Tag: loveland tigers

  • Meet Your Loveland Real Estate Pros

    Meet Your Loveland Real Estate Pros

    Promoted Post

    Meet The Christy Jones Team

    Christy Jones, CRS, Realtor®
    cell: 513.470.8909
    email: Christy.Jones@cbws.com

    Customer service and satisfaction is paramount to my success in real estate since I began this career in 1999.  My vast client base with consistent repeat and referral business supports this focus.  Balance between home life, with a husband and three children and two dogs,  and a business is a crucial element.  Forming a family-run team in the last few years has enabled me to support the real estate needs of my clientele while still providing attention at home and in the community.  You are sure to see me or my signs in Loveland where I reside and in the surrounding three county area. 

    Fun Fact: My husband Bryan & I trained and ran together in the Columbus Marathon in 2004.  Running, traveling, and being involved in church and school related activities are my other areas of interest.


    Jo Helmink, Realtor®
    cell: 513.703.1053
    email: Jo.Helmink@cbws.com

    I have a passion for people, for beauty, and for Real Estate. My past career as an interior designer helps me bring my three “loves” together in serving my clients… All in a city that has become home to me over the past 18 years. Let me help make it home for you!


    Jim Helmink, SRES, Realtor®
    cell: 513.703.1053
    email: Jim.Helmink@cbws.com

    I am a hands-on type of agent who will gladly use my experience of rehabbing homes to get down to the details in making sure the home you want is solid and structurally sound. My former corporate business skills help me identify good investments and bring a set if strong negotiating tools to get you the best possible deal.

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  • Loveland Women, the #1 Cross Country team in Ohio hosts home meet Saturday

    Loveland Women, the #1 Cross Country team in Ohio hosts home meet Saturday

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland High School Cross Country teams are looking forward to hosting their first of four meets this season beginning with the Loveland Invite this Saturday at Home of the Brave Park. 18 teams will compete.

    The Loveland Women will compete on their home field as the just-announced, Ohio Association of Track and Cross Country Coaches, #1 Division team in Ohio. The Men are currently ranked 14.

    The #1 ranking should come as no surprise. In their season opener on August 25 at the Ohio High School Athletics Association (OHSAA) Cross Country Season Opener the women beat a field of elite teams from all across the state. (Read that story below)

    First race is at 8 AM.


    LHS Women’s Cross Country Team Grabs 1st Place at Season Opener!

    Cassie Mattia –  Aug 25, 2021

  • Hold onto your hat and these pivotal dates

    Hold onto your hat and these pivotal dates

    David Miller

    by David Miller

    Who will be in your corner?

    Loveland, Ohio – These events will be your chance to personally meet the local politicians who want to be part of the teams leading the Loveland City School District and Loveland City Council for the next 1,440 days. Four-long years, so this is important!

    On October 21 the Little Miami River Chamber Alliance, Loveland Magazine, and LOVELAND MAGAZINE TV will host the contenders for seats on the school board, and on October 14 they will bring together on a public stage your job applicants for Loveland City Council.

    City Council – October 14, at 7:00 PM at the Loveland Middle School/Intermediate School Cafeteria.

    School Board – October 21, at 7:00 PM at the Loveland Middle School/Intermediate School Cafeteria.

    Will there be undisputed champs?

    Election fans can see if the contenders roll with the punches, stick and move, or have promises that pack a punch. Will you see any future respected political figures or elder statesmen/women?

    Both of these heavyweight championship Forums will be broadcast “LIVE” on the Loveland Magazine FaceBook Page. It’s not Pay-per-View and tickets are not required – it’s totally FREE!

    Who knows, there might be some highfalutin’ good ideas that come from one or more of these candidates that can transform Loveland. There will almost certainly be some re-hashing the past but that will be OK if it leads to knowledge of what the future might hold.

    Politicians routinely offer more promises than they keep, however hearing them straight from their mouths is the start of holding them accountable. Meeting them in person is always better than voting based on the number of yard signs and you can be a political influencer if you can say, “I actually heard her say it!”

    If you cannot attend in person or chose to be inside the safety of your own home you may want to tune in LIVE to be in-the-know.

    The format will follow the same as in the past:

    • To begin, candidates will each present their platform for 2 minutes and tell you why they are running for office.
    • Questions will be asked for 60 minutes allowing each candidate two minutes to reply or pass.
    • After 60 minutes candidates are asked to close with 2-minute speeches.

