Tag: loveland

  • Older women front and center in ‘No Kings’ pro-democracy movement

    Older women front and center in ‘No Kings’ pro-democracy movement

    A woman joins the No Kings protests near the Philadelphia Museum of Art on June 14, 2025. (Tara Pixley for The 19th)

    by Amanda Becker

     

     

    Read Amanda Becker’s Loveland, Ohio connection in her Bio below.

    This story was originally reported by Amanda Becker of The 19thMeet Amanda and read more of her reporting on gender, politics and policy.

    _____________

    Americans in their 60s, 70s and beyond showed up in force at this weekend’s protests, drawn by the Trump’s dismantling of public institutions and government programs.

    SPRINGFIELD, OHIO — The 2017 Women’s March was Barbara Hartwick’s first-ever political protest. She drove from the exurban community where she lived at the time to downtown Cincinnati, a left-leaning city of 300,000 people that anchors the otherwise conservative region. Still, Hartwick said, she felt too nervous to carry a sign or join in most of the crowd’s chants.

    Eight years later, having watched President Donald Trump’s political ascent, Hartwick, 63, has gone from a “hesitant” to an enthusiastic protester. When she joined the several hundred people outside Springfield’s city hall on Saturday — among them many retirees who, like her, took to the streets to oppose Trump’s agenda — she held up a sign that read: “Let the wild rumpus start!” She was inspired by the crown-wearing young boy in Maurice Sendak’s children’s book, “Where the Wild Things Are.” It was, she said, a nod to the “No Kings” nationwide rallies.

    Hartwick, a retired teacher, said she had “misconceptions” back in 2017 about what protests were like; she had never been politically active beyond voting. The march revealed to her “the camaraderie, the community of people there.” The crowd was “generally peaceful and positive” as they protested and it helped Hartwick realize that other women like her were also frustrated and disappointed with the direction of the country. She discovered that community spirit again Saturday in Springfield, the conservative-leaning city that Vice President JD Vance put on the map during the presidential campaign, when he made false accusations against the Haitian migrants legally living there to make the case for today’s militaristic immigration crackdown.

    Papas Coming Home 970x250

    Protests, Hartwick said, “give people hope.”

    Women led prominent protests during Trump’s first term against his presidency writ large, his treatment of women, his now-fulfilled pledge to appoint Supreme Court justices that would overturn the federal right to abortion, his family separations policy at the U.S. border and more. But while Black women have voted against the president in every election, White women voted for Trump in 2016, backed him again at the ballot box in 2020 and then a third time in 2024, according to exit polls. Democratic former Vice President Kamala Harris actually lost support from women overall last year as compared to 2020 across all age groups except one: those over 65.

    Headed into Saturday’s protests, the only age group across all genders and races with a lower opinion of Trump than 65+ voters was voters under the age of 30, according to a weekly tracking poll conducted by YouGov for the Economist magazine.

    Rural America is older than urban America, so in Saturday’s small-town and suburban protests, the graying nature of the coalition in the streets protesting Trump was visible enough that it caught the attention of local news outlets. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch posted a video of “senior citizens and others” at a protest in the moneyed suburb of Clayton, Missouri. West Virginia Public Radio reported that at a demonstration in Charleston, the state capital, “all ages were represented, but a large contingent of older West Virginians braved the sun and humidity to attend.” Trump had a higher margin of victory in the largely rural state than nearly any other.

    Longtime climate activist Bill McKibben, who founded the Third Act organization several years ago to build a community of Americans 60 and older to fight climate change and protect democracy, wrote a recent Los Angeles Times op-ed with Akaya Windwood, an adviser for the group, under the title: “Why older Americans are Trump’s biggest nightmare.”

    A research team led by American University’s Dana R. Fisher surveyed the host organizers of Saturday’s events and found that “consistent with the Resistance to the Trump administration during its first term, the majority of hosts and participants were female, predominantly White, and highly educated.” What has changed since the president’s first term, Fisher told The 19th, is that “the people in the streets are older than they were back in the first administration.”

