Tag: Loveland Magazine

  • Southwest Ohio residents can receive $100 gift card when they recycle old mowers with no emission battery-run mowers

    Southwest Ohio residents can receive $100 gift card when they recycle old mowers with no emission battery-run mowers

    Residents of southwest Ohio are invited to replace their gas-powered lawn mower with a new battery-operated mower through the “Mow Greener” program. Residents may register online to receive a $100 VISA gift card when they recycle their old mower and provide proof of purchase of a battery-powered mower. Program registration opens on Wednesday, March 1 at SouthwestOhioAir.org. Residents who do not have internet access may register by phone at (513) 946-7777. There is a limit of available gift cards, available on a first-come, first-serve basis.

    Mow Greener is for residential household in Butler, Clermont, Clinton, Hamilton, or Warren counties. New battery powered lawn mower must be purchased after January 1, 2023, to be eligible. Program participants will find a list by county of scrap metal recyclers where they can take their old lawn mowers on the Mow Green webpage.

    Why should a homeowner consider switching to a battery-operated lawn mower? From an air quality perspective, battery-powered mowers run cleaner than gas and oil-based engines. In addition, they are easier and cheaper to maintain as there is no gas, oil, or spark plugs. Battery-powered mowers are lightweight, easy to start, and their battery packs may be used in other lawn care equipment with the same brand and/or voltage requirements.

  • [Public Hearings] Duke seeks a rate increase that would generate approximately $48.7 million of additional revenue

    [Public Hearings] Duke seeks a rate increase that would generate approximately $48.7 million of additional revenue

    Public hearings on Duke Energy Ohio’s natural gas rate application scheduled for March

    The local public hearings are scheduled as follows: 

    March 8, 2023, at 6 p.m.
    Mason Municipal Center | Fire Station 51, Community Room
    4420 Mason Montgomery Road

    Mason, OH 45040 

    March 10, 2023, at 12:30 p.m.
    Cincinnati City Hall | Council Chambers, Room 300
    801 Plum St.
    Cincinnati, OH 45202 

    Read below to learn how to submit a comment if you cannot attend.


    Individuals who testify will be required to provide their full name and contact information. Those that testify will have their comments included in the case record.

    Learn more about how to testify at a PUCO public hearing

    Written comments may also be addressed to the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180 E. Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio, 43215. Comments should reference case docket numbers 22-507-GA-AIR22-508-GA-ALT22-509-GA-ATA and 22-510-GA-AAM.  

    A copy of Duke Energy Ohio’s applications and the entry scheduling the public hearings are available on the PUCO website www.PUCO.ohio.gov by clicking on the links to “Docketing Information System” and searching for case number 22-507-GA-AIR


    Case background

    On June 30, 2022, Duke Energy Ohio filed a combined application to increase rates and charges and for approval of an alternative rate plan. 

    Duke seeks a rate increase that would generate approximately $48.7 million of additional revenue, or an increase of 10 percent. After its review of Duke’s records and application, PUCO’s staff recommends a revenue increase in the range of $23.6 million to $36.4 million or an increase of 4.73 percent to 7.28 percent. 

  • Don Tassone releases new book of bite-size stories based on everyday themes

    Don Tassone releases new book of bite-size stories based on everyday themes

    Don Tassone

    Loveland, Ohio – After a long career in the corporate world, Don Tassone returned to his creative writing roots. He is the author of two novels and seven short story collections. Don and his wife Liz live in Loveland, Ohio. They have four children.

    Tassone said, “I’m delighted to let you know my new short story collection, Musings, has just been published.” 

    Tassone continued, “The 75 new stories in this collection come from my own musings about real-life happenings. I hope they show what pausing to reflect can reveal and invite a closer look at the passing parade of events through our daily lives.” They are bite-size stories based on everyday themes.

    You can buy Musings here.

    Read more about Don Tassone and the other books he has published by visiting his website. His books include two novels and seven short story collections.

