CAMPBELL RECORDER
BUY 5 S A V E $5
Your Community Recorder newspaper serving all of Campbell County
A MIX & MATCH SAVINGS EVENT
THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS ❚ PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK
Gay valedictorian to be given First Amendment award Sarah Brookbank Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
A gay teenager from Northern Kentucky who was not allowed to give his valedictorian speech at his high school graduation will be honored with a fi rst amendment award in May. Christian Bales, of Cold Spring, was told he could not give his speech at Holy Cross High School last May because the Diocese of Covington disagreed with the content of his speech. Instead, Bales gave his speech on a megaphone outside the ceremony in Crestview Hills. His words focused on the activism of young people, including a reference to the students from Parkland, Florida’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School calling for an end to gun violence. Bales is one of seven individuals the Hugh M. Hefner Foundation has chosen to honor at this year’s First Amendment Awards Gala on May 15 at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. Student Council President Katherine Frantz also was not allowed to give her speech because it was “too personal,” Bales told The Enquirer. School offi cials and representatives of the Diocese of Covington reserve the right to review and approve all student speeches to be presented in public at high school graduations,” the Diocese said in the statement at the time. “When the proposed speeches were received, they were found to contain elements that were political and inconsistent with the teaching of the Catholic Church.” Holy Cross is a diocesan high school in Covington, y just across the river from Cincinnati, with nearly 390 students. It is overseen by the diocese and its school superintendent, who reports to Bishop Roger Foys. The Hugh M. Hefner Foundation’s First Amendment Awards recognize individuals whose eff orts help protect and enhance First Amendment rights for all Americans and to raise awareness of modern-day challenges to freedom of speech and expression, according to organizers.
Christian Bales, the valedictorian of Holy Cross High School, delivers his graduation speech outside with a megaphone after the ceremony took place last year. The Diocese of Covington banned speeches from Bales and the student council president. School officials said the speeches contained "elements that were political and inconsistent with the teaching of the Catholic Church." PROVIDED
“Millions of students are exposed to a censorship culture within our education system as free speech violations take place at our schools and on college cam-
puses. We cannot allow First Amendment threats to become commonplace in our country,” said Christie Hefner, founder and chairman of the Hugh M.
Hefner First Amendment Awards. Christie Hefner established the awards in 1979 to honor her father’s commitment to defending the First Amendment. Previous honorees include high school students, lawyers, librarians, journalists and educators. A complete list of past award winners and judges can be found here. “Because of the dedication and commitment of Americans who refuse to be censored, threats to the First Amendment do not go unchallenged,” Christie Hefner said. “We honor and recognize America’s unsung heroes: the individuals who put themselves and their organizations at risk by bravely defending their constitutional right to freedom of speech and expression.” The 2019 honorees are: Law: Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr., Partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, and global Co-Chair of the fi rm’s Litigation Group, for his work on behalf of CNN and Jim Acosta in connection with the restoration of Acosta’s White House press credentials. Government: Dr. George luber, former chief of the Climate and Health Program in the Division of Environmental Health Science and Practice at the National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). After the 2016 election, Luber was directed to cancel a conference on climate change with Al Gore; he refused on the basis of science education and was outspoken on the issue. The CDC sent . Luber home on administrative leave. After taking a public stand, the CDC withdrew Luber’s proposed termination. Book Publishing: Greg Lukianoff , President and CEO, FIRE, & Jonathan Haidt, Social Psychologist, NYU’s Stern School of Business, for their book, “The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas Are Setting Up a Generation for Failure.” Journalism: Grace Marion, former editor-in-chief of her high school newspaper, The Playwickian, for her fi ght against school censorship after she saw See AWARD, Page 2A
Craving more Goettafest? Festival expands to 8 days. Nom Sarah Brookbank Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Eggs and goetta is fried at the Cincinnati Grill booth during Glier's Goettafest in 2018. PHOTOS BY SHAE COMBS FOR THE ENQUIRER
How to submit news
Is one weekend of Goettafest not enough for you? We’ve got good news. Glier’s Goettafest is expanding to a second weekend, meaning Goettafest will last eight days this summer in Newport. The two-weekend experience will take place from July 25 to 28 and Aug. 1 to 4 at Newport’s Festival Park at the Levee. Admission is free and open to the public. Glier’s Goettafest features vendors serving over 45 unique goetta items, continuous live music on two stages
To submit news and photos to the Community Press/Recorder, visit the Cincinnati Enquirer’s Share website: http://bit.ly/2FjtKoF
Contact The Press
and games, infl atables and attractions for the entire family. “It is only at Goettafest that the very best culinary craftspeople in the area set up shop side-by-side to fl irt with the tastebuds of the faithful. From fudge to pizza, their goetta-based creations test the limits of goetta as an ingredient,” organizers said. Goettafest started in 2001 in Mainstrasse and has moved a number of times before landing at its current home on Newport’s riverfront. In 2009, Goettafest’s attendance jumped to more than 100,000 visitors. For more information, visit www.goettafest.com.
