Tag: loveland magazine local news

  • Loveland Board of Education votes to cancel Grailville purchase

    Loveland Board of Education votes to cancel Grailville purchase

    Loveland, Ohio – At its January 21 business meeting, the Loveland City Schools Board of Education voted to cancel the contract with the Grail, an Ohio nonprofit, for the option to purchase 110 acres of Grailville – a property located on O’Bannonville Road east of downtown Loveland.

    “With the overwhelming results of the November 2019 levy, the board has placed the facility master plan on hold until we can reengage the community in alternative solutions to our building issues,” said Board President Dr. Kathryn Lorenz in a statement issued by the District. “We have listened to our community and heard that it is not ready to bear the investment in the facilities plan as presented, and therefore purchase of any land without a definitive approved building plan would dilute funds

    that will now be needed for additional years of maintenance to current facilities, and would be inadvisable in light of this changed financial need. For these reasons we don’t see the feasibility of moving forward with the purchase of land now.”

    The board also approved resolutions related to the $2.7 million in expense reductions that are presented alongside the 6.95-mill operating levy request on the March 17 ballot. In addition to eliminating expenditures in the five-year forecast related to the planned expansion of programs and services; reducing consultants, contracted services and department budgets; and increasing fees; the district is eliminating staff positions.

    A combination of 13-14 teaching, non-teaching, and administrative positions, and two future forecasted teaching positions are being eliminated. The positions being eliminated are determined first and the Reduction in Force process is then conducted per Ohio Revised Code (ORC) and Master Agreement timelines for notice and board action. Employees are released at the end of the 2019-20 school year with consideration to certification, contract, and seniority.

    Superintendent Dr. Amy Crouse said in a press release, “We have focused on reducing and eliminating non-employee costs, but because the largest portion of our budget goes toward paying salaries and benefits, we had to make decisions regarding the elimination of positions.”



  • Sitting down with Loveland’s newest council member, Andy Bateman

    Sitting down with Loveland’s newest council member, Andy Bateman

    In the video above, council member Andy Bateman sits down to talk about his new experience at the job, the future of Loveland, and how he sees our city.

    Mihaela Manova

    by Mihaela Manova

    Loveland, OhioFresh from getting newly elected, Andy Bateman has grown in popularity with his youthful presence and warm demeanor. Ever since the Loveland community has witnessed his election and presence in the city’s governing body, the locals expect the best to come from his ambition.

    We met for the first time back in December when he was inducted in the city’s governing body and we were excited to see what could come next for our city. You can see our coverage and our first quick interview with him HERE (begin at 0.54).

    In our interview with Andy (his name preference contrast to Mr. Bateman or Andrew), we learn more about his origin of ambitions, his outlook on Loveland, and what he could change if given the chance. 



  • Special meeting for Loveland Council announced

    Special meeting for Loveland Council announced

    A Press Release from the City of Loveland:

    Loveland City Council will hold a special meeting on Saturday, February 1, 2020, at 10:30 a.m. to discuss their goals, strategic priorities, and any other business as may properly come before the municipal body which may be considered and acted on. The meeting will be held at the Loveland Safety Center, located at 126 S. Lebanon Road and is open to the public.





  • Events and classes at Loveland And Symmes libraries

    Events and classes at Loveland And Symmes libraries


    You and your child will shake it together! Sing, dance and enjoy music, movement and fun.Recommended for ages 1 – 4. No registration required.
    Loveland Branch Meeting Room
    Monday, January 27, 2020 10:30 AM – 11:00 AM

    Fun for you and your baby with songs, rhymes, stories and movement. Recommended for ages birth – 18 months. No registration required.
    Symmes Township Branch Meeting Room
    Monday, January 27, 2020 11:00 AM – 11:30 AM

    Enjoy books, songs, activities, and more while learning early literacy skills. For preschoolers and their caregivers. Ages 3-6. No registration required.
    Symmes Township Branch Meeting Room
    Monday, January 27, 2020 1:30 PM – 02:30 PM

    Learn a new skill using the Library’s Makerspace, then take home a finished product!
    Loveland Branch Meeting Room
    Monday, January 27, 2020 6:00 PM – 07:30 PM

    Meets the last Monday of every month. Books for the next month will be passed out at the meeting. Please call or ask at the desk for this month’s selection.