  • Ohio utility regulator front and center in massive bailout scandal

    Ohio utility regulator front and center in massive bailout scandal

    FBI agents remove boxes of materials from PUCO Chairman Sam Randazzo’s condo in Columbus Nov. 17, 2020. Photo courtesy of Daniel Konik/Statehouse News Bureau.

    BY: MARTY SCHLADEN – Ohio Capital Journal

    CINCINNATI — Ohio’s utility regulator is at the center of a massive bribery and money laundering scandal that has been the focus of a trial here since late last month. In 2019, its chairman and a very recent senior official played a central role in writing corrupt bailout legislation that would give more than $1 billion in subsidies to companies the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio was supposed to be regulating.

    But did their role in the process violate any PUCO rules? The answer is unclear.

    When it comes to being a consumer watchdog, the PUCO doesn’t have the best track record. 

    Since 2008, it has granted more than $1 billion in electric rate increases that were later declared illegal by the Ohio Supreme Court. But, thanks to the way the increases — or “riders” — were written, there’s no way to force utilities to return those ill-gotten gains to ratepayers.

    In at least one of those instances, a regulator might have known the rate hike was illegal when he voted to grant it.

    In June of 2019 — as Akron-based FirstEnergy was funneling millions through dark-money groups to pass the bailout that is the subject of the trial here — the Supreme Court struck down an increase that had already paid the company a non-refundable $460 million. Asim Haque, who months earlier was chairman of the PUCO, sent a FirstEnergy executive a text suggesting that Haque knew the increase was illegal when he voted for it. Haque then said he was just kidding.

    Then, just last month, the PUCO approved an increase of more than 50% in fixed rates for Columbia Gas without making the company go through a formal process to show that it needs the money. That means that after five years throughout much of Ohio, it likely will cost nearly $60 a month just to have gas service  — regardless of whether you live in a 500 square-foot apartment or if you live in a mansion on a five-acre lot. Any payments for gas itself will be in addition to that amount.

    It doesn’t appear that Columbia owner NiSource needed the money. Last year, before the PUCO allowed the rate hike, NiSource’s profits came in $217 million — or 41% — higher than expected. Then, a month after the increase was granted, NiSource announced it was increasing its profit forecast for 2023.

    In a press release, the company boasted of “strong regulatory execution” — including by winning the fixed-rate increase from the PUCO.

    And then there’s House Bill 6, the 2019 law that is the subject of the trial in federal court here that has been ongoing since Jan. 23.

    Former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder and former Ohio Republican Party Chairman Matt Borges are on trial for their participation in what prosecutors say is likely the biggest bribery and money laundering scandal in Ohio history. They allege that $61 million that mostly came from FirstEnergy was used to make Householder speaker in 2019, and then to pass and protect the $1.3 billion bailout. Most of that money was intended to prop up FirstEnergy’s failing nuclear and coal plants.

    No current or former PUCO employees have been charged in the scandal. But, to put it charitably, the conduct of at least two of them was puzzling — given that the agency’s mission is to protect ratepayers who don’t have a choice about buying the utilities’ products.

    In January 2019, Householder won the speakership and was beginning his push for a FirstEnergy bailout. At the same time,  FirstEnergy lobbyist Ty Pine sent PUCO senior advisor Pat Tully’s resume to Jeff Longstreth, Householder’s right-hand man, according to testimony in the trial. Within weeks, Tully had moved from his PUCO job to one as senior advisor for energy policy in the House Republican Caucus.

    Sam Randazzo, a former FirstEnergy consultant, was confirmed as Gov. Mike DeWine’s nominee to chair the utility commission in April 2019. When he nominated Randazzo, DeWine brushed off warnings that his nominee had “opaque and undisclosed” ties to FirstEnergy.