News: 513-248-8600, Retail advertising: 513-768-8404, Classified advertising: 283-7290, Delivery: 859-781-4421. See page A2 for additonal information
The Beckhart stall serves up loaded tater tots with bier cheese and goetta at last year’s Glier's Goettafest. This year’s fest will be eight days
Vol. 2 No. 12 © 2019 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Price $1.00
2A ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
Orange barrels ahead for I-71/75 in Kenton County Chris Mayhew Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Two weeks of orange barrelled-lane closures began April 4 on about four miles of Interstate 71/75 in Kenton and Boone counties. The road work is scheduled to last through April 19. Areas between Kyles Lane in Fort Wright and Turfway Road in Florence will be aff ected. Kentucky highway offi cials announced the night and weekend lane shutdowns in an April 2 news release. The two weekends and nightly lane closures for road paving will enable the completion of the $6.3 million highway repair project. There will be two work areas: ❚ Southbound lanes will be aff ected from just before Buttermilk Pike at exit 186 to an area south of Kentucky state Route 236/Donaldson Road exit 184.
You will see a lot of orange barrels on I-71/75 FILE
❚ Northbound lanes will be aff ected between Turfway Road/state Route 236 to the Donaldson Road exit.
Signs will alert motorists when exit ramp closures happen, according to the news release. Speed limits will be reduced to 55 mph in the work zone. One lane interstate times: I-71/75 north and south will be reduced to a single lane for motorists from midnight until 5 a.m. April 5-7 between the Kyles Lane and Buttermilk Pike exits and between Turfway Road and the I-275 interchange. Daytime weekends: Two lanes of traffi c will be maintained during weekend daytime work hours from 5 a.m. to midnight. Nightly single lane closures will happen at various times. “When complete, this section of roadway will provide a safer and smoother ride for all those who travel on the I-71/I-75 interstate," said Bob Yeager, chief district engineer for Department of Highways District 6 in Covington.
Serial killer draws unidentifi ed Cincinnati woman he claims he killed Cameron Knight Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
What happens when a person confesses to so many murders that the FBI can’t even fi nd all the victims? In the case of serial killer Samuel Little, he draws his victims from memory and the authorities publish those drawings in the hope someone recognizes them. Little is 78 and was raised in Lorain, Ohio. He’s been in prison since 2012. Prior to that, he traveled the country for more than three decades murdering women. He’s confessed to 90. He says he has killed in Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, and the FBI recently released sketches of those alleged victims. One of the haunting sketches shows a black woman with short style hair. Little says he killed this woman in Cincinnati in 1974. Scrawled next to the portrait: “Tall girl by highway by sign.” A second sketch shows a white woman with reddish hair and blue eyes. Little told the FBI he met this woman in Columbus, killed her and disposed of her body in Northern Kentucky in 1984. When the FBI released the killer’s list of victims, which he recited from memory. They had already confi rmed 34 of them. Since November, eight more cases have been confi rmed or matched to open cases. Little was arrested at a Louisville homeless shelter in 2012. He was extradited to California on drug charges, and once there his DNA was matched to three unsolved homicides in the 1980s. He was sentenced to life in prison. This spring, Little wanted to move to a diff erent pris-
Samuel Little’s drawings include a woman he says he killed in Cincinnati in 1974, left, and a woman he says he met in Columbus in 1984. PROVIDED/FBI
Samuel Little appears at Superior Court in Los Angeles in 2013, where he was found guilty of three murders. AP FILE PHOTO
on. The FBI and other investigators had long suspected he had killed other people. In exchange for moving, Little started talking. He confessed to 90 murders, investigators said, many of which he remembers in great detail. His killings span the country with incidents in 16 states. The Ohio Attorney General’s Offi ce keeps comprehensive records of unsolved homicides in the state. Two unsolved deaths from 1974 involved black females in the Cincinnati area, but neither death matches Little’s profi le. Angela Tucker, age 5, was killed in a fi re in Over-the-Rhine that was ruled an arson and 70-yearold Mattie Broadus was stabbed to death in a Down-
town apartment. Little knocked out his victims and strangled them. They were often prostitutes or other vulnerable women. “Many of these deaths were not classifi ed as homicides but attributed to drug overdoses, accidents, or natural causes,” the FBI said. The Cincinnati Police Department said it is looking into deaths from that time. Little is in poor health and will likely stay in prison in Texas until his death, investigators said. For more information or to report potential case links to Samuel Little, people can contact the FBI’s violent crime apprehension program at 800-634-4097.
