Campbell Recorder 03/14/19

Page 1

CAMPBELL RECORDER

Your Community Recorder newspaper serving all of Campbell County

THIS WEEK AT

THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS ❚ PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK

Cincinnati landslides are bad. They might get worse. Hannah K. Sparling and Terry DeMio Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

When Tom Gerrein left for Mass on Easter Sunday in 2010, he had a fl at backyard. When he returned home, he did not. Tom and his wife, Kathy, walked behind their house in Bellevue and there it was. A landslide had cut their backyard in two, leaving a big crack through the middle and pulling the bottom half of the yard downhill. Tom was shocked. He had heard of his neighbors having trouble with landslides but didn’t think his own property was in any danger. It turned out his yard was one of 39 caught up in a landslide, spread among several Bellevue streets. One of Tom’s neighbors lost an addon room and part of a garage – “They just sort of crumbled,” Tom said. Another couple ended up walking away, abandoning their home and letting the bank foreclose. Tom and Kathy had their house reappraised, and it lost more than 40 percent of its value, dropping from $113,000 before the landslide was discovered to $65,000 after. “It’s like someone put a bomb in your yard,” Tom said.

Sorry, that’s not covered by insurance Cincinnati’s hills are majestic, off ering unparalleled views of sunrises, sunsets and the winding Ohio River. But all across this region, homeowners like the Gerreins are waking up to the realization that living among hills comes with risk. The landslides on Columbia Parkway make news when they snarl rush-hour traffi c for a day or two, but they represent just a fraction of the underlying problem and cost. Much of that cost falls on homeowners, who sometimes don’t realize until it’s too late that landslides generally are not insured. And, while landslides have always been a problem here, they’re a problem some scientists fear will get worse as climate change causes more weather extremes and dumps more rain onto hillsides in Ohio and Northern Kentucky. There is no comprehensive landslide database, but University of Kentucky Geologist Matt Crawford has been mapping them for several years, and he

A recent landslide took out the backyard of a home on Clayton Court in Bellevue, Kentucky. A retaining wall was built on Anspaugh Avenue behind the home. PHOTOS BY THE ENQUIRER/MEG VOGEL

has about 80,000 on his list so far. That’s just in Kentucky.

‘We have to be really careful’ Greater Cincinnati sits in part on what’s called the Kope shale formation, which breaks down easily and is highly prone to landslides. There is also lakebed clay, a remnant of the glaciers, scattered throughout this region. Lakebed clay shrinks when it’s dry and swells when it gets wet. Too much precipitation adds weight and pressure. The hillsides get oversaturated and, eventually, there’s a landslide. That geology alone would be enough, said Eric Russo, executive director of The Hillside Trust, a nonprofi t dedicated to protecting this region’s hills. But landslides here have been exacerbated by development, Russo said. The hills were stripped of trees and quarried for rock. See LANDSLIDES, Page 2A

Tom Gerrein stands in his backyard in Bellevue, Kentucky on Feb. 19 He and his wife moved into their home in the summer of 1969. On Easter morning in 2010, they came home from church to fi nd a landslide they have since learned is affecting more than 35 properties in Bellevue.

DOJ: Dayton landlord demanded sex acts for rent Chris Mayhew Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Federal prosecutors have accused Dayton, Kentuck, landlord Gus Crank of demanding women perform sex acts to help pay rent or keep their housing. The U.S. Department of Justice fi led a lawsuit March 6 accusing

How to submit news

Crank of sexually harassed female tenants in violation of the federal Fair Housing Act, according to a news release. The residential rental property manager was accused of harassing female tenants from 2008 to 2016 with threats to evict them if his sexual advances were refused, according to the release. Off ers to reduce monthly rent pay-

To submit news and photos to the Community Press/Recorder, visit the Cincinnati Enquirer’s Share website: http://bit.ly/2FjtKoF

Contact The Press

ments in exchange for sex were reportedly made and there was unwelcome sexual touching, according to the release. Crank made intrusive and unannounced visits to women’s apartments to further his sexual advances, according to the release. He is acSee RENT, Page 2A

News: 513-248-8600, Retail advertising: 513-768-8404, Classified advertising: 283-7290, Delivery: 859-781-4421. See page A2 for additonal information

Drivers needed to deliver the Community Recorder once a week Part-time adult motor drivers are needed in the Campbell County area to deliver the Recorder newspapers. Drivers must be available on Thursdays and have a reliable vehicle. For more information, call 859-4423460.

Vol. 2 No. 8 © 2019 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Price $1.00


2A ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER

Landslides Continued from Page 1A

People built houses and roads, and they didn’t always account for the hills and how they were changing and often damaging them. “We’ve signifi cantly altered the landscape over the last couple hundred years,” Russo said. “In a lot of cases, the hillsides were made weaker.” And then there’s the rain. Pounding rain. Day after day. It fl oods the river and, in a way, it fl oods the hills. In 1871, the fi rst year the National Weather Service tracked annual precipitation, Cincinnati got 34.5 inches. There were ups and downs from year to year, but from then through 1999, Cincinnati averaged 39.5 inches of precipitation each year. From 2000 through 2018, the average was 46.4 inches – a 17 percent increase. Experts caution against using past rainfall amounts as a predictor of any one city’s specifi c future. Cincinnati could end up with record rainfall while there’s record drought just a few cities away, or vice versa. But, the University of Maryland made a climate-change map that predicts that in 2080, Cincinnati’s climate will feel most like today’s climate near Clarksdale, Mississippi. That would mean a winter that is 12 degrees warmer on average and 74 percent wetter. As the earth warms, it means the atmosphere can hold more water, which translates to more precipitation and more intense storms, said Greg Springer, chair of the department of geological sciences at Ohio University. That combination – added to this area’s already steep terrain – means landslides will “almost certainly become more common,” Springer said. Mayor John Cranley said there is no question climate change is already aff ecting landslides on Columbia Parkway, which have shut down the road repeatedly this year. The most obvious fi x is a higher retaining wall, but that could cost close to $10 million. The Hillside Trust doesn’t keep exact counts, but Russo, too, thinks landslides are increasing. These days, he gets fi ve or six calls a week from people who think they might have a slide and aren’t sure what to do. “It might start getting people to think,” he said, “we have to be really careful about how we’re developing.”

Thirty-nine houses on a slide Landslides damage is diffi cult to quantify, but at one point in the ‘80s, Hamilton County had the highest percapita landslide cost in the country. Experts doubt that has changed much. From 2015 to present, the Ohio Department of Transportation spent about $295 million on landslide repair. In Kentucky, the state transportation cabinet spent more than $85 million on landslides in the past fi ve years. That only covers landslides that impacted state roads, to say nothing for the many slides that happened on local roads or private property. People just don’t think about it, said Crawford, the University of Kentucky geologist. They see a pretty house on a hill, and they buy it. They imagine a future with their family. Planting a garden. Taking long walks. The danger of a landslide – and the lack of insurance coverage under most policies – never crosses their

Tom Gerrein’s yard was one of 39 caught up in a landslide that spread among several Bellevue streets. He said his house lost more than 40 percent of its value after the landslide. MEG VOGEL/THE ENQUIRER

minds. “Generally, you’re on your own,” Crawford said. “Most people don’t know that, and it’s really, really a burden. I’ve seen a lot of damaged homes and people in bad situations, tragic situations, because of it. And they don’t know who to turn to.” In Bellevue, Tom and Kathy Gerrein ended up paying nearly $11,000 out of pocket for two studies they sent to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, asking for help. In 2014, FEMA granted them and the other homeowners a deal to build retaining walls: FEMA would pay for 87 percent of the project and the homeowners would be responsible for the remaining 13. That federal help is rare – a silver lining to so many homes being at-risk – but it’s been fi ve years since the money was awarded, and not much has been done. Bellevue got a new mayor in January, though, who lamented the lack of progress and said the roughly $2.5 million FEMA project is one of his top priorities. The city isn’t paying for the project since it’s on private property, but it is responsible for overseeing the work since it involves federal money. “It’s a giant project. It’s just so complicated,” said Mayor Charlie Cleves. But “it should have been taken care of by now. It’s a lot of homes that are caught up in this thing.” The Gerrein house has a few cracks now that weren’t there before, and some of the doors don’t close as well as they used to, Tom said. Still, he feels lucky because, despite the major drop in value, he doesn’t think their house has suff ered any major structural damage. Every time there’s a period of heavy rain, though, he wonders if their luck will run out. Because the ground is still shifting, and the yard is still dropping.

‘That’s worth more than the house’ This is not just a problem for people who happen to take Columbia Parkway to work or who live at the top of Mount Adams or Price Hill. This is about a backyard in Oakley that one day was level and the next had a rift about a foot-and-a-half deep. It’s about a house in Clifton where the front yard cascaded down onto the sidewalk.

A landslide in February 2018 crept dangerously close to the Husman House condos. PROVIDED

It’s about a condo building in East Walnut Hills, where owners pooled their money to build a 150-foot retaining wall after a landslide in February 2018 swept away a chunk of the backyard and crept uncomfortably close to the building. “We felt like we had to act fast,” said Melanie Millar, a past president of the Husman House homeowners’ association. “We didn’t have a lot of room for losing more land.” In North Avondale, John Lanzador had no idea anything was wrong until the city came this past summer and cited him for a landslide in his backyard. Lanzador’s yard at the top of the hill had slipped and was pushing mud and debris against the neighbors’ houses at the bottom, threatening serious structural damage. The fi rst estimate was a gut-punch: Half-a-million dollars. “That’s worth more than the house,” Lanzador said. Someone suggested he sue his neighbors. If they did something that triggered the slide, maybe they could be held fi nancially liable. But Lanzador hated the thought of that. He didn’t think the landslide was anyone’s fault, and if anything, he wanted to help his neighbors, not face-off in court. Someone else suggested he go bankrupt. Take the loss and walk away. That felt wrong, too. Finally, Lanzador was able to get a lower estimate from a company in West Chester, and he and his neighbors worked out a deal to share the cost. The hill is getting re-sloped, and there will be new retaining walls to protect the homes at the bottom. Work started in January and was supposed to be fi nished by now, but it keeps getting delayed by rain. Lanzador hopes it’s done in a couple weeks so he can do his best to forget about it and move on. It ended up better than what he was initially facing, but it’s still been tough. “Nobody’s expecting a $100,000 hit,” he said. “I’m just wishing it’s over. Get it done with, and we’ll be OK.”

COMMUNITY PRESS & RECORDER NEWSPAPERS

Rent

❚ 312 Elm Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202 ❚ 2116 Chamber Center Drive, Fort Mitchell, KY 41017 NEWS TIPS............................................................................513-248-8600 HOME DELIVERY..................................................................859-781-4421 ADVERTISING.......................................................................513-768-8404 CLASSIFIEDS ........................................................................513-242-4000

Our home is here.

Madonna Manor.

We’ve been so worried about Mom. She is Dad’s primary caregiver and it was starting to take a toll. Since the move to an Assisted Living suite at Madonna Manor, we worry less and our parents are enjoying life. • Maintenance-free living • Social gatherings and meaningful spiritual opportunities • Chef-prepared meals • Transportation provided Call Jessica today at 859.426.6400 for details on how you can save $500 per month and have your moving expenses covered.

Restrictions apply.

HEARING TESTS SET

$ Va 17 lu 5 e

move-in special!

75 e $1 alu V

Call about ou r

FOR SOUTHGATE, KY Hearing tests will be given at Beltone Hearing Aid Center. The test will be given by a Hearing Care Practitioner in Southgate on Thursday, Jan. 17th. Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding conversations is invited to have a hearing test to see if this problem can be helped. Bring this Coupon in for your HEARING TEST: a $175 value, FREE! Evening and Weekend tests by appointment. visit our website www.beltonetristate.com

Hearing Aid Center Southgate, KY - 2306 Alexandria Pike Find us in Southgate Chiropractic Office, Exit #2 off I-471!

Thursday, Jan. 17th • 9:00am - 4:00pm

Independent Living Assisted Living Memory Care Rehabilitation Skilled Nursing 2344 Amsterdam Road | Villa Hills, Kentucky 41017 | 859.426.6400

homeishere.org

Call Now! 859-594-7566 WALK-INS ALWAYS WELCOME!

OR CALL TOLL FREE AT 1-888-744-7598!

Most Insurance Plans Accepted! Managed Care Plans Offered!

DON’T WAIT CALL NOW!

Continued from Page 1A

cused of making unwelcome comments and advances too. “No female tenant should have to suff er sexual harassment as a condition of maintaining housing,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband. The Department of Justice launched an initiative in October 2017 to combat sexual harassment in housing and rolled out the initiative nationwide in April 2018, the release said. The Department of Justice said there have been eight lawsuits fi led since the initiative was launched.


CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ 3A

Our MISSION:

O

NE

PK

35

UE

OR

with card

with card

AL

YO ET N E P KG . G

FREE!

Q G. FREE OF E

U

Fresh Blueberries 6 oz.

Pork Loin BackRibs

1

99

$ 88

¢

lb.

Juicy Green Grapes

Bone In Whole Pork Shoulder

2

$ 99

ANGUS BEEF

D-CU

O T IN ST

R

E

H

AN

lb.

with card

with card

PREMIUM

Sister & Brother, Julie Needler Anderson & Michael Needler, Jr.

/$

L E S S E R VA L

BU

BUY 1 PKG. GET 1 PKG.

Inspire PRIDE IN OUR TEAM

Nourish OUR COMMUNITIES

Delight OUR CUSTOMERS

Family Owned and Operated

2

$ 68

lb.

with card

Boneless Beef Bottom Round Rump Roast or Value Pack Steaks

Corned Beef Flat or Eye of Round

Navel Oranges 4 lb. bag

Sauerkraut 2 lb.