    In the Householder trial, Tully testified that while Randazzo was still a nominee, he met with Tully, Householder and Rep. Nino Vitale R-Urbana. From there, Tully worked with Randazzo to help draft the utility bailout, HB 6, and to reconcile it with draft legislation submitted by FirstEnergy. The bill secured final passage in July 2019 — months after Randazzo had taken the helm at the utility commission.

    In other words, Ohio’s top utility regulator helped write a law that gave a billion-dollar bailout to a company he was supposed to be regulating on the ratepayers’ behalf. And he was heading an agency that over the previous decade had awarded electric utilities more than $1 billion in illegal, non-refundable rate hikes.

    Randazzo would later resign after the FBI in 2020 raided his Columbus condo. And in a deferred prosecution agreement, FirstEnergy admitted that it paid him $4.3 million just before he became PUCO chairman.

    But does the PUCO have any rules against the role Randazzo played in drafting HB 6? 

    Asked if the agency had a policy prohibiting a commissioner from helping write legislation affecting a utility he or she is supposed to be regulating, spokesman Matt Schilling initially seemed to say that it did not.

    “The PUCO is a state agency and will always be responsive to requests for information or technical assistance to the Ohio General Assembly on matters related to utilities and commercial transportation,” Schilling said in an email last week.

    But in answer to a follow-up, Schilling seemed to say something different. He was asked if that means PUCO believes there was nothing inherently improper about its chairman helping to draft legislation creating subsidies for utilities the agency regulates.

    “No, I never stated anything like that,” Schilling replied. “The PUCO does not comment on ongoing proceedings or court cases.”

    So what about commission employees doing as Tully did when he had a FirstEnergy lobbyist passing out his resume? After all, you might pull punches as a regulator if you’re hoping to land a job with one of the companies you’re supposed to be regulating.

    Schilling’s response might not be very reassuring. He cited a law that “prohibits Commission employees from seeking employment with utilities regulated by the Commission.”

    But Schilling also sent along agency guidance that contains a pretty big loophole.

    “Although this law prohibits Commission employees from soliciting Commission-regulated utilities for employment, it does not prevent employees from considering employment opportunities with these utilities in instances in which the utility approaches the employee,” it said.

    It seems that, after the fact, it might be difficult for the PUCO to figure out who approached whom when an employee jumps ship for a well-paid utility job. And its protections against conflicts of interest during the hiring process don’t seem ironclad.

    “However, if you are contacted by a utility concerning a possible job offer, you must immediately advise your supervisor of the contact so that your supervisor can limit your duties to matters which do not involve the utility in question while any discussions are taking place,” the guidance said.

    In Tully’s case, he didn’t end up directly on FirstEnergy’s payroll. But he did help write a law that the company paid more than $60 million for.

  • Loveland Spring brush pick-up

    Loveland Spring brush pick-up

    Loveland, Ohio – The 2023 spring brush pickup program will begin on Monday, March 20. Brush must be placed in the grass near the roadside no later than Sunday night, March 19. Public Works will collect the brush for approximately two weeks.

    Loveland’s Guidelines

    The following are guidelines established for the brush pick-up program:

    • Brush must be placed at the curb or edge of roadway. Do not place brush in the roadway, gutter, ditches, or on sidewalks. 
    • Do not block fire hydrants.
    • Please remove basketball hoops from sidewalks, cul-de-sacs, the end of your driveway, etc. In many neighborhoods, basketball hoops make it difficult for our leaf/brush crews to navigate the route and make turns. 
    • Limbs cannot exceed 10 inches in diameter at the cut section.
    • Limbs should be placed at the curb with the cut section facing the street and all limbs should be facing the same direction. This makes it easier and faster to handle.
    • No leaves, pine needles, grass clippings, bamboo, ornamental grass, or other yard waste will be collected.
    • Small twigs and sticks should be bundled with twine in bundles 12 inches in diameter. Twigs or sticks can also be placed in a container at the curb, but no other yard waste should be in the containers. No loose piles of sticks and debris, please.

