Tag: loveland

  • Coming soon: Cassie’s Table of Discussions interview with Zumi and the League of Animal Welfare

    Coming soon: Cassie’s Table of Discussions interview with Zumi and the League of Animal Welfare

    Loveland, Ohio – Last Wednesday, The League of Animal Welfare came to Cassie Mattia’s “Table of Discussions” for a feature interview.

    This is a teaser clip of Zumi doing dog tricks to pique your anticipation.

  • Loveland’s Spring brush removal program

    Loveland’s Spring brush removal program

    Loveland, Ohio – The Spring brush pickup program has begun. Brush must be placed in the grass near the roadside. Public Works will collect brush for approximately two weeks.

    Guidelines

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

    • Brush must be placed in the grass behind 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 crews to navigate the route and make turns.
    • Limbs cannot exceed 10 inches in diameter at the cut section.
    • Limbs should be placed 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.  These items clog or bind up the chipper.
    • Small twigs and sticks should be tied with twine in bundles 12 inches in diameter. Twigs or sticks can also be placed in a container, 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.

    Please Note

    • Any material not meeting these requirements cannot be collected and will be left.
    • Outside the regular pick-up schedule, residents are encouraged to visit City Hall to get a free voucher to drop off any yard waste to Evans Landscaping.
    • Wood chips may be available. Anyone in the city who would like a load of wood chips should call (513) 774-3067.
  • Jack Quehl was a kid like yours

    Jack Quehl was a kid like yours

    Jack Quehl was a kid like yours.

    Jack grew up here in Loveland, went to elementary school at St. Columban and high school at Moeller. He played football and was a National Merit Scholar. Jack loved music, travel, reading, and his friends. He graduated from the University of South Carolina’s Darla Moore Business School and moved to Baltimore for his first job. A month later, Jack was dead.

    Jack made one bad decision, and it killed him.

    One night, Jack was with friends, and someone brought out a party drug. Jack didn’t say no. None of them knew the drug had been cut with deadly fentanyl. On Sunday, September 19, 2021, Jack was found unresponsive, and one of his friends was dead. Jack’s parents Tom and Stephanie rushed to his side, but it was too late. Jack wasn’t an addict, he wasn’t a habitual drug user, and he never intended to take fentanyl. But he did, and it took his future.

    Fentanyl is the leading cause of death for Americans ages 18-45.

    Illicit fentanyl is cheap and easy to make, and it pours into our country every day. It’s 50 times stronger than heroin, 100 times stronger than morphine, and is highly addictive. Cartels add it to illegal and recreational drugs and to fake pills made to look like Xanax and other prescription medications. In 2023, DEA seized more than 68 million fentanyl-laced fake pills and more than 11,010 pounds of fentanyl powder. That’s equivalent to more than 336.3 million fatal doses.

    7 out of 10 fake pills contain a lethal dose of fentanyl.

    Tom and Stephanie Quehl don’t want another family to be devastated by fentanyl. In November 2022, they founded DOITFORJACK and the Jack Quehl Foundation. DOITFORJACK is committed to educating our community about the threat of fentanyl poisoning by sharing Jack’s story. To learn more about our mission, please visit us at DOITFORJACK.ORG. (embed https://www.doitforjack.org)

    Help DOITFORJACK stop fentanyl from taking someone else’s Jack.

     

    LearnMore…

  • Loveland Athletic Boosters Annual Mulch Sale

    Loveland Athletic Boosters Annual Mulch Sale

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland Athletic Boosters support the Loveland City School District athletic programs. Support of the student athletes includes donating equipment to the athletic department, sponsoring activities to promote school spirit, and enthusiasm, and funding major capital improvements. The Boosters support more than 1,000 7th through 12th grades girls & boys.

    Four options of premium mulch provided by Bzak Landscaping

    PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW

    All bags are 2 cubic foot bags

    Queen City Gold – this is our most popular mulch its triple shredded and dark brown in color – $5.25 per bag

    Black Dyed Double Shredded Mulch – All dyed mulch is processed with a water based dye. It will hold color longer than the natural hardwood mulch. – $5.75 per bag

    Red Dyed Double Shredded Mulch – All dyed mulch is processed with a water based dye. It will hold color longer than the natural hardwood mulch. – $5.75 per bag

    Longneedle Pinestraw Bales – covers approximately 45 sq. ft per bale. All natural product. Hand baled. – $14 per bale

    *10 Bag Minimum Order

    *Free local delivery of your order will be provided by Loveland Student Athletes
    *Individual bags will be delivered starting Friday, April 5th (between 5P-8P & and Saturday, April 6th (between 10A-12P)
    *Full pallets and straw will be delivered on or by April 13th
    *Satisfaction guaranteed

    If you have questions, contact us: lab45140mulch@gmail.com

  • Summer Camps at Whistle Stop Clay Works

    Summer Camps at Whistle Stop Clay Works

    Advertisement

    June 24 – 28

    Cost is $205 per camper.

