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Descendants of Wadsworth founding families sought

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WADSWORTH — Wadsworth’s Bicentennial Committee is searching for members of the city’s founding families who are residents two centuries later.

Local descendants of the city’s founders will be recognized Aug. 7 at the town square as part of the yearlong bicentennial celebration.

“They’re going to talk about the founding families at the ceremony,” said Johanna Perrino, spokeswoman for the Wadsworth Bicentennial Founder’s Day Committee. “If there were some descendants in the audience, that would be great.”

She said she’s certain there are some descendants of the founding families living in the city.

“When people come to Wadsworth, they tend to stay,” Perrino said.

Anyone who is a descendant or knows of one is asked to call Terry Greenhalgh at (330) 336-8762.

For more information on upcoming bicentennial events, visit www.Wadsworth200.com.

Wadsworth’s founding families
• 1814 — Daniel Dean, Oliver Durham, Salmon Warner, Michael Waltz, Peter Waltz, William Rasor, Christopher Rasor, George Rasor, Jacob Everhard, John Henry Everhard, Jonathon Everhard and Adam Smith (Schmitt).

• 1815 — Samuel Blocker, Orrin Loomis, Daniel Ware, Henry C. Wright, Henry or Samuel Falconer and Jacob Miller.

• 1816 — Benjamin Aagard, Lawrence Baughman, Frederick Brown, Joseph Loomis, Col. Harry Mills, James Reed, Christian Ritter, Benjamin Simcox, William H. Wright, Abraham Hard and Lysander Hard.

• 1817 — Levi Blakeslee, Henry Hayden, Samuel Hayden, Elisha Hinsdale, George Lyman and John Sprague.

• 1818 — Ebeneezer Andrus, Abiel Bennett, Stanton Bennett, Timothy Bennett, Phineas Butler, Michael Calbetzor, John Curtis, William Curtis, widow Sabra Curtis, Amos Hanchett, Abraham Hard, Chauncey Hart, Luther Hemmingway, Guerdon Hilliard, Abiah Lindley, Augustus Mills, Ira Moody, Ephraim Moody, Lemuel North, Allen Pardee, James Platt, John Weeks, Leavitt Weeks, Peter Weeks, Aubel family and Falk family.

• 1819 — Freeman Austin, Andrew Delong, Levi Clark, Clement Clark, Philo French, Thomas French, Hiram Kingsbury, Abner Wines and Jacob Wise.

• 1820 — Caleb Battels, David Beyer, William Eyles, Robert Hilliard, Samuel McCoy, Obadiah Newcomb, Thomas Reese, James Spillman, John Spillman and Charles Wheeler.


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Ex-employee’s lawsuit costs county insurance fee

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MEDINA — Medina County will pay $2,500 to meet an insurance deductible in a payout resulting from the settlement of a federal lawsuit between the county’s clerk of courts and a former employee.

County Administrator Chris Jakab said no more than $2,500 will be paid from county funds in the settlement.

“That’s our standard deductible,” Jakab said. “That’s how much will apply in this matter.”

Jakab said the county pays about $519,000 per year for its insurance policy, which covers everything from property and vehicle damage to liability and crime and law enforcement issues.

He said the out-of-court settlement is not yet finalized, so he wasn’t sure whether the payments would alter premium costs in the coming years.

Clerk of Courts David Wadsworth was sued last June in U.S. District Court, Northern District of Ohio, by his former chief deputy, Julie Kauffman.

In her lawsuit, Kauffman said Wadsworth violated her First Amendment right to free speech because he fired her in retaliation for telling county Prosecutor Dean Holman that Wadsworth had misused public funds in his 2012 election campaign.

Kauffman sought reinstatement of her job, damages from the county and from Wadsworth, attorneys’ fees and a declaratory judgment that Wadsworth violated her rights.

Jakab said he wasn’t sure whether Kauffman would get her job back because the settlement wasn’t finalized.

“The final details haven’t been released,” he said.

According to court records, the parties must submit official dismissal entries within a month. More details may become available then.

Kauffman said in her lawsuit that she told the prosecutor Wadsworth had used clerk’s office materials in his 2012 election campaign, pressured his workers to vote for him, kept a map of his campaign yard signs in his office, and filmed a political advertisement in the clerk’s office.

As a result of Kauffman’s report, Wadsworth on Sept. 4 was charged with and pleaded no contest to misusing funds, a first-degree misdemeanor, and entered a first-offender counseling program. If he completes the program, the charge will be dropped.

News of the settlement comes two months after federal Magistrate Greg White ordered that the prosecutor and lead sheriff’s investigator would have to testify at trial.

Contact reporter Nick Glunt at (330) 721-4048 or nglunt@medina-gazette.com. Follow him on Twitter @ngfalcon.


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Flag Day celebration highlights heroic Medina Twp. firefighters

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Boy Scout Troop 462 retires the American flag outside of the Medina Township Maintenance Building on Saturday as part of the annual Flag Day ceremony. The Scouts replaced the flag with a new one. (DAVID KNOX / GAZETTE)

Boy Scout Troop 462 retires the American flag outside of the Medina Township Maintenance Building on Saturday as part of the annual Flag Day ceremony. The Scouts replaced the flag with a new one. (DAVID KNOX / GAZETTE)

A dozen township firefighters were honored for saving three lives last month.

Medina Township fire Cap. Mark Roberts and Lt. Scott Vargo presented the life saving awards Saturday at Medina Township’s annual Flag Day ceremony.

