Tag: ohio

  • Buy your “Square” for OSU vs Michigan Football Game

    Buy your “Square” for OSU vs Michigan Football Game

    OSU vs Michigan Football Game

    November 25th, 9AM – 4PM

    (Noon Kick-Off)

    Payouts for each quarter and final score ($10 and $20 boards)

    Click below to pick a square online if you are unable to attend the big Tailgate.

    ________________

    Loveland, Ohio – There will be a real tailgate on Railroad Avenue between Paxon’s Grill and Ramsey’s Trailside when the Loveland Legacy Foundation with the support of their event partners: Ramsey’s Trailside, Paxton’s Grill, Bush-Re-Shea Insurance, Keli Williams Sibcy Cline and UniShippers present their annual Biggest Tailgate for the “BIG Game” between Ohio State and Michigan.

    The annual Biggest Tailgate for the “BIG Game” has historically been hosted inside at Ramsey’s Trailside, but this year they are going bigger and outside. There will be a 15-foot LCD TV to watch the game.

    Railroad Ave. will be closed down so you can set up your tailgate just like any college game you’d attend – so bring the full spread.

    Feel free to grill out or order tailgate delivery from Ramsey’s or Paxton’s.

    Local liquor laws do not allow you to bring your own alcohol into the event, but both Ramsey’s and Paxton’s will have full-service DORA bar service and event specials to take care of all of your tailgate needs.

    Just like in years past, if you’d rather secure a prime seat indoors at either Ramsey’s Trailside or Paxton’s Grill, you can reserve your table of 2,4,6,8 for $25 per person with a tax-deductible donation to the Loveland Legacy Foundation.

    Prizes for BEST Tailgate set up and there will be games throughout the event.

    Reserve your Table(s) and purchase your Square(s) here: https://www.flipcause.com/secure/cause_pdetails/MTg4MTUy

    ABOUT LOVELAND LEGACY FOUNDATION

    The Loveland Legacy Foundation is a 501(c) (3) non-profit charitable organization with the purpose of improving the community of Loveland, OH. The organization was created out of the generosity of members of the Loveland community and businesses that responded to the fire that devastated the downtown area. The affected business owners who received this financial support, in turn, agreed to start this foundation to “pay it forward” and provide a resource that leaves a lasting legacy in the community. The organization will represent a wide variety of ideas, interests, initiatives and needs identified by those engaged who have united in a common purpose – the betterment of Loveland, OH, now and in the future.

    _____________

  • Chamber honors local organizations and businesses

    Chamber honors local organizations and businesses

    WCPO Weatherman Steve Raleigh was the guest emcee for the awards dinner
    Chamber Board Member, Brian Garry was the Emcee for the Awards Dinner

    Loveland, Ohio – On Thursday evening, November 16 the Little Miami River Chamber Alliance held their annual Awards dinner at the Oasis Conference Center. Chamber Board Member, Brian Garry was the Emcee for the evening and WCPO Weatherman Steve Raleigh was the Guest Emcee.

    Kaitlyn Brennan is the site manager of Gigi’s Playhouse Cincinnati, the Emerging Business of the Year. She told attendees about the organization’s free educational, therapeutic-based, and career development programs for individuals with Down syndrome.

    A raffle was held and the proceeds were divided between the Chamber’s scholarship fund and Gigi’s Playhouse Cincinnati. Kaitlyn Brennan is the site manager of Gigi’s Playhouse and made a presentation about their delivery of free educational, therapeutic-based, and career development programs for individuals with Down syndrome, their families, and the community, through a “replicable playhouse model”.

    Gigi’s Playhouse Cincinnati was also recognized as the area’s Emerging Business of the Year.