It takes a family to make a difficult decision.
Award
COMMUNITY PRESS & RECORDER NEWSPAPERS ❚ 312 Elm Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202 ❚ 2116 Chamber Center Drive, Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
Continued from Page 1A
NEWS TIPS ........................................................................513-248-8600 HOME DELIVERY ..............................................................859-781-4421 ADVERTISING ...................................................................513-768-8404 CLASSIFIEDS .....................................................................513-242-4000
18 6pm
Adelaide Center
on the campus of Madonna Manor 2344 Amsterdam Road, Villa Hills
Free event. Complimentary dinner. RSVP to Bethany Breckel at 859.468.4134 by April 13
$ Va 17 lu 5 e
HEARING TESTS SET
Conversations that matter.
Insightful information from experts: • How to remain at home safely and independently while aging. • Importance of having a Living Will and advanced directives. • How to start important discussions with loved ones.
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
For more information please contact Starlette at 859.486.7390.
Vendor and Informational Displays before and after program.
75 e $1 alu V
THURSDAY APRIL
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
Call Now! 859-594-7566 Madonna Manor
WALK-INS ALWAYS WELCOME! CE-GCI0131193-05
OR CALL TOLL FREE AT 1-888-744-7598!
Most Insurance Plans Accepted! Managed Care Plans Offered!
DON’T WAIT CALL NOW!
about a dozen articles censored. Grace was able to publish her fi nal jawdropping article during her last year at the school, which outed the school for the lack of sexual misconduct records for its teachers. Education: Christian Bales, an openly gay and gender non-conforming student, who was not allowed to deliver his valedictorian commencement speech at his Catholic high school’s graduation ceremony. Christian decided to deliver his speech with a bullhorn following the graduation ceremony surrounded by students and faculty. Lifetime Achievement: Floyd Abrams, Senior Counsel, Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP, for his lifelong devotion to Constitutional law. Abrams has argued numerous signifi cant First Amendment cases in the U.S. Supreme Court.
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ 3A
CE-GCI0164901-02
4A ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
In Kentucky, you can’t get your Real ID’s yet Billy Kobin and Chris Mayhew USA TODAY NETWORK
New driver’s licenses meeting federal security requirements that can be used to fl y domestically are not available at Northern Kentucky circuit court clerk offi ces yet. The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet has alerted clerk offi ces the anticipated rollout dates for Kentucky’s new Real ID previously announced have been pushed back, said Kenton County Circuit Clerk John C. Middleton. “Just stay tuned,” he said. You’ll be able to use your current driver’s license to fl y domestically until October 2020, when Kentucky’s extension on complying with the Real ID Act expires. The previously announced release dates for the federally accepted drivers licenses in Northern Kentucky, among the earliest in Kentucky, March 29 for Campbell and Kenton counties and by April 5 in Boone County. Some people have come to the offi ce expecting to obtain a Real ID drivers license already, Middleton said. The new licenses can also be used to access restricted federal facilities such as power plants and military bases. Boone County Circuit Clerk David S. Martin said his offi ce has been told by Kentucky offi cials it may be a couple of months until the new licenses will be issued at his offi ce. The state’s rollout of the new licenses will begin in early April in Woodford and Franklin counties, according to a news release from the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. A county-by-county rollout extending to the remaining 118 counties will begin two to three weeks later and conclude within a two-month period, the cabinet said. “We only get to launch once and have adjusted the preliminary pilot dates to
Kentucky Vehicle Regulation Commissioner Matt Henderson speaks with county clerks about the new driver’s license that will be Real ID compliant. The launch date has been pushed back. MICHAEL CLEVENGER/COURIER JOURNAL
stay true to our commitment to deliver a system to the Circuit Court Clerks and the public that will make the transition as smooth as possible,” Matt Henderson, Department of Vehicle Regulation commissioner, said in the release. “Extending the testing phase allows the project team and card vendor needed time to vet and update the new system used to handle front- and back-end operations associated with how we issue and produce the new cards.” Specifi c dates for the remaining
county-by-county rollout schedule will be announced in early April, the cabinet said. The state is piloting the ID system in two counties and will do live monitoring of the process and then apply best practices and lessons learned from the experience when the system rolls out statewide. The state is working to upgrade driver’s licenses, permits and personal IDs to comply with the Real ID Act, a post-9/ 11 security measure that set standards
for identifi cation cards. The voluntary travel ID requires more documentation, such as a birth certifi cate and a Social Security card. The delayed rollout will not impact benefi ts Kentuckians can access using their current driver’s license, thanks to a federal extension from the Department of Homeland Security that allows airport security checkpoints and military bases to accept existing card versions for U.S. air travel and entry, the Kentucky transportation cabinet said.