    Morning Camp: 9am to noon (ages 9 and older)

    Afternoon Camp: 1pm to 4pm (ages 12 and older)

    Learn to make a variety of clay creatures and animals, and even get a chance to use the potter’s wheel.

    It is five days of instructor-lead classes, a 3-hour class per day. Camp is a great way to keep children busy, entertained, and learning a new skill set. Camp is limited to eight children and we will have a campfire & marshmallow roast on the last day of camp.

    Clay, tools, glazes and firings included.

    REGISTER

     

  • How and when to file Loveland income tax

    How and when to file Loveland income tax

    Loveland, Ohio – The City of Loveland income tax is a 1% earnings tax on persons who live or work in the City. A credit is given to residents who pay taxes to other municipalities. According to City Hall, “residents who work in areas imposing less than a 1% earnings tax must pay the difference to Loveland.” All residents must file a return by April 15 even if no tax is owed.

    Info Provided by City Hall

    Not sure if you live in Loveland? View the street listing Street Listing (PDF) to view all streets that are in Loveland.

    Filing Your Local Income Tax Returns

    The City of Loveland uses the Regional Income Tax Agency (RITA) to collect local income taxes. Residents and businesses can file their local income tax returns with RITA using the following methods:

    • RITA eFile: Click “My Account” to securely file your return through RITA’s website.
    • Individual Paper Forms: Click to download and print the appropriate return form and mail to RITA at the address listed on the form.
    • Business Paper Forms: Click to download and print the appropriate return form and mail to RITA at the address listed on the form.
    Interest Rate 

    Ohio House Bill 5 (ORC 718.27) requires municipalities to publish the interest rate for tax underpayments by October 31st, for the next calendar year. The Regional Income Tax Agency has addressed this requirement on the City of Loveland’s behalf by posting this information to the RITA website. Based on the calculations required by House Bill 5, the annual interest rate will be as follows:

    • 2016: 5%
    • 2017: 6%
    • 2018: 6%
    • 2019: 7%
    • 2020: 7%
    • 2021: 5%
    • 2022: 5%
    • 2023: 7%
    • 2024: 10%
    Estimated Taxes

    For tax years 2015 and prior, the Loveland Income Tax Code (Chapter 183, Section .07) requires individual taxpayers having estimated taxes due in excess of $100.00 to pay on a quarterly billing schedule. Noncompliance results in a penalty equal to 10% of the tax remaining due over $100.00 after the estimated payment deadline of January 31. To avoid assessment of such a penalty, the code provides “safe harbor” options:

    1. Owe less than $100 when you file the annual return, and all required payments were made timely.
    2. Pay at least 100% of your previous year’s tax liability.
    3. Pay at least 90% of the current year’s tax liability through the same means as #2.
    4. The taxpayer is an individual who resides in the city but was not domiciled there on the first day of January.

    Starting Tax Year 2016, quarterly payments of estimated tax are required if the total tax liability is $200 or more. The new due dates for estimated payments are April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. Noncompliance results in a penalty equal to 15% of the tax remaining due after the estimated payment deadline of December 15. To avoid assessment of such a penalty, the code provides three “safe harbor” options:

    1. The taxpayer is an individual who resides in the city but was not domiciled there on the first day of January,
    2. Pay at least 100% of your previous year’s tax liability, or,
    3. Pay at least 90% of the current year’s tax liability.
    Extension Requests

    For taxpayers on a federal extension, a separate request for a municipal extension is not required. Submit a copy of the federal extension with the filing of the extended municipal return.

    For taxpayers not on a federal extension, an extension request must be submitted on or before the date of the municipal income tax return is due. Visit the RITA website for the extension request form.

    Please remember that an extension only extends the time allowed to file an annual return, not the time allowed for payment.

  • Downtown Loveland is now the home of a BREW Tour!

    Downtown Loveland is now the home of a BREW Tour!

    Loveland, Ohio – Downtown Loveland is now the home of a BREW Tour! The Little Miami River Chamber Alliance along with several downtown Loveland, Ohio businesses have launched a unique, fun,and complimentary BREW tour to encourage the community to patronize area businesses during the chillier and slower months of business.