    Fisher’s team’s preliminary findings showed that the median age on Saturday for participants in Philadelphia was 36 years old while the median age for protest event hosts nationwide was 67. Their field research in the first months of Trump’s second term shows that participants and organizers protesting the president are more likely to be women, more likely to be older and more likely to be White than participants and organizers of other recent protest movements.

    The 2017 Women’s March, held the day after Trump’s first inauguration, was, at the time, the largest single-day protest in U.S. history — between 3.2 million and 5.2 million people, or 1 to 2 percent of the country’s population, participated in more than 400 demonstrations nationwide. Saturday’s “No Kings” protests aimed for the lofty goal of about 12 million people, or about 3.5 percent of the country’s population, a number that reflects the level of participation that political scientists say is necessary to overcome a dictator or authoritarian leader.

    Organizers sought to do that by dispersing protests across more than 2,000 locations, many in places where public demonstrations are rare. Cities like Philadelphia and Chicago reported some of the largest crowds, but there were also well-attended events in small towns and mid-sized cities in politically conservative states like Ohio, Missouri, Tennessee and West Virginia.

    Jeremy Pressman, co-director of the Crowd Counting Consortium, a joint project of Harvard Kennedy School and the University of Connecticut, said it would be weeks before they can fully tally nationwide attendance. But, he told The 19th by email, it “looks very likely it was one of the largest days of protest in U.S. history.”

    It didn’t surprise Hartwick that older Americans, and especially older women, are souring on the president, whose administration has fired tens of thousands of federal workers and shuttered federal programs under the banner of anti-diversity equity and inclusion efforts. Plus, Republicans in Congress are debating legislation that would finance tax breaks for the wealthy by making deep cuts to the Medicaid health insurance program for lower-income Americans and nutrition programs on which many seniors rely.

    An aphorism in U.S. politics is that Americans become more conservative as they age; many older women who spoke to The 19th on Saturday noted that it isn’t a conservative approach, in the “small-c” sense of the word, to dismantle government programs and institutions and to upend democratic norms.

    “We don’t want to go back. It took a movement to get the right to vote. It took a movement to get Civil Rights. I’ve never in my lifetime lived when rights are taken away — until now,” Hartwick said, lamenting that to younger Americans, Trump’s policies and intensely divided politics likely seem normal.

    Also at the Springfield protest was Joan Justice, 84, holding a sign that said: “If there’s money for a parade? Then there’s money for Medicaid!” “I have friends who are in nursing homes and I know the money is running out and it really scares me,” Justice, also a retired educator, told The 19th of the program that covers long-term residential care for lower-income seniors because Medicare, the health insurance program for elderly Americans at all income levels, does not.

    Another “No Kings” protest in nearby Middletown, Ohio, a deeply conservative town of about 50,000 where Vance was raised by his grandparents, drew more than 400 and skewed older than Springfield. Among the people gathered at a busy intersection near a large supermarket, hardware store and a panoply of national restaurant chains was a 64-year-old woman who asked to be identified by her first name only, Rebecca, because, she said, she knows Trump opponents who have faced harassment. She was attending her first protest and said, “I want to start getting more active, I want to start writing my congressmen. My parents were Republicans and they would be appalled.”

    Standing nearby was Nannette, 74, who requested her surname be withheld for the same reason. She said that “Middletown is a small town, but I’m doing everything I can think of,” attending the April protests against cuts to the federal government that preceded those held on Saturday. “I was a lifelong Republican, and I tried to hold on, but January 6th was the end,” she said. When she sends mail, she puts her stamps with the American flag upside down as a subtle signal of distress.

    Hartwick said she sees a recent version of her past self in these older women who are overcoming fears about public demonstrations to protest the president, so she is “finding little opportunities to let people know it’s okay to not like what’s going on right now.”

    Just last week, Hartwick said, she was buying posterboard at her local Kroger supermarket when a woman in her late 60s or early 70s asked if she was making signs for a garage sale. “I said ‘no’ and she said ‘oh, what is it for?’ I said: ‘A protest.’ And she whispered: ‘The No Kings protest?’ I said ‘yes.’ And then she said: ‘Good luck.’”