1

$ 99

2

Dean’s

Ice Cream 56 oz.

Simply

Orange Juice 52 oz.

with card

Celebrate National

pi day 3.14.19

3

$ 77

2

with card

Bakery Fresh

8" Fruit Pies

Starbucks

Swiss or Baby Swiss

with card

$ 14 Ground Coffee 12 oz. Select Varieties

5

$ 99

2

LIMIT

lb. with card

$

6

Compare and SAVE!

$ 99

LIMIT

2

1

Wholey Shrimp Fried Rice 24 oz.

5

$ 49 with card

Wholey Wild Salmon Fillets 16 oz.

with card

Guinness Stout 12 pk. bottles

Available Buttermilk, Hyde Park & Harrison locations.

9

$ 49 with card

Smart Indulgence Beer Battered Cod 10 oz.

6

$ 99 with card

Go Wild Norwegian Haddock Fillets 8 oz.

with card

1

with card

$ 29

Potato Chips 9 oz. Select Varieties

with card

1

$ 99

$ 99 Idaho Potatoes 5 lb. bag

Remke, Your Lenten Seafood Headquarters! Available at all locations.

lb. with card

with card

Snowfloss

LIMIT

3

$ 29

6

$ 49 with card

Smithwick's or Harp 12 pk. bottles

Ad prices are effective Thursday, March 14th - Wednesday, March 20th 2019

15

$ 99

13

$ 99


4A ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER

SD1, EPA extend $1.3B sewer fi x deadline under the amended consent decree, according to an SD1 news release. SD1 provides sewer service to 300,000 people in Boone, Campbell Chaney and Kenton counties. Ratepayers saw 5 percent increases on their bills to comply with the consent decree in 2016 and 2017, according to previous articles in The Enquirer. The SD1 board promised the increases wouldn’t be the last prior to the consent decree extension. The immediate impact of the consent decree extension on ratepayer bills is unknown at this time. Back in 2016 SD1 predicted a need to

Chris Mayhew Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Northern Kentucky sewer customers just received a 15-year extension to pay the estimated $1.3 billion still needed to comply with the federal Clean Water Act of 1972. The year 2025 was the three-county region’s previous deadline to meet the EPA’s binding 2005 federal consent decree timeline to mitigate sewer overfl ows into streams and rivers. The consent decree is a legally binding agreement in federal court with the EPA, Sanitation District No. 1 of Northern Kentucky and the Commonwealth of Kentucky. SD1 has until Jan. 1, 2040 to comply

There is no good reason to “Act Your Age!”

increase average monthly rates by 300 percent by 2025 to adhere to the consent decree. The estimate in 2016 was average bills could climb as high as $180 monthly by 2025. More than 1 billion gallons of Combined Sewer Overfl ows (CSO) and 115 million gallons of Sanitary Sewer Overfl ows still happen every year in Northern Kentucky. The overfl ows of untreated sewage mixed with water, CSO’s, and raw sewage overfl owing (SSO’s) must be eliminated or remediated under the consent decree. “Aff ordability has been a driving factor in our negotiations with the regulators,” said SD1 Executive Director Adam

Meyer Tool $15.9 million Boone County investment uses tax incentives Chris Mayhew Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Celebrate Life.

Meyer Tool will spend $15.9 million to renovate a building in Boone County near Erlanger. The Camp Washington-based company will create 100 new aerospace industry jobs, according to a Tri-ED news release. The site is nearby Meyer’s existing location at 1462 Donaldson Highway within a half a mile of Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin made the announcement Monday, according to the release. Tri-ED is Northern Kentucky’s economic development agency. Kentucky Economic Development Authority preliminarily approved $1.25 million in tax incentives for Meyer through the Kentucky Business Investment Program. Meyer gets to keep a portion of its investment through corporate

Senior Living Apartments

Personal Care Suites *Be Social. *Be Active.

*Be Supported. pp

859.331.3224 www.stcharlescommunity.org

Chaney. “The extension will allow us to spread infrastructure capital costs over a longer period, reducing the fi nancial impact to our customers while ensuring progress on overfl ow mitigation.” The eventual cost of eliminating the overfl ows may end up being less than the previously estimated $1.3 billion, according to SD1’s news release. The extension gives SD1’s board fl exibility to take advantage of emerging technologies to lower the eventual cost, according to the news release. Chaney said he is optimistic the consent decree will be fi nalized by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky he process may take several months, he said.

income tax credits and wage assessments by meeting job and investment targets. The new 83,000-square-foot Meyer Tool site will give the company 12 locations supplying the aerospace and industrial gas turbine industries. “We’re very excited with this opportunity to expand our advanced manufacturing capacity in such an ideal location for us,” said Beau Easton, one of the owners of Meyer Tool, Inc. “The new site will be located 13 miles from our headquarters, and around the corner from our Northern Kentucky facility, so we will have a lot of logistical and synergistic opportunities.” Easton said the company has benefi ted from an excellent workforce talent pool in the area. Meyer already employes 164 employees in Northern Kentucky. The company has eight U.S. locations and sites in Poland and Canada.

+

IT’S

NATIONAL REPLACEMENT WINDOW MONTH AT RENEWAL BY ANDERSEN!

30 BUY ONE

GET ONE

%

OFF!

*

WINDOWS & PATIO DOORS S PLUS

NO

MONEY DOWN INTEREST P AY M E N T S

Offer ends 3/31!

FOR 12 MONTHS~

CALL NOW FOR A FREE IN-HOME CONSULTATION

513-268-1186 RbACincy.com

Renewal by Andersen Midwest is independently owned and operated. *Offer expires 3/31/2019. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. Buy one (1) window, get the next one 30% off and 12 months no payments, no interest when you purchase four (4) or more windows and patio doors between 3/1/2019 & 3/31/2019 with approved credit. ~Subject to credit approval. Interest is billed during the promotional period but all interest is waived if the purchase amount is paid before the expiration of the promotional period. APR is subject to change after promotional period expires. Financing for GreenSky® consumer loan programs is provided by federally insured, federal and state chartered financial institutions without regard to age, race, color, religion, national origin, gender or familial status. Savings comparison is based on the purchase of a single unit at regular list price. See your local Renewal by Andersen location for details. All license numbers available upon request. "Renewal by Andersen" and all other marks where denoted are trademarks of Andersen Corporation. © 2019 Andersen Corporation. All rights reserved. +Based on 2016 homeowner brand survey. Andersen family of brands aggregated: Andersen, Renewal by Andersen, Silver Line and American Craftsman.


CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ 5A

ANTED W 30 People

Who have difficulty hearing and understanding in background noise. The 30 people are needed to evaluate Miracle-Ear’s® latest and most advanced digital hearing solution — the ME5500, a true wonder of GENIUS 3.0 technology that addresses the most common concerns of hearing aid wearers. Candidates will be asked to evaluate our instruments for 30 days (RISK FREE*). At the end of the 30 days, if you are satisfied with the improvement in your hearing and wish to keep the instrument, you may do so at tremendous savings. TM

Candidates will be selected by March 30, 2019. If you are interested, call for your appointment. Miracle-Ear Hearing Centers Cold Spring 4200 Alexandria Pk. (859) 446-5983

Colerain Twp. 9592 Colerain Ave. (513) 286-3561

Cynthiana Weds. 9am-5pm (859) 587-1447

Eastgate 4530 Eastgate Blvd. (513) 645-6704

Erlanger 3405 Dixie Hwy. (859) 379-6991

Florence 7901 Mall Rd. (859) 479-2914

Georgetown Thurs. 10am-4pm (937) 381-9554

Hamilton 1355 Main St. (513) 268-5256

Lawrenceburg Tues. 10am-5pm (812)-382-5061

Lebanon Weds. 9am-3pm (513) 286-3469

Maysville Weds. 11am-5pm (606) 824-4162

Miamisburg 125 Springboro Pk. (937) 872-0022

Middletown Towne Mall (513) 268-5553

Springdale Western Hills 11554 Springfield Pk. 6210 Glenway Ave. (513) 268-5097 (513) 436-4441

Free hearing tests* are provided to anyone interested in knowing if they qualify for this program. *Hearing tests is always free. Not a medical exam. Audiometric test to determine proper amplification needs only. Risk free offer, if you are not completely satisfied, the aids may be returned for a full refund within 30 days of the delivery, in satisfactory condition. Hearing aids do not restore natural hearing. Individual experiences vary depending on severity of loss, accuracy of evaluation, proper fit and ability to adapt to amplification. ©2019 Hearing Services LLC


6A ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER

Celebrate holiday with corned beef and cabbage Moist and buttery soda bread

Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld

I use my food processor, but you can use a mixer or by hand.

If I didn’t look at the calendar, I would still know St. Patrick’s Day is coming up. That’s because in the grocery stores corned beef is front and center in the meat aisle. This year I used my instant pot for cooking the corned beef. Wow. The beef was done in an hour and 15 minutes (it would have taken a minimum of 4 hours in the slow cooker). I took the meat out and then cooked the cabbage, carrots and potatoes for about 6 minutes. The instant pot has hit mainstream kitchens in a big way. Northern Kentucky reader Nicole Morgan is a fan, and so is friend Carol Vanover, an Indiana reader – they both convinced me to try the pot (check out their recipes on my site). The instant pot is a multi-cooker that’s also a slow cooker, electric pressure cooker, sauté/browning pan, rice cooker, and more. So far all I’ve used it as a pressure cooker. As I evolve with it, I’ll share more recipes using other features. Now if you want, you can always use the regular slow cooker for this recipe, just put the vegetables in the slow cooker fi rst with the meat on top, and cook on low 8-10 hours or high 4-6. And because I’ve gotten a couple requests for my special soda bread, which has been shared before, that’s here too. Happy St. Pat’s Day.

Tip from Rita’s kitchen Do you have an instant pot? Share recipes and tips.

Ingredients 2 cups all purpose flour ⁄ 4 teaspoon baking soda

3

⁄ 2teaspoon salt

1

3 tablespoons sugar 1 stick butter, softened ⁄ 2 heaping cup dried cherries, raisins, cranberries or favorite dried fruit

1

cream

1 cup regular sour

Melted butter

Try making corned beef and cabbage in an instant pot. PHOTOS BY RITA HEIKENFELD

A bit of turbinado or coarse sugar (opt but good)

Instant Pot corned beef and cabbage

Instructions

Ingredients

Preheat oven to 375. Place piece of parchment on cookie sheet and spray parchment.

Corned beef with spice packet, about 2# 2 bay leaves 1 head of cabbage, wedged 1 pound carrots, chunked up 4-5 nice red potatoes, quartered or chunked up 2 cups water Salt and pepper to taste Horseradish and red wine vinegar Instructions Put corned beef, fat side up, spices, bay and water into pot. Cook on high pressure 1 hour and 15 minutes. Meat will register at least 145 when it’s done. Do a quick release, remove meat and add vegetables. Cook on high about 6 minutes. Do a quick release. Remove bay leaves, season, slice meat and enjoy! Oh, and don’t forget to pass the horseradish and red wine vinegar!

Mix flour, soda, salt, sugar and butter until crumbly. Add cherries. Toss to combine. This keeps fruit suspended. Blend in sour cream. Form into mound-shaped circle about 6 inches wide and 2 or so inches tall. Place on cookie sheet and make a cross in the middle. (This is to let the devils out, or is it to keep them from coming in?!). Brush with butter and sprinkle with sugar. Bake 40-50 minutes or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Check after 40 minutes. Serve warm with butter.

Karastan® Carpet In-Stock starting at $2.58 Sq Ft 26%-51% Savings 15 In-Stock Colors

live beautifully sale

up to

Live Beautifully. Our carpets and rugs are designed to inspire beautiful living. Dance, sip, read, dine, and relax on the comfort of Karastan.

Save $100 for every $1,000 spent on select Karastan® residential carpet styles up to $500. This offer is valid on a minimum purchase of $1,000. First quality, current running, special order styles. Not valid on in-stock Karastan® carpets. In-stock Karastan® carpets are priced as is, no further discounts. Does not apply to previous purchases. Cannot be combined with any other offers. Offer ends March 31, 2019.

Carpets & Floors CE-GCI0145575-01

Call For A Free In Home Consultation

513-306-4995 859-568-5150


CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ 7A

Imagine Your Home Totally Organized

40 OFF %

1SP2 MONTH EC IAL FINANCING*

On purchases of $2 more made with ,000 or your Home Design credit ca rd.

TWO WAYS TO SCHEDULE YOUR FREE IN-HOME DESIGN CONSULTATION.

CALL: 859.538.5015 or visit www.closetsbydesign.com

Design Center Hours: M -F 9 - 5 | SAT 10 -3 Independently Owned & Operated

11275 Deerfield Rd., Cincinnati, OH 45242 40% off any order of $1000 or more. 30% off an order $700 - $999. *Subject to credit approval. Minimum monthly payments required. See store for details. Free installation valid only on complete systems of $700 or more. Coupon valid on new orders only and must be presented at initial design consultation. May not be applied to a previously placed order. Financing available.


