Hamilton County, Ohio – Curious about what your Hamilton County Public Health Department has been up to? Here is their annual report, highlighting their services, programs, and goals.
Tag: ohio
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Here is the annual report of the Hamilton County Department of Health
Each year, the public document provides information about the agency’s financial position, key service statistics and program highlights. The 2024 edition notes several of HCPH’s new or expanded projects, such as a collaboration between the agency’s epidemiology and harm-reduction teams to identify and warn about drug trends (including a local increase in xylazine additives), the growing Recovery Friendly Hamilton County initiative to support employees dealing with substance-use disorder, and a celebration of 15 years of community transformation through the WeThrive! ℠ program.[pdf-embedder url=”https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/HCPH_2024AnnualReport_ab_01312025.pdf”] -

Department of Commerce Emphasizes Caution Regarding Unsolicited Real Estate Offers
Loveland, Ohio – If you receive an unsolicited offer to purchase real estate, the Ohio Department of Commerce’s Division of Real Estate and Professional Licensing (REPL) urges you to practice caution. The Division has recently received numerous questions from residents across the state regarding unsolicited offers they’ve received to purchase their property, many of which include a specific dollar amount.
The Division is calling attention to this issue because unsolicited offers such as these, if not managed appropriately, could lead consumers to unknowingly sell their property for significantly less than it’s worth or agree to a lease arrangement that could have unintended negative financial consequences.
Some consumers have reported receiving unsolicited offers that also include a disclosure form developed by REPL. While the form is authentic, its accompaniment with an offer could potentially give the appearance that the individual making the offer is registered with the Division or that the offer is authorized by the Division. The inclusion of this form does not affirm the validity or legality of an offer.
According to Freddie Mac’s November 2024 Quarterly Economic, Housing and Mortgage Market Outlook report, there is a national housing shortage of approximately 3.7 million units for sale or rent. In addition, according to the Ohio Housing Finance Agency’s 2024 Ohio Housing Needs Assessment, vacancy rates in the state have been falling steadily since 2009. In 2021 the homeowner vacancy rate (0.4%) and rental vacancy rate (4.0%) hit their lowest recorded levels, and they remained low at the end of 2022 (0.9% and 6.2% respectively), indicating a tight housing market.
With a low inventory, homeowners may notice an increase in unsolicited offers they receive to purchase their homes. REPL Superintendent Daphne Hawk encourages all consumers who receive these offers to exercise caution and conduct plenty of research before making a decision.
“If you receive an unsolicited offer, whether via mail, call, text or an in-person visit at your door, always take time to ask questions,” Hawk said. “While many homeowners believe the person contacting them to be a real estate agent, in many cases, they are not. Asking questions like ‘are you an Ohio real estate agent?’ will let you know if you are communicating with someone locally or an out-of-state investor. Make sure to review offers carefully with legal counsel before signing any documents or providing information to anyone, especially if it’s someone you do not know. As tempting as an offer may be, acting quickly and without the advice of a local real estate expert could have a range of significant consequences. For example, you may think the offer is too good to pass up, when in fact it’s well below the market value of your property.”
Consumers can verify the status of a real estate license on the Division’s website through eLicense Online.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) also offers advice on limiting unsolicited offers received by various means. For more information, visit:
“As always, if you suspect you have been the victim of a real estate scam, you should contact your local law enforcement agency as soon as possible,” Hawk said.
For additional resources and information on real estate-related consumer topics, visit the Division’s website by clicking here.
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You Must Stand Up: The Fight for Abortion Rights in Post-Dobbs America
“Meticulously researched and compulsively readable, You Must Stand Up documents in searing detail the challenges and horrors of the post-Roe landscape. This is required reading for anyone trying to make sense of our current moment.”
—Melissa Murray, author of #1 New York Times bestseller The Trump Indictments: The Historic Charging Documents with Commentary
Loveland, Ohio – Loveland Magazine recently started publishing news stories by Loveland native Amanda Becker. In 2024 Becker released a book titled, You Must Stand Up: The Fight for Abortion Rights in Post-Dobbs
Chapter 12 is set in Ohio.
Nieman Fellow Amanda Becker provides a real-time portrait of the creative resistance that unfolded in America’s first year without the protections of Roe v. Wade. Amidst daily shifts in health care access, new legal battles coming before partisan courts, and up-for-grabs state constitutions, Becker follows the leaders who rose to meet these challenges – doctors and staffers turning to new financial and medical models to remain open and providing abortions, volunteers who campaigned against antiabortion ballot initiatives, and medical students who fought to learn and provide what can be lifesaving care.
By depicting the splintered reality of post-Dobbs America, and by capturing how Americans have developed new ways to best protect their constitutional rights, Becker ultimately shows how outrage can beget hope, and give rise to a new movement.