Members of the Medina County Honor Guard give the 21-gun salute during the annual Flag Day service in Medina Township. The township retired the flag that flies outside of the maintenance garage on Weymouth Road. (ANDREW DAVIS / GAZETTE)

Members of the Medina County Honor Guard give the 21-gun salute during the annual Flag Day service in Medina Township. The township retired the flag that flies outside of the maintenance garage on Weymouth Road. (ANDREW DAVIS / GAZETTE)

Roberts awarded firefighters Mark Radice, Sean Kavlick, Daniel Gazzo and Alex Elioff for rescuing Medina resident Tyler Kitson and Fox 8 weatherman Dick Goddard from flood waters on May 12.

Kitson found refuge in a tree after attempting to save the life of 83-year-old Goddard when Plum Creek overflowed at the state Route 3 exit of Interstate 71 in torrential rains. Goddard was trapped in his car for about 45 minutes. Kitson was able to get out of his car and climbed a tree to stay above the water.

Firefighters Chris Shuster, Mike Stopa, Michael Pieowiak, Mike Zevchek, Katherine Holland and Jason Smith received Certificates of Commendations for their help in the event.

Three other township firefighters — Brian Mummert, Bobby Keister and Mark Radice — received life saving awards after resuscitating a man who went into cardiac arrest while driving his car through a Home Depot parking lot on May 4.

Home Depot employee Richard Elliot and customer Justin Meister, who broke the rear, driver’s side window to unlock the door and shut the car off, received special recognition.

Home Depot employees Mallory Velick and Steve Lowery, who performed CPR on the victim until emergency personnel arrived, also received awards.

More than 75 residents, emergency workers, Boy Scouts and public officials attended the ceremony on Saturday afternoon at Blakeslee Park.

Ohio House Speaker Bill Batchelder presented three elementary school children with commendations from his office for their essays about what the American flag means to them.

The first place winner, Alexandria Henry from Northrop Elementary School, wrote about how the flag means loyalty, freedom and justice.

Henry was presented a $100 savings bond while second place winner, Rachel Smith from Blake Elementary School, was awarded a $50 savings bond, while third place winner, Reece Lloyd was given a $25 dollar savings bond.

The winner of the annual Flag Day design contest was township resident Donald Fisher, who donated his $50 savings bond award to the townships Shop With a Cop program.

The event has been held annually for six years. Trustee Mike Todd came up with the idea after thinking that Flag Day did not get the attention that it deserves.

At the end of the ceremony, the flag that flies outside the maintenance building was retired by Boy Scout Troop 462.

After the ceremonies, residents celebrated the 239th birthday of the U.S. Army with a cake cutting and participated in an exhibition softball game where proceeds went to the township’s Shop with a Cop program.

“The flag represents everything that is good about us,” Mike Carlson of Carlson Funeral Home said in his keynote address.

“I would suggest that the next time you look at the flag that you are actually looking at us.”

Contact reporter Andrew Davis at (330) 721-4050 or adavis@medina-gazette.com.


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Analysis: Ohio gas, oil wells more at risk for pollution

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Ohio is among 19 states with an oil or gas well recently drilled on public lands that was identified by the federal government as having a higher risk of pollution.

Ohio has one higher risk gas well, in Bazetta Township in Trumbull County. It was inspected as required by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. That’s according to data obtained by The Associated Press of drilling inspections for the fiscal years 2009 to 2012.

Northeast Ohio’s Trumbull County is home to the Shenango Wildlife Area.

In all, the data show that four in 10 new oil and gas wells near national forests and fragile watersheds or otherwise with higher pollution risks escape federal inspection.

The Ohio well has been in production since 2010, and the owner is M&M Royalty Ltd.

Four in 10 new oil and gas wells near national forests and fragile watersheds or otherwise identified as higher pollution risks escape federal inspection, unchecked by an agency struggling to keep pace with America’s drilling boom, according to the Associated Press review, which shows wide state-by-state disparities in safety checks.

Roughly half or more of wells on federal and Indian lands weren’t checked in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming, despite potential harm that has led to efforts in some communities to ban new drilling.

In New Castle, a tiny Colorado River valley community, homeowners expressed chagrin at the large number of uninspected wells, many on federal land, that dot the steep hillsides and rocky landscape. Like elsewhere in the West, water is a precious commodity in this Colorado town, and some residents worry about the potential health hazards of any leaks from wells and drilling.

“Nobody wants to live by an oil rig. We surely didn’t want to,” said Joann Jaramillo, 54.

About 250 yards up the hill from Jaramillo’s home, on land that was a dormant gravel pit when she bought the house eight years ago, is an active drilling operation that operates every day from 7 a.m. until sometimes 10:30 p.m. Jaramillo said the drilling began about three years ago.

Even if the wells were inspected, she questioned whether that would ensure their safety. She said many view the oil and gas industry as self-policing and nontransparent.

“Who are they going to report to?” she asked.

Government data obtained by the AP point to the Bureau of Land Management as so overwhelmed by a boom in a new drilling technique known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, that it has been unable to keep up with inspections of some of the highest priority wells. That’s an agency designation based on a greater need to protect against possible water contamination and other environmental and safety issues.

Factors also include whether the well is near a high-pressure formation or whether the drill operator lacks a clear track record of service.

“No one would have predicted the incredible boom of drilling on federal lands, and the number of wells we’ve been asked to process,” said the BLM’s deputy director, Linda Lance.

Since fracking reached a height in 2009, about 90 percent of new wells on federal land are drilled by the process, which involves pumping huge volumes of water, sand and chemicals underground.

“The current rate of inspections is simply not acceptable to us,” she said.

The agency oversees 100,000 oil and gas wells on public lands, 3,486 of which received the high priority designation.

According to BLM records for fiscal years 2009 to 2012, 1,400 of those high priority wells, spread across 13 states, were not federally inspected. Wyoming had the most, 632, or 45 percent. South Dakota had 1 out of 2 wells uninspected, and Pennsylvania had 1 out of 6.

