Tag: loveland

  • City Hall sends Resolution to National Park Service in support of Loveland Bike Trail becoming part of a national trail

    City Hall sends Resolution to National Park Service in support of Loveland Bike Trail becoming part of a national trail

    Loveland, Ohio – On January 28th the Loveland City Council voted to send a resolution to the National Park Service in support of the Buckeye Trail becoming a National Scenic Trail. The Loveland Bike Trail is part of the Buckeye Trail that runs through Historic Downtown Loveland. The Loveland trail runs adjacent to the State and National Scenic Little Miami River and is officially called the Little Miami Scenic Trail and is part of Little Miami State Park.

    The National Park Service is conducting a feasibility study to determine if the Buckeye Trail should be designated as a National Scenic Trail. It spans 1,454 miles, connecting 47 counties and over 100 communities across Ohio, including Loveland.

    In introducing the resolution, Clerk of Council Misty Clark said, “If designated, it would join an elite group of just 11 National Scenic Trails, and it would become the fifth largest in the nation. It would also be the only loop trail and the first to receive this designation since 2009. Clark added that the designation would bring “significant benefits, including increased federal support, enhanced visibility, and expanded opportunities for community and economic development throughout Ohio.”

    The study was approved with bipartisan support Congress. In 2022 Congress directed the Secretary of the Interior to study the feasibility and suitability of designating the Buckeye Trail as a National Scenic Trail.

    A roll call vote was taken at the Loveland council meeting and the resolution was adopted by a vote of 7-0.

    The action by City Council came after Loveland Magazine Editor David Miller sent an email to City Manager Dave Kennedy alerting him of the opportunity.

    BACKGROUND: Loveland Bike Trail could become part of National Scenic Trail

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    About the Buckeye TrailSince its establishment in 1959, the Buckeye Trail has grown from a 500-mile route into the nation’s largest loop trail, closing the loop in Cuyahoga Valley National Park in 1980. Free and open to all, 1,454 miles of the Buckeye Trail pass through 21 designated Buckeye Trail Towns and landmarks such as Wayne National Forest, Serpent Mound, and Fort Ancient, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Buckeye Trail is within 90 minutes of every Ohioan, providing an accessible connection to Ohio’s Great Outdoors and showcasing the state’s scenic and historical diversity. buckeyetrail.org

    About the Buckeye Trail Association
    Established in 1959, the Buckeye Trail Association builds, maintains, preserves, and promotes Ohio’s Buckeye Trail as a sustainable resource connecting people to the state’s scenic and historical diversity. The BTA inspires conservation and outdoor recreation across the state. buckeyetrail.org

  • New Episode: The Queen City Sports Podcast by Chris Ball & Mark Raines

    New Episode: The Queen City Sports Podcast by Chris Ball & Mark Raines

    by Chris Ball

    Loveland, Ohio – Don’t look now, but the Bearcats have some life! They’ve won 3 straight games, and scored 84 or more points in each of them. Jizzle James is dominating on offense, and the Cats are getting back to their dominance on the glass. Their offense is playing to its strengths once again, and what seemed like a program on the brink just a short few weeks ago has a pulse, and a realistic chance to make the NCAA Tournament. Mark and Chris talk you through exactly what the numbers look like, and just how Cincinnati has pulled itself back into the hunt. They are still behind the eight ball with very tough tests upcoming against Iowa State, Baylor, and Houston, but there is still hope in the Queen City.

    The guys next talk about the Michigan Wolverine’s big home win against the top 10 Purdue Boilermakers, avenging a huge blowout lost a few weeks ago in West Lafayette. Dusty May has transformed a program that won just 8 games last year into one that now sits atop the Big 10. Although the Wolverines turn the ball over far too much, Mark and Chris explain why some of these turnovers are the result of the offense the Wolverines run, and just how efficient they can be if they are cleaned up. Ahead of a big matchup with Ohio State this weekend, Michigan looks to keep the momentum rolling as they climb in the polls.

    Finally, the guys bring you a recap of the Super Bowl and a tough loss for the Kansas City Chiefs. Jaylen Hurts answered the call and led the Eagles to victory as Saquon Barkley was relatively quiet. Though Patrick Mahomes had an uncharacteristically poor performance, he surely had no help from his line, running backs, or receivers. In the wake of this loss, Kansas City has plenty of holes to fill, and we will see if they can return to the title game in 2026.

    Have a listen and don’t forget to leave your comments and feedback!