48 MONTHS FINANCING* Take the guesswork out of mattress shopping.
On purchases $3499 or more made with your Furniture Fair Synchrony Home Card. 48 Equal Monthly Payments are required. Tax and delivery due at time of sale.
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.
**
JEFFERSONTOWN, KY 502.890.868A6
FREE Preferred Delivery On all mattress set purchases $799 or more.
Financing Offer applies only to single-receipt qualifying purchases on purchases of $3499 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, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ 5A
INDEPENDENT & ASSISTED LIVING Everything you want, without costing you everything you have. Reservations Required RSVP by 4/10! Call Today For More Information!
AT T E N T I O N V E T E R A N S !
VA AID &
ATTENDANCE Benefit Planning Workshop April 11, 2019 - Two sessions: 5pm & 6pm. Learn Veterans Spouses receive LearnHow how this Veteranand Pension Benefitcan can help offset funding for Assisted Living the cost of assisted living for veterans and their spouses. + Q&A session immediately following + Q&A session immediately following presentation presentations + Complimentary hors & beverages + Complimentary horsd’oeuvres d’oeuvres & beverages
513-538-1817 CORBLY ST.
The Ashford of Mt. Washington 1131 Deliquia Drive Cincinnati, OH 45230
CAMPUS LN.
SUT TON RD.
DELIQUIA DR.
SALEM RD.
Schedule your personalized tour today!
513-538-1817
CE-GCI0166172-03
BEECHMONT AVE.
Located right down the street.
Reservations required!
6A ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
Two ways to make Easter egg bread Easter egg bread made with frozen dough
Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld
Make a double, or triple braid. Ingredients 2-3 loaves frozen bread dough, thawed until pliable (bread will have risen a little)
Some of us are cooks. Some of us are bakers. Some of us are both. I’m covering all bases today with two recipes for Easter egg bread. The fi rst is an easy one from frozen dough. For those of you nervous about making bread from scratch or not having time, this one’s for you. Fun for little bakers, too. Maybe you’re a from scratch baker. The second recipe is yours. The Greeks make their braided Easter bread special with red dyed eggs, symbolizing Christ’s suff ering and new life. Use colored eggs you like, or leave them out. Can you help? Peterson’s BLT pasta salad. Nancy P. craves the salad that was served at Peterson’s Clifton, Mt. Adams and downtown locations. “I think some of the ownEaster egg bread with a Greek Easter braid RITA HEIKENFELD/PROVIDED ers are still around,” Nancy said.
Egg wash: 1 egg beaten with a teaspoon of water 3 plain hard-boiled eggs plus 3 colored ones Instructions Roll each loaf into a 20” or so rope. Lay next to each other, then braid. Form into ring and pinch edges to seal. Place on parchment lined baking sheet. Push 3 plain hard-boiled eggs into braid. Let rise in warm place, covered, until almost doubled. (Mine took 20 minutes). Gently brush all over with egg wash.
Easter egg bread from scratch
Instructions
until doubled, about 1 hour.
Ingredients
Whisk together 1 cup flour, sugar, salt and yeast.
Punch dough down and turn out onto lightly floured surface. Divide into two equal pieces. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
2-1/2 cups flour, divided
Combine milk and butter and heat until milk is warm and butter almost melted.
1/4 cup sugar 3/4 teaspoon salt 1 package active dry yeast .25 oz. 2/3 cup milk 2 tablespoons butter 2 large eggs, beaten a bit 4 tablespoons butter, melted 3 plain hard-boiled eggs plus 3 colored ones
Stir milk mixture gradually into flour mixture. Add 2 eggs and 1/2 cup flour. Mix well. Mix remaining flour in 1/2 cup at a time, until dough leaves sides of bowl. Turn out onto lightly floured surface and knead until smooth and elastic, 5-8 minutes. Butter bowl, place dough in and turn to coat. Cover and let rise in warm place
Roll each into rope about 35” long and 1” or so thick. Lay next to each other, then braid. Form into ring and seal edges. Push plain boiled eggs into braid. Place on parchment lined baking sheet and cover. Let rise in warm place until doubled, about 45 minutes. Brush with melted butter. Preheat oven to 350 and bake until golden brown and cooked through, about 35 minutes. Cool and replace eggs with colored ones.
