Loveland, Ohio – The Tiger wrestlers were at home today for the 34th Mahalik Duals. Ty Harter wins the 100th match of his career.
Tag: Loveland City School District
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Join Great Oaks online on Thursday to learn more about how you can #DiscoverYourGreatness
Promoted Post
Tomorrow we’re taking a DEEP DIVE into our high school career programs! Join us online Jan 19 at 7pm to learn more about how you can #DiscoverYourGreatness at Great Oaks in our 30+ career programs.
We’re taking applications now, so tune into this session to learn how to apply, what to expect in these programs, and ask any questions you have about life at Great Oaks. The event can be found at https://bit.ly/3ZwKfDR
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Here is a photo sampling of the fierce play you’ve missed
CORRECTION: Indian Hills’ Ella Riggs did not play in the game. I was reading old news that was featured on the team’s web page. Riggs graduated last year.
by David Miller

David Miller with his buddy the Loveland Tiger at the Mental Health Awareness Night on January 17th. Loveland, Ohio – Haven’t seen the 2023 “Our Way” edition of Loveland High School Women’s basketball? Here is a photo sampling of the fierce play you’ve missed.
The Tigers are currently in 3rd place in the tough Eastern Cincinnati Conference with an 8-3, 11-4 record.
This past Monday they defeated Turpin on the Tiger court 39-36 and overwhelmed the Little Miami Panthers on the road, 54-39 on January 12. At home, on January 10 they defeated Winton Woods 37-36. And, on January 5 defeated Milford on the Tiger court 45-43.
That’s a 4 game-winning streak and 6 wins in their last 7 games.
The women travel tonight to nearby Indian Hill to take on their all-time leading scorer, Ella Riggs who on January 7 set the Braves record with 1638 career points. This is a non-conference game against the 5-4, 9-4 Braves, who are on a 8-win and 1-loss streak in the Cincinnati Hills League.
In the Tiger win over Turpin Olivia Rabe scored 16. At Little Miami, she scored 23 and pulled down 13 rebounds, had 5 assists and steals, and blocked 4 shots. She leads the ECC averaging 3.6 blocks per outing.
Jose Early scored 13 against Turpin and is second in the ECC with 4.1 assists per game. She is first among ECC opponents with 3 steals per game.
The scoring was spread out in the Winton Woods game with Katy Wilber, Olivia Raby, and Josie Early scoring 9 each and Sophia Kapszukiewicz adding 7.
For high school basketball fans, know that this Tiger team is aggressively smart and disciplined under the co-coaching staff of Keith Braswell and Brad Early.
The next home game for the Tigers is Monday, January 23 vs Anderson, however, Indian Hill High School is a close enough venue, and it will be a short journey to see some incredible athletes tonight. The game time is 7:30.















































Standings CONFERENCE OVERALL TEAMS W-L PCT PF PA W-L PCT PF PA STRK West Clermont 11 – 0 1.000 59.5 33.1 17 – 0 1.000 57.9 33.2 W17 Kings 8 – 2 .800 52.3 43.9 11 – 4 .733 50.9 40.4 L1 Loveland 8 – 3 .727 45.8 42.9 11 – 4 .733 45.5 38.7 W4 Walnut Hills 7 – 4 .636 49.0 42.6 11 – 5 .688 50.7 37.7 L1 Winton Woods 6 – 4 .600 46.4 38.9 9 – 6 .600 46.1 41.7 L2 Lebanon 6 – 5 .545 49.5 48.1 12 – 5 .706 52.0 44.4 W1 Milford 5 – 6 .455 50.0 50.0 9 – 7 .563 51.2 47.6 W2 Turpin 2 – 9 .182 34.7 48.6 4 – 12 .250 35.6 47.1 L6 Little Miami 1 – 10 .091 36.5 53.4 2 – 14 .125 40.1 52.9 L1 Anderson 0 – 11 .000 34.9 55.7 1 – 16 .059 35.9 53.1 L16 -

Loveland Board elects Lorenz and Eilert
Loveland, Ohio – The Board of Education held its organizational meeting on January 10.

Dr. Kathy Lorenz was elected to continue as President of the Board 
Jonathan Eilert will serve as Board Vice President this year replacing Kevin Dougherty. -

Jeff Williams and Luke Waddell will be inducted into Class of 2022 Loveland High School Athletic Hall of Fame
Loveland, Ohio – The induction into the Class 0f 2022 Loveland High School Athletic Hall of Fame will be on Friday, February 3 at Loveland High School. The time will be approximately at 7:30 PM between the JV and Varsity Men’s baseball games.
Loveland Athletic Achievement Award

Jeff Williams (right) escorts Tony Ricci and the game ball during 2019 Homecoming activities. (Loveland Magazine file photo) Jeff Williams served as Loveland Athletic Booster President from 2005 to 2020.
There were three Loveland High School State Championships during his tenure for which he organized Tony’s dinners, championship rings, and state travel gear.
Jeff raised $500,000 for the first turf field and $750,000 for a weight room that is used by all athletes in grades 7 thru 12.
Jeff was responsible for the “Building Tradition” branding, creating the Friday Night football experience, revamping locker rooms, and the purchase of the “Bleacher Jersey” and two Tiger tunnels.
During his tenure, he established a long-term relationship with a spirit wear vendor. He challenged City Hall when they tried to ban candy from being thrown during the Homecoming Parade. Jeff started the tradition of ECC Champs and Senior dinners for all athletes at Tony’s Steakhouse. He revamped the Hall of Fame dinner and gifts.

