Tag: ohio

  • As deadline for reform measure nears, advocates look to future of Ohio redistricting

    As deadline for reform measure nears, advocates look to future of Ohio redistricting

    The members of the Ohio Redistricting Commission are sworn in by Gov. Mike DeWine on Wednesday. Left to right: State Rep. Jeff LaRe, Secretary of State Frank LaRose, Auditor of State Keith Faber, DeWine, Senate Majority Floor Leader Rob McColley, House Minority Leader Allison Russo and Senate Minority Leader Nickie Antonio. (Photo by Susan Tebben, OCJ.)

    BY:  Ohio Capital Journal

    Signature collection continues for an anti-gerrymandering ballot measure in Ohio that would replace politicians on the redistricting commission with citizens. As the July deadline approaches, supporters are pointing to a new study showing how uncompetitive Statehouse races are.

    The Brennan Center for Justice at NYU’s law school analyzed Ohio’s current maps alongside the results of the most recent primary election.

    Authors of the study said the data “reveals one of the tangible ways Ohio’s gerrymandered maps undermine electoral competition, and how the districts leave millions of Ohio voters without a significant voice in the Ohio House elections slated for this November.”

    “An overwhelming majority of Ohioans will cast ballots this November in legislative districts that were drawn to lock in general election outcomes, and few districts featured meaningful primary contests,” the Brennan Center report stated. “These are the predictable consequences of living in a gerrymandered state.”

    One of the authors of the report, released Tuesday, is Yurij Rudensky, who spoke in support of the new ballot initiative proposed to hit voters in November. If it gets on the ballot and is passed by voters, the reforms would replace the current Ohio Redistricting Commission made up of elected officials with a citizen-run, judge-vetted commission to draw the next Statehouse and U.S. Congressional maps.

    Rudensky spoke in a March panel, alongside former Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor and others, about the difference between the reforms passed in 2015 and 2018 and the proposed amendment that voters may see on their general election ballots.

    At the March panel discussion, Rudensky hesitated to call the last two measures reforms because he argued no changes were made and the previous amendments merely demonstrated that “political insiders have no business being in the process.”

    Since those amendments passed — reforms made through legislative negotiation before hitting the voters — the Ohio Redistricting Commission has been built on a Republican majority, with Gov. Mike DeWine, Senate President Matt Huffman, former House Speaker Bob Cupp, Secretary of State Frank LaRose and Auditor of State Keith Faber all standing on the commission during some or all of the proceedings over the two years it took for the group to pass six Statehouse maps and two congressional maps. State Rep. Jeff LaRe, R-Violet Twp., replaced Cupp and state Sen. Rob McColley, R-Napoleon, came in for Huffman toward the end of the two-year span.

    The Statehouse maps were declared unconstitutionally gerrymandered five times by a bipartisan majority on the Ohio Supreme Court, but voters were forced by federal judges to use them for the 2022 Election.

    Statehouse maps passed by the redistricting commission this past September, and set to be used for this year’s election, were the only to receive bipartisan agreement (with Senate Minority Leader Nickie Antonio and House Minority Leader Allison Russo’s votes), while the state’s Congressional map is still considered unconstitutional under an Ohio Supreme Court ruling.

    In analyzing the current Ohio Statehouse maps, Rudensky and co-author Gina Feliz concluded that about 77% of the state’s population live in “districts where elections for state representatives are not in serious dispute.”

    “That is, these districts are either uncontested, or they give one party a disproportionate advantage in the general election so that the district is uncompetitive, even if it’s formally contested,” the researchers wrote.

    The report defines “uncompetitive” as districts where the partisan draw favors one party by 55% or more.

     Source: Brennan Center analysis of Ohio Secretary of State’s Office Unofficial 2024 Primary Election Results. 

    Nearly half of the districts in the Ohio House didn’t have a primary contest in March to drive a November general election race, the Brennan Center research found, citing data from the Ohio Secretary of State.