SAVE UP TO
Preheat oven to 350. Bake 35 minutes or so for double braid, 40 minutes or so for triple braid, until golden brown and baked through. Cool and replace eggs with colored ones. Is bread done? A temperature of 190-195 is perfect for these 2 breads. Stick thermometer in side or bottom. Tips: Take a rest If dough resists rolling, let rest, covered, 10 minutes for gluten to relax.
1,000
$
10% INSTANT REBATE CARPET | HARDWOOD | WATERPROOF | LAMINATE
Carpets & Floors CE-GCI0162766-02
Call For A Free In Home Consultation
513-306-4995 859-568-5150
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ 7A
Man accused of claiming he was missing boy ordered detained Kevin Grasha Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
The 23-year-old man accused of pretending to be a boy who has been missing since 2011 “has a signifi cant mental health past” and previously was hospitalized for psychiatric reasons, his attorney said Tuesday. Those statements were made during a brief detention hearing in federal court in Cincinnati. Magistrate Judge Karen Litkovitz ordered Brian Michael Rini detained pending further proceedings. It was Rini’s fi rst court appearance since last week when he was charged with lying to federal agents. Rini’s federal public defender, Richard Monahan, did not provide more information about his mental health history.
Litkovitz said his criminal record dates back to when he was 13. Rini – wearing a jail uniform with a light green shirt and orangeRini and-white-striped pants – appeared relaxed in the courtroom. He read through documents and at one point smiled as Monahan talked to him. His unshaven face showed multiple days of hair growth. He did not speak during the hearing. Rini has been separated from other inmates at the Butler County Jail, where records list him at 5-foot-9 and 145 pounds. The jail has been holding him for U.S. Marshals. Litkovitz said he is a fl ight risk. Rini, who is from Medina, ison parole and has
warrants for his arrest in other cases, Litkovitz said. Rini was released from an Ohio prison last month after serving more than a year for burglary and vandalism. In that case, from Medina County, Rini and others held a party at a $400,000 home that was listed for sale, causing more than $1,000 in damage. Also at Tuesday’s hearing, Rini was described as having no stable job and no stable home. No one from his family has off ered to let him stay with them if he were to be released on bond, prosecutors said. On April 3, police found Rini wandering on a Newport street, appearing confused and in need of help, court documents say. He told police he was Timmothy Pitzen, a boy from Aurora, Illinois, who
went missing in 2011 when he was 6. Timmothy would be 14 now. Rini claimed, the documents say, he escaped from two men after being held captive and forced to have sex. Rini was taken to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center after complaining of abdominal pains. He was there for more than a day, according to the documents. After a DNA test, Rini admitted his true identity. Asked why he claimed to be the missing boy, Rini said “he wished he had a father like Timmothy’s,” according to court documents. Offi cials said Rini told investigators he’d seen the case featured in the last several weeks on a rebroadcast of the television news program “20/20.” Rini has twice before claimed to be a victim of sex traffi cking, offi cials said.
Case of impostor claiming to be missing child is ‘pretty unique’ Sheila Vilvens Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Events played out in the Cincinnati area recently like a scene from the documentary “The Imposter.” On April 3, an individual was found on the streets of Newport, claiming to be the missing child Timmothy Pitzen. DNA testing proved otherwise April 4. It was not Pitzen, an Illinois boy who went missing in May of 2011 at age 6, it was 23year-old Brian Rini of Medina, Ohio. “The Imposter” recounts an eerily similar story that played out over two decades ago in Texas. Frenchman Frederic Bourdin fraudulently claimed he was Nicholas Barclay, a Texas boy who at age 14 never returned home after playing basketball with friends. Instances of attempted deception like the one experienced in Newport are rare, according to John Bischoff , executive director of Missing Children’s Division of National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. “There have been cases in the past, for one reason or another, a child believed that they were, in fact, someone else,” he said. “But with circumstances surrounding this instance, it was pretty unique.” As the scenario played out in Newport, for a split second, the community experienced the hope and frustration parents of missing children experience throughout their lives, he said. That roller coaster of emotions parents feel of wanting their child back and experience of tips and leads that don’t pan out. “All and all, we’re extremely sad at the
Missing person poster created by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children showing Timmothy Pitzen at age 6 when he went missing and an age progression picture of him at age 13. NATIONAL CENTER FOR MISSING & EXPLOITED CHILDREN/PROVIDED
outcome here,” he said. “But the search goes on.”