    Voters can throw their written questions into the octagon and all questions will be screened for duplicity by independent ring-side judges. The emcees will ask as many of the questions as time allows in the 60 minutes.

    You the registered voters of the City of Loveland and the Loveland City School District however will be the crucial and critically important judges come November 2 so reserve your ring-side seat by saving these dates.

    Loveland’s 2021 General Election candidates

    Important Election Dates for Voters in Ohio

    August 23 – Write-in candidates must file declarations of intent by 4 p.m. (72 days before general election

    September 17 – Military & Overseas Absentee Voting begins (46 Days Before Election Day)

    October 4 – Deadline for voter registration for Nov. 2 general election (30 days before general election)*

    October 5 – Early In-Person Voting begins and includes the Saturday, Sunday and the Monday before Election Day

    October 5 – Absentee Voting By Mail begins (28 Days Before Election Day)

    October 11 – Board of Elections Closed to In-Person Voting (Columbus Day).

    October 30 – Applications for absentee ballots to be mailed for Nov. 2 general election must be received by boards of elections by noon (3 days before general election)

    November 2 – General Election Day. Polls open at 6:30 AM and close at 7:30 PM.



    View the Ohio Secretary of State voting calendar and schedule in a Month by Month view


    *REGISTER TO VOTE OR UPDATE YOUR VOTER REGISTRATION INFORMATION (Update your voter registration address)


    Find your Early Voting Location


    Find your Polling Location


    District Maps

    STATE GENERAL ASSEMBLY DISTRICTS

    FEDERAL CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS

    EDUCATIONAL & JUDICIAL DISTRICTS


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    Future Voter Coloring Pages (ohiosos.gov)

    DOWNLOAD


    Clermont County Board of Elections Website

    Hamilton County Board of Elections Website

    Warren County Board of Elections Website


    Throughout the years, men and women in our armed forces have made great sacrifices to protect our freedom and democracy. Today, the courageous members of our military branches continue to serve our country so we all can enjoy one of our most sacred rights – the right to vote. Through the I Vote in Honor of a Veteran initiative, you can demonstrate the pride you feel for a veteran or servicemember and, at the same time, encourage others to vote on Election Day.

    Wear an I Vote in Honor of a Veteran pin on Election Day to show your appreciation to those men and women who made it possible for you to exercise your right to vote.

    To get your pin, click this LINK to submit a testimonial about how they’ve inspired you will be sent one.

  • Jean Schmidt (R-Loveland): Prohibit school mask mandates for children

    Jean Schmidt (R-Loveland): Prohibit school mask mandates for children

    In the photo above is Rep. Schmidt speaking on the House floor regarding transgender women in sports. (Photo from Ohio House of Representatives)

    State Reps. Jean Schmidt (R-Loveland) and Mike Loychik (R-Bazetta) announced on August 25 they have introduced House Bill 400, which would prohibit public schools from mandating students to wear a mask. The bill introduction comes as statewide concerns from parents have heightened as several public schools have implemented school mask mandates for children.

    The Loveland City School District has mandated mask wearing for teachers, staff, all visitors, and all students below 7th grade when inside buildings. The 7-12 students are exempt from Loveland’s mask mandate.

    “I’ve seen and heard constituent concerns across my district from these mask orders from public schools receiving public taxpayer dollars,” said Loychik. “Through this bill, we are reiterating their opposition as it should be up to the discretion of parents on whether their kids should wear a mask or not.”

    House Bill 400 only pertains to students wearing masks and does not prohibit faculty, staff, and guests from wearing masks or from the school imposing a mandate on them, according to Schmidt’s press release about her sponsorship.

    Schmidt is sponsoring the bill amid local residents upset over certain schools implementing student mask mandates.

    “I’m disheartened that local school boards are mandating masks for students within the 65th House District and across our state,” said Schmidt. “I anticipate working with Rep. Loychik and several interested parties closely in the coming weeks to move this bill forward in the Legislature to address these rising concerns of Ohioans.”

    View Current Version

    The bill currently has over 20 cosponsors and awaits its first committee hearing.

    Thomas E. Brinkman Jr.