    You may also view Illustrated Brush Pick-Up Instructions (PDF) or our how-to video.

  • Dairy Whip Opening Day: Where Ice Cream and people have gathered since 1955

    Dairy Whip Opening Day: Where Ice Cream and people have gathered since 1955

    Quality Soft Serve Ice Cream Since 1955 in Loveland, Ohio

    The Loveland Dairy Whip opens daily beginning Friday, March 3 at 2 PM

    A family-owned business offering a wide variety of soft-serve specialty desserts.​

    ABOUT LDW

    A family-owned business offering a wide variety of desserts. Teresa (Flint) Morgan (current owner) got her start at age 11 by bagging hamburgers for her parents, Marian & Jim Flint, which owned the Dairy Whip from 1972 through 1986. We no longer serves food as the “Fifth Wheel Hamburgers“ which was popular in the 70s, however, we are still known for our creamy soft serve ice cream.

    We use a high quality soft serve mix and only quality products. While offering the usual vanilla, chocolate and twist cones (with eyes for kids) which can be topped with sprinkles or chocolate/cherry/cake batter dip top, we also offer eight other flavors like Blue Moon, Dreamsicle, Cake Batter. Some of our specialties are Parfay’s and Cyclones with a variety of candy toppings.

    The Chocolate Mountain, Reese, Oreo and Black Raspberry Chip are only a few of the favorites. We also have special “Kid Sundaes” We have “Specialty Desserts” like the Hot Fudge Brownie, Strawberry Short Cake, Hot Caramel cake. All have ice cream and a cake from a local bakery.

    If you desire one of the classics, we have them too (shakes, banana boats and sundaes).

    The LDW on the WEB

    The LDW on FaceBook

  • [Photos] Tiger Women bow out to #1 team in Ohio

    [Photos] Tiger Women bow out to #1 team in Ohio

    Loveland Senior Guard Josie Early

    Harrison, Ohio – The Loveland High School Women’s Basketball Team ended their season in the 3rd round of the Ohio Basketball Tournament with a loss to the #1 team in Ohio. The game on Tuesday afternoon was played at Harrison High School. The score was Mason 49, Loveland 22. Josie Early led the Tiger scoring with 8 and Olivia Raby scored 5. Grace Dressell scored 4.

    The Tigers (11-5, 17-8) finished in 3rd place in the ECC.

    Conference leader West Clermont went into their tournament game on Monday and saw their 24 and-no-loss season disappear. The Kings Knights (13-1, 21-5), # 2 in the ECC beat the Wolves 49-43. Kings continued their tourney journey by beatingt Centerville today 61-53.

    Meanwhile, the Tiger Men’s team lost their entry game in the State Tournament on Tuesday 73-47 against Princeton.

    Photos ©2023 by David Miller/Loveland Magazine.

  • Defense lawyer boils over in Ohio utility bailout and political bribery racketeering trial

    Defense lawyer boils over in Ohio utility bailout and political bribery racketeering trial

    Former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder, a Perry County Republican, second from left, with attorneys outside of his racketeering trial. Photo courtesy of WEWS.

    BY: MARTY SCHLADEN – Ohio Capital Journal

    CINCINNATI — The defense of former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder erupted Thursday in Householder’s epic corruption trial.

    Defense attorney Mark Marein of Cleveland suggested it was because of U.S. District Judge Timothy Black’s unfairness. But it came after a day in which the defense team’s attempts to undermine prosecution witnesses’ credibility might have come to naught.

    The sparks flew in the fourth week of the trial. Householder and former Ohio Republican Party Chairman Matt Borges are accused of racketeering in a scheme to use $61 million in utility money to make Householder speaker and pass a $1.3 billion bailout that mostly benefited Akron-based FirstEnergy, the primary contributor.

    Earlier on Thursday, defense attorney Steven Bradley cross examined Jeffrey Longstreth, who operated as Householder’s right-hand man through his bid for the speakership and the 2019 passage and defense of the bailout law, House Bill 6.