According to FBI reports, 464,324 National Crime Information Center entries
were made in 2017 for missing children. The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children has over 6,000 open cases. The case involving Timmothy Pitzen is one. Law enforcement tracks down leads every day, some as promising as the one in Newport seemed initially, Bischoff said. Since Pitzen went missing in 2011 at age 6, the NCMEC said it’s received more than 120 leads. All were passed along to enforcement. While the center and Pitzen’s family hoped the Kentucky lead would result in a reunion, unfortunately, that wasn’t the case, Bischoff said. If there is a silver lining from the incident it’s this, there’s now an increased awareness and community engagement in not only Timmothy Pitzen’s case but for missing children in general, he said. Bischoff is hopeful the heightened awareness and engagement continues and encourages people to remain vigilant. Look at images of missing children posted on websites like the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. “These children are out there, and the majority of them are in the public every day,” Bischoff said. “The hope is someone somewhere will see the right image at the right time to turn into a positive recovery.” Timmothy Pitzen is still out there, Bischoff said. “We’ll never lose hope. We’re side-by-side with the family and law enforcement,” Bischoff said. “We’ll never give up hope that Timmothy Pitzen is out there.”
Community Banking for northern kentuCky
There is no good reason to “Act Your Age!” Celebrate Life.
At Citizens Deposit Bank you’ll find... • Friendly, knowledgeable bankers • Local lending decisions • 24/7 banking convenience with CDB Mobile Banking
Senior Living Apartments
Personal Care Suites *Be Social.
CITIZENS
*Be Active.
*Be Supported. pp
www.stcharlescommunity.org
YOUR FINANCIAL CORNERSTONE
CE-CIN0007930-02
859.331.3224
DEPOSIT BANK
Cold Spring Office • (859) 441-1450, 136 Plaza Drive Cold Spring, KY Florence Office • (859) 283-6222, 8545 US 42 Florence, KY Ft. Wright Office • (859) 344-7860, 3425 Valley Plaza Parkway Ft. Wright, KY
8A ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
A single visit with us could mean more time with them. That’s the power of an Annual Wellness Visit. From preventive screenings to a comprehensive healthcare plan tailored to meet your needs, you’ll find it right here. All from one visit, plus many plans don’t require any out-of-pocket costs.
Schedule a wellness visit today; stedocs;com/primarycare | ?->��-9�9-9:��
Campbell Recorder
❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019
❚ 1B
Sports Is NKU women’s basketball coach abusive or fun? Ex-players divided that torture, emotional/verbal abuse, and the manipulation continues,” said Reeves, who is now in her 30s. Bacon was injured in the fi rst half of the season and needed knee surgery. She said after that the coaching staff told the other players that Bacon chose to give up on the team and that they should stay away from her. Bacon remembers one winter day after her surgery when she was hobbling on crutches across campus to get to practice on time. She called her teammates for a ride. “Coach Whitaker told them ‘if you go pick her up, you’re in trouble,’” Bacon said. Her teammates, who’d been on the team before Whitaker came to Austin Peay, drove to get her anyway. Getting surgery meant Bacon would never play another game of basketball. When the injury took the game away, Whitaker took the team away, too, she said. “When I needed my team to be there for me the most they were isolating me from everybody,” Bacon said. She said the coaches told her teammates she was negative and not to help her or hang out with her. After her surgery, Bacon wasn’t allowed to travel with the team on away trips. “The last game of my entire basketball career, I had to ride in a van with the booster club and sit in the stands,” Bacon said. But afterward, she “was just glad it was fi nally over. It was this freedom.”