    Gary Click

    Rodney Creech

    Jon Cross

    Al Cutrona

    Bill Dean

    Jay Edwards

    Ron Ferguson

    Diane V. Grendell

    Jennifer Gross

    Thomas Hall

    Marilyn S. John

    Mark Johnson

    Kris Jordan

    Jeff LaRe

    Derek Merrin

    Kevin D. Miller

    Jena Powell

    Sharon A. Ray

    Craig S. Riedel

    Jason Stephens

    Reggie Stoltzfus

    D. J. Swearingen

    Scott Wiggam


  • Vaccination Incentive of $100 Now Available to All Medicaid Members Aged 12 and Up

    Vaccination Incentive of $100 Now Available to All Medicaid Members Aged 12 and Up

    For Ohio Medicaid members, going to school should start at a pharmacy, doctor’s office or community event where free COVID-19 vaccines are available. 

    A $100 gift-card incentive for vaccination, previously offered only to adults, now includes children ages 12 to 17. 

    That means every Medicaid Managed Care member old enough to be vaccinated also qualifies for the incentive.

    Kelly O’Reilly, president and chief executive officer of the Ohio Association of Health Plans

    The incentive is being expanded as children return to classrooms and COVID-19 cases rise dramatically in Ohio and nationwide, with the Delta variant becoming the dominant strain identified in new cases. Delta also appears more highly transmissible than previous variants and more likely to infect younger adults and children.

    “Getting students 12 and up vaccinated will provide peace of mind to parents, caregivers and educators,” said Kelly O’Reilly, president and chief executive officer of the Ohio Association of Health Plans. “Vaccination is the surest way to protect teens against COVID-19.”

    Working together, Ohio’s Medicaid Managed Care plans — AetnaBuckeye Health PlanCareSourceMolina HealthcareParamount Advantage and UnitedHealthcare — have made
    finding and getting the vaccine easier than ever with Vax on the Spot(www.covidvaxonthespot.com), a website with information on community vaccine events and walk-in opportunities at pharmacies. The site also gives details on how members can get the $100 incentive. In some locations, including many pharmacies and Federally Qualified Health Centers, gift cards are available on-site.

    The campaign and the incentive are working. Ohio Medicaid Director Maureen Corcoran announced recently that the number of Medicaid members getting their first dose rose by 49% in the first week of August compared with the week before.

    Since Gov. Mike DeWine challenged the Medicaid Managed Care plans in June to do more to encourage vaccination, Ohio has seen a 57% increase in the number of Medicaid members who have completed vaccination. As of Aug. 8, the number that had received at least one shot was more than 800,000.

    Medicaid vaccine gift cards will continue to be available to eligible Ohioans through
    Dec. 31, 2021.

    According to the health plans’ medical directors, shrinking the population of unvaccinated people is the most important front in the battle to contain the pandemic. So far, available vaccines have proven highly effective at preventing people from contracting COVID-19 and even more effective at preventing serious illness and hospitalization, even among Delta cases. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, almost everyone — 97% — who contracts a COVID-19 case serious enough to require hospitalization is unvaccinated.

    For more on Ohio’s Medicaid Managed Care Organizations, visit https://medicaid.oahp.org/.

  • Thank you, donors to Seth Mitchell Hero 5K

    Thank you, donors to Seth Mitchell Hero 5K

    by the family and friends of Captain Seth Mitchell

    Happy summer 2021 contributors to the Seth Mitchell Hero 5K. We hope your summer is going well. We are all blessed that it is going differently than last year! As always we want to keep you updated on how your investment in the scholarship campaigns are going.

    Due to Covid 19 we held the 5K virtually in 2020. You guys made the event fun and meaningful. We had over 100 participants and raised a significant amount of funds, even for a challenging year.

    Our scholarship committee thanks you. Each year we hope to raise enough to fund scholarships for deserving seniors from Loveland High School where Seth graduated in 1997. Because of you, we have been successful again.

    Let us introduce the recipients for 2021.


    Teri Clark and Madeline Schamel (provided photos)

    The Seth Mitchell Memorial Scholarship: Teri Clark has a keen interest in science and math. According to her application essay, her goal is to “treat my friends the same way Seth treated his friends, with kindness and loyalty”. Teri said that she was humbled by the opportunity to apply for the scholarship in Seth’s name. In our interview with Teri we found that she has overcome personal hardships that strengthened her and helped her find a passion to serve others by pursuing a career in the medical field.