    Longstreth was arrested along with Householder, Borges, and two others in July 2020. He is now cooperating with prosecutors in exchange for a sentencing recommendation of less than six months.

    The dinners

    During direct examination Wednesday, Longstreth described fancy dinners with Householder and FirstEnergy’s top executives during Donald Trump’s inauguration in 2017 in Washington, D.C. 

    At one, Longstreth described being at one end of a long table with FirstEnergy Vice President Michael Dowling in a noisy steakhouse, while Householder sat with company CEO Chuck Jones at the other. Longstreth said he couldn’t hear the conversation at the other end of the table, but at his end Dowling told him FirstEnergy needed help and it wanted to help Householder become speaker.

    Dowling instructed Longstreth to set up an organization to receive FirstEnergy’s millions, Longstreth said. 

    “He said (the money) needed to be undisclosed and unlimited contributions,”  Longstreth testified on Wednesday.

    Apparently seeking to impeach Longstreth’s memory, Bradley on Thursday showed the jury an itinerary indicating that Jones took the FirstEnergy corporate jet to D.C. the morning after the steakhouse dinner. He also produced a credit card receipt showing that Jones attended a dinner at a different restaurant the following night than where a second, more-intimate dinner was described by Longstreth on Wednesday.

    But Assistant U.S. Attorney Emily Glatfelter asked Longstreth if itineraries change. He agreed they often do.

    She then produced credit card receipts and car records that indicated Jones may well have been in D.C and could have attended the first dinner as Longstreth described. She also showed that on the following night, the dinner Bradley said Jones attended ended about 30 minutes before the one Longstreth said he attended began.

    Longstreth testified that it was common at presidential inaugurations to attend multiple receptions and dinners in the same evening. Apparently that’s a major purpose of the quadrennial gatherings: To stay in $600 hotels, eat multiple $200 dinners, and figure out how to split up the taxpayers’ —or  ratepayer’s — money.

    Whistleblower former state Rep. Dave Greenspan

     Former State Rep. Dave Greenspan, R-Westlake. Official photo.

    After Longstreth left the stand, the prosecution called former state Rep. Dave Greenspan, R-Westlake. He said he never voted to make Householder speaker and he never supported House Bill 6. 

    “I didn’t believe in corporate bailouts,” Greenspan said, explaining that this one was especially hard to support because FirstEnergy hadn’t shown that it needed the money and the bill put no restrictions on how it was spent. “There was nothing in the bill that required FirstEnergy to do anything.”

    As a sign of how unpopular the bill was, 17 Republicans voted against it when it passed the House in April 2019. And it’s an important reminder that it would never have become law without the support of Ohio House Democrats.

    Greenspan described the intense pressure he was under from Householder and lobbyist Neil Clark to vote for the bill. He was so disturbed by it that he contacted a member of the U.S. Marshal’s Service, who put him in touch with the FBI.

    During cross examination, Marein, another of Householder’s attorneys, seemed dumbfounded that Greenspan contacted the FBI, which he referred to as the “Federal Bureau of Investigation” in a tone that in many places would pass for shouting.

    Then, as he tried to read lengthy passages of Greenspan’s grand jury testimony, Judge Black repeatedly cut the attorney off and told him to ask a question.

    Another attack at the judge

    On Feb. 1, Marein undertook a risky gambit by accusing the judge of bias, saying that Black had it in for his client because Householder opposed Black’s run for Ohio Supreme Court 22 years ago. After the jury filed out Thursday afternoon, Marein doubled down.

    He started off so loudly that Black admonished Marein to show the same respect for him that Black believed he’d shown Marein.

    A little more quietly, Marein said, “You’re really tying our hands. Overruling our objections. Quite frankly, I don’t know what’s going on.”

    Then he added, “Is there something personal against Mr. Householder?”

    When Marein finished, Black asked, “Is that all?”