8A ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER

Viewpoints WINTER AND EARLY SPRING PRUNING TIPS Extension Education Don Sorrell Community Recorder

As spring approaches, many homeowners begin to think about their yard’s landscape. The winter months can be damaging to trees and shrubs. To ensure healthy spring plants, homeowners may want to prune the trees and shrubs around their home. But do not just prune for the sake of pruning, make sure you have a valid reason for pruning before you begin. Pruning during the late winter months allows for the removal of damage caused by winter winds and precipitation. The wounds caused by pruning heal most quickly this time of year just

as new growth is emerging on the plant. Pruning also allows removal of diseased, crowded or hazardous branches. When pruning trees, the size of the tree does not need to be reduced too much in one season. Limit the pruning amount to one-fourth of the tree’s volume. Start by thinning out branches by cutting them off close to the tree’s trunk or a large limb. Leave the base of the branch, known as the collar, intact. Cutting the collar will prevent the plant from growing over the wound caused from pruning. Pruning in this manner allows for a healthy tree that is more open to sunlight and air movement. If the branch is cut back only part way, there will likely be a crowded regrowth of new branches where the cut was made. Do not seal or paint the

SUBMIT YOUR LETTERS, COLUMNS The Community Press & Recorder newspapers have a new email address you can use to send in letters to the editor and guest columns. Send your letters (200 words or less) or guest columns (500 words or less) to: viewpoints@communitypress.com As before, please include your first and last name on letters to the editor, along with the name of your community. Include your phone number as well. With guest columns, include your headshot (a photo of you from shoulders up) along with your column. Include a few sentences giving your community and describing any expertise you have on the subject of your column.

wounds resulting from pruning because this will only delay the tree’s healing process. With spring-fl owering shrubs, rejuvenation pruning may be needed, and the time to prune is fast approaching. The best time to prune these plants is right after they have fl owered. If the shrub is pruned before it blooms, the buds have been removed before their fl owers were enjoyed. When pruning is done after blooming, the fl owers will have been enjoyed, and the plant can recover, grow and produce more buds for fl owers next spring. Rejuvenation pruning removes onethird of the shrub’s oldest growth. This pruning entails selecting the thickest, darkest and unhealthiest stems or branches and cutting them back. Stems should be cut back to soil level and

branches to the point of intersection with the shrub’s main trunk. This ensures that only the youngest, most productive wood (that which produces the most/best fl owers) remains a part of the shrub. Shrubs that will bloom during the summer months can also be pruned during the early spring. Pruning is not limited to a certain time of year. Homeowners can prune at any time if they notice branches and limbs that are damaged either from weather, disease or insects. Pruning is invigorating for the plants in a home landscape so one should not necessarily think of pruning as a means of size control. If you have a plant that has grown out-of-bounds, pruning may not be the answer – you may need to consider replacing the plant with one that will reach a smaller size at maturity.

Managing blood glucose by planning healthy meals Ronda Rex

Campbell County Agent for Family and Consumer Sciences Education

Making the right food choices is a great way for people with diabetes to control their blood glucose. Managing blood glucose helps reduce the risk for health complications. What does healthful eating mean if I have diabetes? Eating the right amount of whole grain foods, vegetables, fruits, low-fat or fat-free milk and milk products, lean cuts of meat, fi sh or poultry and beans each day. Paying attention to portion size (the amount of food you eat in one sitting). Eating three small meals and two healthy snacks each day. Planning meals ahead of time. Having healthy foods such as fruits and vegetables available in your home. Why is eating healthfully important if I have diabetes? Helps you manage blood glucose Reduces your risk for heart disease, stroke, eye disease and other complications Helps you better manage moods and feelings Gives you energy throughout the day What are the benefi ts of using the plate method? The plate method helps you: Make healthy food choices Eat more dietary fi ber, which helps

control your blood sugar Manage your weight Eat more fruits and vegetables Control the amount of carbohydrate foods you eat How can I “think my plate”? 1. Use a dinner plate that is nine inches in diameter. (Using a plate larger than that may encourage you to eat larger portions of food.) 2. Imagine that your plate is divided into three sections. 3. Fill your plate according to the following proportions: Use the large section, or half of the plate, for non-starchy vegetables (green salad, cooked or raw broccoli, carrots, green beans, or caulifl ower). Eat both raw and cooked vegetables at each meal, and vary your veggies. Use one of the smaller sections, or one quarter of your plate, for starchy food such as pasta, rice, cooked beans, or a starchy vegetable (potatoes, corn, beans, butternut squash and peas). Use the other quarter of your plate for protein (chicken, turkey, fi sh, beef, pork, eggs, cheese, or tofu). Bake, grill, steam, or broil lean cuts of meat. Eat about 3 to 4 ounces of protein twice a day. 4. Add an 8-ounce glass of fat-free or low-fat milk. 5. Add a serving of fruit. Choose 1 small fresh fruit, 1 cup of melon (cantaloupe or honey dew), or half a cup canned fruit (in its own juice).

Limited Time Offer 15 – Month CD 18 – Month IRA CD

• Personal & Memory Care

2.50% (2.52

• 24-Hour Nursing Care

)

% APY*

• All-Inclusive Pricing • Person-Centered Care

Convenient Locations:

Exclusively Designed With Your Desired Lifestyle And Atmosphere In Mind

3425 Valley Plaza Parkway 859-34 4-7860

)

% APY*

Ft. Wright Florence

8545 US 42 859-28 3-6222

Schedule Your Tour Today!

Cold Spring

136 Plaza Drive (Just off the AA on Highway 27) 859-441-1450 CE-CIN0007930-02

4009 Seligman Drive • Florence, KY 41042 www.dominionflorence.com 859-287-4852

2.50% (2.52

CITIZENS DEPOSIT BANK

YOUR FINANCIAL CORNERSTONE

A Community Bank

*APY = Annual Percentage Yield. Rates effective as of November 19, 2018. Rate subject to change. $500 minimum deposit required to obtain this rate. Penalty for early withdrawal. Brokered deposits and deposits from other financial institutions not accepted. Member FDIC.


Campbell Recorder

❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019

❚ 1B

Sports Camels lose tough decision to Trinity in semifi nals Camels senior is used to clutch shots James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

LEXINGTON – The Camels season is over after losing to Trinity in the semifi nals, however, one thing remains certain: Reid Jolly making a clutch shot has been a common occurrence for Campbell County basketball. Jolly took it to another level on the biggest stage in Kentucky on March 6, the fi rst round of the Sweet 16. With his team trailing by a point, Jolly drove up the middle of the lane and patiently worked his way through three defenders. After a fake or two, he rose up and drew a foul. Then, he calmly sank two free throws to give the Camels the lead for good. After a heart-stopping fi nal sequence, the Camels survived, beating previously undefeated John Hardin 6160 to advance to the quarterfi nals and bringing their record to 30-4. “When you’re a little kid in your driveway, you dream about that,” Jolly said. “I’ve been struggling on those lately and coach had been putting me on the line in practice. I wanted to prove myself in the last seconds of the game.” Jolly has been playing his best basketball in the postseason. In the 10th Region Tournament, he averaged 24.3 points and eight rebounds in the three games. He shot 60 percent from the fi eld and had fi ve steals. He lifted Campbell from an eight-point halftime defi cit to Clark County in the regional fi nals, scoring 11 points in the third quarter. “We knew that our goal is to always go to Rupp, every single year. We expect it, but it’s always a task. I was just doing everything I could to help our team win and contribute in any way possible,” Jolly told the Maysville Ledger-Independent. Jolly was clutch in last year’s postSee JOLLY, Page 2B

Campbell County head coach Aric Russell talks to the Camels as Campbell County defeated Walton-Verona 49-42 in the state quarterfi nals in the Sweet 16 on March 8. JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

LEXINGTON – Heartbreak found the Campbell County boys basketball team once again, ending the careers of seven seniors who have led the program to unprecedented heights. The previous three seasons ended on last second 3-pointers by the opponent. Saturday night at Rupp Arena, Campbell County had the chance to do the heartbreaking. Senior Reid Jolly’s shot in the lane was blocked by Trinity senior David Johnson, and Trinity defeated Campbell County 42-40 in the state semifi nals of the Whitaker Bank/KHSAA Boys Basketball Sweet 16. The Camels ended the season 31-5 in their furthest advancement in the state tournament. Jolly is one of seven seniors with Noah Wirth, Drew Wilson, Tanner

Lawrence, Grant Jolly, Andrew Helton and Chandler Farmer. Junior starter Jordan Gross was the lone non-senior to play against Trinity. “When they were freshmen on the freshmen team, I didn’t move any of them up,” Campbell head coach Aric Russell said. “I’d go to their freshman games and they would have a packed house to see them play. That’s how good they were. Seeing them come up and getting to coach them these last few years, I feel very fortunate and blessed. I love these kids. They’re going to do great things. They’re all quality young men, they work hard. This is going to sting, but tomorrow morning we’ll wake up and realize what a great season this is. Something we’re going to be real happy about for a lot of years.” Campbell’s last stand started with 4.3 seconds on the clock and the Camels inbounding from their frontcourt baseline.

Noah Wirth inbounded to Jolly, who tried to split a double-team and put up a short shot on the baseline. David Johnson, Trinity’s Mr. Basketball fi nalist, got both hands up and defl ected it. The ball ended in the hands of Jamil Hardaway on the baseline. Jolly put his hands on Hardaway and pushed him enough so he stepped out of bounds, but a foul was not called, and time expired with the Camels heated in complete disbelief. “My contact got knocked out on the last play and I could hardly see,” Jolly said. “You can’t always judge a game on the last call. That’s how it goes.” The last play capped a frustrating fi nal minute-plus for the Camels after Jolly hit a 3-pointer to pull Campbell with two points at 40-38, with 1:23 to play. Drew Wilson stole the inbounds See CAMELS , Page 2B

Charlie Fredrick infl uenced high school sports Mark Schmetzer

Special to Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Charlie Fredrick’s impact on Greater Cincinnati high school sports lasted for decades and was felt on both sides of the Ohio River. The former Newport Catholic football and basketball star and long-time coach and athletic director at Newport Catholic, Highlands, Greenhills and Winton Woods high schools passed away at the age of 82 on Friday, leaving behind a legacy of athletic achievements that his family continues to enhance. How strong was his impact? The cell-

Charlie Fredrick

Class of 1955

phone voicemail box of Joe Fredrick, Charlie and Mary Jo’s youngest son, quickly fi lled up with condolence messages. “Big loss,” Joe said. “It’s been like nothing you can ever imagine. It’s just

amazing. As long as I can remember, everywhere I’d go – Greenhills, on the road, at Notre Dame, here in Northern Kentucky – people would come up to me daily and talk about my dad.” Charlie Fredrick graduated from Newport Catholic in 1955 after earning fi ve varsity letters, two in basketball and three in football, and led Northern Kentucky in rushing during his senior football season. He capped his high school football career by scoring three touchdowns and kicking two PATs in a 20-20 tie with McNicholas. He earned a football scholarship to Notre Dame, where he was part of the 1958 team that snapped Oklahoma’s 47-

game winning streak. After graduating, Fredrick returned to Greater Cincinnati and embarked on a remarkable career, starting in 1961 with coaching Thoroughbred football. He started the Newport Catholic track-and-fi eld program in 1963 and won Ninth Region championships in 1964 and 1965, helped by hurdler and later Boston Celtics great Dave Cowens. Fredrick also spent a year on the Highlands’ staff , but after failing to land the Bluebirds’ head football coach job, he moved across the river to coach football at Greenhills. He learned about the See FREDRICK, Page 2B


2B ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER

Camels Continued from Page 1B

pass, and the Camels got it back. After running some off ense, Wilson had a layup blocked and the ball was knocked out of bounds. Jolly got the inbounds pass, was trapped in front of the Camels bench, and was ruled out of bounds with 55 seconds to go. Russell, standing right next to the action, disputed the call and said afterward he thought Jolly was in bounds. Trinity’s Kamari Kenemore made one of two free throws. Jolly followed with what would be his fi nal high school basket, scoring to make it 41-40. The Camels fouled Johnson, and he made one of two with 15.6 seconds left to make it 42-40. Jolly drove up the middle of the lane and had the ball knocked out of his hands and out of bounds, setting up the fi nal inbounds play. A close fi nish seemed unlikely early in the second quarter, when Trinity took a quick 15-point lead at 20-5. Johnson, a University of Louisville signee averaging 16.2 points per game, was doing whatever he wanted against the Camels defense early on. He had eight points and four assists in the 20-5 start. Even his misplays were fruitful, as a missed dunk turned into an off ensive putback for Stan Turnier late in the fi rst quarter. The Camels outscored Trinity 15-2 the rest of the half. Wilson had seven of the points, Andrew Helton four and Jolly four. Trinity went 1-for-9 in that stretch, the only basket a successful dunk by Johnson in transition. “We got off to a bad start,” Russell said. “We let their pressure take us out of what we want to do. He was getting downhill on us early and that really hurt us. And we got the ball out of his hands and made other people shoot it and they were missing shots, which is how we got back in the game.” Trinity head coach Mike Szabo said

the Camels play well together. “Really well coached. I thought it would be a grind-it-out game,” he said. “They made some good adjustments, then we missed some shots. They stayed tough and executed on off ense. They were smart, forcing some shots to come from other places, and we weren’t making them. They started attacking the basket more and coming right at us.” Jolly, who had four points at halftime, came out hot in the second half, scoring three straight Campbell County baskets. Jordan Gross hit a 3pointer to put Campbell up by fi ve, 2924, but Trinity reserve Ethan Hodge answered with a 3-pointer. Hodge had all of his 11 points in the second half. Hodge scored four straight points to start the fourth quarter and completed a 9-0 run and lead 33-29, but the Camels answered with a tough layup from Lawrence and two free throws from Wirth, and it was 33-33 early in the fourth quarter. Jolly led all scorers with 17 points. Wilson had 10. Wirth had fi ve assists and Gross two blocks. “Early on, I was playing pretty soft,” Jolly said. “I tend to get to the rim better. My brother kept beating into my head to get to the rim. That’s where I’m most successful. When I get to the rim, it expands other parts of my game.” Johnson fi nished with 13 points as well as fi ve assists, seven rebounds, three steals and two blocks. Trinity only shot 37.8 percent for the game and Campbell out-rebounded them by six. Helton and Jolly had fi ve boards each. CAMPBELL COUNTY (31-5): Wirth 0 2 2, Wilson 4 1 10, Jolly 7 2 17, Gross 1 0 3, Lawrence 2 0 4, Helton 2 0 4. Totals: 16 5 40. TRINITY (29-8): Rice 1 3 6, Johnson 6 1 13, Kenemore 1 1 3, Hardaway 1 2 4, Turnier 2 0 5, Hodge 3 4 11. Totals: 14 11 42. Halftime, T 22-20. 3-pointers: C 3 (Wilson, Jolly, Gross), T 3 (Rice, Turnier, Hodge).