“You Must Stand Up documents post-Roe America with care and nuance; it’s a necessary book for anyone who cares about the attacks on our bodies. Amanda Becker’s vivid retelling of on-the-ground activism reminds readers not only of what’s at stake—but what it takes to win.”
—Jessica Valenti, author of New York Times bestseller Sex Object: A Memoir and founder of Abortion, Every Day
LISTEN TO SAMPLE

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Read the Annual Clermont County Soil and Water District report
Clermont County, Ohio – The 2024 Annual Report for the Clermont County Soil and Water District is out.
[pdf-embedder url=”https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/annual-report-2024_web-compressed.pdf”]
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Could your logo be the winner in 2025?
Last year’s winning design
Clermont County, Ohio – K-12 students, send in your logo designs for the Spring Litter Cleanup by February 28th.
For rules and registration, visit www.springlittercleanup.com.The Clermont County Park District says they are excited to see what the logo for the 2025 Spring Litter Cleanup will be.
The 2025 Logo Design Contest is for local K-12 students. The winner will receive a $100 cash prize and will also receive a $100 cash donation to their school art department or local art program! There will also be $25 individual cash prizes given to the winning design for each grade level (K-12).

Past Winners All K-12 students attending a school located in Clermont County or within the East Fork Little Miami River Watershed (including home-schooled students) are eligible to compete. Interested students should register using this form. Logo designs should emphasize litter clean-up and prevention – complete contest rules are listed here. Design entries are due to the Clermont Soil & Water Conservation District office by Friday, February 28, 2025.
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African Americans and Labor
Loveland, Ohio – Loveland Magazine celebrates Black History Month.
The 2025 Black History Month theme of the Study of African American Life and History, African Americans and Labor, focuses on the various and profound ways that work and working of all kinds – free and unfree, skilled, and unskilled, vocational and voluntary – intersect with the collective
experiences of Black people. Indeed, work is at the very center of much of Black history and culture. Be it the traditional agricultural labor of enslaved Africans that fed Low Country colonies, debates among Black educators on the importance of vocational training, self-help strategies and entrepreneurship in Black communities, or organized labor’s role in fighting both economic and social injustice, Black people’s work has been transformational throughout the U.S., Africa, and the Diaspora. The 2025 Black History Month theme, “African Americans and Labor,” sets out to highlight and celebrate the potent impact of this work.Considering Black people’s work through the widest perspectives provides versatile and insightful platforms for examining Black life and culture through time and space. In this instance, the notion of work constitutes compensated labor in factories, the military, government agencies, office buildings, public service, and private homes. But it also includes the community building of social justice activists, voluntary workers serving others, and institution building in churches, community groups, and social clubs and organizations. In each of these instances, the work Black people do and have done have been instrumental in shaping the lives, cultures, and histories of Black people and the societies in which they live. Understanding Black labor and its impact in all these multivariate settings is integral to understanding Black people and their histories, lives, and cultures.
Africans were brought to the Americas to be enslaved for their knowledge and serve as a workforce, which was superexploited by several European countries and then by the United States government. During enslavement, Black people labored for others, although some Black people were quasi-free and labored for themselves, but operated within a country that did not value Black life. After fighting for their freedom in the Civil War and in the country’s transition from an agricultural based economy to an industrial one, African Americans became sharecroppers, farm laborers, landowners, and then wage earners. Additionally, African Americans’ contributions to the built landscape can be found in every part of the nation as they constructed and designed some of the most iconic examples of architectural heritage in the country, specifically in the South.
Over the years to combat the superexploitation of Black labor, wage discrepancies, and employment discrimination based on race, sex, and gender, Black professionals (teachers, nurses, musicians, and lawyers, etc.) occupations (steel workers, washerwomen, dock workers, sex workers, sports, arts and sciences, etc.) organized for better working conditions and compensation. Black women such as Addie Wyatt also joined ranks of union work and leadership to advocate for job security, reproductive rights, and wage increases.
2025 marks the 100-year anniversary of the creation of Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and Maids by labor organizer and civil rights activist A. Philip Randolph, which was the first Black union to receive a charter in the American Federation of Labor. Martin Luther King, Jr incorporated issues outlined by Randolph’s March on Washington Movement such as economic justice into the Poor People’s Campaign, which he established in 1967. For King, it was a priority for Black people to be considered full citizens.
The theme, “African Americans and Labor,” intends to encourage broad reflections on intersections between Black people’s work and their workplaces in all their iterations and key moments, themes, and events in Black history and culture across time and space and throughout the U.S., Africa, and the Diaspora. Like religion, social justice movements, and education, studying African Americans’ labor and labor struggles are important organizing foci for newinterpretations and reinterpretations of the Black past, present, and future. Such new considerations and reconsiderations are even more significant as the historical forces of racial oppression gather new and renewed strength in the 21st century.