    Residents and guests can pick up a punch card at any participating downtown Loveland restaurant, bar, or coffee shop to participate in this fun event.

    CeeCee Collins, President of the Little Miami River Chamber Alliance, said that “All folks need to do is ask for their punch card and then visit all the establishments for a beverage of their choice. Once they have visited all of the establishments and have a full punch cared, they can pick up their “prize,” at the chamber. They get to choose from either a commemorative pint glass or a coffee mug.”

    We’re having a lot of fun with the event and the establishments are excited to be a part of this unique BREW Tour. We encourage beer, wine, coffee, soda drinkers all to be a part of the fun!”

    The participating establishments are:

    Narrow Path Brewing
    Ramsey’s Trailside
    RODI Italian
    Tano Bistro
    Mile 42 Coffee
    Hometown Café
    Paxton’s Grill
    The Works
    Bishop’s Quarter
    Hops and Berry
    Rose Boutique Wine Bar
    Cappy’s Wine & Spirits

     

    The event goes from February 19 to April 19 in downtown Loveland, Ohio only.

    CONTACT:

    ​​CEECEE COLLINS

    ​​513-683-1544

    ​​CEECEE@LMRCHAMBERALLIANCE.ORG

  • Loveland Presbyterian Church yard sale on March 9

    Loveland Presbyterian Church yard sale on March 9

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland Presbyterian Church is having a yard sale on March 9 from 9 Am until 3 PM. The church is located at 6796 Loveland Miamiville Road. (See map below.)

    Advertisement

     

  • Photo Essay: Loveland Bike Trail Bridge construction update

    Photo Essay: Loveland Bike Trail Bridge construction update

    Loveland, Ohio – Word on the site yesterday as bridge parts were being bolted in place is that construction is on schedule for a May reopening of the Loveland Bike Trail bridge in Historic Downtown Loveland. The old railroad bridge that had been used for decades to carry bikers, runners, bladders, and walkers over O’Bannon Creek is being replaced with a new span.

    All photos are © David Miller/Loveland Magazine 2024.

     

  • Was the Loveland Frogman Festival fact, fiction or fantasy?

    Was the Loveland Frogman Festival fact, fiction or fantasy?

    Loveland Magazine Managing Editor at last year’s Loveland Frogman Festival.

    by David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – The March 2nd Loveland Frogman Festival at the Oasis Conference Center may have been art imitating life or life imitating art. As much as anything, it is a cultural and art show seen from the otherworldly perspective of people’s lives, through the attire of visitors and vendors, and the art they create. Something of a masquerade ball, Halloween party, craft show and family reunion. It was a showcase of Loveland, Ohio to the Mid-West the South, and the East Coast.

    The Loveland Frog, Jeff Craig, and Andy the Pied Piper of Loveland. (Andy introduces himself in one of the videos below.)

    When I asked Founder and Director of the Festival, Jeff Craig to identify the person in the frog costume next to him in this photo he asked me to take, he said, “That was a costume? Say it ain’t so?” He laughed before continuing, “Now that I think about it, I never saw my oldest daughter and the Frog at the same time throughout the festival.”

    Since the mid 1990’s Jeff has worked in the world of cartography and Geographic Information Systems, most recently for the last ten years with Duke Energy. He graduated from Miami University with a degree in Education and completed grad school at the University of Cincinnati studying Geography. As his schedule allowed, he taught Intro Geography courses at Northern Kentucky University, Cincinnati State, and Miami University. He lives in Cincinnati near Mt. Airy Forest with his wife Sarah. They have a blended family including a son and daughter in college and a daughter in 4th grade. He said, “Our house is always home to many pets. Right now that includes three dogs and three cats.” Music has always been part of Jeff’s life, from marching band to jazz band in school and he now plays the snare drum with the Cincinnati Caledonian Pipes & Drums.

    Part Masquerade Ball and a little Halloween thrown in, this was one of the more elaborate creatures entertaining the attendees.

    I hope you will get a sense of the spirit of the Frogman Festival in these very short videos below. I quickly learned what smudge fans are, first being attracted to their beauty and the craftsmanship thinking they were only ornamental pieces of amazing art. They are indeed, but as Sherry explains, they have a very useful and practical purpose.

    Smudge Fans are explained by Sherry in the video below.

    Danner Seyffer brought his Cryptic Scouts of America and was the troop leader in the room. He has an awful lot of of fun with the persona!

    Nadine who traveled from Toledo, has seen Bigfoot and tells a horrifying story of her encounter with the Dogman. Immediately after the encounter, she fled her home so fast she wasn’t able to retrieve all of her belongings.