    Let Us Never Forget/Mitchell Family Scholarship: Madeline Schamel has used hard work, positivity and determination to overcome medical challenges during her high school years. One letter of reference said of Maddie, “while many teenagers facing those obstacles would choose flight, Maddie embraced the uncertainty and fights with poise and maturity beyond her years”.

    Like Seth, these young women are known for hard work, determination, selflessness, kindness and loyalty. We are proud to have them pursue their dreams with a financial boost from all of you that have contributed to the Hero 5k in honor of Seth’s service and sacrifice.

    Lastly, we do want to announce that the 12th Annual Cpt. Seth Mitchell Hero 5K (www.sethmitchellhero5k.org) will be held on October 16 at 11 AM in beautiful Nisbet Park in Historic Downtown Loveland Ohio.

    We will also offer a virtual run again. You’ll be able to do your run/walk during the month of October from any location. The website will open soon for registrations and donations.

    Thank you all and blessings be upon you,

    Steve, Connie and Drew Mitchell, Family of Captain Seth Mitchell, USMC


    Scholarship Committee – Mollie Emerick, Marisa Sobb, Greg Carpinello, Damien Cook. Loveland High School, 1997.


  • School vaccine records missing for tens of thousands of Ohio students

    School vaccine records missing for tens of thousands of Ohio students

    “The question is, why are the schools not collecting this data?”

    BY: JAKE ZUCKERMAN and Ohio Capital Journal

    School vaccination records were missing or incomplete among roughly 1 in 5 sampled Ohio middle and high school students last year, despite state law requiring local boards of education to track immunizations records of all enrolled students.

    All Ohio students, per state law, must be vaccinated against mumps, tetanus, polio, measles, Hepatitis B, chicken pox and meningococcal diseases. They can claim exemptions in writing due to natural immunity from prior infection; a medical contraindication; or for “reasons of conscience, including religious convictions.”

    Though the law requires local boards of education to keep immunization summaries available on request for inquiring parents, schools statewide are failing to track vaccination among tens of thousands of students. 

    “The question is, why are the schools not collecting this data?” said Madhav Bhatta, an epidemiologist at Kent State University. “If it’s required by law that every child either get vaccinated or have a medical exemption … then why is there missing data?”

    In the 2020-2021 school year, when a nascent pandemic shuttered schools and doctors’ offices, only 76% of 12th grade students submitted proof of receiving the meningococcal vaccine, according to immunization data obtained in a public records request from the Ohio Department of Health. The vaccine protects against meningitis and other, sometimes-lethal illnesses caused by the same bacteria. 

    About 22% of 12th graders had no exemption on file, leaving the picture unclear whether communities have high enough vaccination coverage to protect students. 

    That same year, only 78% of 7th grade school students statewide showed proof of receiving all vaccinations. Data was missing or incomplete on 19% of all 7th graders. 

    The missing data spans beyond the threshold for herd immunity for some vaccines. For instance, in the 2019-2020 year, 7.2% of kindergarteners and 9.4% of 7th grade students didn’t have all vaccination records or exemptions on file. 

    According to the World Health Organization, a community loses “herd immunity” — a threshold of community protection where a disease lacks viable hosts to spread — against measles when coverage falls below 95%. About 2.5% of students claimed a “conscience” objection, and a fraction of a percent claimed medical contraindications — which means they have diagnosed conditions where certain medical treatments such as a vaccine may cause harm.

    “If [students with incomplete data] don’t have it on file because they are not vaccinated, that’s a problem,” Bhatta said. “We want as high a level of vaccination as possible to reduce the risk of transmission within a community.”

    CDC research shows childhood immunization rates dropped significantly in 2020. However, the problem predates the pandemic. State data shows between 7.2% and 12.5% of sampled Ohio students did not show proof of vaccination or claim any exemption in 2019-2020 either. 

    The reports also lack data on vaccination by race or socioeconomic status, two major social determinants of health. 

    When contacted, different state agencies passed the blame or pointed fingers at county school boards, which are responsible for collecting data at the local level. 

    Vaccine hesitant?

    Amid a COVID-19 pandemic that has hospitalized nearly 64,000 Ohioans and killed more than 20,600, 38% of the age-eligible population remains unvaccinated after eight months of availability

    The COVID-19 vaccine data stands in stark contrast to the roughly 3% of public-school students who formally claim a nonmedical exemption year over year, raising more questions about the missing data. 