    “People might be looking for someone else who feels the way they do because they don’t see it in their own community,” Hartwick said.

     

    https://19thnews.org/membership/

  • Rep. Greg Landsman included in the Minnesota murder suspect’s notes

    Rep. Greg Landsman included in the Minnesota murder suspect’s notes

    Loveland, Ohio – Rep. Greg Landsman (Ohio’s 1st Congressional District representing part of Loveland) reported today that his name was included in the Minnesota murder suspect’s notes.
    _________
    I was notified by Capitol Police that my name was included in the Minnesota murder suspect’s notes.
    Update and statement.
    On Sunday morning, Capitol Police contacted my office to tell me the FBI had found my name as part of evidence collected during the search for a suspect in Minnesota – who is accused of murdering and seriously injuring lawmakers.
    Since the suspect was still at large at that time, we worked very closely with the Cincinnati Police Department to arrange for increased security for my family and me.
    I’m extremely thankful to the Cincinnati Police Department for their quick assistance and to Capitol Police for their guidance.
    We’re very relieved the suspect has been arrested.
    This is an ongoing investigation, and we want to keep you informed, but we don’t have any other information to share right now.
    __________

    Background from the Associated Press

    Suspect in shooting of Minnesota state lawmakers targeted 2 others that night, prosecutors say

    Investigators say Vance Boelter appeared to spend months preparing for the shootings — the latest in a string of political attacks across the U.S. His list of potential targets contained dozens of names, including officials in at least three other states.

  • 2 Loveland, Ohio residents and dog saved because of working smoke alarms

    2 Loveland, Ohio residents and dog saved because of working smoke alarms

    Loveland-Symmes firefighters had recently replaced the home’s smoke alarm batteries 

     

    Loveland, Ohio – A senior couple and their pet were saved Saturday morning when their home ignited in fire, filling it with toxic smoke. They were alerted and were able to escape due to a working smoke alarm.

    At 6:45 AM on Saturday, June 14, a 1st alarm was transmitted for a dwelling fire on Marbea Drive in the City of Loveland, Ohio. The Loveland-Symmes Fire Department (LSFD) responded with regional automatic mutual aid partners from Deerfield Township, Miami Township-Clermont, and the cities of Montgomery, Sharonville, and Blue Ash.

    Smoke alarms woke the couple and when they opened their bedroom door they faced heavy smoke. First responders arrived at 6:48 AM and faced intense fire conditions. The occupants were found in the rear yard as they had escaped safely.

    A passerby stayed with the couple, and paramedic crews checked them out as they were shaken but physically uninjured.

    Firefighters were able to save some of the couple’s personal paperwork, prescriptions, and other important items, according to the Department.

    Investigators are working on determining the cause. LSFD, in coordination with the family and the Red Cross, made sure the couple had a place to stay and were taken care of.

    Message from LSFD Deputy Chief Billy Goldfeder

    ONCE AGAIN WE ARE REMINDED: WORKING SMOKE ALARMS SAVE LIVES!

    This morning’s fire could have had a much more tragic outcome, and the community could be mourning several losses. Thankfully, the home had working smoke alarms. 
     
    Firefighters from LSFD, through our regular community-wide smoke alarm canvassing program, had recently replaced the home’s smoke alarm with new batteries.

    Roughly three out of five fire deaths happen in homes with either no smoke alarms or no working smoke alarms. More than one-third (38 percent) of home fire deaths result from fires in which no smoke alarms are present. The risk of dying in a home fire is cut in more than half in homes with working smoke alarms!  

    LIFE SAVING TIPS FOR HOMEOWNERS, RENTERS, SLEEP-OVERS  & FOR DORMITORIES 

    Working smoke and carbon monoxide (CO) alarms save lives by quickly giving you and your loved ones an early warning signal that something is wrong. Fire spreads fast, and carbon monoxide is a silent killer. Working alarms are the most critical component of your escape plan.