Loveland Freshman, Like Waddell had 175 ground yards on 19 carries, and 194 total yards when Loveland High School won the state Division II championship in 2013. High School Accomplishments
Graduated from Loveland High School in 2017.
Football
• 4 Year LHS Letterman 2013 through 2016.
• 2013 (13 wins – 0 loses) Division ll State Championship Team.
All ECC 2nd Team Freshman year.
All ECC 1st Team, Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.
ECC Offensive Player of the Year, Senior year.
All-City 1st Team Freshman, Sophomore, and Junior year.
All-City Honorable Mention Senior year.
Max Prep 1, 2nd Team All-American.
Skyline Chili Crosstown Showdown MVP Junior and Senior year.
Edward Jones Student of the Month 3 times.
All-State Special Mention Junior year.
All-State Offensive Skill Player of the Year Junior and Senior year.
All-State Offensive MVP 3.
Archie Griffin Sportsmanship Award Senior year.
Tri-State Offensive Player of the Year Finalist Junior year.
LHS School Football Records
Career Rushing Yards 5600.
Career Points 500.
Career Touchdowns 83.
Career Receiving Yards 1699.
Single Game Rushing Yards 383 set on September 11, 2015.

Shattering nearly a half-century-old LHS record, Luke Waddell ran 19 times for 383 yards and scored 5 touchdowns at Oak Hills on September 11, 2015. (Read story…) Single Season Rushing Yards 1784 (2013).
Single Season Points Scored 192 (2015).
Basketball
Varsity Letter Junior year.
All-ECC 2nd Team Junior year.
All-Conference Academic Junior year.
Charlie Harker Assists Award Junior year.
Baseball
Varsity Letterman Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.
Most Valuable Offensive Player Freshman and Junior year.
Tiger Man Award Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.
All-ECC 1st Team Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.
Athlete of the Year Senior year.
1st Team All-Ohio Junior, and Senior year.
All-City Honorable Mention Freshman year.
All-City 1st Team Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.
All-City 2016
All-USA Today Ohio 1st Team Senior year
East-West All-Star Senior year.
Cincinnati Sports Award Senior year
Cincinnati Athlete of the Year Finalist Senior year
Cincinnati Baseball Player of the Year Senior year
2016-2017 LaRosa’s Male MVP Finalist.
LHS School Baseball Records
Career Doubles 39.
Career Hit Leader 145.
Games Played 105.
30 Hit Club Freshman and Sophomore.
40 Hit Club Junior year.
100 Hit Club (105) Career.
College
Georgia Tech Yellowjackets Baseball. Three year starter.
Professional Baseball
Currently with Atlanta Braves’ minor league Mississippi Braves.
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First Zoo Baby of 2023
Cincinnati, Ohio – The Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden got off to a great start on January 5 with the arrival of a healthy baby tamandua. Nine-year-old Isla gave birth early in the morning after being on birth watch for more than a month. The sex of the pup has not yet been determined.
“The birth window for tamanduas is 130-190 days, and Isla’s pup came at the very end of that window,” said Cincinnati Zoo’s zoological manager Julie Grove. “Our Zoo Volunteer Observer (ZVO) team has been monitoring Isla’s every move since mid-November, and our care team has performed regular ultrasounds to track fetal development. Isla’s keepers have established an amazing bond with her, and she cooperates fully with ultrasounds and other health-related procedures.”
This TikTok shared by @CincinnatiZoo highlights the hard work and dedication that the tamandua care team put into managing her pregnancy.
@cincinnatizoo Isla the tamandua is due any day now! #cincinnatizoo #tamandua #babyanimals #zookeeper
♬ Stories 2 – Danilo StankovicZookeeper Colleen Adams shares more about Isla and her prenatal care in a recent Cincinnati Zoo Tales podcast.
The long birth window created an opportunity for Zoo employees to participate in a baby pool. Each date/time guess was $5, and all proceeds will be sent to the Anteaters & Highways project (https://www.giantanteater.org/). The winner will be among the first to see the baby up close!
Also called the lesser anteater, the tamandua uses its long snout to sniff out ant, termite, and bee colonies. Long claws enable it to dig into nests, and a long sticky tongue licks up the insects. A single tamandua can eat up to 9,000 ants in a single day!