    Concerns about outbreaks of rare diseases among unvaccinated communities isn’t just a hypothetical. 

    Widespread vaccination eradicated measles in the U.S., but the virus can cause outbreaks when a host imports and spreads it among unvaccinated people. In early 2014, two unvaccinated Amish men returned to Knox County from the Philippines, unknowingly carrying measles, a highly infectious but vaccine-preventable disease. Amish communities tend to abstain from vaccination.

    The two men seeded an outbreak that caused 383 infections in nine counties over four months, according to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine. About 90% of the victims were unvaccinated. Health officials mounted an awareness campaign and surged in more than 12,000 MMR vaccine doses for some 10,600 people to eventually smother the outbreak.

    Researchers also note that unvaccinated people are not randomly distributed. Rather, they tend to concentrate in certain areas. Thus, statewide vaccination numbers can mask the vulnerability of some specific counties. 

    The missing data is a “significant concern,” according to Amy Bush Stevens, vice president of the Health Policy Institute of Ohio.

    HPIO analyzed the data obtained from the Ohio Department of Health. According to its analysis, students in non-Appalachian, rural communities are most likely to claim exemptions to vaccination mandates. Students in metropolitan counties are most likely to not submit their vaccination records. 

     Screenshot from Health Policy Institute of Ohio analysis of Ohio Department of Health Immunization Summary Report data.

    The missing data blurs a critical picture of whether students are protected, she said. 

    “Childhood vaccinations are a highly effective way to prevent infectious diseases among kids that have killed many children in the past,” she said. 

    Who’s to blame?

    The law requires local boards of education to provide a summary of student immunizations to the state health director every year. 

    When contacted, both the Ohio Department of Education and the Ohio Department of Health sidestepped blame and pointed at the local schools. 

    Alicia Shoults, an ODH spokeswoman, said ODH provides funds for local health departments to do “assessment site visits for compliance.” The pandemic, however, limited this practice, and officials are still reviewing data to determine why so many students’ immunization records were missing last year. 

    “Ultimately, at the local level, schools are responsible for enforcement,” she said. 

    The Ohio Capital Journal requested data on school vaccination exemptions in May from the Ohio Department of Education. Spokeswoman Mandy Minick initially stated no such data exists. When asked about the data later obtained from ODH, its missing components, and the state law that requires it, she deflected blame. 

    The law prescribes roles to local schools and the state health director, not ODE, she said. 

    “The Department of Education does not have a prescribed role in the collection of this data,” Minick said.  

    A spokesman for the Ohio School Boards Association reviewed the immunization data but said he didn’t have anything to add. 

    OCJ contacted six county school boards overseeing schools with high rates of incomplete data. Only Youngstown City School District responded. 

    Of 152 seniors at Chaney High School in 2020-2021, 122 didn’t submit proof of vaccination or notice of exemption for the meningococcal vaccine — the only vaccine students must receive while in high school. 

    In the 2018-2019 school year (the 2019-2020 data is not broken out by high school), 89 of 158 students were missing meningococcal vaccine records. 

    If a meningitis outbreak emerged, officials wouldn’t immediately know who’s protected and who isn’t, costing precious time as vaccines are surged in. 

    Denise Dick, communications director for Youngstown City Schools, said while the pandemic worsened things, there has been a historical problem getting families to submit paperwork related to vaccination. However, the district is establishing in-school, optional vaccination appointments for a full spectrum of shots. 

    No one is forced to vaccinate, she said, but the goal is to make it as easy as possible for students. In the meantime, she acknowledged the district is flying blind as far as protection against infectious disease. 

    “Whether they’re not getting them, or they’re not giving us the record, we just don’t know that,” she said. 

    Solutions?

    Amy Bush Stevens, from HPIO, has the fixes large and small. 

    On the mechanical side, HPIO analyzed a 2012 CDC survey of states and found Ohio is one of 18 states that doesn’t require health care providers and payers to report immunization data. 

    Some choose to, but others don’t. Mandatory reporting, she said, would clear the air on who’s vaccinated and who isn’t. (An ODH spokeswoman did not respond to an interview request with an administrator of ImpactSIIS, the state’s immunization information system.)

    The current system, Stevens said, puts the burden on parents to submit records. For parents, especially those with lower incomes who move more often or change physicians, it’s too easy for documentation to get lost in the shuffle. 