    In addition, here is the article that Chris and Mark referenced when discussing the Wolverines and their efficient offense, despite having one of the worst turnover rates in college basketball.

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    Christopher Ball is a longtime Loveland resident and an attorney. He graduated from Loveland High School in 2003 and was a member of the football team before going on to become a coach’s assistant at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana. He has been following and rooting for the Reds and Bengals since the early 1990s and has been through the many ups and downs that fandom has wrought over the years.

  • A message from Stephanie and Do It for Jack

    A message from Stephanie and Do It for Jack

    Loveland, Ohio – A short message from Stephanie and the Do-It for Jack – Jack Quehl Foundation. Click below to watch.

    Stephanie says, “Our St. Patty’s Day t-shirts are in-stock and ready to gift. Send this super soft shirt to your college student, young adult or even get one for yourself. You won’t regret it. We will ship to your family and friends with a message from us. Wear this shirt and let it be a reminder of Jack and to make good choices on this festive day.”

    Order now so we can get the merchandise back to you ASAP.

    March 15th is the Leprechaun Chase 5K in Loveland (volunteers needed) Sign up here. Learn more here.

    The Jack Quehl Foundation Is on a Mission to Educate Our Community About The Dangers of Fentanyl Poisoning

  • Loveland High School to Start 30 Minutes Later Next Year

    Loveland High School to Start 30 Minutes Later Next Year

    Decision Based on Community Feedback and Mental Health Research

    Loveland, Ohio – Loveland High School will implement a 30-minute later start time for the upcoming school year. This change follows recommendations from community engagement sessions conducted by the District’s Community Advisory team.

    Superintendent Mike Broadwater emphasized the importance of adequate sleep for adolescents, citing research on mental health. “The goal is that our students come to school ready to go,” Broadwater stated.

  • City of Loveland’s Annual Report for 2024

    City of Loveland’s Annual Report for 2024

    Loveland, Ohio – The Charter of the City of Loveland mandates that an annual report be prepared and made available to the public. It provides an overview of city finances, personnel, police, fire, public works, and economic development. In addition, the 2024 report highlights capital projects.

    [pdf-embedder url=”https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Loveland-Ohio-2024-Annual-Report.pdf” title=”Loveland, Ohio 2024 Annual Report”]

  • A “Jazz Night” at Loveland High School

    A “Jazz Night” at Loveland High School

    Loveland, Ohio – Thursday night Geoffrey Miller and Christopher Huening will lead Loveland High School musicians through a casual night of jazz. All money raised in a raffle, silent auction, split the pot, and at the dessert/drink table supports the student musicians.

    Admission is $5 at the door. Cash and credit cards will be accepted.

    The concert is at the Loveland Intermediate School cafeteria where there will be themed baskets, gift cards, and a silent auction. The night of jazz starts at 7 PM and features three school jazz bands. Doors open at 6:30 PM.

  • Loveland High School Junior Connor Burns selected for first-ever Ohio Suicide Prevention Foundation Youth Advisory Council

    Loveland High School Junior Connor Burns selected for first-ever Ohio Suicide Prevention Foundation Youth Advisory Council

    Connor Burns and Superintendent Mike Broadwater

    Loveland, Ohio – Loveland High School Junior Connor Burns, has been selected for the first-ever Ohio Suicide Prevention Foundation Youth Advisory Council. He’ll meet with leaders from around the state to shape suicide prevention efforts in Ohio.

    Ohio Suicide Prevention Foundation

    The Ohio Suicide Prevention Foundation is a non-profit organization that works tirelessly to prevent one of our most preventable causes of death: suicide. Our work includes reducing the stigma of suicide, promoting evidence-based prevention strategies, and raising awareness about suicide’s relationship to mental illness and substance use disorders, and other factors that contribute to suicide.

    Our community-based programs and best-practice resources are specifically designed to improve mental health across the state. Thanks to a combination of education, training, and support, we’re helping all of Ohio’s communities reduce the risk of suicide and lessen its effects on family, friends, and neighbors.

    Theteam is available to connect you to programs, services, and resources. For more information, call 614-429-1528 or email support@ohiospf.org. Learn more…

  • Loveland man,  Bryan Hambley Announces Campaign for Ohio Secretary of State

    Loveland man, Bryan Hambley Announces Campaign for Ohio Secretary of State

    Bryan Hambley (Provided Photo)

    Loveland, Ohio – Bryan Hambley, a cancer doctor who cares for leukemia patients, has announced his campaign for Ohio Secretary of State. Hambley and his wife Jana, a trauma surgeon, live in Loveland with their five and seven-year-old children. While practicing medicine, Bryan has also organized communities, “To fight against pharmaceutical companies that use their money to buy influence in hospitals, bring critical healthcare to underserved communities, and stand up for the right to vote and be heard.”