All the higher risk wells were inspected in six states — Alabama, Michigan, Mississippi, New York, Ohio and Texas.

Many more wells are located on private lands, where state officials take the lead in ensuring they comply with environmental laws, with mixed results. Nationwide, there were nearly 500,000 producing gas wells in 2012, according to Energy Information Administration data. More than 1,800 new wells were being drilled in March alone.

Dennis Willis, a former BLM field officer in Price, Utah, says he routinely provided input on oil leasing and drilling decisions on federal land before his retirement in 2009. He described a situation of chronic underfunding dating to at least the early 2000s, when BLM management made clear that issuing new permits would be a priority over other tasks, according to a 2002 memorandum from supervisors in Utah to field officers. At the time, fracking was becoming more widely used.

“There certainly wasn’t a shortage of spills, leaks, pipeline failures and other problems,” said Willis, who now does consulting work for conservation and other groups.

“It’s a disaster waiting to happen,” he said.

In interviews, BLM officials acknowledged persistent problems in keeping up with inspections, but said they were not aware of any major safety issues to date arising from the uninspected wells.

Lance said BLM field managers are making judgment calls to minimize the risk of potential harm to surrounding communities. The agency also is reviewing whether it needs to slow down the pace of permits to ensure public safety.

Officials noted that money provided by Congress for oil and gas operations has declined since 2007. During that period, the number of wells drilled on federal and Indian lands has increased by roughly one-third.

“We’re trying to do the best we can with limited resources,” Lance said.

If approved by Congress, the BLM’s 2015 budget request of $150 million for oil and gas operations would allow the agency to conduct the bulk of its required inspections over three years, in part by collecting fees from oil and gas companies.

Unlike past years, $48 million will be earmarked for inspections. The BLM made similar budget requests the last several years with little success.

The BLM has sought to add inspectors, but that has proved challenging in places such as Utah, where most wells are drilled on federal land. While a petroleum engineer could get a starting salary of $90,000 in the private sector, the BLM typically pays $35,000. This year’s appropriations bill would allow the BLM to increase inspector salaries to around $44,000.

The public concern is evident in Colorado, where increased drilling into suburban and rural areas has led community groups to push nearly a dozen oil and gas local control initiatives for the November ballot. Of the wells drilled from 2009-12, the BLM designated more than 400 on federal and Indian lands in Colorado as high priority, the third highest behind Wyoming and North Dakota. More than 160 of Colorado’s uninspected high-priority wells are near New Castle, on the edge of the White River National Forest.

Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper has been seeking a legislative compromise that could satisfy concerns over health and safety impacts of fracking.

Regulators contend that overall, water and air pollution problems from fracking are rare, but environmental groups and some scientists say there hasn’t been enough research on those issues.

Jaramillo said residents in the canyon have mixed feelings about fracking.

“The people that really like it are the people who are getting money out of it,” she said. “The people who don’t are really worried about — Is it going to ruin the water? Is it going to ruin the land? Is it going to ruin the air?”

A neighbor, Kory Kipferl, owns a 10-acre property adjacent to federal land dotted with capped wells on gravel pads. He said the lack of inspections didn’t surprise him — he’s accepted what he called a need for domestic drilling — but he’s concerned about the water table.

“Once we start puncturing the water table, that could cause problems, whether you’re drilling for gas, oil, water, whatever,” Kipferl said.

The BLM dataset is more extensive than what was reviewed recently by the Government Accountability Office, and filtered to remove duplicate well entries that yielded an overcount. In a recent report, auditors said the BLM needed to do a better job of coordinating with state regulators.

In Pennsylvania, for instance, the one well that went uninspected by the BLM had been checked multiple times by the state.

Still, it’s not clear how willing states are to take up the federal task.

“To say that we’re going to start inspecting federal wells is just above and beyond what we could do,” said John Rogers, associate director of Utah’s Division of Oil, Gas and Mining, pointing to his small staff.

He said companies will inspect their own equipment in order to protect their investment, so it’s likely that at least some of Utah’s 200-plus wells that weren’t inspected by BLM are checked by someone.

“We’re certainly not going to second-guess people’s inspections,” Rogers said of the BLM.


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PHOTO: Three generations attend Dad Fest in Sharon Twp. on Sunday

Main Street Medina asks who delivers the best pizza at Saturday event

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MEDINA — Hungry residents gathered on the Square on Saturday to gorge themselves on pizza and decide which shop was the best in Medina County.

Main Street Medina held the second annual Pizza Palooza featuring six local pizza eateries, with Gionino’s Pizzeria winning top honors as the “People’s Choice” best pizza in Medina.

From left: Main Street Medina Executive Director Matt Wiederhold stands with Gionino’s Pizzeria employees Gust Spilios, Andy Derr and J.J. Larkin after presenting them with the trophy for “People’s Choice” Best Pizza in Medina County at the second annual Pizza Palooza. (ANDREW DAVIS / GAZETTE)

From left: Main Street Medina Executive Director Matt Wiederhold stands with Gionino’s Pizzeria employees Gust Spilios, Andy Derr and J.J. Larkin after presenting them with the trophy for “People’s Choice” Best Pizza in Medina County at the second annual Pizza Palooza. (ANDREW DAVIS / GAZETTE)

“It feels awesome,” Andy Derr of Gionino’s said. “This was a team effort.”

A panel of judges comprised of Medina Mayor Dennis Hanwell, County Commissioner Pat Geissman and Jani Groza of Westfield Insurance had a blind tasting of specialty pizzas from the six shops and chose Marco’s Chicken Florentine Pizza as the “Judge’s Choice.”