MARCH SPECIALS 09 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER

#H8120 • Auto, Sunroof, Turbo, Low Miles

09 DODGE CALIBER SXT

Reid Jolly fi nds a lot of defense as he presses for a jump shot for Campbell County at the KHSAA Sweet 16 Tournament at Rupp Arena on March 6. GEOFF BLANKENSHIP FOR THE ENQUIRER

Jolly Continued from Page 1B

season as well. In the regional semifi nals, an overtime win over Clark, Jolly hit a 3-pointer with 30 seconds left to send the game to OT. He fi nished with 17 points and eight rebounds on the night. “It was time for me to redeem myself,” Jolly told the Enquirer that night. “I wasn’t hitting most of my shots. I was open and it was a big shot to knock down. I’ve been practicing that a lot lately.” In the regional fi nal, Campbell trailed Scott by one in the fourth quarter before he took over during a 68-62 win. Jolly fi nished with 21 points and 14 rebounds, including a key bucket that gave Campbell a fi ve-point lead late. Jolly was 7-of-12 from the fl oor and dished out four assists that night.

SHORT HOPS #K1005 • Auto, Air, All Power, Low Miles

Jon Richardson

Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Boys basketball

6,988

$

08PONTIACSOLSTACECONVERTIBLE

8,988

#J1142 • Auto, Air, Loaded, New Top

❚ Kam Pardee scored 24 points in Walton-Verona’s 76-54 win over Knox Central March 6. ❚ Campbell County edged John Hardin 61-60 behind a 30-point performance from Reid Jolly March 6. The Camels defeated Walton-Verona 49-42 as Jolly scored 13 points March 8, but lost to Trinity 42-40 in the state semi-

#J1093 • Auto, Air 4x4

Fredrick

$ #J1085 • Auto, Air, Low Miles

$

05 HONDA CRV AWD

7,488

06 VW BETTLE CONVERTIBLE

6,988

$ #J1159 • Auto, Air, All Power, Low Miles

03 SUBARU FORESTER AWD

Continued from Page 1B

6,988

$

11 GMC TERRAIN

5,488

$ #K1022 • Auto, Air, Loaded, Sunroof

13 DODGE AVENGER

#J1153 • Auto, Air, All Power

$ 8,988 8,988 1065 OHIO PIKE 513-752-1804

CE-CIN0007982-01

$

JUST 3 MILES EAST OF I275, EXIT #65

www.joekiddauto.com

In the 2018 Sweet 16, Jolly had 20 points and nine rebounds to lead the Camels to their fi rst-ever state tournament win, over University Heights. In the next round, a heartbreaking 5655 loss to Oldham County, Jolly hit a basket to put Campbell up 55-53 with 30 seconds to go. Jolly is averaging 22.7 points and 10 rebounds this year. He shoots 64.8 percent from the fl oor for the season. He was named 10th Region player of the year by regional coaches but was not nominated for Mr. Basketball by the KABC, which gave that honor to eventual Mr. Basketball Dontaie Allen of Pendleton County. Jolly was the only player in the Sweet 16 averaging more than 20 points per game for the season. Jolly has not made a college choice yet. Jolly was Northern Kentucky’s top receiver during football season, with 63 catches for 921 yards and nine touchdowns. He is getting Division II looks in basketball.

SALES HOURS: Mon-Thu 9-8 Fri 9-6 • Sat 9-5:30

opening from former Pioneers’ athletic director and football coach Ralph Staub. “Ralph Staub was at (the University of Cincinnati) and he asked me if I was interested in a job,” Charlie once recalled. “I had three kids and one on the way. I was very interested.” Fredrick was named Greenhills’ athletic director in 1971 and served as the Winton Woods school district’s athletic coordinator for 28 years, overseeing in 1991 the merger of its athletic department with Forest Park High School’s when the district lumped the two schools together as one. He retired in 1998. Fredrick and his wife, Mary Jo, had four children – Chuck, Mike, Maureen and Joe – whose names dominate the Greenhills record books. Chuck’s son,

fi nals March 9. ❚ Covington Catholic fell to Scott County 64-61 despite 18 points from Michael Mayer March 7.

Girls basketball ❚ Simon Kenton fell to Collins 45-42 March 4. ❚ Lauren Schwartz scored 20 points to lead Ryle to a 67-51 win over Dixie Heights March 4. ❚ Scott lost to George Rogers Clark 59-53 March 4.

C.J., led Covington Catholic to the 2018 Kentucky boys’ basketball state championship and now plays for Iowa. Charlie in 2013 joined Joe as the third father-son combination to be inducted into the LaRosa’s Athletic Hall of Fame. Charlie also has been inducted into the Ohio Interscholastic Administrators Hall of Fame and the Winton Woods and Newport Central Catholic halls of fame. Winton Woods football and soccer players and track-and-fi eld athletes compete in Charles Fredrick Stadium. His name adorns the front of the press box, easily seen from Winton Road. Visitation is scheduled from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Thursday at Middendorf Funeral Home in Fort Wright. Mass of Christian Burial will be said on Friday at Blessed Sacrament Church in Fort Mitchell, followed by a celebration of Charlie’s life starting at 11 a.m. at the church “We’re already concerned about the crowd,” Joe said.


CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ 3B

Overhead Door Company of Northern KentuckyTM Proudly Servicing Cincinnati & Northern Kentucky

FREE

Control and Monitor your garage door from anywhere with

Keyless Entry

With the installation of any model garage door opener. Not valid with any other offer. Expires 3/31/19

GOOD

BETTER

Legacy® 920 24 Volt DC Chain Drive

$395 Installed

Includes one remote control and free keyless entry

WIFI Connectivity

BEST

Legacy® 920 With Emergency Battery Back Up

Legacy® 920 with Battery Back Up and

Installed

Installed

$430 Includes one remote control and free keyless entry

$480 Includes one remote control and free keyless entry

UPGRADE TO THE ULTRA QUIET BELT DRIVE OPTION FOR AN ADDITIONAL $25 Above pricing assumes a 7ft. tall garage door. Additional charges will apply if the the garage door is taller than 7 ft. Limit one Free keyless entry per customer.

CALL NOW! 513-394-6008 859-488-6150

Family Owned & Operated Since 1947 Visit Our Showroom 2571 Ritchie Ave. Crescent Springs, KY 41017 7:30am-4:30pm (M-F) and 7:30-Noon (Sat)

www.OverheadDoorOnline.com CE-GCI0148363-01


4B ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER

COMMUNITY NEWS NKY Chamber hosts Pints & Perspectives: Business Case for Diversity The Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce (NKY Chamber) continues its popular Pints & Perspectives event series with “Business Case for Diversity” on Wednesday, March 20, from 4:30-6 p.m. “Diversity and inclusion are important topics for our local businesses to discuss,” said NKY Chamber President & CEO Brent Cooper. “Northern Kentucky is a hub of global businesses and it’s important to talk about how we can make the region a welcoming place for talent from around the world.” Attendees will hear from Marilyn Baker from Yankee Doodle Deli, Mic Cooney from PNC Bank, Daniel Rajaiah from the Indian American Chamber of Commerce, and Davis Robinson from St. Eliz-

abeth Healthcare. The moderator will be Kristen Smitherman-Voltaire from Gateway Community & Technical College. Pints & Perspectives: Business Case for Diversity will be at Carnegie Hall in Newport (401 Monmouth St., Newport). Registration is $25 for NKY Chamber members, $35 for future NKY Chamber members, and $20 for NKYP Passport holders. Pre-registration is required and is available at nkychamber.com/events. The Title Sponsor for Pints & Perspectives is Kerry Nissan. Mikayla Williams

Highland UMC to host Local Missions Fair On March 24 from 9:30 a.m. to noon, Highland United Methodist Church will host a Local Missions Fair in the Fellowship Hall. Refreshments will be served. Enter through the street level door on Memorial Parkway directly across Highlands High School. All are invited to at-

Attention Farmers CAIP Program (Sponsored in part by the Kentucky Agricultural Development Fund)

Application Period:

March 25-April 12, 2019 at 4 p.m.

Applications and Information:

Campbell Co. Conservation District, 8350 E. Main Street, Alexandria, KY, MWF 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. phone 859-635-9587, http://agpolicy.ky.gov Campbell Co. Cooperative Extension Service, 3500 Alexandria Pike, Highland Heights, KY M-F 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. phone 859-572-2600 CE-GCI0149148-01

CAIP Information Meetings:

Monday, March 25, 2019, 7:00 PM, and Tues., March 26, 2019, 9:00 AM at Campbell Co. Environmental Education Center 1261 Race Track Road, Alexandria

tend and learn more about volunteer opportunities with local non-profi t agencies. Agencies represented will be: Emergency Shelter of Northern Kentucky, Family Promise of Northern Kentucky (formerly Interfaith Hospitality Network), Hosea House, Vine & Branches, and Ida Spence Mission. Through “extra mile giving,” HUMC members support these programs. The Ministry Team, whose members are actively involved as board members and/or volunteers with the agencies, administers the fund. Representatives will be present to explain the mission and needs of their agencies and to invite our participation with volunteer service and/or fi nancial support. Following is a brief summary of the agencies: Emergency Shelter of Northern Kentucky, 634 Scott St., Covington, provides a safe environment for homeless men and women in winter and is a transitional shelter in summer for guests who are nearing independent living. Family Promise of Northern Kentucky, 9th and Patterson, Newport, assists homeless families. In addition to overnight shelter in local churches, the Day Center staff assists families with resources to better their lives and to create a stable home. Hosea House, 901 York St. serves the needs of Newport residents and provides ing a daily hot meal to an average of 150 guests. Additional services include: on- site foot care, Thanksgiving Food Baskets, and an Adopt-a-Family program at Christmas as well as information and referrals for other needs. Vine & Branches, UMC campus ministry at NKU, is a community of Christian students with a mission to make disciples of Jesus. The commu Members meet for worship, Bible studies, meals and recreational activities at various campus locations. Ida Spence Mission, 2401 Benton Road, Covington, serves the City Heights housing community with Christian ministries to children and adults as well as hot meals for families each month and

food to children each day. For more information, contact Tom Yocum 513-616-6719. Tom Yocum

St. Elizabeth Healthcare participates in national study St. Elizabeth Healthcare is pleased to announce Dr. Valerie Williams’ involvement in a national groundbreaking clinical trial for patients with gastroesophageal refl ux disease (GERD). Dr. Williams is the fourth author listed in the CALIBER Study, published in the January 2019 issue of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (Volume 89, Issue 1). Thanks to her eff orts, she was the third top enroller in the study, a notable accomplishment for a national trial. Thirteen of Dr. Williams’ patients are included in the CALIBER Study data, including Northern Kentucky resident Patricia Pillion. “This is a landmark clinical trial,” says Dr. Williams. “Prior to the CALIBER Study, there hasn’t been a clinical trial that has directly compared the LINX surgery to medication management for moderate to severe Williams GERD.” The CALIBER Study randomized 152 patients who were all on once-a-day PPI (proton pump inhibitor) medications with persistent symptoms of GERD. The patients were split into two groups: group one received the minimally-invasive LINX surgery and group two received twice-a-day PPI acid reduction medication. The study’s data demonstrates that increasing acid refl ux medication to manage GERD will yield little relief for patients. By contrast, the data supports LINX surgery as an eff ective and permanent solution – one that can help GERD patients achieve a signifi cant reduction of symptoms. For more information on the CALIBER Study and the LINX procedure, please call the St. Elizabeth Thoracic Surgery offi ce at (859) 301-2465. Guy Karrick

56 MONTHS FINANCING* On purchases $3999 or more made with your Furniture Fair Gold credit card. 56 Equal Monthly Payments are required. Tax and delivery due at time of sale.

FREE

**

Preferred Delivery Take the guesswork out of mattress shopping.

bedMATCH is a patented diagnostic system that matches you with the mattress best suited for your body type and sleeping position. Using 18 statistical measurements, over 1,000 scientific calculations and the information you provide about your sleep preferences, bedMATCH identifies the optimal postural support and pressure relief for your body.

On all mattress set purchases $799 or more.