     

    2023 Award winners

    Business of the Year: Paxton’s Grill

    Emerging Business of the Year: Gigi’s Playhouse Cincinnati

    Beautification Award: Loveland PaddleSports (Loveland Canoe and Kayak)

    Community Involvement Award: The Works

    Business Community Advocate Award: LIFE Food Pantry

    Non-Profit of the Year: The Grail

    Woman Owned Business of the Year: The 1859

    Young Professional of the Year: Katie Taylor

    Randy K. Stanifer Health, Wellness & Fitness Business of the Year: Gray Nutrition

    Customer Service Award: Hometown Café

    Community Responder Award: Loveland Legacy Foundation

    Hidden Hero Award: Angels by the Trail

    Chamber Choice Award: City of Loveland Public Works

    Lift Up Loveland Award: Ralph Dunnigan

     

    WCPO Weatherman Steve Raleigh was the guest emcee for the awards dinner
    Jimmy Hooper accepted the Customer Service Award given to Hometown Café
    Tasha Danzilo accepted the  Community Involvement Award for The Works
    Shawn Hartness accepted the Chamber Choice Award on behalf of the City of Loveland Public Works Department
    Ralph Dunnigan received the “Lift Up Loveland Award”
    Mark and Robyn Bersani were awarded the Beautification Award for Loveland PaddleSports (Loveland Canoe and Kayak)
    President Martha Hadley accepted the Community Responder Award given to the Loveland Legacy Foundation
    The Hidden Hero Award was accepted by founder, Stacey Lund for Angels by the Trail
    Angelo Veotte-Board President of Gigi’s Playhouse Cincinnati accepted the Emerging Business of the Year award
    Linda Bergholz the Executive Director, accepted the Business Community Advocate Award for the LIFE Food Pantry
    Kate Harden the owner of The 1859 was recognized as Woman Owned Business of the Year.
    Katie Taylor, Owner of The Outsourced COO was chosen as the Young Professional of the Year
    John Zielke accepted the Business of the Year honor on behalf of  Paxton’s Grill
    Terri Pucket accepted the Non-Profit of the Year award for The Grail

    The silent auction still has a few items remaining. If you would like to bid or buy now, please CLICK. The auction benefits Gigi’s Playhouse and the chamber scholarship fund and is live until Monday, Nov 27.

    Miss the wine and bourbon pull? Reach out to Meredith (Meredith@lmrchamberalliance.org) for more info and to grab a bottle!

    All photos in this story © David Miller/Loveland Magazine 2023

  • Bengals sign former Loveland High School standout QB Drew Plitt to practice squad

    Bengals sign former Loveland High School standout QB Drew Plitt to practice squad

    Loveland Magazine file photo of Drew Plitt visiting Loveland High School in 2018

    Loveland, Ohio – The Cincinnati Bengals signed former Loveland High School standout, QB Drew Plitt to their practice squad today. Plitt (6-2, 217), a first-year player out of Ball State University, originally was a college free agent signee of the Bengals in 2022. He played in two preseason games for Cincinnati in 2022 before being waived, and was not with an NFL team during the ’22 regular season and ’23 offseason. Plitt played in five games for the Arlington Renegades of the XFL during the 2023 season.

    The Bengals play the Pittsburgh Steelers at 1 PM in Paycor Stadium this Sunday.

    Drew Plitt QB’d the Loveland Tigers when they won the State Championship in 2013
  • Shop Small in Loveland on Saturday

    Shop Small in Loveland on Saturday

    Promoted Post

    Loveland, Ohio – Be sure to support our local businesses as you begin your holiday shopping. Remember to shop small all season long, kicking off with Small Business Saturday on November 25.

    Right Click to download a Passport.

    [pdf-embedder url=”https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/2023-Shoppers-Passport.pdf” title=”2023 Shopper’s Passport”]

  • The big Loveland Tailgate OSU vs Michigan Football Game is November 25th

    The big Loveland Tailgate OSU vs Michigan Football Game is November 25th

    OSU vs Michigan Football Game

    November 25th, 9AM – 4PM

    (Noon Kick-Off)

    Loveland, Ohio – There will be a real tailgate on Railroad Avenue between Paxon’s Grill and Ramsey’s Trailside when the Loveland Legacy Foundation with the support of their event partners: Ramsey’s Trailside, Paxton’s Grill, Bush-Re-Shea Insurance, Keli Williams Sibcy Cline and UniShippers present their annual Biggest Tailgate for the “BIG Game” between Ohio State and Michigan.