The pizza featured a white sauce and chicken.

“I think that this is great,” said Richard Stein of Marco’s.

Other shops included Domino’s, Romeo’s, Hungry Howie’s and Gepetto’s.

Participants bought “Pizza Passports” for $8, which included a ticket to test a slice from each shop in the competition.

A share of the profits from the pizza passports was donated to Feeding Medina County.

“We had a lot of people tell us about good things about Feeding Medina County,” said Sandy Calvert, executive director of Feeding Medina County. “It was a different venue for nonprofits to showcase their mission and show local residents what they do.”

Westfield contributed $2,500 to promote the event.

Contact reporter Andrew Davis at (330) 721-4050 or adavis@medina-gazette.com.


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Officials say Medina school buses look too rusted to repair

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MEDINA — School officials parked a bus outside Medina High School before the Monday night board meeting so board members and the public could see the corrosion that has rendered many of the district’s buses irreparable.

The 14-year-old bus appeared intact from the outside. But the inside of the bus told a different story, with gaping holes in the floor where rust had eaten all the way through.

Rusted holes can be seen in the floor of Bus 12 on display Monday outside the Medina school board meeting. School officials invited the public to inspect the damage to demonstrate the need for new buses. (NANCY JOHNSON / GAZETTE)

Rusted holes can be seen in the floor of Bus 12 on display Monday outside the Medina school board meeting. School officials invited the public to inspect the damage to demonstrate the need for new buses. (NANCY JOHNSON / GAZETTE)

Rob Travis, manager of the school district’s transportation department blamed Northeast Ohio winters for much of the damage.

“Brine and salt from the roads get into every crevice and deteriorate the buses from the inside out,” he said, “Our priority is maintaining a safe fleet.”

At Monday’s meeting, the board approved spending $1,188,785 to purchase 15 new school buses from Cardinal Bus Sales Inc. of Lima.

The board also approved soliciting bids for the purchase of two additional school buses equipped to transport district students with special needs.

Board President Tom Cahalan pointed out the funds for the new buses would not come from the 5.9-mill levy approved by voters in November.

“The levy brought busing back,” he said, “but the money to buy the buses will come from sales tax dollars.”

The school district promised to restore busing for high school students if the levy passed.

In other action Monday, Treasurer David Chambers presented to the board the general expenditures for the 2013-14 school year.

The analysis of the general fund showed the district spent $61.6 million — $7.9 million less than originally projected in a five-year forecast.

Contact reporter Nancy Johnson at (330) 721-4065 or areanews@medina-gazette.com.


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Seville rubber factory addition to double its size

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The Blair Rubber Co., 5020 Panther Parkway, Seville, is expanding. Doing the honors at Monday’s groundbreaking are, from left, controller Tonjua McCullough, plant superintendent Roy Eikelberry, marketing director Nalex Cordova and quality manager Gregg Reinmann. (DAVID KNOX / GAZETTE)

The Blair Rubber Co., 5020 Panther Parkway, Seville, is expanding. Doing the honors at Monday’s groundbreaking are, from left, controller Tonjua McCullough, plant superintendent Roy Eikelberry, marketing director Nalex Cordova and quality manager Gregg Reinmann. (DAVID KNOX / GAZETTE)

SEVILLE — A ceremonial groundbreaking was held Monday for a 50,000-square-foot addition to the Blair Rubber Co. that will nearly double the size of the plant by next spring.

Blair Rubber manufactures corrosion-resistant rubber linings for tanks and other containment vessels used by a variety of industries.

Founded in 1981 in Copley Township, in Summit County, Blair Rubber was purchased in 2001 by IKO, of Canada. In 2006, the company moved into a new 52,000-square-foot building, 5020 Panther Parkway.

The expansion is needed to keep up with demand, Nalex Cordova, director of sales and marketing, said at Monday’s groundbreaking.

“We have just about doubled our production over the last three years,” he said.

Blair Rubber has 77 employees, but expects to hire more after the expansion is completed in spring 2015.

JBA Architects, of Newark, designed the expansion and EM Construction, a division of Beacon Marshall Cos., of Bath, is the general contractor.

Contact reporter David Knox at (330) 721-4065 or dknox@medina-gazette.com.


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Bus drivers told to think what they would do in crisis situations

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Amherst Schools bus driver Brenda Reaser subdues Medina County sheriff’s Deputy Mark Brooks, who posed as a gunman during the Ohio In-Service School Bus Driver Training Program on Monday. (NICK GLUNT / GAZETTE PHOTOS)

Amherst Schools bus driver Brenda Reaser subdues Medina County sheriff’s Deputy Mark Brooks, who posed as a gunman during the Ohio In-Service School Bus Driver Training Program on Monday. (NICK GLUNT / GAZETTE PHOTOS)

Almost 15 years ago, Twinsburg Schools bus driver Desiree Churn-Philpott encountered a crisis situation she always hoped to avoid. As she pulled up to a stop, a little girl on her bus looked out the window and saw her father.

“I can’t go out there,” the little girl whispered, explaining her father was a bad man.

So Churn-Philpott did the only thing she could think of. She kept going on her route, hoping to return shortly.

A Medina firefighter demonstrates how a fire hose might disperse harmful gases in a crisis situation. (NICK GLUNT / GAZETTE)

A Medina firefighter demonstrates how a fire hose might disperse harmful gases in a crisis situation. (NICK GLUNT / GAZETTE)

The man followed. That’s when she called the bus dispatch and had them alert police, who caught up with her and handled the situation.

“I wasn’t going to give that man an opportunity to get that little girl,” she said.

While Churn-Philpott did the right thing, she said she wished she had been trained to handle such a crisis.