CE-GCI0151436-01

CONVENIENT LOCATIONS ALL OVER THE TRI-STATE AREA FAIRFIELD 513.874.5553

DAYTON / MIAMISBURG 937.260.4477

EASTGATE 513.753.8555

FIELDS ERTEL 513.774.9591

OXFORD 513.273.2054

COLERAIN 513.385.6600

COLD SPRING, KY 859.572.6800

FLORENCE, KY 859.525.7911

WESTERN HILLS 513.598.7200

JEFFERSONTOWN, KY 502.890.8686

Financing Offer applies only to single-receipt qualifying purchases on purchases of $3999 or more. Doorbusters, Gift Ideas, Prior Sales, Hot Buys, Floor Samples, Discontinued and Clearance Merchandise excluded from promotions and credit term offers. No interest will be charged on the promo purchase and equal monthly payments are required until the initial promo purchase amount is paid in full. Regular account terms apply to non-promotional purchases. For new accounts: Purchase APR is 29.99%; Minimum interest charge is $2. Existing cardholders should see their credit card agreement for their applicable terms. Subject to credit approval. Tax due at time of sale. A deposit is required on special orders. Not responsible for typographical errors. See store for details and additional financing options. Additional discounts and rebates do not apply to Tempur-Pedic or iComfort.


CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ 5B

TOP 100 M A N U FA C T U R E R S 2 018

Gilkey Window Company was recognized by Window & Door Magazine as one of the top manufacturers of windows in the country.

Since 1978

Savings as Beautiful as

THE WINDOWS.

SPRING SALE! LIMITED TIME ONLY!

NO 40 BUY 1 - GET 1

%

OFF

Fiberglass/Vinyl Windows & Doors

AND

Interest Financing FOR UP TO 12 MONTHS

MINIMUM OF 4 WINDOWS. Cannot be combined with previous sales and quotes. Not valid with any other discounts or offers. 0% Apr for 12 months available to well qualified buyers on approved Credit. Financing not valid on prior purchases. No finance charges will be assessed if promo balance is paid in full in 12 months. Discount applies to retail list price. Other restrictions may apply.

HURRY!

Offer Expires 3/31/19

VISIT GILKEY.com | CALL 513-306-4989 40+years & 60,000 JobsInstalled!

To find a Gilkey Home near you, visit: www.Gilkey.com/customer_locator

CE-GCI0152349-01

OVER


6B ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Alexandria 10567 Lynn Lane, unit 6: Donna Keaton to Eleanor Beckerich; $79,000 10608 Christa Court, unit 10: Kailha and Austin Baker to Corinne Hagis; $80,000 1075 Wellington Place Drive, unit 1: Amy and Jamie Adams to Tracy Buckler; $67,000 1302 Osprey Court: The Drees Company to Samantha and Andrew Jones; $289,000 13142 Pleasant Ridge Road: Bevelry and Gerald Klein to Rebecca and Alex Klein; $136,500 3622 Neltner Road: Susan and Michael Sayers to Renee and James Klingenberg; $245,000 530 Inverness Way: The Drees Company to Kathleen and John Garmany; $352,000 546 Inverness Way: The Drees Company to Judith Caldwell; $346,000 682 Mallard Drive: Maranda and Lester Beckner Jr. to Michelle Miskanin and Thomas Stubbeman; $246,000 7822 Promontory Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Ashley and Justin Lockhart; $426,000 822 Yorkshire Drive, unit 16-104: Fischer Attached Homes III, LLC to Chelsea Garman; $187,000 9750 Sweetwater Lane: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Mary Banks and Garrett Haynes; $249,000

Bellevue 200 Poplar St.: Chris McDaniel to Janean Parsons;

$117,000 218 Division St.: Brandy and Jordan Bramel to Payton and Michael Haynes; $239,000 324 Foote Ave.: Jessica and John Beauchamp to Nicole and Nicholas Breitenbach; $170,000 905 Lafayette Ave.: Jerre Plau to Ashley and Robie Swope; $110,000

Cold Spring 209 Daverick Court: Kimberly Schweitzer to Gary Rawe; $160,000 5867 Boulder View, unit 18-203: Thelma Rachford to Donna Keaton; $140,000 6707 Muman Road: Marian Ragan to Jonathan Louis; $135,000 812 Flint Ridge, unit 2-304: Shelly Cooke-Messer to Ada Cenkci; $155,000

Fort Thomas 122 Rosemont Ave.: Campbell County Investments, LLC to Lindsay and Lewis Heiert III; $295,000 212 Riverside Parkway: Jane Reusch to Jennifer and Michael Sheehan; $375,000 33 Covert Place: Clifton Family Trust to Kelly and Andrew Fath; $405,000

Highland Heights 25 Highland Meadows Circle, unit 2: Todd Asalon to Emily Downing; $93,000

25 Highland Meadows Circle, unit 4: Lisa Riley to Elaine Helmick; $91,000 43 Maple Ave.: William Agee to Steven Helton; $85,000 5 Henry Court: Kristina Bihl to Laura and William Cogswell Jr; $189,500

Newport 105 15th St.: Tammy Brumfield to Krista Werbil; $440,000 32 19th St.: Jennifer Carpenter, Scott Carpenter and Kenneth Carpenter to Caitlin Greer; $71,000 4 15th St.: Brian Crone to Brianna and Geoffrey Meyer; $144,000 609 Monroe St.: Jane and Daniel Gray to Sharon Ramler; $390,000 726 Overton St.: Katelyn and Robinson Scott to Mary and Mark Schroer; $337,500 935 York St.: Kelly and Paul Ilg to Anastasia and Vicenct Soukup; $126,000

Southgate 109 Harvard Place: John Davis to Chris Gillaugh; $120,500 28 Woodland Hills Drive, unit 9: Sawyer Landers to Heather and Jason Taylor; $55,000 58 Woodland Hills Drive, unit 10: Janet Mullikin to Constance and John Christofield; $53,000

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

THURSDAY, MARCH 14 Concerts & Tour Dates Damn Jackals, Resonator, the Ape Tones 8 p.m., Thompson House, 24 East 3rd St., Newport. facebook.com/379317342099530. Supersuckers 30th Anniversary Tour W/ Nine Pound Hammer 8 p.m., The Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.

Education

About Calendar To submit calendar items, go to Cincinnati.com/share, log in and click on “submit an event.” Send digital photos to kynews@communitypress.com along with event information. Items are printed on a space-available basis with local events taking precedence. Deadline is two weeks before publication date. To fi nd more calendar events, go to Cincinnati.com/calendar.

Nightlife & Singles

Health & Wellness

Performing Arts

Diabetes Support Group 10 a.m.-noon, Campbell County Cooperative Extension Service, 3500 Alexandria Pike, Newport.

Papadosio 8 p.m., Madison Theater, 730 Madison Ave., Covington. madisontheateronline.com

Kentucky Bats 6:30-7:30 p.m., Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, Burlington.

Neighborhood Corner to Corner - Healing the Wounds of Trauma 9:15 a.m., Gateway Community & Technical College, 516 Madison Ave., Covington. eventbrite.com

FRIDAY, MARCH 15 Concerts & Tour Dates Ben Levin & the Heaters 9:30 p.m., The Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com. Born of Osiris with Chelsea Grin and Make Them Suffer 7 p.m., Thompson House, 24 East 3rd St., Newport. Nelly 8 p.m., BB&T Arena, 500 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. $75 VIP pit with early entry, $45, $40 advance. Papadosio 8 p.m., Madison Theater, 730 Madison Ave., Covington. $30 2-night pass, $20 single. Ages 18-up. cincyticket.com. Shaw Davis & the Black Ties with Rhythm Hounds 8 p.m., Thompson House, 24 East 3rd St., Newport. reverbnation.com The Exit Strategy, Feral Friends, Madqueen 8 p.m., The Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.

Education BLINK Friday Studio Class 1:30-3:30 p.m., Highland United Methodist Church, 314 N Ft Thomas Ave., Fort Thomas. Varies. upspiralcreative.com

Basic Truth 7 p.m., The Fifth Lounge Radisson Riverfront, 668 West 5th St., Covington. reverbnation.com

SUNDAY, MARCH 17 St. Patrick’s Day at Molly Malone’s Irish Pub 7 a.m., Molly Malone’s, 112 East 4th St., Covington. covington.mollymalonesirishpub.com.

Kids & Family

SATURDAY, MARCH 16 Comedy

MONDAY, MARCH 18

ComedySportz Cincinnati: Saturday Matinee 3-5 p.m., The Ludlow Theater, 322 Elm St., Ludlow. $ 5 at the door, free ages under 12.

TUESDAY, MARCH 19

Concerts & Tour Dates

Concerts & Tour Dates

Cincinnati Noir 10 p.m., The Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com. Daniel Mason Band, Polly Punkneck 9:30 p.m., The Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. reverbnation.com FinTan 6 p.m., Molly Malone’s, 112 East 4th St., Covington. reverbnation.com Scott Miller & the Commonwealth 8 p.m., The Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. reverbnation.com

Island 8 p.m., Madison Live, 734 Madison Ave., Covington. ticketmaster.com

Conferences & Tradeshows

Overeaters Anonymous 7-8 p.m., St. Elizabeth Hospital, 85 North Grand Ave. FL A, Fort Thomas. Free.

The Vulnerable & Exploited: Human Trafficking In NKY Conference 8 a.m.-4 p.m., St. Elizabeth Training and Education Center (Formally the METS Center), 3861 Olympic Blvd., Erlanger. $15. eventbrite.com

Festivals StoutFest noon, Molly Malone’s, 112 East 4th St., Covington. Free admission. Ages 21-up. Most stouts $7 for 9 oz. mollymalonesirishpub.com.

Health & Wellness Allison Erwin Yoga: Saturday Morning Flow 10 a.m., QFit, 336 Fairfield Ave., Bellevue. eventbrite.com

Holiday

Fundraising & Charity The Blanket Bash 7-10 p.m., Leapin’ Lizard, 724 Main St., Covington. $35.

Kids & Family

Overeaters Anonymous 7:15-8:15 p.m., St. Elizabeth Hospital, 85 North Grand Ave., Fort Thomas. Free.

East of Austin 9:30 p.m., KJ’s, 2379 Buttermilk Crossing, Ft Mitchell. reverbnation.com Newport Gangsters Tour 5 p.m., Gangsters Dueling Piano Bar, 18 E 5th St., Newport. $25.

St. Patrick’s Day Craft Party 2-4 p.m., BehringerCrawford Museum, 1600 Montague Road, Covington. Party and parking are free with museum admission, but space is limited, so reserve your spot by March 13 at 859-491-4003 or education@bcmuseum.org. bcmuseum.org.

FinTan 6 p.m., Molly Malone’s, 112 East 4th St., Covington. reverbnation.com

Health & Wellness

Nightlife & Singles

Food & Wine

Baker Hunt Art and Cultural Center Winter Class Schedule 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Baker Hunt Art and Cultural Center, 620 Greenup St., Covington. bakerhunt.org. BLINK Thursday Studio Class 6-8 p.m., Highland United Methodist Church, 314 N Ft Thomas Ave., Fort Thomas. Varies. upspiralcreative.com

Literary & Books

Noble Booksellers - Newport on the Levee, 1 Levee Way Suite 2127, Newport. stores.barnesandnoble.com

How to Catch a Leprechaun Storytime 11 a.m., Barnes & Noble Booksellers - Newport on the Levee, 1 Levee Way Suite 2127, Newport. stores.barnesandnoble.com

Literary & Books Leprechauns and Limericks Event 2 p.m., Barnes &

Film RBG Documentary and Discussion 5:30-9 p.m., Northern Kentucky University Otto M. Budig Theatre, University Hall on NKU Campus, Newport. tinyurl.com/ yyhrsyg7.

Health & Wellness

PUZZLE ANSWERS C P L S

O H O K

E A S Y

X R A Y C A M E R A

E S S O

D E E P

A L I S

P E N H

T Y R E S E

H E A L E R

G A V E I T A D G E O P R R E A S M S M O E R R S

I S T A O H N G E L G R E A Y M A R S O S S N T H G A M I M T O O R O O T E R T B O P E R O S I T E P O I T Y S E S I S P O S A M D E

T A C O S H A P E S T I O B O N R I A M E D C E E R A D E E C Z O O F A L R I P B S C A S A T H N T S H T A T I P O S W E R O A T E U R O S S

N E M E S I S L O L S H O O P F R I

I C L Y E S T K F F C A D U E S E V R A I R D I G T A V D I A T R O

A D E L E H I F I V E L E T I N

G L I T T E R A T E I L A E N I D N E F A O V O O R P E A D C A T E R E R

R A D I A N

U R A N I C

B A N G L E

L O N E L I E S T

T R I O

E Y E S

K N E W

I D E A

A N N I

T E E M

H Y D E


CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ 7B

Cincinnati’s Leading Bathroom Remodeler Since 1989

More than 50,000 jobs sold

Transform Your Bath for Less with Improveit. For a Limited Time Only, Get 50% Off Installation* walk thru inserts tub & shower replacements

mirrors & lighting

FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY

50% Off Installation

vanity bases & tops

*

During the Spring Bath Remodel Sale improveitusa.com/cincibath1

LIFETIME TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY

FREE Bathroom Inspection & Design Consultation CALL 513-434-1994 TODAY! *50% off the installation cost of a single bathroom or window project. Minimum purchase required. Purchase must be made during initial visit. Offer good off regular labor prices only. Not valid on previous purchases. Cannot be combined with any other offers. Discounts will be applied against installation price at time of contract proposal. Other restrictions and conditions may apply. Other restrictions and conditions may apply. Visit improveitusa.com for additional information and conditions. Offer expires 3/31/19. CE-GCI0150164-01


8B ❚ THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE

ANSWERS ON PAGE 6B

No. 0310 MATH HYSTERIA

1

BY ADAM FROMM / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

AC R O S S

RELEASE DATE: 3/17/2019

1 Get along 8 New York’s longest parkway, with “the” 15 Eats 19 Exodus figure 20 Well turned 21 “The Nutcracker” protagonist 22 L x A 24 Actor Gillen of “Game of Thrones” 25 Vodka in a blue bottle 26 Test for college srs. 27 Instrument that represents the duck in “Peter and the Wolf” 28 Lacework technique 30 The Caribbean’s ____ Islands 33 Put at stake 35 Police group with an assignment 36 Mystery Writers of America trophy 39 x – y = x – y 42 Certain red algae 45 Middling mark 46 Fishmonger, at times 47 (A- or B+)/7 50 Postwar German sobriquet 54 Abbr. on a phone dial 55 Brest friend Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).

