their administrators. The following documents list the entities by county in the week when teachers and personnel are able to begin vaccinations.

    Week One (Beginning February 1st)

    Week Two (Beginning February 8th)

    Week Three (Beginning February 15th)

    Week Four (Beginning February 22nd)

    Here is the Loveland District’s latest Covid 19 Dashboard also released on Friday:

    Below are the recent daily reports issued by the District:

    The district has been notified of the following positive case of COVID-19:

    • On 1/28/21, a student at Loveland Elementary School, last at school on 1/25/21.
    • On 1/26/21, a student at Loveland Intermediate School, last at school on 1/22/21.
    • On 1/23/21, a teaching staff member at Loveland High School, last at school on 1/20/21;
    • On 1/24/21, a student at Loveland High School, last at school on 1/20/21; 
    • On 1/25/21, a non-teaching, non-school-based staff member, last at work on 1/21/21;
    • On 1/25/21, a student at Loveland High School, last at school on 1/20/21; and
    • On 1/25/21, a student at Loveland High School, last at school on 1/22/21.
    • On 1/22/21, a student at Loveland High School, last at school on 1/20/21.
  • The Laundry Project assists low-income families with meeting a basic need – washing clothes and linens

    The Laundry Project assists low-income families with meeting a basic need – washing clothes and linens

    SATURDAY, JANUARY 30TH  

    10:00 AM – 1:00 PM (last wash at 12:30 PM)

    Loveland Cleaners and Laundromat – 910 Loveland Madeira Rd # 5, Loveland, OH 45140

    Loveland, Ohio – The Ohio Laundry Project is an extension of the Laundry Project by Current Initiatives, a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization incorporated in Florida that started with young adults committed to educating others on current social initiatives and mobilizing them to bring about change.

    The Laundry Project assists low-income families with meeting a basic need – washing clothes and linens, by turning laundromats into community centers of hope. Laundry fees are paid for while volunteers assist with laundry services, entertain children, and create a caring space at the laundromat.

    They will be at the Loveland Cleaners and Laundromat at 910 Loveland Madeira Road on Saturday between the hours of 10 AM – 12:30 PM. (last wash at 12:30 PM)

    Your gift helps transform communities. Donate Today

  • Dan Timmerman on his way to the “Loveland Dog Walking Trail”

    Dan Timmerman on his way to the “Loveland Dog Walking Trail”

    Loveland, Ohio – Loveland Resident Dan Timmerman took this photo of Historic Downtown Loveland this morning with the full moon in the background while walking his dog. Dan was on his way to the Loveland Bike Trail that he calls the “Loveland Dog Walking Trail.”

  • Vaccine provider location search

    Vaccine provider location search

    Loveland, Ohio – Looking for a COVID-19 vaccine provider near you? Visit https://vaccine.coronavirus.ohio.gov to search for providers vaccinating in the current phase, Ohioans 80 and older, by county and ZIP code.

    Editor’s Note: This is a challenging website to navigate, however, it is the promised unveiling of the national database of COVID 19 vaccine providers.

  • It’s Official: Loveland is home to the 2022 HOMEARAMA

    It’s Official: Loveland is home to the 2022 HOMEARAMA

    New Date is September 3-18

    by David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – The Home Builders Association of Greater Cincinnati have made their official announcement that the 2022 HOMEARAMA will be in Loveland. The site is going to be called, ChimneyRidge which is being developed by CB Butterworth, LLC. The location is at Buttersworth Road and St. Rt. 48 in the northern part of the City.

    The site is in the Little Miami School District and part of a Loveland tax increment financing district. City hall is currently in the process of changing the zoning on the site to a special planning district.

    There will be 30 homesites on 26 acres, of which eleven of the sites will be for “show” homes. Projected prices for the homes in the show will be $750,000 and up.

    The Home Builders Association promises, “A gas-lit front entry with natural stone walls lends an old-world charm to the former homestead of Civil War Union General Thomas Tinsley Heath.”

    Hensley Homes, J & K Custom Homes, Robert Lucke Homes, Classic Living Homes, and WP Land Company have committed to build a home in the development.

    The proposed show dates would be June 11 – 26, 2022.


    You can read and learn more about what is planned in the announcement below.


    We are pleased to announce that HOMEARAMA® 2022 will be held at ChimneyRidge in the City of Loveland, in Warren County. ChimneyRidge is being developed by CB Butterworth, LLC (Ken Campbell and Greg Berling). The 2022 show will mark the 59th Anniversary of HOMEARAMA®!

    ChimneyRidge sits high on 26 wooded acres off of Butterworth Road in the City of Loveland. It is located in Warren County and is part of the Little Miami School District. ChimneyRidge is limited to 30 homesites (11 show lots) of which many back to private, wooded and sloping rear yards with lots up to two acres. A gas lit front entry with natural stone walls lends an old-world charm to the former homestead of Civil War Union General Thomas Tinsley Heath. The three cul-de-sac streets cut among the old growth trees of ChimneyRidgeplace residents less than a mile from the shops and restaurants of historical downtown Loveland and its widely recognized Bike Trail. Neighboring communities including Milford, Madeira and Montgomery offer additional shopping and dining options. ChimneyRidge offers easy access to I-275 and is a short drive to Kenwood Towne Centre, Kings Island, Western & Southern Open at the Mason Tennis Center, Oasis Golf Club, O’Bannon Creek Golf Club and much, much more!

    ChimneyRidge “preferred builders” (Hensley Homes, J & K Custom Homes, Robert Lucke Homes, Classic Living Homes, WP Land Company) have committed to build a home in HOMEARAMA® 2022. Therefore, there are already 5 show homes committed. Remaining show lots will be available on a first come, first served basis.

    Projected prices for the homes in the show will be $750,000 and up. Show lots are priced at $145,000 – $265,000. ChimneyRidge will have a Homeowner’s Association.  The HOA capital fee will be $1,500 at closing and $1,200 a year thereafter.  There will also be an assessment on the property taxes for 20 years to cover the cost of the sanitary sewer extension of no more than $800 per year.

    Show builders can purchase any lot that is still available in the show sectionfor one year after the conclusion of HOMEARAMA® 2022.  No lots outside of the show section will be available to show builders unless they are a ChimneyRidge “preferred builder”. Lot prices will increase 5% on June 30, 2022.

    The proposed show dates would be June 11 – 26, 2022.  
     

    If you plan on attending the Lot Selection Meeting on January 22nd we ask that you contact Karen Pfeiffer at the Association office 513.589.3214, by cell 513.673-6675 or email at kpfeiffer@cincybuilders.comand make your reservation.  In the meantime, if you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact Karen.  For additional information about lots or ChimneyRidge, or to meet with Greg Berling at the site to look at the show lots, please contact Greg at 859-250-8285 or gberling@cbman.com.