    The annual Biggest Tailgate for the “BIG Game” has historically been hosted inside at Ramsey’s Trailside, but this year they are going bigger and outside. There will be a 15-foot LCD TV to watch the game.

    Railroad Ave. will be closed down so you can set up your tailgate just like any college game you’d attend – so bring the full spread.

    Feel free to grill out or order tailgate delivery from Ramsey’s or Paxton’s.

    Local liquor laws do not allow you to bring your own alcohol into the event, but both Ramsey’s and Paxton’s will have full-service DORA bar service and event specials to take care of all of your tailgate needs.

    Just like in years past, if you’d rather secure a prime seat indoors at either Ramsey’s Trailside or Paxton’s Grill, you can reserve your table of 2,4,6,8 for $25 per person with a tax-deductible donation to the Loveland Legacy Foundation.

    Prizes for BEST Tailgate set up and there will be games throughout the event.

    Reserve your Table(s) and purchase your Square(s) here: https://www.flipcause.com/secure/cause_pdetails/MTg4MTUy

    ABOUT LOVELAND LEGACY FOUNDATION

    The Loveland Legacy Foundation is a 501(c) (3) non-profit charitable organization with the purpose of improving the community of Loveland, OH. The organization was created out of the generosity of members of the Loveland community and businesses that responded to the fire that devastated the downtown area. The affected business owners who received this financial support, in turn, agreed to start this foundation to “pay it forward” and provide a resource that leaves a lasting legacy in the community. The organization will represent a wide variety of ideas, interests, initiatives and needs identified by those engaged who have united in a common purpose – the betterment of Loveland, OH, now and in the future.

    _____________

  • Loveland Magazine carries Narcan (Naloxone) at work and in “Company Car”

    Loveland Magazine carries Narcan (Naloxone) at work and in “Company Car”

    One of the doses of Narcan Spray Loveland Magazine received free through the mail.

    Removing the Stigma

    Loveland, Ohio – Overdoses can happen in a moment and we know having Narcan (Naloxone) handy can save a life.

    Loveland Magazine will now be carrying Narcan in the “Company Car” as well as having it stocked at our office.

    Get Free NARCAN (Naloxone)

    If you are in Ohio, you can get Narcan for yourself, someone you know, or your organization. Help save lives!

    Using this LINK, Loveland Magazine received a two-pack box of Narcan Nasal Spray. It only took a few clicks, a few days, and it was totally FREE.

    What Is Naloxone?

    Naloxone is a medication that can reverse an overdose caused by an opioid drug (heroin, illegal fentanyl, or prescription pain medications). When administered during an overdose, naloxone blocks the effects of opioids on the brain and quickly restores breathing. Naloxone is marked under various trademarks, including NARCAN®

    Naloxone has been used safely by emergency medical professionals for more than 40 years and has only one important function: to stop overdose death by reversing the effects of opioids. Naloxone is a safe, non-controlled drug and has no potential for abuse.

    If naloxone is given to a person who is not going through an opioid overdose, it is harmless. If naloxone is given to a person who is dependent on opioids, it will cause withdrawal symptoms. Withdrawal, although uncomfortable, is not life-threatening.

    This video shows how to give naloxone nasal spray (brand name Narcan®) in an opioid overdose situation.

    Also, learn how to administer naloxone by watching this video from the Ohio Department of Health.

     

  • Seaman Seth Moore becomes member of elite Navy Honor Guard

    Seaman Seth Moore becomes member of elite Navy Honor Guard

    Members of the Navy Ceremonial Guard participate in some of our nation’s most prestigious ceremonies, including Presidential inaugurations and arrival ceremonies for foreign officials.
    A Press Release from the Navy Office of Community Outreach
    Milford, Ohio – Seaman Seth Moore recently completed an intensive 10-week training program to become a member of the elite U.S. Navy Ceremonial Guard.