    “In all, there are 15 districts (out of 99 total) that will give voters no choice between Democratic and Republican candidates for state representative,” according to the study.

    The report also recognized the low turnout in the state during the primary season, with an average of 18.8% of registered voters casting ballots in districts with competitive primaries.

    Because of that, Rudensky and Feliz counted fewer than 450,000 voters who “all but decided who would serve as state representatives on behalf of more than 2.3 million registered voters and 3.5 million constituents.”

    The report pointed to the proposed ballot initiative led by Citizens Not Politicians as a redistricting reform that could “center community needs and voter preferences rather than the interests of incumbents.”

    Looking to a future that may have an independent redistricting commission, the voting rights group Common Cause put out its own report, a summary of a 2023 conference where members reflected on states who already have such a system in place, and those like Ohio that could see the change come in November.

    “Unsurprisingly, all those who attended the conference believed in the possibilities of fair and representative maps and that independent redistricting commissions were the best strategy to achieve this goal,” Common Cause stated in the new report.

    The “Roadmap for Fair Maps in 2030,” a summary of the 2023 National Citizen Redistricting Commissioners Conference, talked about the need to make redistricting a transparent process that is “responsive to community needs.” At the conference, the report said a “model commission” was organized for Ohio and neighbor state Indiana “to demonstrate how an alternative process based on community input and transparency can work.”

    In a previous report, released shortly after the Ohio Redistricting Commission adopted the current Statehouse district maps, Common Cause gave the state a failing grade, calling the current map-drawing process and the results that came from it “unmitigated disasters.”

    Ideally in redistricting, Common Cause members said the process should “ensure that commissions reflect the diversity of the jurisdiction” and engage community-based organizations and leaders to build resident trust and hold commissions accountable.

    What should not be included in the process, according to the report, are legislature-appointed commissioners or any legislative role in the mapping process.

    “Commission decisions on maps should be final, except for judicial review, with no approval from elected officials required,” the report stated.

    The Citizens Not Politicians initiative was supported in the report as part of strategies to “increase fair representation in 2030,” the next time the process is set to start, though maps in Ohio would need to be redrawn in 2025 if the ballot measure passes in November.

    Opposition to the initiative has been led by Huffman, who helped formulate the previous redistricting reforms. In an Ohio Chamber of Commerce event following the March primaries, he laid out his arguments against the initiative, saying litigation would pile up with the proposed system, and that “when allowed to work,” the current system did its job.

    In order for the measure to appear on Ohio ballots in the general election, supporters must collect 413,487 valid state voter signatures by July 3.


    Susan Tebben
    SUSAN TEBBEN

    Susan Tebben is an award-winning journalist with a decade of experience covering Ohio news, including courts and crime, Appalachian social issues, government, education, diversity and culture. She has worked for The Newark Advocate, The Glasgow (KY) Daily Times, The Athens Messenger, and WOUB Public Media. She has also had work featured on National Public Radio.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Elly De La Cruz Makes History For The Reds

    Elly De La Cruz Makes History For The Reds

    Elly De La Cruz with a young fan at this year’s Reds Fest

    by Chris Ball

    Loveland, Ohio – Baseball is America’s pastime, and its records stretch back more than a century. And so when such records are broken, it means just a little bit more as compared to any of the other major American sports. This is why when fans read what Elly De La Cruz has accomplished these past few weeks, it makes it all the more impressive.

    With his monster April, Elly is now the only player since at least 1901 with at least 8 home runs and 17 steals in a calendar month. Oh by the way he also uncorked a throw to first at a jaw dropping 106.9 miles per hour. When he struggled at the beginning of the season Reds fans questioned whether De La Cruz had the focus and discipline necessary to make it at the major league level. Those criticisms are much quieter now given all that he has accomplished and how it seems that he has carried this team given the struggles or absence of other very important Reds players.