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Love for you to apply on behalf of Loveland’s LIFE Food Pantry
Loveland, Ohio – The Contribution Project accepts applications from young people (ages 14-25) who are seeking to make an impact on their community, school, or neighborhood through a “contribution”.
We would love for you to apply on behalf of the LIFE Food Pantry — it takes just a few minutes—and if selected, LIFE Food Pantry will receive funds to continue serving our neighbors in need.How You Can Help:1) Visit The Contribution Project2) Submit a quick application for LIFE Food Pantry3) Spread the word—every entry counts!Together, we can make a BIG difference. Thank you for supporting LIFE and ensuring no Loveland family goes hungry.So, what’s a contribution?
A contribution is something tangible that adds value to you and the community around you.
EXAMPLES:
• Simon built birdhouses around campus for Eastern Bluebirds and to help educate students.
• Amber funded a Mental Health Summit with a student org for self-identifying women of color.
• Robert paid the way for his Taekwondo team to go to Nationals.
• Residential Sustainability Leaders works to promote different ways that students can contribute to making campus a more eco-friendly place by engaging in sustainable practices.
• My contribution was to provide dog food, treats, and toys to guide dogs in training.
• I decided to go around campus to surprise people with flowers. I get flowers from Trader Joe’s and give them out to students who look extra stressed and to campus workers who work hard every day to provide students with the best experience possible.
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After many weeks of competition, Nala is currently in 10th place in the U.S.A in America’s Favorite Pet contest
by David Miller
Loveland, Ohio – A beloved resident of Historic Downtown Loveland, Nala is always making new human forever friends on the Loveland Bike Trail. Nala is the fur baby of Loveland Magazine President and Publisher Cassie Mattia, and her boyfriend Adam Ploof.
After many weeks of competition, Nala is currently in 10th place in the U.S.A in the America’s Favorite Pet contest. She needs to be one of the top 5 pets before February 6 at 7 PM to remain in the contest. If she wins she will win the top prize of $10K and be featured on the cover of Modern Dog magazine! If she wins the national competition, Nala’s story will be shared in a special 2-page feature that showcases her unique personality and charm.
Please, lend her a loving hand by casting your VOTE today. It only takes a few seconds to VOTE.If you have already voted, and we know many of you have, remember that you can cast your FREE vote again every 24 hours. If you believe in Nala as much as we do, a donation that goes to the Progressive Animal Welfare Society can greatly amplify your voting power.
Bear with me here… I know all of you pet owners believe your fur baby deserves to be on the cover, but Nala now has a real chance – and how cool would it be to brag that one of Loveland’s favorite pets is also America’s Favorite Pet?
America’s Favorite Pet is excited to partner with PAWS (Progressive Animal Welfare Society) to aid in its mission to help cats, dogs, and wild animals thrive in happy, healthy homes or in their natural habitats. Since 1967, PAWS has unified more than 130,000 cats and dogs with loving families, nurtured more than 140,000 sick, injured, and orphaned wildlife, and made the world a better place for countless critters.
I’ve dozed off on Nala’s living room couch and woke with this adorable and loving fur baby cuddling closely and warmly by my side and found out she’s been there for an hour – both of us in a deep, deep sleep. Nala would represent Loveland in a remarkable way.
Cassie says, “Thanks to all those who have supported my little girl! Would you be so kind as to vote and keep on voting?”

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New Episode: The Queen City Sports Podcast by Chris Ball & Mark Raines
by Chris Ball
Loveland, Ohio – The Cincinnati Bearcats are struggling mightily and are now 2-7 in the Big 12 after a very good start to the season. Mark and Chris do a deep dive on what has gone wrong during this last stretch of very winnable games for the Cats. The problems stem from what we all thought was going to be a huge strength for this team, namely rebounding and hustle. Cincinnati has been outrebounded in their last several games, and it is making it nearly impossible to win, especially when the offense has also struggled. Mark and Chris disucss just what has gone wrong and what it means for the rest of this Bearcats season, and even the prospects for the team going into next year. The guys also get into the NFC and AFC Championship games, and the impact that both Saquon Barkley and Patrick Mahomes had on their teams’ victories. And don’t forget to tune in next week when we preview the Super Bowl matchup between the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles.
Have a listen and don’t forget to leave your comments and feedback!
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Hey readers… have an opinion about sports? How about a topic you’d like to see written about in Loveland Magazine or a thought about one of our articles?
Just need to vent and get out your frustration about the Reds, Bengals, or any other sports issues?
Feel free to share with an email to lovelandmagazinesports@gmail.com!
We would love to hear from our readers, and we thank you for your support and engagement.
Also, don’t forget to follow us at The Loveland Sports Desk at the below links:
For Facebook, click here.
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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.








