Kate Murphy and James Pilcher Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Former players paint two completely diff erent pictures of coach Camryn Whitaker, whose Northern Kentucky University women’s basketball program is under review after abuse allegations. The start of Whitaker’s collegiate coaching career echoes recent charges of mistreatment, one group of former players says. “It was manipulation, intimidation, isolation, neglect,” said 32-year-old Amber Bacon, who played for Whitaker for two years at Austin Peay State University in Tennessee. Whitaker, now 37, was the assistant coach at Austin Peay from 2006 to 2008, and it was her fi rst fulltime coaching gig. Bacon said Whitaker purposely created division on the team by isolating certain players and pitting teammates against each other. When she saw the news that some of Whitaker’s players at Northern Kentucky University were accusing the coach of emotional abuse and bullying, she immediately felt sick to her stomach and started crying. “It’s 11 years later and it’s still happening to people,” Bacon said. But other women who played for Whitaker over the years, including at Missouri State, Dayton and Kentucky, paint a diff erent picture of the coach. “She makes you feel wanted, but she will push you to get the best out of you,” said JaVonna Layfi eld, who was recruited to Dayton by Whitaker. “You want a coach like that to be hard on you. But she’s never been a coach that would tear you down to degrade or punish you.” Layfi eld graduated in 2018 and recently fi nished her fi rst season playing professionally in Greece. She said she’s known Whitaker since she was 14 and chose Dayton because of Whitaker. “I remember my freshman year when she would come and pick me up at two or three in the morning when I was having panic attacks and she’d calm me down and let me sleep on her couch,” Layfi eld said. Jim Jabir, who was the head coach for 13 years at the University of Dayton and Whitaker’s boss, said he was shocked by the accusations. “She coached hard … but our players loved her,” Jabir said. “I was never offended by anything she said. She was very, very polite and conscientious of other people’s feelings.” Jabir, the head coach at Florida Atlantic University in Miami, said Whitaker is a great person and he would never have called her abusive. He also questioned the NKU players’ complaints. “It’s just kind of the world we live in now, where someone can make claims and say whatever you want,” Jabir said. NKU recently announced an outside fi rm would conduct an “independent, external review and assessment” of the women’s basketball program that will be done “as swiftly and effi ciently as possible but also be very thorough.” Neither Whitaker nor her assistant coaches have been available for comment since the controversy started in late March. Taryn Taugher, a senior at NKU who had just fi nished her fi nal season in the program, posted an article online detailing how Whitaker emotionally abused and bullied several former players. The university announced it will hire an outside fi rm to review the women’s basketball program in light of the concerns raised by former players.
‘Happy and fun to be around’
Northern Kentucky women's basketball coach Camryn Whitaker signals a play to her team during the fi rst half of a game at Louisville in December 2018. TIMOTHY D. EASLEY/ AP
Then-assistant coach Camryn Whitaker congratulates the University of Kentucky women's basketball team after it defeated Oklahoma 79-58 to advance to the Sweet 16 in 2016. BRITNEY HOWARD/ UK ATHLETICS
Dividing recruits from holdovers Whitaker joined the Austin Peay program with head coach Carrie Daniels. The pair came from Western Kentucky University, where Whitaker played for fi ve seasons and led the team to 97 wins, a conference championship and an NCAA Tournament bid. Whitaker was fresh out of college when she arrived in Clarksville, Tennessee. She seemed eager to coach the “tight-knit group” of players that were already on the team, Bacon said. Things changed the second year when Whitaker and Daniels brought in
their recruits, according to Bacon and Kellea Reeves, who were seniors at the time. “They started to create this division on the team,” Bacon said. “I was isolated and ousted. I think they just wanted to create their own program, and we were the leftovers.” Reeves said her college days on the court at Austin Peay were similar to what some of the NKU players described. She played for Whitaker for two years as a center and went through what she called isolation and manipulation as a “toxicity and degrading environment.” “Honestly, it hurt my feelings to know
After two seasons at Austin Peay, Whitaker took another assistant coaching job at Missouri State University, another Division I school. She coached there from 2008 to 2011. Tia Mays was at Missouri State for one year during the 2010-11 season. But Whitaker left a lasting positive impact on her. Playing for Whitaker was a big part of her decision to join the program because she was looking for a school where she had a supportive coaching staff . Mays, now 28, described Whitaker as goofy and easy to talk to because she was close to the players’ ages. “She was happy and fun to be around,” Mays said. “I didn’t see any sort of issues or hear anything as far as dislike or verbal abuse.” She said she spent a lot of time in Whitaker’s offi ce, but it was always to confi de in her. Mays’ father died while she was a sophomore at Missouri State. And while that time was a blur, she said, Whitaker was there for her. “She made sure I was taken care of and I wasn’t alone,” Mays said. She said Whitaker even fl ew back home with Mays after her father died and never made her feel like she had to put basketball over her family. Whitaker brought the Lady Bears to the Women’s National Invitation Tournament twice and helped the team earn 46 wins in two seasons in Springfi eld. After leaving Missouri State, Whitaker returned to her alma mater, Western Kentucky, for the 2011-12 season as an assistant coach. Then she moved on to the University of Dayton for three seasons, where she primarily coached the guards and handled recruiting. During her tenure, the Flyers had a 78-17 overall record, won the Atlantic 10 regular-season championship in 2013 and 2014 and advanced to the NCAA Elite Eight in 2015 for the fi rst See WHITAKER, Page 2B
2B ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
SHORT HOPS Jon Richardson Cincinnati Enquirer | USA TODAY NETWORK
Baseball ❚ Beechwood defeated Carlson (MI) 9-1 behind three RBI’s from Logan Castleman April 1 and handled Ludlow 15-0 April 5. ❚ St. Henry defeated Carlson (MI) 12-2 in six innings April 1 and handled Newport 20-4 in four innings April 5. ❚ Bellevue handled Covington Latin 16-2 in fi ve innings April 1. ❚ Bishop Brossart overcame Newport 16-1 in four innings April 1. ❚ Scott edged Dixie Heights 7-5 in extra innings April 1 and beat Ryle 2-0 April 6.