    • Be sure to have the right type of alarm. Alarms must be approved by Underwriters Laboratories (look for a UL mark) and have an audible end-of-life warning. All new and replacement smoke alarms should have a sealed 10-year battery that is non-replaceable and non-removable.
    • Have both smoke alarms and a CO alarm (or a combination smoke/carbon monoxide alarm). One type of alarm is not a substitute for the other.
    • If your alarm still uses removable batteries, be sure to change them twice a year. A great reminder is changing batteries on days when clocks are changed for daylight saving time. Replace these alarms with ones that contain sealed 10-year batteries as soon as possible.
    • Have a smoke and CO alarm installed on every floor in your home.
    • Make sure to install smoke alarms outside of individual sleeping areas.
    • Be aware that CO alarms don’t substitute for smoke alarms.
    • Know the sound differences between your smoke and CO alarms.

    If you are unable to purchase a smoke alarm, the Loveland-Symmes FD will provide one and install it for you at no cost. This service is also available from other area fire departments in each community.

    The Loveland-Symmes Fire Department in conjunction with the American Red Cross will come out and test your smoke detectors, inspect their location, and or replace defective batteries and detectors. We will also install a new detector on each door of your home if needed. Please submit your information to the Fire Prevention Request Form and the best time to come out to your home. Please email  web-fireprevention@lsfd.org to get more information and schedule a time to check/change your smoke detectors.

  • Loveland, Ohio’s “No Kings” rally w/video and interviews

    Loveland, Ohio’s “No Kings” rally w/video and interviews

    Editor’s Note: An attendee and her husband who walked the venue reports: “We counted around 900. I know a lot of people had been there earlier and already left so I’m sure it got decently over 1000 during the day.

    Loveland, Ohio – A thousand Loveland Area residents with a hundred grievances lined a 1/3 mile stretch of Loveland Madeira Road centered in front of the Loveland Primary/Elementary school campus and Shoppers Haven on Saturday afternoon. Not since the Loveland Tigers won the State Division II football championship in 2013 had so many united for a cause. Hundreds more honked horns, showing support as they drove past the rally.

    On the same day that tanks and artillery launchers rolled through Washington D.C. on the Army’s 250th anniversary, the day that President Donald Trump turned 79 and wanted a national birthday party for himself, local organizers had called for a “No Kings” rally in Loveland.

    The organizing rallying cry was, “NO KINGS is a national day of action and mass mobilization in response to increasing authoritarian excesses and corruption from Trump and his allies. We’ve watched as they’ve cracked down on free speech, detained people for their political views, threatened to deport American citizens, and defied the courts. They’ve done this all while continuing to serve and enrich their billionaire allies.”

    FOX News reported that “millions of people were said to have turned out at “No Kings” protest marches in nearly 2,000 cities across the U.S.”

    Alt National Park Service reported last night, “We’re honored to report that over 11 million showed up for today’s No Kings protest, and totals are still coming in.”

    “No Kings” Rally Drive-by

    “No Kings” Rally video and interviews

     

  • “NO KINGS” rally planned for Loveland on Saturday

    “NO KINGS” rally planned for Loveland on Saturday

    Saturday, June 14

    3 – 5 PM

    Loveland, Ohio – On the same day that tanks and artillery launchers will be rolling through Washington D.C. on the Army’s 250th anniversary, the day that President Donald Trump turns 79 and wanted a national birthday party for himself, local organizers have called for a rally in Loveland.

    Organizers proclaim, “On June 14th, we’re showing up everywhere he isn’t, to say no thrones, no crowns, no kings.”

    Background: Nationwide protests loom over Trump’s upcoming military parade

    Loveland Location

    Sidewalks along Loveland-Madeira Rd
    In front of Loveland Elementary School

    About this event

    “In America, we don’t put up with would-be kings. NO KINGS is a national day of action and mass mobilization in response to increasing authoritarian excesses and corruption from Trump and his allies. We’ve watched as they’ve cracked down on free speech, detained people for their political views, threatened to deport American citizens, and defied the courts. They’ve done this all while continuing to serve and enrich their billionaire allies.”