    The other important point to consider for De La Cruz is how his game has improved just over the course of the early part of the season. He’s cut his strikeout rate from 50 percent to 30 percent and increased his walk rate up to around 15 percent when it had been as low as 5 percent. Though Elly’s other hitting numbers may pop off the page a bit more, the evolution of his plate discipline is what makes those numbers possible.

    His offense isn’t the only thing getting better. It was difficult to watch Elly muff routine ground balls or sail easy throws during the first few games of the season. But that all seems like a distant memory, far in the rear view, as we watch him play now. His defense has greatly improved and, while still raw at times, is something he’s clearly refining at one of the most physically demanding positions in defensive baseball.

    Though it is only his first full season at this level, Elly has clearly shown that he has all the tools necessary to be a star in Major League Baseball not just years firm the road, but right this very moment. The future is now for Elly and the Reds and we are all privileged to watch.

    On another important note for the Reds, perhaps Jeimer Candelario is beginning to slowly turn things around. Against the Padres on Tuesday night he had two more hits including a solo homer, albeit in a losing effort. After posting some of the worst metrics of his career, Candelario has two multi hit games in a row and broke an 0-19 slump. If he starts to produce at even average levels it will be a big boost to a ball club fighting and scraping for every win it can get in the ultra competitive National League Central.

     



    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.

  • The Bengals Address Key Needs In the 2024 Draft

    The Bengals Address Key Needs In the 2024 Draft

    Amarius Mims photo via Cincinnati Bengals on FaceBook

    by Chris Ball

    Loveland, Ohio – The 2024 Bengals have a clear set of goals entering the upcoming season: keep Joe Burrow upright and keep him healthy. That starts at one key position group: the offensive line. That group has come under intense scrutiny ever since the team took Burrow at the number one pick overall in the 2020 draft. The rate at which he has been sacked has been well documented. In 2021 it was a league high 51 times, and by 2023 he had been sacked the second-most times among all NFL quarterbacks since he entered the league. Burrow’s hits and his injuries are well-known factors league wide, as are the Bengals’ efforts to mitigate that damage and keep their franchise pillar on the field.

    While they have done well bringing in linemen in free agency, signing the likes of Alex Cappa and Ted Karras, it has been a very different story drafting and developing in the trenches. Whether it be Jonah Williams, Cedric Ogbuehi, or (dare we say it), Billy Price, the Bengals have yet to turn their top draft picks along the line into genuine stars that can show they can protect the most important position and player on the field on a consistent basis.

    Amarius Mims photo via Georgia Dogs Roster

    Bengals fans all hope that trend is coming to a close with the pick of Georgia offensive tackle Amarius Mims. He is an absolute titan of a man, at 6 foot 8 inches and 340 pounds such that it is hard to imagine a freight train being able to get past him. Never mind that he has less than 11% body fat and ran 5.07 in the 40-yard dash, there is simply no question that the physical traits and raw skill are unquestionable when it comes to Mims.

    Those traits and his potential were never in question, but there are some concerns that may prevent him from becoming the Bengals’ right tackle of the future. This issues namely come from his lack of consistent starting experience. He was able to start just eight games over three years at Georgia, and was out for six games last year with an ankle injury. While the injury itself isn’t necessarily one that is thought to impact his career long-term, any malady is magnified a hundredfold when the subject is a first round pick of the impact of a player like Mims. The lack of consistent starting and playing at Georgia means that it will be up to the Bengals staff, namely Frank Pollack, their offensive line coach, to transition Mims into the physically and mentally demanding world that is the National Football League.

    The signing of Trent Brown will undoubtedly help this transition, both from mentorship and timing angles. However, Brown has his own injury issues, as do the Bengals as a team, and there is therefore a significant possibility that Amarius Mims will see significant snaps in 2024. He has all the talent in the world to step in and contribute, it is now on the Bengals and their staff to make sure he is ready to be the tackle all Bengals fans hope he could be.