    No registration required.
    Symmes Township Branch Meeting Room
    Monday, January 27, 2020 7:00 PM – 08:00 PM

    Enjoy books, songs, activities, and more while learning early literacy skills. For preschoolers and their caregivers. Ages 3-6. No registration required.
    Symmes Township Branch Meeting Room
    Tuesday, January 28, 2020 10:30 AM – 11:30 AM

    Join the Contemporary Arts Center for a special workshop designed specifically for homeschool families. Stop by the library to participate in hands-on art making, learn about contemporary artists and take home an extended learning sheet with tips and resources for building on what you’ve discovered. This program is designed for children ages 6-12 and their parent or caregiver. Space is limited.
    Symmes Township Branch
    Tuesday, January 28, 2020 12:30 PM – 01:30 PM

    Join us for a night of dramatic play as our meeting room becomes Symmes Market. Dramatic play is an excellent way for kids to build social and literacy skills–and grown-ups are encouraged to play along! Intended for ages 4-8, but siblings are welcome. No registration required.
    Symmes Township Branch
    Tuesday, January 28, 2020 6:30 PM – 07:30 PM

    Encourage emerging language skills with books, rhymes, music and fun. Recommended for ages 18 months – 36 months. No registration required.
    Symmes Township Branch Meeting Room
    Wednesday, January 29, 2020 10:30 AM – 11:00 AM

    Enjoy books, songs, activities and more, while building early literacy skills. For preschoolers and their caregivers.

    No Registration Required
    Loveland Branch Meeting Room
    Wednesday, January 29, 2020 10:30 AM – 11:30 AM

    Encourage emerging language skills with books, rhymes, music and fun. Recommended for ages 18 months – 36 months. No registration required.
    Symmes Township Branch Meeting Room
    Wednesday, January 29, 2020 11:30 AM – 12:00 PM

    Learn to speak and read Spanish!

    Introduction to Speaking and Writing Spanish (for beginners) @ 1PM
    Reading Spanish Literature (for intermediate to advance) @ 2PM
    Brush Up Your Spanish: Refresh Your Proficiency (for intermediate to advance) @ 3PM
    No registration is required.
    Symmes Township Branch Meeting Room
    Wednesday, January 29, 2020 1:00 PM – 04:00 PM

    Got the winter weather blues? Need a change of scenery? Bring the little kids and come play at the library! Our meeting room will be converted to a Market and the kids can play while grownups have coffee and chat with other adults! The market is opened from 10 – Noon for younger children.

    No registration required.
    Symmes Township Branch
    Friday, January 31, 2020 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM

    LIBRARY NEWS
    Arguing with Zombies
    Place your hold on the print, eBook, or eAudiobook version of Arguing with Zombies by Paul Krugman!
    Big Lies in a Small Town
    Place your hold on the print, eBook, or eAudiobook version of Big Lies in a Small Town by Diane Chamberlain!

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  • Walter Golladay: Combined property tax levy/earned income base tax should be considered

    Walter Golladay: Combined property tax levy/earned income base tax should be considered

    by Walter D. Golladay

    In January 2020, Social Security, federal and military retirees received a miserly 1.6 percent cost-of-living pension increase. In 11 years, our COLA reflects a cumulative increase of only 15.2%.

    Rather than living with the financially harsh and punitive School Property Tax Levies Ohio residents have been subjected to for decades, retirees should be advised that in the State of Ohio there are two secondary income funding sources available to Ohio School Districts and voters.

    I refer you to the Ohio Department of Taxation “Guide to Ohio’s School District Income Tax”. https://www.tax.ohio.gov/school_district_income.aspx

    For retirees in the state of Ohio, there are two types of School District Income Taxes, one BAD, one GOOD.

    The BAD Tax is a School District “traditional base tax”. The same tax retirees pay today to the state of Ohio. The BAD tax includes pension and retirement income. Today, approximately 144 Ohio School systems have implemented this voter approved tax. ORC 5748.021 allows a school district with a traditional base tax to go to the ballot to replace that tax with an earned income base tax.

    The GOOD Tax is School District “earned income base tax”. On page 4 of the above mentioned Guide, it states that Earned Income Tax excludes such items as interest, dividends, capital gains and pensions. The City of Loveland utilizes this form of taxation on our retired pensions.

    Today, approximately fifty-nine Ohio school systems have implemented this voter-approved tax. Earned Income taxes range from a low of one-quarter percent to a high of two percent.

    Loveland voters should be aware that a school board can adopt only one School District Income base tax, not both. So earned income base tax is the solution for we retirees. ORC 5748.02 (E) prohibits a district from having school district income tax levies with both bases.

    After the unsupported March 2020 Property Tax Levy is defeated, I would suggest the

    Loveland City School District seriously consider, in their next proposed tax levy, a properly vetted and much lower combined school tax levy consisting of a property tax … AND … a earned income tax.

    For the benefit of our many retired Loveland residents, the primary goal is to soften the financial impact on them every time our school district needs to acquire more funds to operate their many programs.