     

    Seaman Seth Moore, a 2017 Milford High School graduate, joined the Navy six months ago. Today, Moore serves as a U.S. Navy Ceremonial Guardsman.

    “I joined the Navy to better my future and to travel,” said Moore.
    .
    Established in 1931, the U.S. Navy Ceremonial Guard is the official honor guard of the U.S. Navy and is based at Naval District Washington Anacostia Annex in Washington, D.C.

    According to Navy officials, the U.S. Navy Ceremonial Guard’s primary mission is to represent the service in Presidential, Joint Armed Forces, Navy, and public ceremonies in and around the nation’s capital. Members of the Navy Ceremonial Guard participate in some of our nation’s most prestigious ceremonies, including Presidential inaugurations and arrival ceremonies for foreign officials.

    “I have learned discipline and getting out of my comfort zone,” said Moore.

    Sailors of the Ceremonial Guard are hand-selected while they are attending boot camp at Recruit Training Command in Great Lakes, Illinois. Strict military order and discipline, combined with teamwork, allow the Ceremonial Guard to fulfill their responsibilities with pride and determination. They are experts in the art of close order drill, coordination, and timing.

    The Ceremonial Guard is comprised of the drill team, color guard, casket bearers, and firing party.

    “I like that I will gain new experiences here,” said Moore.

    There are many opportunities for sailors to earn recognition in their command, community, and careers.

    “I am most proud of completing ceremonial guard training,” said Moore.

    As a member of the U.S. Navy, Moore, as well as other sailors, know they are a part of a service tradition providing unforgettable experiences through leadership development, world affairs and humanitarian assistance. Their efforts will have a lasting effect around the globe and for generations of sailors who will follow.

    “Serving in the Navy means to me that I get a sense of pride in what I do,” added Moore.

  • [VIDEO] 22nd Annual Pass it On Food Drive

    [VIDEO] 22nd Annual Pass it On Food Drive

    David Miller is the Managing Editor of Loveland Magazine.

    UPDATE: Loveland Schools reports that students and staff donated more than 6,000 food items.

    Loveland, Ohio – I met Nancy Grant at the corner of Lebanon Road and Durango Drive right across from the Prince of Peace Lutheran Church this morning where she was directing traffic for the 22nd Annual Pass it On Food Drive. Hundreds of Loveland Intermediate School and Loveland Middle School students were carrying food to the church that they donated to the LIFE Food Pantry. The food will be packaged into Thanksgiving baskets for local residents and clients of the pantry.

    The children walked about 3/4 mile to hand deliver the food.

    The food drive was started by Nancy Grant to heal wounds after the terrorist attack on 9/11. The purpose is so that clients of the LIFE Food Pantry and other residents in the community can eat well at Thanksgiving and later in December.

    Grant said twenty-two years ago, “Well, we can’t change the world, but we can change our little corner of it.” She had this idea to line up the kids down the street and pass the food donations one bag and box, hand-to-hand at a time to one another until it reached the church. A pay it forward so children could feel good about themselves. She thought it worked after 9/11 and has ever since. The students didn’t exactly “pass-it-on” to one another like they used to, but each carried their own donations to the church.

    After the donations arrive, adult volunteers will sort, date-check, organize, and assemble a Thanksgiving meal box to go out to area families. The huge effort is to ensure that all our Loveland families and singles will have the items they need so they can sit down together and enjoy a traditional meal for the holiday.

     

     

  • Apex Sportswear & Promotional Specialties in Loveland, Ohio

    Apex Sportswear & Promotional Specialties in Loveland, Ohio

    Promoted Post

    Loveland, OhioApex Sportswear & Promotional Specialties is in the heart of the West Loveland Historic District with its own free parking. In business there since 1992 as a full-service promotional specialty company. They provide assistance with theme creativity, layout and design, and the finest imprinted and embroidered items. They have access to over 600,000 promotional products, and are dedicated to finding the ideal product for your promotional need.