    Another idea: tie reimbursement funding from Medicaid managed care plans more strongly to vaccination rates. More vaccination now equals lower costs of care down the line. And more outreach to eligible families to the Children’s Health Insurance Plan, which covers childhood vaccination, would help as the rate of uninsured children ticks up in Ohio. 

    And then there are structural changes. Public health departments are chronically underfunded in Ohio and one of the few fail safes for low-income, undocumented, or uninsured families. The Columbus Dispatch reported last year that Ohio spends less per capita on public health than all but three states

    “Anything we can do to increase the public health workforce will help with that and make sure that kids with no other source of care get their childhood immunizations,” Stevens said. 

    The chances of a serious legislative fix are slim. Anti-vaccination attitudes are prevalent among Ohio’s Republican-controlled legislature. Earlier this summer, lawmakers passed (and Gov. Mike DeWine signed) one bill restricting schools from mandating vaccination against COVID-19 while the shots are available under a more limited emergency use authorization from federal regulators. The House Health committee has teed up a hearing on a much broader bill imposing a number of restrictions related to all vaccinations for Tuesday morning. 

    Other pending legislation would ban “vaccine passports” related to COVID-19. Discussion of the bills among proponents often dubiously characterizes a heavy-handed government forcing vaccines on the unwilling. 

    Among health experts, however, the reality is simple: Less vaccination equals more infectious disease. 

    “If you don’t rely on the school system to report — that’s the only way we could get a semblance of aggregated data,” Bhatta said.

  • Interim state superintendent named yet again

    Interim state superintendent named yet again

    Stock image from Pixabay

    BY: SUSAN TEBBEN and Ohio Capital Journal

     Dr. Stephanie K. Siddens
    Photo by the Ohio Department of Education

    A new interim state superintendent will hold down the fort at the Ohio Department of Education, following the departure of the previous interim superintendent.

    Dr. Stephanie K. Siddens, currently the senior executive for the state’s Center for Student Supports, will take over in September, after current superintendent Paolo DeMaria officially retires. The Ohio State Board of Education approved Siddens as interim head at a special meeting on Monday.

    Siddens has been with the Ohio Department of Education since 2006, working as assistant director and director for the Office of Early Learning and School Readiness, and as senior executive director for the Center for Curriculum and Assessment, before taking her current job.

    Deputy State Superintendent John Richard had previously been picked by the state school board to fill the interim spot, but on August 10, Richard announced he’d be leaving the department.

    Media reports say Richard took a job as president of the Stark Education Partnership in Stark County.

  • LHS Women’s Cross Country Team Grabs 1st Place at Season Opener!

    LHS Women’s Cross Country Team Grabs 1st Place at Season Opener!

    by Cassie Mattia

    Loveland, Ohio- LHS Tiger Athletics kicked the Fall sports season off with a bang as the Women’s Cross Country Team collected their first 2021 victory on Saturday at the Ohio High School Athletics Association (OHSAA) Cross Country Season Opener!

    Both Loveland’s Women’s and Men’s Cross Country Teams competed Saturday against 43 (scored) teams from all across Ohio at Fortress Obetz in Columbus, Ohio, which is also where the OHSAA’s 2021 State Cross Country Meet will be run this year.

    Both Tiger teams are being looked at with high expectations this year as they have a squad full of veteran runners returning including 2020 Eastern Cincinnati Conference Runner of the Year Senior Ryan Chevalier and 1st Team All-ECC Jesse Gibbins and Emmy Sager.

    Loveland did not disappoint their supporters at the first meet of the 2021 season as the Women finished in 1st place out of 43 very talented teams and the Men finished in 3rd place. The Women finished with a score of 90 (11-12-18-20-29-108-130), a team time of 1:38:48, a runner average of 19:46, and a mile average of 6:22. The Men finished with a score of 185 (5-13-38-50-79-116-132), a team time of 1:26:04, a runner average of 17:13, and a mile average of 5:33.

    For LHS’s Women’s Cross Country Team, Junior Madison Conatser finished 11th with a time of 19:27.8, Senior Jesse Gibbins finished 12th with a time of 19:33.7, Senior Sarah Madix finished 18th with a time of 19:40.5, Senior Emmy Sager finished 20th with a time of 19:51.5, Junior Ally Colegate finished 29th with a time of 20:13.6, Senior Maaike Snider finished 108th with a time of 22:00.2, and Sophmore Lauren Gard finished 130th with a time of 22:24.8.