    As Bengals fans are learning, there simply isn’t enough money to go around when it comes to retaining players we all know and love. This was the case with D.J. Reader who signed a two-year deal with the Lions this past offseason. Reader was a leader and his run-stopping ability could not be denied. Run defense was an area where the team struggled overall last year (they were 26th in the league, allowing 126 yards per game) and losing Reader signaled that problem might only get worse in 2024 and beyond.

    Enter Kris Jenkins. The Bengals selected the Michigan defensive tackle and 2023 National Champion with the 49th pick in the second round of the NFL draft. According to PFF his run-stop percentage ranks in the 99th percentile and it’s hard to imagine a better fit for the Bengals’ needs in round 2 of the draft. When he’s paired with newly-signed Sheldon Rankins, who has a 71.5 pass rush grade and a 10.2 percent pass rush win rate (all very respectable numbers), that tandem could be very dangerous in the years to come, as they complement each other extremely well.

    The Bengals had significant holes to fill coming into 2024, but their first two picks appear well-positioned to address those needs and exceed expectations in the coming seasons. A smart and focused draft now could mean exceptional success during Joe Burrow’s prime years.



    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.

  • [Video Interview] Cassie Mattia Talks With Autism Awareness Advocate Tim Livelsburger

    [Video Interview] Cassie Mattia Talks With Autism Awareness Advocate Tim Livelsburger

    David Miller is the Managing Editor of Loveland Magazine

    by David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – In celebration of Autism Acceptance Month, Cassie Mattia invited a very special guest to share his story with the community. Tim Livelsburger is not only advocating for those with Autism within the community, but he is also using his experiences as a learning tool to help those that may be encountering obstacles due to their disability.

    Tim is thriving and wants nothing more than to use his voice to help others with developmental disabilities achieve their goals! He told Cassie what obstacles he overcame, and how he is now exceeding his ultimate goals.

    Cassie, besides being the President and Publisher of Loveland Magazine is the Public Relations Coordinator for the Butler County Board of Developmental Disabilities. She asked LOVELAND MAGAZINE TV and myself to travel to the BCBDD’s office in Hamilton with our video equipment to help produce the interview and wanted us to share it with you, our faithful Loveland Magazine readers.

    I couldn’t be more thankful to have a business partner with the values of Cassie and that she seeks out someone like Tim to interview, someone who is doing wonderful things within his Autism family and the broader family we all hope to have an impact on. Thank you Tim, Cassie, and the Butler County Board of Developmental Disabilities for what you are dedicating your life’s work toward; inclusion, understanding, and acceptance of each individual.

    Happy Autism Acceptance Month to each of you and to our readers.

    President and Publisher of Loveland Magazine, Cassie Mattia is a resident of Historic Downtown Loveland and the Public Relations Coordinator at Butler County Board of DD. Cassie was awarded the Little Miami River Chamber Alliance 2021 Young Business Professional of the Year.

     

  • Loveland’s annual road program will pave these streets

    Loveland’s annual road program will pave these streets

    Loveland, Ohio – The streets (or sections of streets) that will be repaved in this year’s paving program are:

    • Stoneybrook Neighborhood
      • Debra Lane
      • Glenda Drive
      • Highridge Circle
      • Highridge Drive
      • Jilbe Lane
      • Kenmar Drive
      • Marbea Drive
      • Ridge Circle
    • Heights Neighborhood
      • Comanche Court
      • Iroquois Court
      • Miamiview Drive
      • Mohican Drive
    Construction is expected to be underway during the Spring.
  • You are invited for coffee and pastries by the Doitfor Jack – Jack Quehl Foundation

    You are invited for coffee and pastries by the Doitfor Jack – Jack Quehl Foundation

    Loveland, Ohio – The Jack Quehl Foundation – DoItForJack was established in 2022 in loving memory of the beloved son of Tom and Stephanie Quehl, Jack, after his tragic death from fentanyl poisoning. His death was a devastating loss to his family and his many friends.

    You are invited for coffee and pastries on Wednesday, May 7 by the DoItfor Jack – Jack Quehl Foundation to learn more about the Foundation, its mission and “the many ways they work to impact the fight against fentanyl.”