     

  • Gov. DeWine calls on legislators to modify recreational marijuana law before it goes into effect

    Gov. DeWine calls on legislators to modify recreational marijuana law before it goes into effect

    BY:  Ohio Capital Journal

    Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine says he accepts that Ohioans have voted to legalize recreational marijuana, but is calling on legislators to make changes to the law before it goes into effect on Dec. 7.

    “My recommendation to the General Assembly is that they take action to make sure that both rights are protected,” DeWine said Thursday morning to a group of reporters during his first remarks about Tuesday’s election.

    “People have a right to smoke it. People have a right to consume it. But also that everybody else’s who doesn’t choose to do so is also protected with their rights as well.”

    Leading up to the election, DeWine was a vocal critic of Issue 2, which legalizes and regulates the cultivation, manufacturing, testing and the sale of marijuana to Ohioans 21 and up.

    “We respect what the people have done,” DeWine said. “What the people have clearly told us is they want legal marijuana in Ohio. We are going to see that they have that. We’re also going to live up to our responsibility to all the people in the state of Ohio, whether they voted for it or voted against it.”

    In doing so, he wants to make sure various protections are in place, starting with Ohio’s children.

    “One goal will be to make sure that they are protected from advertising in regard to marijuana,” DeWine said. “We want to do everything within our power to reduce the number of inadvertent consumption of gummy bears, cookies and other products that have marijuana.”

    Last year, a 10-year-old Upper Arlington elementary student mistakenly brought her dad’s edible marijuana gummies to school and shared with them other students during lunch, thinking they were leftover Easter candy. After eating the gummies, the students became nauseous, experienced hallucinations and had elevated heart rates, so they were all taken to a local hospital for treatment.

    “We have every responsibility to do everything we can to keep those (emergency room visits) numbers down as much as we can,” DeWine said.

    BUCKEYE LAKE, Ohio — AUGUST 17: A worker holds a tray of green apple marijuana edibles that will be packaged for medical sale, August 17, 2023, at the PharmaCann, Inc.’s cultivation and processing facility in Buckeye Lake, Ohio. (Photo by Graham Stokes for Ohio Capital Journal)
     BUCKEYE LAKE, Ohio — AUGUST 17: A worker holds a tray of green apple marijuana edibles that will be packaged for medical sale, August 17, 2023, at the PharmaCann, Inc.’s cultivation and processing facility in Buckeye Lake, Ohio. (Photo by Graham Stokes for Ohio Capital Journal. Republish photo only with original story.) 

    He said he also feels obligated to protect adults who don’t want to inhale or smell marijuana when they are walking around.

    “They make a choice not to use marijuana, they should be protected from being in a place where they have to deal with that,” he said.

    DeWine also wants to reduce the number of drivers under the influence of marijuana. This was an issue the opposition group Protect Ohio Workers and Families harped on throughout election season — predicting Ohio would see an additional 48 fatal vehicle crashes and 2,298 more injury crashes if Issue 2 passed.

    Issue 2 is a citizen initiative, meaning Ohio lawmakers can make changes to the law — something DeWine hopes can happen by Dec. 7.

    “I would hope … that when Dec. 7 comes and goes that we will be able to inform the people of the state exactly how this program will roll out,” he said. “I think it would be good if that was all done by the 7th so that we’re not in a situation of taking something away from people.”

    DeWine said he has a Monday morning meeting scheduled with Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens, R-Kitts Hill, and Ohio Senate President Matt Huffman — two republicans who were quick to hint at making changes to Issue 2 after the race was called.

    “Now is the time for the legislature to lead on how best to allocate tax revenues while responsibly regulating the industry,” Stephens said in a statement.

    Huffman said lawmakers may clarify language “regarding  limits for THC and tax rates as well as other parts of the statute.”

    Follow OCJ Reporter Megan Henry on Twitter.

    Reporter Nick Evans contributed to this story. 


    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.

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