On Monday, Churn-Philpott was one of more than 500 bus drivers from more than 30 Northeast Ohio school districts who gathered to get that kind of training at the Medina County Fairgrounds in Medina.

Mike Redfern, regional instructor for the Ohio In-Service School Bus Driver Training Program, told the bus drivers they probably won’t encounter any situations like this, but they should be prepared.

“If you’re going to take aggressive action, you need to know what you’re going to do ahead of time,” Redfern said.

Redfern commentated from the grandstand as hazardous situations were acted out by Medina police officers and firefighters, county sheriff’s deputies, state troopers and hazmat and SWAT members. Some bus drivers participated in the drills acting as students, but most of them watched from the stands.

Bus drivers need to be able to juggle protecting the children and avoiding liability issues, Redfern said. Allowing children to leave the bus in a situation may save their lives, but he said the bus driver may liable if one is injured.

Training scenarios included an active shooter, a hostage situation, a chemical spill on the bus route and a situation regarding missing buses.

“Fortunately, none of these situations happen often,” Redfern said. “But what we do is train you to think what you’d do so you’re prepared if it does happen.”

Medina County Sheriff’s Deputy Mark Brooks — who played the role of the shooter and hostage-taker — said the best tip he could give is for bus drivers to evaluate the situation and improvise.

“There’s no flow chart,” Brooks said. “You need to think, ‘What do I do if.’ That’s what this is about.”

He said in many active shooter and hostage situations at schools, the gunman backs down as soon as someone stands up to him.

“You’ve got to decide what you’re willing to do and what you plan to do in those situations,” he told the bus drivers. “These, really, are life-or-death situations.”

Contact reporter Nick Glunt at (330) 721-4048 or nglunt@medina-gazette.com. Follow him on Twitter @ngfalcon.


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PHOTOS: Parade marks beginning of Wadsworth’s Blue Tip festival

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The 42nd annual Blue Tip Festival Parade on Tuesday kicked off a five-day downtown festival, which takes its name from the iconic strike-anywhere Blue Tip matches once manufactured in Wadsworth and features amusement rides, festival foods, midway games, contests and other entertainment.

The Wadsworth High School Color Guard leads the school band down College Street in Tuesday’s 42nd annual Blue Tip Festival Parade. The five-day downtown festival, which takes its name from the iconic strike-anywhere Blue Tip matches once manufactured in Wadsworth, features amusement rides, festival foods, midway games, contests and other entertainment.

The Wadsworth High School Color Guard leads the school band down College Street in Tuesday’s 42nd annual Blue Tip Festival Parade. (DAVID KNOX / GAZETTE)

The setting sun is reflected in the tubas of the Wadsworth High Band on Tuesday evening during the 42nd annual Blue Tip Festival Parade.

The setting sun is reflected in the tubas of the Wadsworth High Band on Tuesday evening during the 42nd annual Blue Tip Festival Parade. (DAVID KNOX / GAZETTE)

Wadsworth Mayor Robin Laubaugh dons a period costume for her ride in a 1904 Oldsmobile. The classic car is owned by Bob and Judy Clark.

Wadsworth Mayor Robin Laubaugh dons a period costume for her ride in a 1904 Oldsmobile. The classic car is owned by Bob and Judy Clark. (DAVID KNOX / GAZETTE)

Youngsters dress in pioneer garb in honor of Wadsworth’s bicentennial during the parade.

Youngsters dress in pioneer garb in honor of Wadsworth’s bicentennial during the parade. (DAVID KNOX / GAZETTE)


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‘Take Control’ teen driving program wins award, is ‘remarkable’

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COLUMBUS — Medina County’s “Take Control” teen driving program was recognized by the Ohio Department of Public Safety on Tuesday for its dedication to keeping the community safe.

“We’re very honored to be selected for the award,” said Montville Township Police Chief Terry Grice, who developed the program. “I think they’re recognizing it because how unique it is with all the organizations that are involved.”

Terry Grice

Terry Grice

Grice said the most common cause of crashes for teen drivers is their inexperience. The program — funded by the Ehrbar Angels Foundation, the MStar Foundation, the Jessica Schaffer Memorial Fund, Westfield Insurance, Bill Doraty Kia and Medina County Juvenile Court — is designed to give drivers ages 16 to 19 the experience they need to be safer on the road.

It consists of free three-hour classes, including classroom and behind-the-wheel exercises taught by officers from 13 of the county’s law enforcement agencies. The classes began in June 2013 and have served more than 150 drivers.

The state’s Public Safety Department chose to honor the program with its “I Contribute” award because it works to keep roads safe, department director John Born said.

“I applaud Chief Grice, the Montville Police Department and its partners for their efforts in both creating and maintaining a successful program,” Born said. “The ‘Take Control’ program is a remarkable program and certainly deserving of the ‘I Contribute’ award.”

The award is presented every three months, and the recipient is selected from nominations by a community member.

To register for the “Take Control” program, call Montville police at (330) 661-0122.

Contact reporter Nick Glunt at (330) 721-4048 or nglunt@medina-gazette.com. Follow him on Twitter @ngfalcon.


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Endowment fund awards $12K to local nonprofits, reaches milestone

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The Medina County Women’s Endowment Fund awarded $12,000 to seven local nonprofit organizations on Friday, bringing its total donations to more than $100,000 since 1998.

“We are so honored to be part of these organizations’ programs, and we welcome them to the growing list of MCWEF grant recipients,” said Cathy Posner, president of the fund’s advisory board and chairwoman of its grants review committee. “Their invaluable work is changing the lives of women and children across Medina County.”

The endowment fund supports organizations that improve life for the county’s women and children.