    A secondary goal is to ensure the school district discusses in detail with our concerned and extremely knowledgeable residents and voters prior to the next tax levy being placed on the ballot.  If a favorable response from the community is received then a combined lower property tax levy AND earned income base tax should be proposed.

    Common sense indicates that Loveland School District would do well to garner residential voter endorsement, rather than opposition.

    Walter D. Golladay is a resident of Loveland, Ohio




  • Kings Island hosts a First Riders Auction

    Kings Island hosts a First Riders Auction

    The top 32 fundraisers overall will kick off the event with a ride on the first train.

    The thrill of being among the first riders on the new Orion roller coaster at Kings Island will have a whole new meaning April 9, when Kings Island hosts a First Riders Auction event to raise money for A Kid Again, a nonprofit organization which exists to foster hope, happiness and healing for families raising kids with life-threatening illnesses through fun-filled group activities and events. A Kid Again families are invited to participate in these adventures from the age of diagnosis until the child reaches age 20 through funds raised from events such as this.

    A Kid AgainFor the past 24 years, Kings Island has hosted an annual outing for A Kid Again children and their families, providing an opportunity for sick kids to get out of the hospital, grab their brothers and sisters, their moms and dads, and come to Kings Island for the greatest day of the year – the day they can be a kid again.

    During the Orion First Riders Auction event, Kings Island fans and roller coaster enthusiasts alike will enjoy an evening filled with riding one of the most anticipated new rides in the amusement and theme park industry over and over again from 6-9 p.m.

    HOW TO PARTICIPATE
    All participants must raise a minimum of $150 for A Kid Again to participate and will receive a certificate of participation, an Orion First Riders t-shirt, food and unlimited rides on this amazing new attraction.

    Upon creating your fundraising page, be sure to share the link with your friends on Facebook and followers on Twitter to let them know you are participating in this event and how they can help you reach your fundraising goal by making a donation.

    Plaques will be awarded to the top five fundraisers. The top 32 fundraisers overall will kick off the event with a ride on the first train. In the event of a fundraising tie for available seats, a random drawing will be held to determine the rider(s) on the first train.

    Fundraising ends April 3 at midnight.

    Orion will be one of only seven giga coasters in the world, a class of roller coasters having a height or drop of 300-399 feet. Riders will plummet down an exhilarating 300-foot first drop at a 85-degree angle before sending them on a high-speed journey over seven more hills and 5,321 feet of track at speeds up to 91 mph on the tallest and fastest steel roller coaster at Kings Island.


    Thrill-seekers will experience a new level of excitement when they visit Kings Island in 2020. Joining the world-class line-up of roller coasters at the park is Orion®, one of only seven giga coasters in the world, a class of roller coasters having a height or drop of 300-399 feet.

    Themed to the park’s new Area 72, the ride features the latest prototype vehicle developed by the Project X initiative. Scientists are in a race against time to develop technology capable of weaving transport vehicles through a coming meteor storm and traveling to a new planet within the Orion constellation. For the program to be successful, it needs volunteers to help with testing.

    Riders on Orion will plummet down an exhilarating 300-foot first drop, sending them on a high-speed journey over seven more hills and 5,321 feet of track at speeds up to 91 mph on Kings Island’s tallest, fastest and longest steel roller coaster.

    Orion was exclusively designed for Kings Island by Switzerland-based Bolliger & Mabillard, which also designed the park’s popular Banshee and Diamondback roller coasters.

  • State of the Schools student-led open house is Wednesday, January 29

    State of the Schools student-led open house is Wednesday, January 29

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland City School District has invited the community to attend the 2019-20 State of the Schools student-led open house to experience the teaching and learning that takes place in the district.

    “This is the third consecutive year that we put our students front and center to lead the State of the Schools,” said Superintendent Dr. Amy Crouse. “There really is no better way to illustrate education at Loveland. The students will showcase programs and activities that make the Portrait of a Tiger come alive, highlighting the skills they learn here.”

    You will have the opportunity to interact with students of all ages and there will be music performances by nationally recognized groups like the Loveland Show Choirs, Mallet Madness, and the Jazz Program. There will be robotics team demonstrations and a wide variety of exhibits and displays from the classrooms.

    In case of inclement weather, the events will take place on Thursday, February 6.

    The Student-led State of the Schools Open House is Wednesday, January 29, 6 until 7:30 PM at Loveland High School (1 Tiger Trail, Loveland, Ohio, 45140).


    Watch these LOVELAND MAGAZINE TV videos of Cassie Mattia interviewing students at last year’s Student-led State of the Schools Open House…

     




  • Mike Dunlap says thanks for story about his daughter Delaney

    Mike Dunlap says thanks for story about his daughter Delaney

    Mike Dunlap is a Loveland High School teacher, soccer coach, and father of Delany Dunlap

    by Mike Dunlap

    Cassie, thank you for choosing Delaney and doing a wonderful job with the article. (11 Year Old Local is “Tumbling” into a Bright Future!