    🚨On Saturday, June 14, we’re taking to the streets nationwide. We’re not gathering to feed his ego. We’re building a movement that leaves him behind.🚨

    The flag doesn’t belong to Donald Trump. It belongs to us. We’re not watching history happen. We’re making it.

    On June 14th, we’re showing up everywhere he isn’t—to say no thrones, no crowns, no kings. Check out nokings.org for more information.

    A core principle behind all No Kings events is a commitment to nonviolent action. We expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values.

  • First Air Quality Alert of 2025 for the Loveland Area

    First Air Quality Alert of 2025 for the Loveland Area

    Loveland, Ohio – The Southwest Ohio Air Quality Agency has issued an Air Quality Alert, effective at 12:00 a.m. midnight on Thursday, June 12, 2025 through 11:59 p.m. for Butler, Clermont, Hamilton and Warren counties in Ohio; Boone, Campbell, and Kenton counties in Kentucky; and Dearborn County in Indiana.

    The Agency expects to see levels of ozone in the “unhealthy for sensitive groups” range on the Air Quality Index (AQI).

    On Air Quality Alert days, everyone can help reduce ozone formation by taking the following actions:

    • Take the bus, carpool, bike, or walk instead of drive.
    • Refuel your vehicle after 8 p.m.; do not top off when refueling and tighten the gas cap.
    • Do not idle your vehicle; exhaust contributes considerably to ozone formation.
    • Combine trips or eliminating unnecessary vehicle trips.
    • Keep your vehicle maintained with properly inflated tires and timely oil changes.
    • Avoid use of gasoline-powered lawn equipment on Air Quality Alert days.
    • Avoid use of oil-based paints and stains on Air Quality Alert days.
    • Never burn leaves or other yard trimmings.
    • Suspend use of fire pits, campfires and charcoal grills on Air Quality Alert days.
    • Conserve electricity by turning out lights and unplugging unused appliances and electronics.

    For more details on the Air Quality Index and its corresponding health messages, refer to AirNow. You may also choose to sign up for EnviroFlash, a free service and app that notifies you of daily air quality conditions based upon your personal settings that you control.

  • Urgent Issue: Ohio House Bill 335

    Urgent Issue: Ohio House Bill 335

    Loveland, Ohio – This press release was sent by the political action committee, Citizens for Loveland City Schools.

    Dear Loveland City Schools Community,

    Thank you for your continued outreach to our state representatives. You are making a difference!

    Our work continues, however. There is new legislation that is pending – HB 335 – which would be devastating for our schools, cities and counties. It would result in the following losses:

    • Loveland City Schools – annual loss of  $5,846,450
    • City of Loveland – annual loss of $1,683,559
    • Hamilton County – annual loss of $65,730,784
    • Clermont County – annual loss of $22,347,076

    More information on the bill and its impacts to Ohio public schools can be found here.

    How to Help

    Please contact our representatives and ask them to reject this bill. Here is a template you can use.

    You can also join us at Narrow Path Brewery tomorrow, June 12, from 6-8pm. We will gather to write letters to our represenatives, asking them to oppose HB 335.

    We hope to see you tomorrow evening!

    [pdf-embedder url=”https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/HB-335-FAQ.pdf”]

    OH SENATE DISTRICTS

    Ohio Find Your Senator

    District 7

    Senator: Steve Wilson (Republican)  wilson@ohiosenate.gov  (614) 466-9737
    Coverage: Covers Warren County, which includes the City of Loveland.
    Website: ohiosenate.gov/wilsonlookup.boe.ohio.gov+2en.wikipedia.org+2lookup.boe.ohio.gov+2

    District 14

    Senator: Terry Johnson johnson@ohiosenate.gov         (614) 466-8082

    Coverage: Represents portions of Clermont County
    Website: ohiosenate.gov/terry-johnsonohiosenate.gov+1senate.state.oh.us+1