This year’s awards included:

• $3,000 to Friends of Medina County Parks Inc., which plans to build an inclusive playground accessible to children of all physical abilities at Carolyn Ludwig Mugrage Park in Granger Township.

• $2,500 to Medina Health Ministry to provide free preventive care and health education to uninsured working women in the county.

• $2,500 to the Suicide Prevention Education Alliance, which provides programming on suicide prevention and depression awareness at Brunswick, Buckeye, Cloverleaf, Highland and Medina high schools.

• $1,000 to Guardians Advocating Child Safety and Protection, which gives programming to parents about Internet safety, sexting, bullying and abuse.

• $1,000 to the Matthew 25 Coalition, which provides prescription vouchers to women in southwest Medina County who can’t afford co-pays on medication.

• $1,000 to Oaks Family Care Center, which has a program to help single mothers learn to communicate effectively with their children’s fathers so they can work better as parents.

• $1,000 to RePlay for Kids, which puts on workshops in the county’s high schools to teach students to adapt toys for local children with disabilities.

“We are so proud to have awarded more than $100,000 in grants to nonprofits serving women and children in our community,” Posner said. “We look forward to the day when some of these projects will no longer be a pressing concern.”


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Parma police ticket man who warned drivers of sobriety checkpoint

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CLEVELAND — A suburban Cleveland man says police violated his First Amendment right to free speech when they cited him for holding a sign warning motorists to turn if they wanted to avoid a police sobriety checkpoint.

Forty-three-year-old Douglas Odolecki held a sign Friday night in Parma that said: “Check point ahead! Turn now!”

He and his attorney are fighting the citation. Odolecki says police sometimes abuse their authority and he believes he’s fighting for a just cause.

A Parma police spokesman said city attorneys previously determined the part of the sign telling motorists to turn is illegal.

It’s not the first time Odolecki used the sign or got into trouble for it. Parma police arrested him in September 2012 for having a knife in his pocket while holding that sign.


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Black River school board selects 1984 graduate as new superintendent

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Black River Schools is replacing outgoing superintendent Janice Wyckoff with one of its own. The school board hired Chris Clark, a 1984 graduate of Black River High School, as their new superintendent at a special meeting Tuesday night.

“I look forward to working with you all,” he told the board and residents who attended the meeting.

Newly hired Black River Schools Superintendent Chris Clark attends Tuesday’s school board meeting with his wife, Barb, and daughters, Morgan and Shelby. A 1984 Black River graduate, Clark said he is looking forward to leading the district. (ANDREW DAVIS / GAZETTE)

Newly hired Black River Schools Superintendent Chris Clark attends Tuesday’s school board meeting with his wife, Barb, and daughters, Morgan and Shelby. A 1984 Black River graduate, Clark said he is looking forward to leading the district. (ANDREW DAVIS / GAZETTE)

“I value my education from Black River Local Schools and would be honored to mold and develop students from the same district that molded and developed my education,” he said.

Clark’s two-year-contract provides for an annual salary of $95,000 — the smallest superintendent’s salary among the seven school districts serving Medina County and the same pay Wyckoff received. Her five-year contract, which expires July 31, called for her to be paid $97,375 last year, but she declined to accept the increase because of the district’s tight finances.

Black River passed its first additional operating levy in 16 years in May 2013.

Clark has bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the Ohio State University in agriculture and administrative training from the University of Dayton and Ashland University.

He previously worked for Madison Plains Schools in London, Ohio, for 25 years, including six years as principal of the high school.

He also operates a family farm in New London and has close ties with the Black River community.

Wyckoff told the board in February that she was resigning to accept the superintendent position for Clear Fork Valley Schools in Bellville. She starts there Aug. 1.

Clark will take over as superintendent July 1.

The school board started vetting candidates to fill Wyckoff’s position in May.

After narrowing down the 23 candidates to Clark and one other applicant last week, board President Jody Weidrick said the board decided on Clark based on his history with the district.

“He is a Black River grad,” she said. “He works well in our system and has for a long time.”

Clark agreed.

“I feel like I’m home,” he said.

Contact reporter Andrew Davis at (330) 721-4050 or adavis@medina-gazette.com.


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Lodi Lumber owner traces family’s lumber roots back to 1700s

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Jim Rice’s daughter, Whitney, is the 10th generation of the family to work in the lumber business. Historical photos provided by the family. (NANCY JOHNSON / GAZETTE)

Jim Rice’s daughter, Whitney, is the 10th generation of the family to work in the lumber business. Historical photos provided by the family. (NANCY JOHNSON / GAZETTE)

Few people can trace their family roots to pre-Revolutionary War America. Jim Rice can.

The owner of the Lodi Lumber Co., Rice also can trace 10 family generations who have worked in the lumber business.

(PHOTO PROVIDED)

(PHOTO PROVIDED)

Rice, along with daughter, Whitney Rice, and cousin, Brian Rice, are celebrating the 125th year of the Lodi business with an open house celebration 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at their 111 Wean St. facility.

Whitney Rice is the 10th-generation family member to work in the lumber business. A graduate of Kent State University, Whitney handles marketing for the company.

Vice President Brian Rice manages the lumber yard.

“To survive 125 years, we feel truly blessed,” Brian Rice said. “We have a loyal customer base, both past and present and a group of dedicated and talented employees, both past and present.”

“We’re proud of what we do, the people who work with us and the services we supply,” Jim Rice added. “We are a modern lumber company that has stood the test of time.

“Look at everything that’s happened over the past 125 years — wars, various economic conditions — we’ve been very fortunate to survive,” he said.

Lodi Lumber has survived and thrived. The Rice family operates a general hardwood lumber and millwork business, together with a retail lumber and building materials yard.