56 Single hair on a carpet, maybe 59 Theresa May, for one 60 “Likewise” 62 Only places to find anteaters in the U.S. 63 Caboose 65 On point 67 √666 71 Dawn goddess 72 Blank section at the start of a cassette 74 Drop acid 75 Tennis’s Nadal 77 “Bus Stop” playwright 78 Short cuts 79 “Hey ____” 80 Director Caro 83 Free all-ad publication 86 $$$/X 90 Spanish-speaking Muppet on “Sesame Street” 93 A short while? 94 Brewery named for a New York river 95 3.BB 100 Mullah’s decree 101 Like unbaked bread 102 Box score bit 103 Noted dog trainer 106 Founder of Egypt’s 19th dynasty 108 W.S.J. announcements 110 Drop to zero battery 111 Curse word 115 Some giggling dolls

116 X

120 Prognosticators 121 Hobbyist 122 Turned yellow, say 123 Goes off course 124 Actress Portia 125 One way to turn DOWN

1 Two-stripe NCOs: Abbr. 2 “Sure, I guess” 3 “No sweat” 4 Airport security apparatus 5 Follower of Christ? 6 Like cornflakes, after sitting for a while 7 1,000 large calories 8 K’ung Fu-____ (Chinese name for Confucius) 9 “Now I get it!” 10 Russian blue or Egyptian Mau 11 OxyContin, e.g. 12 Archenemy 13 Martinique, par exemple 14 Dermatologist’s concern 15 Fashionable set 16 Angular measurement 17 Relating to radioactive element No. 92 18 Wrist ornament 21 Booking for a wedding 23 Grassy stretches

3

4

5

6

7

8

19

Adam Fromm lives in Providence, R.I. He works for a pharmaceutical company and moonlights as a singersongwriter. This puzzle is a throwback to his college days when he briefly majored in math . . . before switching to literature. He prefers subjects that ‘‘don’t require the right answer, only a reasonable one.’’ This is his fifth puzzle for The Times — W.S. Esq

2

29 First female singer to have three simultaneous solo top 10 singles 31 Elvis’s middle name 32 Guitar inlay material 34 Seller of Famous Bowls 36 Gas brand with an oval logo 37 Pitched low 38 Attempted something 40 Opening to an apology 41 Tapering haircut 43 Nonmoving part of a motor 44 Blobbish “Li’l Abner” creature 48 Painter whose masterwork is said to be the Scrovegni Chapel frescoes 49 Earth Science subj. 51 The ____ Road in America (Nevada’s Highway 50) 52 Wynken, Blynken and Nod, e.g. 53 Things that people are warned not to cross 57 Letters sometimes followed by :D 58 Handle online 61 Soldier food, for short 62 Throw in the microwave, slangily 63 R&B group with the 1991 No. 1 hit “I Like the Way”

12

13

14

15

37

31

28

32 39

42

43

33

45 49 56

61

66

68

73

84

58

69

91

87

92

114

80

88

89

93

94

98

99

102

103 108

109

100 104

107

115

116

120

121

122

123

124

125

117

111

118

79 1993 Salt-N-Pepa hit whose title is a nonsense word 81 Didn’t doubt 66 Phnom ____ 82 Notion 68 Mystical ball, e.g. 84 Sappho, e.g. 69 Kind of year: Abbr. 85 Annual athletic 70 Former national awards show airline 87 For sale in malls of Brazil 88 Theater reproof 73 Sticks on the tongue? 89 Dope 76 Made an attempt 91 Contraction in a 78 Verve Christmas song

112

119

92 Like Quakers

65 Father-and-daughter boxing champs

95 Actor Gibson of “2 Fast 2 Furious”

End Of Season Special

105

110

64 She, in Portuguese

up to 15-year Carefree parts & labor warranty up to 72 months 0% financing available***

113

76

106

SAVE up to $2,067 on a Carrier HVAC System plus a Free Connected Wi-Fi Thermostat

82

71

79

97

Control your home’s comfort from anywhere.

81

64

70

86

101

53

59

75

85

90 96

57

63

78

83

50

74

77

52

35

62

67

72

51

29

46

55 60

18

41

48

54

34

40

44

47

17

21

27

38

16

24

26 30

95

11

23

25

65

10

20

22

36

9

96 Doctor 97 Demolition tool

107 Device that comes with 79-Across 109 ____-chef 112 Years in the Roman Empire

98 Stick on, as a poster

113 Abound

99 Exclamation that might accompany a curtsy

114 Fictional Mr. 117 Old-fashioned cry of despair

104 Lab-assisted, after “in”

118 Part of T.G.I.F.: Abbr.

105 Admit

119 W.W. II rationing agcy.

$47 Furnace Tune-Up No Breakdown Guaranteed

(513) 327-2572 New clients only please. No breakdown this season. Must be able

to start unit. One unit only. Not valid on boilers or oil. Normal business hours only. See ** C08

Free HVAC or Plumbing Diagnostic with Repair (513) 327-2572

Valid with repair. $94 value. See** C54

Unclog Any Drain... $93 or Free We’ll open your drain or you don’t pay. We’ll keep it open for 1 year. (513) 327-2572 Valid on any drain. Owner-occupied homes only. One additional visit included to re-open the same drain within one year. Reasonable access to a clean-out required and up to 100 ft restriction for main sewer drains. See** C03

$37 Sump Pump Inspection (513) 327-2572 Evaluates current operation of the equipment. See* C12

$304 Off Battery

Backup Sump Pump

See* & **

schedule your free estimate on new equipment

24 – 7

emergency service

(513) 327-2572

Discount on select battery backup models only. Some restrictions apply See** C43

A+ trusted, licensed HVAC and plumbing experts for 42 years

(513) 327-2572 up to 2-year parts & labor warranty on repairs

*Valid on Carrier 3 ton 16 SEER A/C or heat pump when matched with a high efficiency furnace (up to $1,069). Includes up to $1,069 Thomas & Galbraith discount and up to 15-year Carefree parts & labor warranty valued at $998. Up to $1,069 equipment discount can be applied to other select models. FreeWi-Fi programmable thermostat with qualifying purchase.Wi-Fi signal must be compatible. Some restrictions apply. Rebates, credits & financing vary by model. Financing with approved credit. Minimum monthly payments required. Interest accrues at time of purchase unless paid in full during promotional period. For regular term purchases, APR is based on US prime rate and is subject to change. ***Up to 72 months 0% financing option valid on Optimum and Optimum Plus systems and cannot be combined with other discounts. Customer responsible for filing utility rebates if applicable. **Must be presented at time of service. Cannot combine with other discounts. Not valid on previous purchases. Existing residential only. See dealer for details on discounts, warranties and guarantees. Homeowner authorization needed. Must be in service area. Expires 4/15/19. IN HVAC License #: H0010016 KY HVAC License #: HM01276 KY HVAC License # : HM05814 OH HVAC License #: HV48412 KY Plumbing License #: M5308 OH Plumbing License #: PL47812 IN Plumbing License #: CO50800249 CE-GCI0150736-01


Classifieds

MARCH 14, 2019 μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 1C

cincinnati.com

JOBS

HOMES

To place your ad visit: cincinnati.com/classifieds or search: classifieds General Auctions

Homes of Distinction

Bob Fuller Estate

Tom Deutsch, Jr.

Homes for Sale-Ohio

513-460-5302 Homes for Sale-Ohio

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap or familial status or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newpaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Kentucky Commission on Human Rights 800-292-5566 H.O.M.E. (Housing Opportunities Made Equal) 513-721-4663

Real Estate

Rentals

great places to live... 2 BR 2 full BA apartment Union KY. Rural setting. $850/mo, utilities included. 513-444-9071 Cincinnati Family & Senior Low Income Apts. Section 8. 1-3BR. 513-929-2402 Equal Opportunity Housing Cincinnati Family & Senior Low Income Apts. Section 8. 1-3BR. 513-929-2402 Equal Opportunity Housing

Condo for sale 510 Shadow Ridge Dr. Cold Spring, KY Showing March 16th - 9:00 4:00 or call for appointment. Brick. Built in 2001. 1,899 sq ft 2 BR 2.5 Baths Asking $195,000 859 654 6485 859 322-1513

21 Ac. Grant Co., all woods, lots of frontage, mobiles welcome, hunt out your backdoor, city water, $3,000 down, $775 per mo. 9 Ac. Butler area, open ridge in front, rolling into woods in back, ¼ mile off Hwy 27, city water avail., $2,000 down, $477 per mo. 5 Ac Kenton Co., rolling to hilly pasture, view, on blacktop dead end road, double wides welcome, $54,900, $1,500 down

Cincinnati Family & Senior Low Income Apts. Section 8. 1-3BR. 513-929-2402 Equal Opportunity Housing

7 Ac. Dry Ridge area, all woods, hilly, 10 min. Off I-75, quiet area, city water & electric along road, $56,900, $2,000 down

Fort Mitchell - Clean, 2nd Flr,1BR w/ garage & C/A, Nice wood floors,1 yr Lease, No Smoking/pets (good credit) $700/mo + dep. Call 513-608-6504

4 Ac. Glencoe area, mostly rolling pasture, ideal spot for home or double wide, view, city water,$34,900, $1,000 down, $310 per mo.

FT. MITCHELL-- 4 Family, 1BR, FREE heat & water! Garage. No smoking/pets. No sec. 8. $565. 859-331-9204 FT. THOMAS. 1 & 2 BDRM APTS & 1 BDRM TOWNHOMES 859-441-3158 MT. LOOKOUT 1 & 2 BDRM Grandin Bridge Apartments 513-871-6419

Newport: Large 2 BD - Walk to Levee - Eat-in kitchen W/D hook-ups - High ceilings $750/month + utilities Call 513-289-5697

1 Ac. Kenton Co., near Visalia, open in front, rolling off into woods, double wides are welcome,city water, $2,000 down, $300 per mo. 31 Ac. Pendleton Co., mostly woods, some pasture, semiprivate homesite, 3 miles off Hwy. 27, city water, $105,900, $4,000 down TRI-STATE LAND CO. Walton, KY (859) 485-1330

Careers

Jobs

new beginnings... Destin, FL, Gulf front, 2BR, Condo Rentals, in Beautiful Destin, Local owner. 513-528-9800 Office., 513-752-1735 H

Cleaners Wanted

HILTON HEAD Sea Pines. 3BR, 3 1/2BA Townhome on golf course & near Sea Pines beach club. Rented only by the owners. 513-314-7987

Sat. March 30 @ 10:00am

515 TELESCOPE VIEW UNIT #103

in Northern Kentucky 8:00am – 2:00pm 11:00am - 3:00pm 5:30pm - 11:30pm 2:00pm - 6:00pm Call Steve at 859-912-1227

Communications Coordinator Boone County Extension Service Requisition #: RE17498 The University of Kentucky is accepting applications for a fulltime position for an Extension Communications Coordinator at the Boone County Extension Office in Burlington, KY. This position will be responsible for directing the communications strategy and objectives of the Boone County Cooperative Extension Service. Major duties include enhancing media exposure by developing content for web site and social media; providing leadership and expertise in the area of communication. Required competencies include strong written/oral communication and computer/social networking skills. High school diploma or GED required. Communications or Marketing Degree preferred. Salary is $16-18/hour. To apply for this position: RE17498 a UK Online Application must be submitted to https://ukjobs.uky.edu. View qualifications & job responsibilities on website. Application deadline: 3/25/2019. For more info call 859-586-6101. The University of Kentucky is an equal opportunity employer

CE-0000708557

Assorted

Stuff all kinds of things... COIN COLLECTIONS WANTED, for the AUCTION held in conjunction with the 36th ANNUAL GREATER CINCINNATI NUMISMATIC EXPOSITION Sharonville Convention Center June 13-15th 2019 This annual event is the Tri-State’s oldest and largest rare coin convention and draws buyers from all over the US. If you have a serious coin collection for sale, this is the marketplace - nothing else in the area is even close! To discuss consigning your collection call Paul Padget today at (513) 821-2143, $$$$. (513)821-2143 epadget@fuse .net

2 TO 12 ROOMS COMPLETELY REMODELED, ON BUS STOP, FREE PARKING, HEAT, AIR & WATER, PRICED RIGHT! WONT LAST CALL 513-532-0857

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIED onlineatcincinnati.com

Commercial

opportunites, lease, Invest...

BEAUTY/NAIL SALON ONGOING BUSINESS, Fully Equipped, N.KY Upscale Area. Richwood KY. For Lease. 859-760-0441

$$$ PAID for LPs, CDs, CASSETTES - ROCK, BLUES, INDIE, METAL, JAZZ, ETC + VINTAGE STEREO EQUIP, DVDs & MEMORABILIA. 50 YRS COMBINED BUYING EXPERIENCE! WE CAN COME TO YOU! 513-591-0123

Selling on location to the winning bidder regardless of price! 60 acre farm w/ 2 bdrm modular home, barns, and garages conveniently located in Peach Grove near the AA Hwy. Farm will sell at 10:00 am. Equipment will sell immediately following. See next week's ad for a complete listing or for more information visit us at; www.auctionzip.com Terms: Farm 10% down balance on or before 5-15-2019. Terms: Equipment Cash or personal check with picture ID.