    Having been raised on a small family-owned farm, Hambley told Loveland Magazine that he believes in the power of communities banding together to advocate for their needs.

    His first foray into organizing happened when he was a small child, and the state tried to shut down his town’s small public school. The town of 800 people got into their trucks, drove to the capitol, and made their voices heard to save the school.

    Hambley said that Democracy works best when communities can exercise their right to be heard. “Here in Ohio, we have seen our Secretary of State abuse our democracy, making it harder to vote, purging voters from the voter rolls, and drawing unfair maps that disenfranchise millions of Ohio citizens. I am running because I care about Ohio, and I have seen my patients and our communities suffer from a broken and gerrymandered democracy.”

    Kelly Sakalas, Chair of the Warren County Democratic Party, said, “Bryan is the first in the door and last to leave. He spent countless hours volunteering and knocking on doors supporting reproductive rights, fighting against gerrymandering, and supporting Senator Sherrod Brown. We are lucky to have him here in Warren County, and Ohio will be lucky to have him as their Secretary of State!”

    As Hambley gears up for this election, he said that he will travel to “all corners of the state” to meet folks and hear their vision for Ohio. He welcomes any outreach from the press or any Ohioan interested in discussing the future of our State.

    Bryan can be reached at team@hambleyforohio.com.

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    HAMBLEY FOR OHIO CAMPAIGN RAISES OVER $360,000 IN 30 DAYS

    In just the month of January, Bryan Hambley’s campaign for Ohio Secretary of State raised an impressive 6-figure haul

    LOVELAND, Ohio – Bryan Hambley, candidate for Ohio Secretary of State, announced having raised over $362,081 in just 31 days.

    “We know there is a long way to go, but we are extremely proud of the first 31 days of the campaign. In just four weeks, we have been to Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Toledo, Lebanon, West Chester, and Dayton.  I’m looking forward to visiting every county in Ohio to meet with voters this year” Hambley said. “Ohio is a big state and it takes strong fundraising to reach voters across the state. The support we’ve received in January demonstrates our commitment to running a strong, viable campaign across our state.”

  • Historic Black church given ‘Proud Boys’ trademark: Calls for stand against hate

    Historic Black church given ‘Proud Boys’ trademark: Calls for stand against hate

    A hearse carrying the casket of Rosa Parks and a 1950s era bus sit in front of the Metropolitan AME Church where a memorial service for the civil rights icon was being held on Oct. 31, 2005, in Washington, D.C. A judge has ordered the naming rights of the extremist group the Proud Boys be given to the church.

    Mark Wilson/Getty Images

    “For the first time in our nation’s history, a Black institution owns property of a white supremacist group.”

    Washington, D.C. – A historic Black church in Washington, D.C., that has been awarded control of the name of an extremist group that vandalized its property is calling for people to take a stand against hate.

    On Monday, D.C. Superior Court Judge Tanya Jones Bosier ordered that all interests in Proud Boys International’s trademarked name, “Proud Boys,” be given to Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church. And no one can sell, transfer, license or dispose of the Proud Boys’ trademarked name without permission from the church or the court, according to the judgment.

    The order is a victory for the church, after it asked the court to enforce a default judgment of $2.8 million in damages and said it was “entitled to all of PBI’s interests in the Proud Boys Trademark and a lien on the Trademark.”

    Read the full Black History making story…

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    Learn more about the Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church

    We Stand Up For Justice and Stand Against Hate

    In December 2020, the Proud Boys desecrated and vandalized Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church (and by extension, everyone who stands against hate) when the Proud Boys “leaped over Metropolitan AME Church’s fence, entered the church’s property, and went directly to the Black Lives Matter sign. They then broke the zip ties that held the sign in place, tore down the sign, threw it to the ground, and stomped on it while loudly celebrating. Many others then jumped over the fence onto the church’s property and joined in the celebration of the sign’s destruction.” Read the order from Judge Neal E. Kravitz. 

    Metropolitan AME Church did not back down. The church stands drawing strength from the legacies of Elizabeth Freeman and Ida B. Wells-Barnett, against the Proud Boys, a white supremacist group, and vowed to fight because following Jesus in these times and circumstances demands nothing less.  As a result of these efforts, Metropolitan was able to secure $2.8 million in damages based on the hateful conduct of the Proud Boys burning our Black Lives Matter banner.  