    The Men’s Cross Country Team also had some impressive finishes with Senior Ryan Chevalier finishing in 5th with a time of 16:13.6, Junior Brady Steiner finishing in 13th with a time of 16:44.9, Senior Sam Neiger finishing in 38th with a time of 17:26.1, Freshman Nick Huff finishing in 50th with a time of 17:38.1, Junior Grant Hanson finishing in 79th with a time of 18:00.4, Senior Andrew Waple finishing 116th with a time of 18:21.8, and Junior Alex Saletta finishing in 132nd with a time of 18:32.7.

    For the full meet results click here.

    Congratulations to LHS’s Men’s and Women’s Cross Country Team’s on their 1st and 3rd place finishes in their first meet of the 2021 season! We are looking forward to seeing all the Tiger success this year! Thank you to LHS Cross Country parent Paul Madix for providing us with both the stats and photos from the opening meet!

    The Tigers will compete again on Friday, August 27th at Christ Church for the Moeller Prime Time Invitational at 8:45 P.M.

    Tentative 2021 LHS Men’s & Women’s Cross Country Schedule

    8/24 Sat, OHSAA Season Opener, 10:00 a.m. at Fortress Obetz

    8/27 Fri, Moeller Prime Time Invitational, 8:45 p.m. at Christ Church

    9/4 Sat, Loveland Invitational 8:45 a.m. at Home of the Brave

    9/11 Sat, Mason Invitational 9:00 a.m. at Corwin Nixon Park

    9/18 Sat, Asics Woodbridge XC Classic TBD at Irvine, California

    (Top 7 Times from the OHSAA Season Opener & possible wildcard. Pending approval from OHSAA & Loveland Schools)

    9/25 Sat, Loveland Sunset Invite 6:00 p.m. at Loveland High School

    10/2 Sat, Saturday Nights Lights TBA at Centerville HS

    10/16 Sat, ECC Championships TBD at Home of the Brave

    10/21 Thur, Southwest Ohio Championships 5:45 p.m. at Site TBD

    (Based on the ECC Championship results, all remaining non-Top 7 will compete)

    10/23 Sat, District Championships TBD at Voice of America

    (Top Seven will compete)

    10/30 Sat, Regional Championships ** TBD at Troy, Ohio

    11/6 Sat, Ohio State Championships ** TBD at Fortress Obetz

    ** Team or Individuals must qualify for the Regional & State Championships

    *** Start Times will vary due to our participation in multiple races.

    For more LHS sports updates stay tuned to the Sports 411 With ME, Cassie Mattia!

  • Mayor Bailey launches process for 10 new D-5J liquor permits and drinking district for Loveland Madeira Road Business Corridor

    Mayor Bailey launches process for 10 new D-5J liquor permits and drinking district for Loveland Madeira Road Business Corridor

    Loveland, Ohio – “I have reviewed the CED application and the benefits it represents to the Loveland Madeira Road Business Corridor. Based on this review, I am submitting the application to City Council with a recommendation of approval and request that City Council schedule a public hearing to be held on September 28, 2021, to allow for public comment on the application,” Mayor Kathy Bailey said in a recent memo to Council.

    Loveland Mayor Kathy Bailey (Loveland Magazine File Photo)

    The drinking district, or “Community Entertainment District” (CED) within the Loveland Madeira Road business corridor would create 10 new D-5J liquor permits.

    At the August 24 council meeting, City Manager Dave Kennedy described the effort as a new pool of liquor licenses, called D5-J, “…to help create a long and sustained turnaround for the Loveland Madeira Road business corridor.” He said it could expand the corridor’s opportunities for dining and entertainment-type businesses.

    Mr. Kennedy added that, if a CED is created, a D5-J would cost the applicant a $100 processing fee and a permit fee of $2,344, a savings of $27,000.

    The proposed district would encompass 54.029 acres between the intersection of West Loveland Avenue to Kroger, including all of the city’s Chestnut Street parcels. If approved, it would allow for ten D5-J liquor permits to be available in the district. The City council must: approve or disapprove the application. 

    If Council moves forward with the process they will set a date and time for a public hearing regarding the application. 

    Kennedy told Council that the CED could easily be expanded in the future. He said there would be a maximum of fifteen D5-J licenses in one district.