David Dunaway Realty & Auctions 859.409.7653

WAR RELICS US, German, Japanese Uniforms, Helmets, Guns, Swords, Medals Etc, Paying Top Dollar Call 513-309-1347

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIED onlineatcincinnati.com

Georgetown KY 34th Annual Antique Show and Sale Scott County High School US 25 North at Cardinal Lane Sat. Mar 16th, 9am-5pm Sun. Mar. 17th 11am-4pm Quality Antique Dealers from Several States Admission $3.00 Call 859-797-8284

FROM FROM “NO FOOD ALLOWED.” FROM “NO FOOD ALLOWED.” FROM TOFOOD ALLOWED.” “NO TOFOOD “NO ALLOWED.” “ HOW OLD ARE THESE FRIES?” CASKETS $300 & TO “HOW OLD ARE THESE FRIES?” BRASS URNS $75 Solid Cherry & Oak Wood TO only $500 - All funeral homes “HOW OLD ARE THESE FRIES?”

2 Solid wood bedroom sets w/queen mattress/box spring, excellent condition make offer. Pam 859-341-0388

must accept our caskets. IT’S THE LAW! Buy ahead - save thousands!! Delivery available or pick up! Call Bill 513-383-2785 or e-mail: bs45236@gmail.com

HANDY MAN SERVICE & HAULING! 513-429-1091 WE SERVICE ALL APPLIANCES Also Selling Washers & Dryers w/ 1 year warranty. 513429-1091

Musical Instruction

2 PIANO LESSONS 50 YRS. EXP.; 859-727-4264

Business 5372 Cody Rd, Indep, KY. Avail 5/1, 3 BR 2 full BA, Ranch, 1st flr laundry, 2 car att gar, lg bsmt, 2 acres, $1,400/mo + dep 859-380-1099

I BUY STEREO SPEAKERS, PRE AMP, AMP, REEL TO REEL TURNTABLE, ETC. RECORDS, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS (513) 473-5518

15609 Hwy 10 N. Butler KY

CE-0000708603

LSIS JUS OTLE T DD

ABSOLUTE AUCTION

WOW!!! Tom SOLD this super nice condo for our customer in only 4 days on the market. If you’re in the market to make a change this Spring contact him. A great realtor is like a 4 leaf clover, hard to find but lucky to have. Call today so we can get started!

CE-0000708569

General Auctions

60 Acre Farm - Equipment - Household

VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifieds TO PLACE YOUR AD

WILDER

PETS & STUFF

RIDES

BUYING 35mm Photo Slides primarily railroad & transportation related 1940’s- 1970’s, Comic Books 1940’s present, 1920’s -1950’s Dectective & Pinup Pulp Magazines, 513-325-4913 BUYING-RECORD ALBUMS & CDs, METAL, JAZZ, BLUES, ROCK, RAP, INDIE, R&B & REGGAE. 513-683-6985 CASH FOR RECORDS Private collector buying 45’s & LP’s Up to $10 per record, small & large collections. Roger 513-575-2718 I can come to you! I buy pre-1970’s home contents: toys, jewelry, tools, music, art, sewing, books, furniture, etc. Call: 513-473-5518

“HOW OLD ARE THESE FRIES?” You know us for shopping, and now Cars.com is the site for theYou entire lifeusoffor your car. So for turn toisCars.com. know shopping, andevery nowturn, Cars.com the site for

theusentire life of your car.now So Cars.com for every turn, You know for shopping, and is theturn site to forCars.com. theYou entire lifeusoffor your car. So for turn toisCars.com. know shopping, andevery nowturn, Cars.com the site for

the entire life of your car. So for every turn, turn to Cars.com.


2C μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ MARCH 14, 2019 Adopt Me

Pets

Pekepoo, M/F, Vet Checked, $600, (937)510-2863 rosesgoldendoodles.com

find a new friend...

Australian Shepard Puppies, several merils, first shots, born 12/27/18, $200-400. 10995 Hudson Road, Greenfield, OH 45123. 937-763-2007

English Bulldog Puppies. AKC reg., males & females. 1 year health guarantee, vet checked. www.trulocksredgables.com 1-270-678-7943 /270-427-6364 F1B Golden doodles , vet checked, first shots, many colors to choose from, non shedding, $800/$900 859-445-2809

Australian Shepherd Pups $$375, Ready to go 3/15/19, Red Merles and Red Tri (513)312-3818

German Shepherd Puppies $600, black/tan, sable, family pets AKC, shots, dewormed. ODA licensed. (419)629-3830 pics at ohiohgs.com CASH, M/C, V

Bernedoodle Puppies, 8 wks, M/F, Black & White, UTD shots, DewClaws Removed, Very Friendly, $795 & up, 937-417-3248

HAVANESE pups, AKC, home raised, best health guarantee , www.noahslittleark.com 262993-0460

Purebred Miniature Australian Shepherd Puppies! Male and female available at 8 weeks. Tricolors : Black (black, white and tan), Red (red, white and tan). Fantastic Family Pets! Easy to Train! Active and Great for Fetch, Agility and Disc. Docked tails, first shots, worming, microchip. $650 abbiesaussies@gmail.com Facebook: Abbies Aussies in Columbus, OH (614)2706857 Rottweiler Pups, male/female, german, AKC reg., wormed, UTD shots, born January 6, 2019. $800-CASH ONLY! 859-992-3714 YORKIE MALE AKC vet checked - 1st shots & wormed - POP - 7 wks old $850 CASH - 812-584-1964 Yorkies, Boston Terriers, Chorkies, Havanese, Japanese Chin, Multese mix, Pug, Shih Tzu, Shots, Wormed & Vet Checked. Blanchester, OH. 937-725-9641

Automotive

Rides best deal for you...

Labs, English, Male/female, $500, 8 weeks, yellow/white AKC, Vet Checked, Ready Now! (859)588-6622

Garage & Yard Sale VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifieds TO PLACE YOUR AD

Buying All Vehicles Not Just Junk up $3000 Fair cash price, quick pickup. 513-662-4955 CASH for junk cars, trucks & vans. Free pick up. Call Jim or Roy anytime 859-866-2909 or 859-991-5176

05 Toyota Corolla LE, 4DR, Exc. Cond, Auto, Call: 859-525-6363

Great Buys

Garage Sales

neighborly deals...

Silverton OH Estate Sale 6822 Stewart Rd Silverton OH 3/16 & 3/17 Sat - 10-3 #’s @ 9:45 Sun - 10-3 Contents of two-story home & basement of 40 yrs. Vtg hats, purses, shoes, clothes. 2 couches, loveseat, bookshelves, desks, mirrored dressers, Q 4 poster bed, glass dining table & tea cart, China cabinet, glass sofa table, misce. chairs & tables, desk w/hutch, sm chest, smoker stand, nightstands, recliner, TV stands, cedar chest, costume jewelry, Vtg glassware, red sm kitchen appliances, Microwave, glassware, rugs, holiday, planters, lawn mower, tools, pictures, electronics, linens, mirrors, books, records, craft items, freezer, lots of kitchen items – too much to list all priced to sell! Dir from I71 - exit 10 Stewart Rd Street Parking on the side that house is on. Info and pics – hsestatesales.com or 859-992-0212

Hebron, Moving Sale, 1074 Breckenridge Lane , Sat: 9 AM - 1 PM, Miscellaneous Household Items, Christmas Decorations, Tools, , Dir: Northbend Road north , to left on North Point Dr. Left on Breckenridge Corner of Breckenridge and Battery Circle

UPDATED ALL DAY.

Garage Sales

NOW THAT’S REFRESHING.

1 BUYER of OLD CARS CLASSIC, ANTIQUE ’30-40-50-60-70s, Running or not. 513-403-7386

Mazda 2010 CX9 Touring AWD, Automatic. Leather Heated Seats, 129K miles $6,200 Call 859-743-5926

Nissan 2006 Quest Van SE 3.5 V6. Only 60K mi. Exc Cond., 859-525-6363

HAND OUT THE CIGARS! Celebratewitha announcement. VISITCLASSIFIEDS onlineatcincinnati.com

THE NEWS IS ALWAYS CHANGING. SO ARE WE. VISIT US ONLINE TODAY

Service Directory

CALL: 877-513-7355 TO PLACE YOUR AD

COHORN CONCRETE LLC

Specializing in new and old replacement of driveways, patios, sidewalks, steps, retaining walls, decorative concrete work, basement and foundation leaks & driveway additions. We also offer Bobcat, Backhoe, Loader, and Dumptruck Work, regarding yards & lot cleaning. • Free Estimates • Fully Insured • Over 20 Years Experience Currently Offering A+ Rating with Better 10% DISCOUNT Business Bureau

Office

Fax

859-393-1138 859-359-0554 cohornconcrete@aol.com www.cohornconcrete.com

Northern Kentucky Medical Society Speakers Bureau

Are you looking for an informational speaker for your next event? Please contact the NKMS office at

859-496-6567 or via e-mail to nkms@nkms.org

NORTHERN KENTUCKY ROOFING

All Types of Roofing, Shingles and Metal, Roof Repairs, Roof Leaks Licensed and Insured

859-445-3921

NKyHomeRepair.com Post your rental. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com

Kitchen, Bath & Basement Remodeling, Decks, Tile, Custom Showers, Walk-in Tubs

25 years exp. Insured.

859-331-0527

Hendel’s Affordable Û Tree Service Û Call today for Autumn & Discount Pricing! ± 513-795-6290 ± ± 513-266-4052 ±

ONLY CARS.COM HELPS YOU GET THE RIGHT CAR, WITHOUT ALL THE DRAMA.

CHECKOUT CLASSIFIED online at cincinnati.com


MARCH 14, 2019 μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 3C

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION The following vehicles stored at Fenders Wrecker Service 927 Park Ave. Newport ,Ky. 41071., will be sold at public auction on March 23,2019. to the highest bidder. Seller has right to bid on vehicles. Forms of payment are: credit card or cash. No titles are warrented. 1999 GMC 2GTEC19V3X1558425 SIZEMORE PIERSON, NIKOLAS INTEGRITY FUNDING OHIO 2001 SATURN 1G8ZH52881Z315796 CHRIS L CORLEY IHIO AUTO LOANS 2003 LINCOLN 1LNHM81W53Y606078 LAWRENCE JONES 2000 HONDA 2HKRL1857YH522661 VERNON MAYS 2002 CHEVROLET 1G1ND52J92M663309 MARK JOHNSON 2001 CHEVROLET 1G1ND52J416216812 MARILYN YEAGER 2005 HYUNDAI KMHCG35C55U341242 TOMOTHY HOUSLEY 2008 SUZUKI KL5JD56Z88K959017 NICK HAMBLIN 2000 FORD 1FAFP4446YF280306 JUSTIN J TELLEZ INTEGRITY FUNDING 2003 JAGUAR SAJEA51C13WD18028 JAMES BERRY 2003 CHEVROLET 1GNDT13S532246246 PATRICIA SWING 2000 FORD 3FAFP3133YR143462 STANLEY BROCK 2001 DODGE 1B4HS28N71F572008 ELUVIA MENDEZ CHUN 2002 CHEVROLET 1GNDX03E12D292698 HEBER DELEON REYNOSO 2010 CHEVROLET 1G1ZB5EB3AF307016 CATHERINE MEADOWS 1999 FORD 1FMZU35P0XUBO1167 BRENNAN-HUMBERT ELLEN 2002 JEEP 1J4GL48K42W132448 CARL STORMS GENERAL ELECTRIC CREDIT UNION 2002 JEEP 1J4FT28S1SL613338 CARL STORMS OR SHELBY STORMS 2003 MITSUBISHI 4A3AA46G03E157867 JOSHUA ALLEN CAM,Mar7,14,21,’19#3423503

Invitation for Bids Lawn Care & Snow Removal Services Neighborhood Foundations is currently accepting bids for lawn care and snow removal services at the Peter G. Noll, Scholar House, Grand Towers, Corpus Christi, Clifton Hills, Scattered Site and Highland Village properties. The contract will be for a period of one (1) year and renewable for up to four (4) additional years with satisfactory performance. General work required will be grass cutting of all areas, cleanup of grass clippings from walkways, trimming around the buildings, trees, shrubs, fences, curbs, weed control, snow removal, treatment and other services as described in the bid packet. You can bid on all or as few as one grouping of properties. Contracts may be awarded to more than one contractor. Bid packets, information for bidders and tours of properties may be obtained by contacting Randy Schweinzger at (859) 581-2533, ext. 217. The hearing and/or speech impaired may call our TDD line at (859) 581-3181. Bids are due in the Neighborhood Foundations offices no later than 1:00 p.m., local time, March 29, 2019 at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. Offices are located at 30 East 8th. St., Newport, KY 41071. Bids are to be marked “Lawn Care & Snow Removal Services Project #19-01”. The Neighborhood Foundations reserves the right to waive any informality, irregularity, in requests for proposals and to reject any/all requests for proposals should it be deemed in the best interest of Neighborhood Foundations to do so. Neighborhood Foundations is an Equal Opportunity Employer. WBE/MBE firms are encouraged to respond to this Request for Proposals. Randy Schweinzger Procurement Director Neighborhood Foundations (859) 581-2533, ext. 217 rschweinzger@neighborhoodf oundations.com CAM,Mar7,14,21,’19#3417772