    Click to watch the interview Cassie Mattia did with Delaney Dunlap

    My Mom, her grandma, had to talk me off the ledge when we found out about her condition 5 months before she was born. I was beside myself with thoughts of my child not fitting in, or being made fun of, or not doing what other kids can do… and all my Mom kept saying was, “She will be awesome, she will inspire others”. I brushed it off as Mom speak – don’t know why I did that since she was right most of the time, but I did. I do see now what she meant..

    Delaney is strong-willed and independent and I couldn’t be more proud watching her have a conversation with you about it.

    It really is a testament to this community, her friends, and her teachers just to name a few, who have nurtured her growth along the way.

    Thanks again to you and David Miller for stepping out and showcasing what makes Loveland such a great place to live.


     

    Read the full story about why Delaney Dunlap is in Loveland’s DNA…

    11 Year Old Local is “Tumbling” into a Bright Future!

     

     



  • Sam Greenberg, Jordan Sovik, and Ben Westley launch intense seven-week fundraising campaign

    Sam Greenberg, Jordan Sovik, and Ben Westley launch intense seven-week fundraising campaign

    Ben Westley, Jordan Sovik and Sam Greenberg accepted the challenge of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Students of the Year fundraising campaign last summer

    WANT TO HELP?

    Community members can help in several ways between now and February 28:

    Donate directly on team CUREage’s webpage: https://events.lls.org/soh/TriStateSOY20/jsovik

    Dine at (or take out) during one of the 12 restaurant events, where part of proceeds will go to the campaign.

    Attend a special event: LMS/LIS Dodgeball Tournament, Tumble Bee open sessions, LIS, LMS and LHS Benefit Talent Show, etc.

    Loveland, Ohio – “I decided to do Students of the Year because it sounded like fun, challanging, and rewarding,” said Sam Greenberg. He said he was excited to work with his friends to raise money for a worthwhile cause.

    Sam Greenberg, Jordan Sovik and Ben Westley – all seniors at Loveland High School accepted the challenge to be part of the 2020 Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (LLS) Students of the Year Campaign. 19 teams from across the region will be competing with the common goal of raising dollars for LLS and creating awareness about blood cancers like leukemia, which is the most common form of cancer in children and teens.

    “The mission of the LLS is to cure blood cancers and improve the quality of life for patients and their families,” said Kathryn Rose, a teacher at Loveland Middle School. Rose serves on the LLS Student of the Year leadership team in Cincinnati and has been personally affected through the loss of a family member to blood cancer. “The Students of the Year campaign helps LLS’s mission, while also allowing students to gain invaluable experience through an advanced leadership and philanthropy program,” she said.

    Team CUREage has been at work for months, planning and meeting with business leaders in the area to discuss ideas for how to involve the whole community in the fundraising efforts. At this time, they have put nearly 30 events on the calendar, filling almost every day of the campaign with an opportunity to raise money for LLS.

    “These students make up an incredible team with their dedication and hard work,” said Rose. “They are amazing role models for younger students who will continue their legacy and create tradition here in Loveland.

    A schedule of events can be accessed here. Please note that additional events may be added and informational flyers will be posted on the School District’s website.

  • Loveland Board of Education sets meeting dates for 2020

    Loveland Board of Education sets meeting dates for 2020

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland Board of Education voted to hold regular monthly business meetings at 6 PM on the third Tuesday of each month, unless otherwise noted with an asterisk (*) in the schedule below. The meetings will be held in the Loveland Middle/Intermediate School Media Center on 757 South Lebanon Road.

        • January 21, 2020
        • February 18, 2020
        • March 19, 2020 (third Thursday)*
        • April 21, 2020
        • May 19, 2020
        • June 23, 2020 (fourth Tuesday)*
        • August 11, 2020 (second Tuesday)*
        • September 22, 2020 (fourth Tuesday)*
        • October 20, 2020
        • November 17, 2020

    No regular business meeting is scheduled for the months of July and December.

    The Board also voted to conduct other regular meetings, primarily as work sessions, on the first Tuesday of each month unless otherwise noted (*) in the listing below. These meetings will also be held in the Loveland Middle/Intermediate School Media Center at 6 PM on the following dates:

        • February 4, 2020
        • March 3, 2020
        • April 7, 2020
        • May 5, 2020
        • June 2, 2020
        • September 1, 2020
        • October 6, 2020
        • November 5, 2020 (first Thursday)*
        • December 8, 2020 (second Tuesday)*

    No regular work session is scheduled for July or August.