Look for pup-dates, including when you might be able to see the baby, on the Zoo’s social channels.
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Teachers’ pension system touts clean audit. Retirees unimpressed
BY: MARTY SCHLADEN – Ohio Capital Journal
The State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio has been flagging the results of a special audit conducted in response to complaints from some teachers and retirees. But for its part, the group representing the state’s retired teachers isn’t backing down from its critiques of the system.
The examination, conducted by state Auditor Keith Faber, was prompted by retirees who have received few cost-of-living adjustments in recent years while retirement system employees have gotten big salaries and bonuses. And, in the most recent fiscal year, they did so as their investments lost billions.
In a Dec. 29 statement, the retirement system noted that the probe found no evidence of illegal conduct.
“The special audit found no evidence of fraud, illegal acts or data manipulation related to the funds held in trust by STRS Ohio for its members,” the statement said.
It added, “The special audit’s findings include, ‘STRS’ organizational structure, control environment and operations are suitably designed and well monitored, both internally and by independent experts. These experts help assure that STRS follows applicable asset and liability measurement, reporting, investing and cash management laws, professional standards, and best practices. Our conclusions are consistent with the findings of these independent firms.’”
The same statement quoted STRS Executive Director Bill Neville as saying, “It is noteworthy that the special audit’s findings refute much of the inaccurate information circulated about STRS Ohio over the past two years, and the report provides extensive detail and analysis in support of its conclusions.”
However, at least some of the complaints retirees have been raising don’t involve claims of criminality.
At least 200 of the retirement system’s 500 employees make more than $100,000 a year. And, with bonuses, in the 2021-2022 fiscal year 33 of the system’s employees made more than $300,000. Nine made more than $500,000.
Meanwhile, the average public teacher salary in 2022 is $67,000 a year, according to the Ohio Department of Education.
The retirement system manages about $90 million in teachers’ assets. The system makes traditional investments, while also putting money into high-fee “alternative” investments such as private equity and hedge funds.
In making such investments, the system is effectively trying to beat the stock market. STRS spokesman Nick Treneff has said alternative investments also allow for a more diversified portfolio, which can help to manage risk.
But over at least the medium term, the stock market has proven to be the better investment.
Over the past decade, it has provided a 14.8% return on investments, while the system’s alternative investments have provided 11.84% once fees are subtracted, Treneff said in July.
Retirement system salaries and bonuses have grown large as retiree benefits have stagnated.
The latter group got a 3% cost-of-living bump in their benefits last year — their first since 2017. Treneff has explained that the freeze was due to new rules set down by the legislature in 2012. State and local governments were still reeling from the Great Recession and there were nationwide concerns about unfunded pension liabilities.
In addition, the General Assembly hasn’t increased its contribution rate to the pension fund in 38 years.
But what really has retirees incensed is the way the STRS board handled staff bonuses last year. In August, it awarded $10 million in bonuses even though it estimated that it would lose $3 billion in an environment that was brutal for investors.
Then in October, the actual numbers for alternative investments came in. System losses were 77% higher than original estimates — $5.3 billion.
For perspective, the losses follow $22.3 billion in gains a year earlier, according to the system’s financial statements.
However, the retired teachers union argued, if staffers are going to do well in times of plenty, they shouldn’t do so well when times are bad. Also, the group argued, the system’s board should have delayed awarding bonuses until after the actual loss figures came in instead of using a big underestimate.
In light of those occurrences, the Ohio Retired Teachers Association wasn’t mollified by a clean audit
“As expected, the State Auditor confirmed that a broken system yields broken results,” ORTA’s Executive Director Robin Rayfield said in a statement. “Although finding no direct evidence of criminal activity, the Auditor confirmed that the board allowed the staff to use an accounting gimmick to pay themselves $10 million in bonuses despite losing $5.3 billion last year. For years, the board’s bad policies have yielded bad results for teachers, who are working longer and paying more for less, while enriching STRS staff. The only way to change bad policies is to change the STRS board, which teachers will do in this Spring’s election.”
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Loveland Elementary’s Lyla leads in saying “Get Well” to Damar Hamlin
Loveland, Ohio – Last Thursday the Loveland School District held a Town Hall. This is from the Twitter feed of @LovelandTigers.
“Thank you to everyone who signed our “Love from Loveland to Buffalo” banner at last night’s Town Hall. And thank you to Lyla at LES for leading this effort to show support for Damar Hamlin of the Buffalo Bills with get-well cards and notes from classmates!“




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![[Watch Now] Loveland City School District Town Hall Meeting](https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/school-town-hall.png)
[Watch Now] Loveland City School District Town Hall Meeting
Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland City School District held a Town Hall Meeting on Thursday, January 5 in the Media Center at Loveland Intermediate School. The purpose of the Town Hall was for district leaders to hear from the community about issues facing the District, including the financial future of Loveland City Schools.













![[Tonight] “Preview Night” for Loveland High School’s Show Choirs](https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/show-choir-preview.png)