Over the years, the Rice family has added woodworking machinery, including a state-of-the-art computerized Weining molder. The company specializes in industrial and custom millwork.

“My ancestors always had mills — a grist mill on Old Mill Road and a sawmill that ran off a waterwheel in Chatham,” Jim Rice said.

Barnhart Rice, founder of the Rice family in America, emigrated from Germany to Bethlehem, Pa., in the early 18th century.

Barnhart’s son, Frederick Rice, was born in 1753 and served under George Washington at Valley Forge. After four years of service in the Revolutionary War, Frederick set up a grist mill, eventually moving to Ohio in 1821 where he purchased land that is now occupied by the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center.

Two houses he built with his son, another Barnhart, are still in use on the property. Barnhart also followed his father into the milling business.

Barnhart’s son, Philip Rice, moved from the family home in southern Ohio to settle on the banks of the Black River, five miles northwest of Lodi, where he built a dam and sawmill in 1836.

(PHOTO PROVIDED)

(PHOTO PROVIDED)

Philip Rice also was a miller. He worked with son, John Rice, sawmilling and grinding grain, using power generated by the Black River.

John’s son, Joseph Rice, moved to Lodi in 1889, where he and his brother, Clem Rice, purchased a rundown planning mill. The brothers cut their own timber, sawing and manufacturing it into building material before contracting with individuals for the construction of homes and buildings, many of which still stand in Lodi today.

The planning mill burned down a few years later and the brothers borrowed and saved to rebuild a bandsaw mill, the most modern of its time.

In 1911, Joseph’s two older sons, Grover and Noble, followed the Rice tradition by opening the Lodi Lumber Co.

The youngest brother, John E. Rice, joined the firm in 1920 after serving in World War I. The brothers added a retail softwood yard by purchasing the Knapp and Sanford Lumber Co. of Lodi.

During World War II, the plant kept fighter pilots safe with the manufacture of bent wooden supports used inside self-sealing gas tanks in fighter bomber planes, including B-29s.

Grover’s son Phillip Rice followed in the family business and eventually became president of Lodi Lumber. His son, Jim Rice, took the reins in the early 1980s. He was named president of the company in the 90s.

“It’s been a true pleasure getting to know and working with the people in our community and our customers. I look forward to seeing many of them at our open house on June 21,” Jim Rice said.

Contact reporter Nancy Johnson at (330) 721-4065 or areanews@medina-gazette.com.


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Wadsworth’s Blue Tip Festival brings color to city known for tradition

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WADSWORTH — Thousands of people, tons of candy, a cacophony of noise and one giant match.

This is the Blue Tip Festival in Wadsworth. It is the biggest, longest-running community event in a city known for celebrating its traditions.

Margaret Hollowell and her sister, Gloria Schilling, grew up in Wadsworth, both graduating from the high school. They attend the festival nearly every year, even though Margaret moved to Illinois in the 1990s.

A 20-foot-high match, the symbol of the Blue Tip Festival, is lit Tuesday night following the parade in Wadsworth. (SETH BREEDLOVE / GAZETTE)

A 20-foot-high match, the symbol of the Blue Tip Festival, is lit Tuesday night following the parade in Wadsworth. (SETH BREEDLOVE / GAZETTE)

They’re seated, smiling and laughing, on the hillside in Woodlawn Cemetery overlooking the parade going down College Street.

“It’s just nice to come back. It’s nice that it’s still here, Hollowell said. “This town is very, very special to us and I think it’s the hominess and a bonding we have with everyone here.”

The festival, which began Tuesday, is a five-day affair held in Memorial Park, just west of downtown. It is a classic, small-town festival complete with carnival rides, concessions and games.

“It’s about the heritage I think,” Schilling said. “It’s not that there was this match company and we all love it; it’s just a part of the history of the town. I hope it never goes away because it really is so important.”

The festival has been going strong since 1973 when it was held to recognize one of the areas largest employers, the Blue Tip Match Co. Although the company pulled up stakes in the early ’80s, the city continues host the festival every year.

“Yeah, it might seem weird,” Niki Weaver said. “That company’s been gone as long as I’ve been alive.”

Weaver, 20, works at Cool Bean Cafe on the town square. She’s lived in Wadsworth her whole life and has attended the festival as long as she can remember.

Some of her favorite memories are the times spent walking in the parade with her dad or the local softball team.

“It’s a huge part of the community,” she said. “It’s a huge part of why we’re even here because the factory helped keep the city going.”

The festival starts with a parade that includes the high school marching band, local organizations, politicians, businesses and emergency responders. A 20-foot-high, Blue Tip match is then lit on the city square.

Thousands of residents attend the parade, even going so far as to reserve spots along the parade route the night before by laying out blankets or lawn chairs.

“They don’t have parades like this where I grew up anymore,” said Susan Henry, who came to Wadsworth from Ashtabula. “I’ve been coming to this one forever and that’s one of the reasons.

“They still put on this parade and the festival and people can just leave their lawn chairs on the sidewalk the night before. It just reminds me of home — the way home used to be.”

Contact reporter Seth Breedlove at (330) 721-4065 ­or areanews@medina-gazette.com.


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Early voters getting more hours

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COLUMBUS — Ohio voters who want to cast an early ballot in person before Election Day will get new hours to do so under a schedule set this week by the state’s election chief following a recent federal order.

Secretary of State Jon Husted directed Ohio’s 88 county elections boards to be open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday and 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday for upcoming major contests, including the Nov. 4 election.

That means voters in the battleground state will get a total of 18 hours to vote in person over the final three days before presidential primaries and presidential and gubernatorial general elections.

Under Husted’s previous schedule for this November, residents could not have voted on the Sunday and Monday before Election Day.