    May 7th is National Fentanyl Awareness Day and we would love the opportunity to share more about the foundation, and the mostly unknown prevalence of fentanyl in ours, and all communities. This is not an invitation to ask for donations or contributions. The Foundation simply wants the community they live in to know them, be aware of who they are, and understand why they strive to be so visible. Your knowledge alone could contribute to the effort of saving lives that we strive for.

    May 7th ~ 8:30-10 am

    @ The Building Loveland

    116 N Karl Brown Way

    Loveland, OH 45140

    The Building is a fun and charming private event space located in Historic Loveland, OH. The owners, Annette & Andy Friesner, purchased the Building in 2016 and renovated it to its current glory.

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  • Cardinal Land Conservancy and The Grail issue joint press release about land transactions

    Cardinal Land Conservancy and The Grail issue joint press release about land transactions

    Loveland, Ohio – This press release was issued on behalf of the Cardinal Land Conservancy and The Grail on Monday, April 22.

    [pdf-embedder url=”https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Grailville-official-press-release.pdf” title=”Grailville official press release”]

  • “Who’s gonna want to move here?” How fracking around Ohio’s Salt Fork State Park is changing area

    “Who’s gonna want to move here?” How fracking around Ohio’s Salt Fork State Park is changing area

    BY:  Ohio Capital Journal

    Terri Sabo has a breathtaking view of Salt Fork State Park from her dining room window in Guernsey County.

    She and her husband Rick Sabo have lived in their ranch home since 1983 — three years after they moved to Cambridge from Canton.

    Terri loves the dark night skies the park provides, but more recently she sees the occasion flare from a fracking injection well about 14 miles away while standing on her front porch.

    “We thought we would always have beauty, but Cambridge is so different than the ’80s,” Sabo said. “I mean, it’s so industrialized now and every, every other pickup truck has an Oklahoma or Texas plate. And it’s, it’s very, very different than it used to be.”

    The presence of the oil and gas industry around Salt Fork and ongoing fracking have turned the Sabos into advocates trying to protect the land around Ohio’s largest state park. Well pads, injection wells and a couple of drilling rigs dot the area around Salt Fork and its winding roads.

    “I’m past the sadness,” Sabo said, as she drove around Salt Fork on a recent Friday morning. “I’m into acceptance now. And it’s gonna happen.”

    Fracking in Ohio

    Fracking is the process of injecting liquid into the ground at a high pressure to extract oil or gas. It has been documented in over 30 states, according to the Center for Biological Diversity.

    Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich signed a law allowing drilling companies to frack in state parks back in 2011. Under the law, potential drillers had to get permission from the newly created Oil and Gas Commission, but Kasich never appointed members to the commissions — effectively preventing anyone from drilling in parks.

    Then in 2022, an amendment to speed up the process for oil and gas companies to get a fracking lease in state parks was added to House Bill 507, which was originally written to reduce the number of poultry chicks that can be sold in lots from six to three.

    The bill (dubbed the “chicken bill”) made it to Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine’s desk and he signed the bill into law in January 2023. The law — which requires the Ohio Department of Natural Resources to allow fracking for natural gas in Ohio’s public lands and state parks — went into effect in April 2023.

    Within the same week DeWine signed the bill into law, the Sabos got a letter from Texas-based company Encino Energy asking to buy their mineral rights — which they still haven’t done.

    “You work all your life to build something and then they frack it,” Sabo said.

    Encino Energy, the largest oil producer and second-largest producer of gas in Ohio, did not respond to questions sent by the Ohio Capital Journal.

     COLUMBUS, OH — FEBRUARY 26: Terri Sabo (center) who can see Salt Fork State Park from her home, weeps and calls out after the Ohio Oil and Gas Land Management Commission voted to approve a bid to drill under the park and two wildlife areas, February 26, 2024, at the Ohio Dept. of Public Safety, Charles D. Shipley Building Atrium in Columbus, Ohio. (Photo by Graham Stokes for Ohio Capital Journal. Republish photo only with original article.) 