    Later in the evening was the regional premier of the Frogman movie, a “Lovecraftian nightmare”. I chatted with the principals and the special effects artist who demonstrated the “Wand” that was so instrumental in the first sighting of our Loveland Frog. They want the world to know the truth about the Frogman “because the croaks are no hoax.”

    Jeff said that for over fifteen years, he was a vendor at many events like the Point Pleasant, West Virginia Mothman Festival. In 2008 he came out with his “Hidden Ohio Map & Guide“, a full color, 2-sided paper map that pinpoints over 300 haunted and other unusual places in Ohio. Jeff would sell the map along with stickers and other items at the Mothman Festival which then was fairly small compared to what it has become. He said, “I’ve watched it grow over the years and when I came out with my national map of haunted and unusual places called Map in Black in 2021, I started traveling further away to do events. I decided we needed to celebrate the legend we have right here in our area, the Loveland Frogman. I noticed as I went to many events in other states, people had heard of the Frogman and would create art for the Frog’s fans and other items to celebrate the creature. The stories needed to be honored right here in the Little Miami River valley.”

    Jeff’s Map in Black covers Aliens/UFOs, Ancient American Sites, Cryptids, Ecology, Hauntings, Military/Government sites, Native Lands, and Sacred Geography.

    Putting the Sweetheart Resort of Ohio and our Frog on the map

    There were over 1000 attendees. at the 2nd Annual Frogman Festival. The first, last March was at the Great Wolf Lodge near Kings Island. Jeff said that he doesn’t know the “very furthest traveller”, however, many people drove hundreds of miles from Minnesota, Kansas, and Virginia. One of the vendors is from Montreal, Canada and travelled down to Loveland the day before. Many vendors were from out of state including, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Kentucky, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Western New York, and Tennessee. One YouTube blogger, The Carpetbagger who has over a million followers drove nine hours overnight from Georgia to attend the festival and share his many stories throughout the day.

    Matthew Schang, AKA Mothboy Matt told me that he traveled from Western New York to entertain festival goers. When he told me he knows Criyptids jokes I thought I asked a very logical question at an event filled with people who have experienced sudden strange encounters. I asked, “Knock, knock, who’s there?” Mothboy Matt was stumped. I also stumped him when I asked if he knew any Loveland Frog jokes. Mothboy Matt did tell me a Mothman joke, and described it “dad joke”. Mothboys is his podcast on Cryptids, Conspiracies, and the Unknown.

    “Loveland had a great representation at the festival so big thanks to all who attended as well as the businesses and groups that provided help in spreading the word about the event, especially Loveland Magazine”, Jeff said. “We have a unique legend here that people from all over the country and even the world have heard of so the festival helps give the story a physical presence for people to experience. We aren’t out trying to prove anything, we just want to celebrate the stories, not just of Frogman, but the many unusual or mysterious happenings across the Tri-State region. I saw pictures on social media from attendees and vendors who had come from out of town and they were posting shots from the Loveland Castle and various locations as they explored our region before and after the event.”

    There are plans for a 3rd annual Frogman Festival but details still need to be finalized.

    Dare I proclaim as first suggested by an attendee that the first Saturday in March is hereby and forever proclaimed, “Loveland Frog Day”.

     

    ___________________

    Sometimes hilarious, but always creepy, join hosts Laura Kram and Creepy Acres very own resident Bigfoot, Sam Squatch, as they delve into mysterious cryptid encounters and inexplicable occurrences to bring you “This Week in Creepy History”!

    This week’s episode was The Loveland Frogman!

    In the first weeks of March 1972 the city of Loveland, Ohio, a sleepy suburb of Cincinnati, was the scene of one of the most bizarre and unusual cases in all of cryptozoology. 2 different police officers, 2 weeks apart, would both separately encounter what some would describe as a 3-foot-tall, bipedal, frog faced entity.  What was perhaps more outrageous was that this wasn’t the first time Loveland, Ohio had been visited by such creatures!

    Join hosts Laura Kram and Creepy Acres’ very own resident Bigfoot, Sam Squatch,  as they speak with author and researcher James A. Willis (WEIRD WILLIS) about the Loveland Frogman! So sit back and prepare for THIS WEEK IN CREEPY HISTORY!

    James A. Willis is the author of numerous books on Ohio legends and lore including “Weird Ohio”, “Ohio’s Historic Haunts”, “Central Ohio Legends & Lore”, “Southern Ohio Legends & Lore”, and many more!

    You can find James A. Willis on  his Facebook page, or at his websites “My Strange and Spooky World” and  “Ghosts of Ohio”!

    ___________________