    Marein said yes, Black banged his gavel and said, “We’re in recess.”

  • Students at Loveland High School collected 3,000 canned goods for the LIFE Food Pantry

    Students at Loveland High School collected 3,000 canned goods for the LIFE Food Pantry

    Back Row: Andrew Breese, Evan Patterson, Tyler Huff, Ronan Mirza, Art Jarvis, Kim Jarvis, Austin Jarvis, Mike Broadwater, Matt McCarthy

    Front Row: Katy Wilbur, Elly Steinbrunner, Courtney Keyser, Campbell Massey Grace Haught, Sydney Jenkins, Faith Daugherty, Craig Murnan, Brady Steiner

    Loveland Freshman Katy Wilber drained seven threes at Indian Hill on January 18. (Loveland Magazine File Photo)

    Loveland, Ohio – The 2022-2023 “3’s For Life” fundraiser collected more than 3,000 canned goods for the local LIFE Food Pantry. The fundraiser was a partnership between Jarvis Global Investments, Tigers Incorporated, Loveland Spirit Club, and the Loveland Men’s and Women’s Basketball teams.

    For every 3-pointer made at Loveland basketball home games, Jarvis Global Investments donated 12 canned goods to the food pantry. During the 2022-2023 basketball season, 92 three-point shots were made, leading to 1,104 canned goods that were donated.

    In addition to cans donated from the three-point shots, Tigers Incorporated and Loveland Spirit Club Members, Elly Steinbrunner and Brady Steiner, collected an additional 1,639 canned goods from the community, including the Loveland Meijer and Biggby Coffee locations. The total cans from the community and three-point shots totaled 2,743 canned goods, and Jarvis Global Investments provided additional cans to bring the total to 3,000.

    PROUDLY SERVING HUNDREDS OF LOCAL FAMILIES EACH MONTH

    Read about the LIFE Food Pantry and how you can help by ORGANIZING your own food drive.

  • Making boats, fish, and waves at Whistle Stop Clay Works exhibition at Loveland Library

    Making boats, fish, and waves at Whistle Stop Clay Works exhibition at Loveland Library

    Photos by Alex Eicher

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland Branch of the Cincinnati Public Library is hosting an art installation of boats, fish, and waves by Whistle Stop Clay Works through March 24th in celebration of the NCECA 2023.

    The conference, which is geared toward art educators, ceramicists, and clay enthusiasts, will be held in Cincinnati from March 15 through 18 at the Duke Convention Center. NCECA (National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts) strives to promote and improve the ceramic community through education, community building, research, and creative inspiration. They offer programs events and publications to support the ceramic field and communities in with ceramic organizations’ work.  

    The theme of NCECA 2023 is ‘Current’, so boats, fish and waves were chosen to signify the importance of the Ohio River to the area.

    On Saturday, January 7 the Loveland library and Whistle Stop Clay Works (WSCW) co-hosted a three-hour event to make the objects for the art installation. Children and adults made clay boats, sails, waves and fish out of clay to be used for the installation. In addition to clay projects, there was an opportunity for people to make origami boats. There was a similar event held at WSCW, where people could make clay items for the installation as well. 

    “This is a fantastic partnership between artists and the public library. These were free events, so that helped make it accessible to a wide variety of people,” said Bonnie McNett, one of the organizers. “In addition, people can come back to the library and find the exact boat they made because they stamped a unique number on the boat they created.  

    The artists can pick up their art after March 24th.

    “It’s really an interactive event,” continued McNett. “The Library and Whistle Stop wish to thank the 20 volunteers who helped make the art installation possible and also want to thank Kentucky Mud Works for donating the clay used in the creation of the clay armada.”

    The library is at 649 Loveland Madeira Road in the Shoppers Haven Plaza in Loveland, Ohio.  Information about NCECA can be found at www.NCECA.net.

    Whistle Stop Clay Works is located in Historic Downtown Loveland. Learn more HERE.