    Recently, the Ohio Oil and Gas Land Management Commission selected the “highest and best” bidders to lease part of Salt Fork State Park, Valley Run Wildlife Area, and Zepernick Wildlife Area. This gives the green light for ODNR to lease parcels to these companies.

    West Virginia-based Infinity Natural Resources had the winning bid to drill at least two parcels at Salt Fork for $58.4 million.

    Encino leased three different parcels at Valley Run Wildlife Area in Carroll County for $1.05 million and leased one parcel at Zepernick Wildlife Area in Columbiana County for $231,692.

    Sabo cried at the OGLMC meeting were the winning bids were announced.

    “It’s just a very sad day,” she said after the Feb. 26 meeting. “My biggest immediate concern, obviously, is the loss of the park to (reindustrialization). I’ve really seen it grow and come back.”

    Fracking incidents in Ohio

    There were more than 1,400 fracking incidents associated with oil and gas wells in Ohio between 2018 and September 2023, according to FracTracker Alliance — a nonprofit that collects data on fracking pipelines. About 10% of those incidents were reported as fires or explosions.

    During that same time period, there were 56 total incidents in Guernsey County (where Salt Fork is located), according to FracTracker.

    “When the activities first started moving into the town, we were concerned with explosions and exposures,” Sabo said.

    Encino Energy had five incidents during that time frame, and Washington County was the county with the most incidents in the state with 73, according to FracTracker.

    Changes to the area

    The Sabos first started coming to Salt Fork in the late 1960s and early 1970s, before they lived in Cambridge. They enjoy kayaking and biking at the park and have hiked almost every navigable trail in Salt Fork.

    “We really are outdoorsy people,” Sabo said. “The hiking trails are great. And they’re beautiful.”

    Fracking in the area has brought increased truck traffic, new power lines, and additional cell towers. In particular, it has brought brine trucks and Halliburton trucks that haul fracking sand.

    “Who’s gonna want to move here?” Sabo said. “I mean, who’s gonna want to raise their kids here?”

    They have two adult children and grandchildren, but none of them live in Guernsey County.

    Sabo has learned to pick up on various clues — trees being trimmed and power lines going up — to learn where a new well pad is going to be built.

    “You get suspicious of truck driving activity,” Sabo said. “And you will also see the infrastructure that starts getting built up for people to move in. Like they’ll put in new power lines and towers.”

    She usually sees something new being built when she drives around the Salt Fork area.

    “I wonder what they are doing?” she asked as she drove past new construction.

    She was recently taken aback when she spotted new pipeline being put down next to the Bears Den Steakhouse in Cambridge.

    “This is new since last time I went down this road, and we’re only talking pipeline right now,” Sabo said, visibly distraught. “Seriously, this was not here a week ago. Wow. … Forgive me if I’m shocked.”

    What’s next for the Sabos?

    The Sabos have turned their home into their own personal oasis by adding on to it throughout the years and their next addition will be a hot tub in the backyard.

    They seriously considered moving a couple of years ago, but after much thought they have decided to stay — despite what’s happening to the land around them with fracking.

    “It is beautiful here,” she said.

    Follow OCJ Reporter Megan Henry on X.


    Megan Henry
    MEGAN HENRY

    Megan Henry is a reporter for the Ohio Capital Journal and has spent the past five years reporting in Ohio on various topics including education, healthcare, business and crime. She previously worked at The Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Warren County Veterans: Need a ride?

    Warren County Veterans: Need a ride?

    Loveland, Ohio – Veterans and dependents of Warren County can be transported at no cost to any local doctors office or VA medical center for their appointments. Please contact their office as soon as you receive your medical appointment. To take advantage of the transportation service, proof of eligibility is required (DD214).

    Transportation Coordinator – Jim Plagge – 513-695-2708
    Assistant Coordinator – Justin Mcghee – 513-695-2738