The new times come after a federal ruling in a 2012 lawsuit filed against Husted by Democrats and President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign.

In the June 11 decision, U.S. District Judge Peter Economus ordered the Republican secretary of state “to set uniform and suitable in-person early voting hours for all eligible voters for the three days preceding all future elections.”

At issue in the case was a 2011 state law that cut off in-person, early voting for most residents three days before Election Day, but allowed an exception for military and overseas voters to cast a ballot in person until Monday.

Democrats claimed that arrangement amounted to unequal treatment of voters, and said everyone should have the chance to vote on the three days before Election Day.

The judge issued a temporary order in August 2012 that allowed voting to occur on the final three days before the November presidential election. With the case still pending, Husted in February set a voting schedule for this year’s elections with hours that included only the Saturday before Election Day.

The federal judge issued the permanent injunction last week, barring the state’s top election official from enforcing Friday as the close of early voting and requiring hours be set for the three days.

In announcing the new times, Husted said Tuesday that he considers the matter settled.

“It is my sincere hope that in the future Republicans and Democrats can work together to put voters first and avoid these kinds of controversies,” he said in a written statement.

Husted also issued early voting hours for municipal, primary and special elections.

His Democratic challenger criticized the new schedule as not going far enough.

State Sen. Nina Turner, of Cleveland, said it “fails to provide for evening early voting hours that working Ohioans need this cycle.”


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Storm knocks out 911 in Sharon Township

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Due to today’s severe weather, several residents in Sharon Township are unable to call 911 from their landlines, according to Capt. Dennis Miller of the Sharon Township Fire Department. Anyone in the outage area in need of emergency service can call 911 from a cell phone or the Medina County Sheriff’s Office at (330) 725-6631. Read More...

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Funding source still sought to turn Blue Heron Golf Course into park

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Montville Township officials have fallen short in their bid for a $400,000 grant to purchase Blue Heron Golf Course and turn it into a park.

The township came in second place, behind Lorain County, in a bid to secure funding from the Clean Ohio Fund’s Green Space Conservation Program.

Police Chief Terry Grice said the Clean Ohio Fund offered to give the township $80,000, but trustees turned that down.

“If we accepted the $80,000, that would disqualify us from future funding,” Grice said.

Grice said the township reapply for a grant from the Clean Ohio Fund later this year. He said the township also will look for grants from other nonprofit groups.

“We are still looking at different private foundations,” he said. “A lot of the other grants are for repairs and construction.”

The township has five years to come up with $500,000 to buy the golf course.

The township entered a five-year, lease-purchase agreement last month with Medina-based C&C of Ohio LLC to purchase the golf course.

C&C will finance the purchase of the land and lease it to Montville at a cost of $1 plus property taxes per year.

The township agreed to pay $132,000 for four of the 20 parcels this summer, with the rest of the payments occurring over the next five years.

The Green Space Conservation Program is the main source from which the township plans to pay for the 252-acre park.

The Green Space Conservation Program is administered by the Ohio Public Works Commission and helps fund the preservation of open spaces, sensitive ecological areas and stream corridors.

The property has a large undisturbed woodland and more than four miles of natural streams.

Blue Heron opened in 2007 and was touted as the next great golf course in Ohio.

The course’s 10th hole was nominated for “The Most Brutally Beautiful Golf Hole” in the nation in 2008.

The country club has been closed since 2012 for financial reasons.

Contact reporter Andrew Davis at (330) 721-4050 or adavis@medina-gazette.com.


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Bob Evans diners give portion of sales to family of heroic man

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Michelle Radke, wife of Peter Radke, sits with her children, Owen, 10, Hannah, 16, and Brynn, 14, at the Bob Evans in Medina Township during a memorial fundraiser for her husband. (ANDREW DAVIS / GAZETTE)

Michelle Radke, wife of Peter Radke, sits with her children, Owen, 10, Hannah, 16, and Brynn, 14, at the Bob Evans in Medina Township during a memorial fundraiser for her husband. (ANDREW DAVIS / GAZETTE)

Northeast Ohio residents dined at Bob Evans restaurants Thursday night to show their support for the Medina Township man who gave his life attempting to save a young girl struggling in choppy Lake Erie waters last month.

Peter Radke, 43, entered Lake Erie at Bay Village’s Huntington Beach Park to help the girl on May 29. He did not emerge from the water.

Sue Gulachek, a family friend of the Radke family, said she contacted Bob Evans because she knew the restaurant did fundraisers.

Peter Radke

Peter Radke

Bob Evans agreed to donate 15 percent of all sales from all Northeast Ohio locations to the Peter Radke Fund as long as diners brought in a flyer about the Thursday fundraiser.

“I wanted the fundraiser to be more than just Medina,” Gulachek said. “I love them. They are a wonderful family.”

Gulachek said Radke was a giving man and a hero who would jump into the water again if he had the chance.

Radke’s wife, Michelle, and three of their four children attended the fundraiser at the Bob Evans restaurant in Medina Township.

Michelle Radke said it was important to be there because the support from the community has been overwhelming.

“Thank you is not enough,” she said.

“I am shocked with the support the community has shown. People I don’t even know are contributing.”

The community already has raised more than $25,000 as part of a GoFundMe.com campaign and has contributions pouring in from other places.

Michelle Radke said some of the money will be used toward her children’s dreams, whatever they might be.

“I am really proud of my husband. Jumping in the water was probably one of the fastest decisions he had ever made.”

She said her husband talked frequently about what it meant to be successful.

“Having a significant contribution to the world around you measures how successful you are,” she said.

Contact reporter Andrew Davis at (330) 721-4050 or adavis@medina-gazette.com.


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