    However, this resounding victory was incomplete as just a judgment on paper with no actual exchange of monies to compensate Metropolitan.  As a result, Metropolitan went to court to enforce the judgment and Judge Tanya M. Jones Bosier ruled in the church’s favor.  For the first time in our nation’s history, a Black institution owns property of a white supremacist group. Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church now owns the exclusive rights to the Proud Boys trademark, stripping them of the very name they rallied under. This also means that any money the Proud Boys makes from using the trademark must be paid to Metropolitan to help satisfy the multi-million-dollar default judgment.

    Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church was founded in 1838.  From its founding, Metropolitan AME Church, has and continues to do what other churches will not. We are known locally, nationally, and internationally, to be deeply spiritual and deeply engaged in the world. From anti-slavery leadership in the mid-19th century, in the harboring of runaway slaves, to organizing power, people and money toward the flourishing of all people in the District of Columbia today. Metropolitan has been not just a significant center of worship, but also an institution in the forefront of the civic, cultural, and intellectual life among African Americans and others. Today, Metropolitan is focused on theologically sound teaching and preaching in worship; combatting food insecurity through our Food Bank; addressing ecological devastation by addressing heat islands in metropolitan cities with Smart Surfaces Coalition; equipping parents and families with culturally responsive and biblically grounded teaching through the Sankofa project; and building Black Equity and Wealth through Homeownership, prioritizing community safety and holding political leaders accountable with Washington Interfaith Network. 

    We appreciate you taking the time to visit us and we hope you can stand with us by investing in the Community Justice Fund. In these unprecedented times, we are called to continue doing the work of Jesus in the church, the community, and the world. Every contribution will make a difference as we counter the radical ideology and rhetoric that is flowing from the leaders of our Nation while eroding and eliminating civil rights and societal strides that have been made by the sacrifices of our elders and ancestors.

    Stand with us and against hate by investing in the Community Justice Fund today.

    Joy and justice, 

    William H. Lamar IV

  • Hello from Loveland Learning Garden’s New Board President

    Hello from Loveland Learning Garden’s New Board President

    by Katie Taylor

    I joined the Board of Directors of the Loveland Learning Garden in May of 2023 as the Director of Operations. I also have two kids in Loveland City Schools, and both of them have participated in Loveland Learning Garden School Day Programming. I want to thank each of you for your continued support of our organization.

    It is the meaningful relationships we have built with individuals in the community, like you, that continue to make the impact of our organization possible. On behalf of the Board of Directors, we are excited to continue our work together with you.

    Loveland Learning Garden was so fortunate to have Laurie Flanagan as Board President for the last seven years, and I can say with certainty we wouldn’t be where we are today without the leadership and development that she brought to us—including the strong and deep relationships she made with so many people in the community—and I want to thank you again for playing a part in the ongoing development, evolution, and impact of Loveland Learning Garden on our community and the hundreds of kids who participate and benefit from our program each year.

    I appreciate your ongoing commitment to Loveland Learning Garden’s mission! You can reach out to me directly at katie@lovelandlearninggarden.org with any questions, concerns, or feedback you may have. If we haven’t met already, I’m looking forward to meeting you this year out in the garden.

    Warmly,
    Katie Taylor

    Board President, Loveland Learning Garden

    Watch this Guest Column

    Visit www.lovelandlearninggarden.org

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    At Loveland Learning Garden, we believe in the power of nature to spark curiosity, joy, and a sense of connection. Here, kids don’t just learn about the outdoors—they experience it firsthand. From planting seeds and tasting fresh veggies to exploring the magic of our nature trail, every moment is an adventure.

    Our garden and trail are alive with possibilities year-round, offering hands-on experiences that bring classroom lessons to life while nurturing a love for the environment.

    Our Unique Difference

    Loveland Learning Garden is more than a garden—it’s a space where learning meets exploration and where nature inspires young minds. Here’s what sets us apart:

    • Recognized Excellence: Our programs are a model for nature-based education, blending fun with meaningful learning.

    • Hands-On Adventures: Kids dive into science, math, and more through activities like planting, harvesting, and exploring.

    • Community Impact: Every year, we grow fresh produce to donate to local families in need, making our work as rooted in giving back as it is in growth.

    Let’s Grow Together

    Whether you’re here to learn, volunteer, or support, we’d love to have you join us. Together, we’re creating lasting connections—to nature, to learning, and to each other.