    OH HOUSE DISTRICTS

    District 28: Karen Brownlee (Democrat) represents Symmes Township.
    District 62: Jean Schmidt (Republican) represents the City of Loveland and Miami Township. house.ohio.govhouse.ohio.gov

    HOUSE LEADERSHIP

    House Speaker Matt Huffman: Rep78@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 466-6344 

    Finance Chair Brian Stewart: Rep12@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 466-1464 

    Speaker Pro Tempore Gayle Manning: Rep52@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 644-5076 

    Assistant Speaker Pro Tempore Phil Plummer: Rep39@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 644-8051 

    Majority Floor Leader Marilyn John: Rep76@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 466-5802 

    Assistant Majority Floor Leader Adam Bird: Rep63@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 644-6034 

    Majority Whip Riordan McClain: Rep87@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 644-5088 

    Majority Whip Steve Demetriou: Rep35@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 644-5088 

    Majority Whip Nick Santucci: Rep64@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 466-5441 

    Majority Whip Josh Williams: Rep44@ohiohouse.gov, (614) 466-1418 

    Sample Letter

    Dear …… 

    As a resident of Loveland and a strong supporter of Ohio’s public schools, I am writing to urge you to oppose House Bill 335, the so-called “Property Tax Relief NOW Act.” While I understand the importance of addressing property tax concerns, this bill goes far beyond reasonable reform and would cause irreversible harm to our community schools.

    HB 335 proposes to:

    • Eliminate inside millage for school districts, removing over $1.5 billion annually from school funding statewide;
    • Allow unelected county budget commissions to override voter-approved levies, violating core democratic principles;
    • Prohibit new emergency or substitute levies and block renewal of existing ones, stripping districts of vital funding tools;
    • Introduce a patchwork tax credit scheme that creates unequal tax rates on identical properties, raising serious constitutional concerns;
    • Offer no reimbursement or offset for the massive loss in revenue, forcing districts to slash programs, increase class sizes, and cut staff and services.

    This bill directly threatens the quality of education in Loveland and across Ohio. Our schools could be forced to eliminate arts, music, athletics, AP classes, transportation, and much more—reducing educational opportunities and community strength.

    If HB 335 passes, it is likely that Loveland City Schools and other districts will have no choice but to go to the ballot more often, placing a greater burden on voters and increasing instability in school funding. The lost revenue from HB335 for Loveland City Schools is projected at $5.846 million annually, approximately 6.6 mills. Worse yet, by shifting the tax burden from businesses to individuals, this legislation accelerates a 30-year trend of disinvestment in public services.

    There is a better way. Senate Bill 22 provides targeted property tax relief to those who need it most—without destroying school funding. I strongly encourage you to reject HB 335 and instead support a balanced approach that maintains educational excellence while addressing affordability concerns.

    Please stand with your constituents, with Ohio’s children, and with our future. Oppose HB 335.

    Sincerely,

  • Life Food Pantry is collecting new and gently used books

    Life Food Pantry is collecting new and gently used books

    Loveland, Ohio – “Before covid we would have a section in the Back to School Fair where children and parents could take a books to call their own. Hoping to encourage reading as a family thing. This year we are once again making this happen. Now all we need is donated books – lots and lots of them,” said Terri Carter who is currently working on a project for LIFE’s Back to School Fair.

    Terri is collecting new and gently used books of all kinds.

    How can YOU help?

    • Clean out your bookshelves and closets for books.

    • Donate or provide gift certificates to local book stores.

    • Organize a neighborhood book club or church book drive.

    Books can be dropped off at LIFE FOOD PANTRY at 677 Loveland-Madeira Rd. (next door to ACE Hardware)

    Anytime the Life Food Pantry is open you can leave books in the donation box outside the front door.

    A volunteer is available to pick-up larger quantities at your convenience.