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION LEGAL NOTICE Neighborhood Foundations will open up the twobedroom waiting list for the Highland Village development on Thursday, March 14th. These units are available to two person households only (including households with an approved caregiver). Applications are available at the Highland Village Development – 515 Main Avenue, Highland Heights, KY on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays from 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m., unless otherwise posted. For more information, contact 859-581-2533 ext. 220. CAM,Mar14,’19# 3424736 The next Campbell County Extension District Board meeting will be March 21, 5:30 p.m. at the Campbell County Extension Service, 3500 Alexandria Pike, Highland Heights, Kentucky. The Campbell County Extension District Board meets the third Thursday of each month at 5:30 p.m. CAM,Mar14,’19# 3423800 PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE The City of Wilder Planning Commission will hold a public hearing per requirements of KRS 100. 193 on the adoption of the 2018 comprehensive plan update, Growing Wilder-Envisioning Tomorrow on Monday, March 25, 2019. The hearing will be held at 7:00 pm in the City Council Chambers, 520 Licking Pike, Wilder, KY 41071. Please contact the Wilder City Building 859-581-8884 or by email tvance@cityofw ilder.com if you have any questions or would like additional information. CIN,Mar. 14,’19#3426143 City of Dayton 2019-#4 The City of Dayton, Kentucky has adopted Ordinance 2019-#4 which amends chapter 154 of the Dayton Code of Ordinances (Zoning Ordinance) to amend the definitions related to drive-in and drive–through establishments. The ordinance may be viewed in full at: www.da ytonky.com. CAM,Mar14’19#3426727 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Pursuant to KRS 91A.250, the City of Fort Thomas wishes to notify you of a public hearing to be held Tuesday, March 26, 2019 at 7:00 P.M. in the Council Chambers of the City Building, 130 North Fort Thomas Avenue, concerning the proposed 2019 Capital Improvement Project. The purpose of this public hearing is to present information and provide an opportunity for comments from affected property owners. The public hearing will include an opportunity for comment for the following streets: North Fort Thomas Avenue (Covert Run Pike to Corporate Limit) Ohio Avenue Ridgeway Avenue Grant Street Sherman Avenue Sheridan Avenue Fairview Place Vernon Lane (East, South, West) The City proposes to finance these improvements in part by special assessment of the abutting properties on a front foot basis. A copy of the Engineer’s Comprehensive Report and Project Specifications can be examined at the City Building in the General Services Department during normal working hours (8:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.) The City of Fort Thomas will make every reasonable accommodation to assist qualified disabled persons in obtaining access to available services or in attending City activities. If there is a need for the City to be aware of a specific disability, you are encouraged to contact the City Building at (859) 5721210 (Voice/TDD) so that suitable arrangements can be considered prior to the delivery of the service or date of the meeting. CAM,Mar14’19#3428470

Post jobs. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

NOTICE Fort Thomas Board of Adjustment Public Hearing

The City of Southgate, KY has adopted the following ordinances:

The Board of Adjustment of the City of Fort Thomas, Kentucky, will hold a Public Hearing at the City Building, 130 North Fort Thomas Avenue, Fort Thomas, Kentucky, on March 26, 2019 at 6:00 P.M. for the following cases: CASE NO. 19-1506 - A hearing to consider an application submitted by Bluegrass Commercial Group on behalf of owners, Carmen and Lauren Sarge, for property located at 38 Sherman Avenue, Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The owners are requesting right side and rear yard Dimensional Variances for the construction of a building addition. CASE NO. 19-1507 - A hearing to consider an application submitted by Jay and Kristie Dierig, owners of property located at 551 Highland Avenue, Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The owners are requesting a right side yard Dimensional Variance for the construction of a covered deck. CASE NO. 19-1508 - A hearing to consider an application submitted by Jennifer and James Tincher, owners of property located at 48 North Crescent Avenue, Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The owners are requesting a right side yard Dimensional Variance for the construction of a building addition. CASE NO. 19-1509 - A hearing to consider an application submitted by Brian and Jenny Sand, owners of property located at 3 Riverside Parkway, Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The owners are requesting a left side yard Dimensional Variance for the construction of a building addition and a rear yard Dimensional Variance for the construction of a covered porch. Any adjoining property owner who is unable to attend this hearing is encouraged to submit signed, written comments to the Board concerning the proposed project. Said written correspondence shall be received no later than the time of public hearing, and thereupon shall be a matter of public record. All correspondence shall be directed to City of Fort Thomas, General Services Department, Attn: Julie Rice, 130 N. Ft Thomas Ave., Fort Thomas, KY 41075, jrice@ftt homas.org. The City of Fort Thomas will make every reasonable accommo¬dation to assist qualified disabled persons in obtaining access to available services or in attending City activities. If there is a need for the City to be aware of a specific disability, you are encouraged to contact the City Building, General Services Department at (859) 572-1210 so that suitable arrangements can be considered prior to the delivery of the service or the date of the meeting. City of Ft. Thomas, General Services Department CAM,Mar14’19#3428128

REQUEST FOR BIDS FOR THE CITY OF SOUTHGATE, KENTUCKY GAS AND ELECTRIC FRANCHISE The Southgate, Kentucky is soliciting bids from parties interested in obtaining franchises to operate and provide gas and electric systems within the confines of the City of Southgate, Kentucky. Franchise(s) awarded pursuant to this Request for Bids will be non-exclusive and for a term of five (5) years. Bids must meet all of the requirements set forth in Ordinance No. 19-03, a copy of which may be obtained from the office of the Southgate City Clerk. Sealed bids must be received no later than 12:00 p.m. local time on the 25th of April, 2019, at which time the bids will be opened and read aloud publicly in the office of the City Clerk for the City of Southgate, Kentucky. Sealed bid proposals should be sent to the attention of: Brandi Barton, City Clerk, City of Southgate, Kentucky 122 Electric Avenue, Southgate, Ky. 41071. The City of Southgate reserves the right to accept any bid, to reject any and all bids, to waive any irregularities or informalities in awarding the franchise, and to accept what, in its discretion and judgement, is the best evaluated bid which is in the best interest of, and is most advantageous to, the City. CAM,Mar14,’19#3428855

ORDINANCE 19-01 AN ORDINANCE ENACTING AND ADOPTING A SUPPLEMENT TO THE CODE OF ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OF SOUTHGATE, KENTUCKY ORDINANCE NO 19-02 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE NO. 10-6 RELATING TO PROTECTION OF TREES ON PUBLIC PROPERTY WHICH SERVE THE PUBLIC INTEREST BY PROVIDING OXYGEN, STABILIZATION OF THE SOIL, PREVENTION OF EROSION, SHELTER FOR WILDLIFE, CONSERVATION OF ENERGY BY PROVIDING SHADE, FILTERING AIR, AND ADDING TO THE BEAUTY OF THE CITY OF SOUTHGATE ORDINANCE 19-03 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF SOUTHGATE, KENTUCKY ESTABLISHING A NON-EXCLUSIVE FRANCHISE FOR THE USE OF THE PUBLIC STREETS, ALLEYS AND OTHER PUBLIC GROUNDS OF THE CITY FOR THE TRANSMISSION AND DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRICITY AND GAS THROUGH AND FOR CONSUMPTION WITHIN THE CITY; AND PROVIDING THE TERMS THEREOF These ordinances may be viewed in full on City’s website: www.southgateky.org CAM,Mar14,’19#3428023 PUBLIC NOTICE ALCOHOL LICENSE APPLICATION The Newport Foundation, Inc. President, Thomas Fromme, PO Box 72373, Newport, KY 41072 hereby declares its intention(s) to apply for an NQ2 NonQuota Retail Drink License and a Special Sunday Retail Drink License no later than April 1, 2019. The licensed premises will be Newport Riverfront Festival Park along Riverboat Row in Newport, KY. Any person, association, corporation, or body politic may protest the granting of the license(s) by writing the Dept. of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 1003 Twilight Tr., Frankfort, KY 40601, within thirty (30) days of the date of legal publication. CIN,Mar14,’19#3430406 Legal Notice THE NEWPORT PLANNING AND ZONING COMISSION WILL HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING ON TUESDAY, MARCH 26, AT 5:00 P.M. IN THE NEWPORT MUNICIPAL COMPLEX, 998 MONMOUTH STREET, NEWPORT, KENTUCKY. THE HEARING WILL BE HELD FOR INTERESTED PARTIES TO HEAR AND PRESENT EVIDENCE RELATIVE TO THE FOLLOWING AGENDA ITEMS: File Number: PZ-19-03 Applicant: Orchard Street Self Storage, L.P, LLC Location: An approximately four-acre site located at the southwest corner of 11th Street and Monmouth Street, Newport, Kentucky. Requests: Review of a proposed Development Plan for the reuse of existing buildings for self-storage warehousing, with building additions, within the I-1 (Industrial – One) Zone. Inquiries regarding this public hearing should be addressed to: Larisa Sims Assistant City Manager City of Newport 998 Monmouth Street Newport, Kentucky 41071 859-292-3637 CIN,Mar14,’19#3434001

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

INVITATION TO BID Date: March 14, 2019 PROJECT: Parkway Drive Water Main Replacement City of Crestview Hills, Kenton County, Kentucky SEALED BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED AT: Northern Kentucky Water District (Owner) 2835 Crescent Springs Road P.O. Box 18640 Erlanger, Kentucky 41018 UNTIL: Date: Time:

March 28, 2019 2:00 PM (local time)

At said place and time, and promptly thereafter, all Bids that have been duly received will be publicly opened and read aloud. The proposed Work is generally described as follows: Construction of approximately 1,080 linear feet of 8” PVC water main together with the appurtenances and related work along Parkway Drive {Vernon Drive to Dixie Lane} in the City of Crestview Hills, Kenton County, Kentucky. All Bids must be in accordance with the Instructions to Bidders and Contract Documents on file, and available for examination at: Northern Kentucky Water District (Owner) 2835 Crescent Springs Road Erlanger, Kentucky 41018 Or Phipps Reprographics 434 Scott Blvd Covington, KY 41011 Phone: 859-261-1851 Copies of the Bidding Documents may be obtained from the office of Phipps Reprographics at the address indicated herein. Charges for all documents obtained will be made on the following basis: Charge Complete set of Bidding Documents $ 35.00 Mailing and Handling (U.S. Mail) (if requested) $ 15.00 Charges for Bidding Documents and mailing and handling, if applicable, will not be refunded. Bids will be received on a unit price and/or lump sum basis as described in the Contract Documents. Bid security, in the form of a certified check or a Bid Bond (insuring/bonding company shall be rated “A” by AM Best) in the amount of ten percent (10%) of the maximum total bid price, must accompany each Bid. The Successful Bidder will be required to furnish a Construction Payment Bond and a Construction Performance Bond (insuring/bonding company shall be rated “A” by AM Best) as security for the faithful performance of the contract and the payment of all bills and obligations arising from the performance of the Contract. Evaluation of Bids and the awarding of a final contract are subject to the reciprocal preference for Kentucky resident bidders pursuant to KRS 45A490 to 45A.494 and (KAR 200 5:400). Owner reserves the right to reject any or all Bids, including without limitation the right to reject any or all nonconforming, non-responsive, incomplete, unbalanced, or conditional Bids, to waive informalities, and to reject the Bid of any Bidder if Owner believes that it would not be in the best interest of Owner to make an award to that Bidder. Owner also reserves the right to negotiate with the apparent successful Bidder to such an extent as may be determined by Owner. Minority Bidders are encouraged to bid. Bids shall remain subject to acceptance for 60 days after the day of bid opening or for such longer period of time to which a Bidder may agree in writing upon request of the Owner. If a Contract is to be awarded, the Owner will give the successful Bidder a Notice of Award during the period of time during which the successful Bidder’s bid remains subject to acceptance. Amy Kramer, Vice President of Engineering, Production & Distribution Northern Kentucky Water District CAM,Mar14,’19#3428059

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS (RFP) Campbell County Department of Housing (CCDH) is seeking proposals for Project-Based Vouchers in New Construction or Rehabilitated Projects for units that are exclusively for elderly families or are for households eligible for supportive services available to all families receiving PBV assistance in the project. Up to 50 Project-Based Vouchers are available to support the preservation or creation of affordable housing opportunities. The jurisdiction eligible for award is Campbell County (except for the City of Newport) and Pendleton County. The RFP is available at the office of CCDH at 1098 Monmouth Street, Room 235 in Newport, KY 41071, during regular business hours of Monday – Friday from 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. or online at www.campbellcountyky.org under Assistance Services, Section 8 Housing, at the “Project-Based Voucher RFP Package” link. CCDH will accept proposals through June 30, 2019 or until the issuance of 50 vouchers.

CAM,Mar14,’19# 3430534

Your search ends here...

OUR NEW ROBOTS WON’T TAKE JOBS.

THEY’LL FIND YOU THE RIGHT ONES.


4C μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ MARCH 14, 2019

Your generous monetary donation provides shoes, coats, glasses and basic necessities to neediest kids right here in the Tri-state. With so many children living in poverty, it’s a great way for you to help the children who need it most. So, step up for Neediest Kids of All and send your donation today!

GIVE TO NEEDIEST KIDS OF ALL Yes, I would like to contribute to NKOA. Enclosed is $___________________. Name______________________________________________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________________ Apt. No. ___________ City_______________________________________________________ State_________________ Zip___________ Please send this coupon and your check or money order, payable to: NEEDIEST KIDS OF ALL, P.O. Box 636666, Cincinnati, OH 45263-6666

Make a credit card contribution online at Neediestkidsofall.com.

Neediest Kids of All is a non-profit corporation now in its 64th year. Its principal place of business is Cincinnati, and it is registered with the Ohio Attorney General as a charitable trust. Contributions are deductible in accordance with applicable tax laws.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.