    For more information call/text/or email Terri Carter

    513-295-4778 ~ terri.lifefoodpantry@gmail.com

  • Fentanyl Awareness Weekend Returns to Loveland June 12–15

    Fentanyl Awareness Weekend Returns to Loveland June 12–15

    Friday, June 13 ~ Weekend Kickoff

    🕓 4:00–6:00 PM
    📍 Hops & Berry, 118 Karl Brown Way, Loveland, OH 45140
    Join us for a casual kickoff and toast to another year of progress and purpose!
    Pick up your DOITFORJACK t-shirt & swag.


     

    Friday, June 13 ~ Celebration at O’Bryon’s

    🕖 7:00 PM
    📍 O’Bryon’s Bar & Grill, 1998 Madison Rd., Cincinnati, OH 45208
    Hosted by Jack’s friends and our DOITFORJACK Young Professionals Board.
    Raise a glass, share a memory, and help us grow this mission.
    Everyone is welcome!

    🔗 Please RSVP here!


     

    Saturday, June 14 ~ Yoga at RODI Italian

    🕘 9:00 AM
    📍 RODI Italian (SOLD OUT)
    A morning of mindfulness with Heidi Fricke from Simply Power Yoga.
    This event is currently SOLD OUT – thank you for the incredible support!


     

    Saturday, June 14 ~ Celebration of Jack at Cindy’s Friendly Tavern

    🕒 3:00 PM
    📍 Cindy’s Friendly Tavern, 125 S Karl Brown Way, Loveland, OH 45140
    Our annual party to celebrate Jack’s life.
    🎟️ Ticket includes:

    • 2025 event t-shirt
    • 2 drink tickets
    • Hotdogs & hamburgers
    • Custom koozie
      Plus: Don’t miss our amazing raffle baskets!

    🔗 Click here to purchase tickets!


     

    Saturday, June 14 ~ After Party at Bishop’s Quarter

    🕕 6:00 PM
    📍 Bishop’s Quarter, 212 W Loveland Ave, Loveland, OH 45140
    Live music, great vibes, and more time to celebrate with our community.


     

    Sunday, June 15 ~ Kayak & Conversation ~ Father’s Day on the Little Miami

    🕕 All Day
    📍 Loveland Paddlesports, 174 Karl Brown Way, Loveland, OH 45140
    Spend the day on the river with your loved ones and use the moment to have a life-saving conversation about fentanyl.
    💙 $5 from every rental goes to DOITFORJACK

    🔗 Click here to reserve your spot!


     

    Can’t Join Us in Person? Win a Dream Vacation Instead!

    Support our cause from anywhere by entering our raffle for a luxury vacation!
    🏖️ Win a one-week stay for up to 18 guests in a stunning home in Seagrove Beach, 30A, Florida.
    🎟️ Tickets: $100 each | Only 250 available and going fast!
    All proceeds support DOITFORJACK and our life-saving outreach.

    🔗 Buy your raffle tickets HERE!

    Loveland, Ohio – Now in its fourth year, Fentanyl Awareness Weekend & Celebration of Jack brings the Loveland community together for a powerful cause: saving lives through education.

    Hosted by DOITFORJACK ~ The Jack Quehl Foundation, the multi-day event honors Jack’s life while raising awareness about the growing threat of fentanyl poisoning.

    With community events, raffles, drink & dine to donate, and a powerful message, it’s both a celebration and a call to action. All proceeds support the foundation’s mission to educate students, parents, and professionals about the dangers of fentanyl.

    There are multiple ways you can support this cause through this event. Visit the event site for all the details here https://www.doitforjack.org/event/fentanyl-awareness-weekend/

    We hope to see you there!

  • Grant went undefeated on the day (6-0)

    Grant went undefeated on the day (6-0)

    Photo by Loveland Robotics Boosters

    Loveland, Ohio – Congratulations to Grant from FTC Team 10464 The Bionic Tigers. Grant won the antweight (1lb) division laast weekend at HORD in Sandusky Ohio. This was the 20th anniversary of HORD, and in the combat robotics world, it is one of the oldest and most prestigious tournaments attracting top builders from across the country and hundreds of spectators.

    Grant went undefeated on the day (6-0), beating many of the top builders in the country including some famous Battlebots builders.

    Follow the Loveland Robotics Boosters.