Whitaker Continued from Page 1B
time in school history. More than a half-dozen former players during Whitaker’s time at Dayton gave overwhelming positive reviews. Samantha McKay, who was a senior point guard at Dayton under Whitaker, graduated in 2013 and is now playing professionally in Greece. She said six years later, Whitaker is still in her corner. McKay, now 27, was in a serious accident on a team bus in Europe her fi rst year overseas. She suff ered severe back injuries and saw people die. “I remember being in the hospital bed not knowing what was going on or what was going to happen to me and Coach Whit was the one to call and make sure my family knew what was going on and was in touch with me immediately,” McKay said. “I know that if there was a problem in my life she would be one of the few people I would call.” McKay said when it comes to coaching, “while the team is your family, some-
❚ Highlands handled Holy Cross 11-1 in fi ve innings April 1 but fell to Jeff ersonville (IN) 10-3 April 5. The Bluebirds defeated Lincoln-Way Central (IL) 8-1 April 6. ❚ Newport Central Catholic beat Holmes 13-4 April 1. ❚ ❚ ❚ Covington Catholic defeated Scott 1-0 April 3 but lost to Badin 10-4 in eight innings April 6. ❚ Dixie Heights lost to Elder 5-1 April 5. ❚ Simon Kenton fell to Louisville St. Xavier 8-0 April 5. ❚ Campbell County lost to Louisville St. Xavier 12-6 and to Noblesville (IN) 8-4 April 6. ❚ Holmes lost to Calvary Christian 11-5 April 6.
Softball ❚ Simon Kenton edged Walton-Verona 5-2 behind a homer from Alexis Baker April 1. Aubrey Dance hit a home run and knocked in fi ve runs in the Pioneers’ 16-0 win over Bishop Brossart 16-0 April 4 but lost to Boyle County 5-3 and 2-1 April 6. ❚ Bishop Brossart defeated Lloyd 17-7 in fi ve innings April 1 and edged Grant County 5-4 in six innings April 5. The Mustangs lost to Pendleton County 13-0 in fi ve innings but beat Russell County 6-2 April 6. ❚ Newport Central Catholic beat Bellevue 21-6 in four innings April 1 but fell to St. Ursula Academy 12-3 April 6. ❚ 11-0 in fi ve innings April 5. The Lady Raiders fell to Butler County 5-3 in four innings and to Mercer County 7-6 in
times the head of the house has to be tough,” but “I just can’t see in my heart Coach Whit ever abusing anybody.” Evelyn Akhator, a top 2017 WNBA draft pick, is now playing professional basketball overseas in Turkey. She played for Whitaker at the University of Kentucky, where Whitaker had a oneyear stint for the 2015-16 season. The team posted a 25-8 overall record that season and made it to the Sweet Sixteen in the 2016 NCAA Tournament. Akhator, 24, was disappointed when she saw the news of the NKU accusations. She said she saw Whitaker bring out the best in other players. She was tough, but not abusive. “Yes, she pushed us, but it was all about knowing what our potential was and knowing we might not be giving our all in that moment,” Akhator said.
Stepping into the top job at NKU After one season at UK, Whitaker accepted an off er in 2016 to be the head coach at NKU. It was a big step, one she’d been working toward for more than a decade.
When she took over the program, the team was coming off of a winning season and a tough loss in the Horizon League Tournament Semifi nals. “Everyone knew this is the year NKU women’s basketball can do this,” said Shar’Rae Davis who was a senior when Whitaker started in 2016. “Everyone was rallying for us... and in the beginning, we were all very excited.” She said Whitaker has this “southern charm” that is “just so likable.” But once the season started, Davis said things “turned disastrous for us basketballwise” and Whitaker changed. The team struggled to fi nd success throughout the season, posting a 9-22 overall records and winning just 5 of 22 games in the Horizon League. Since Whitaker’s fi rst year at NKU, the team has improved its record overall to 11 wins and 18 losses. The team also had its fi rst winning season in conference play in the 2018-19 season with about 1,300 spectators attending each game. Part of the team’s struggle was due to how Whitaker treated her players, according to Davis. She and at least fi ve other former NKU
Your Client Experience is Our Top Priority We’ve been earning trust with our clients for 42 years. Integrity, commitment, character and ethics aren’t just words for our team, they are actions.
up to 72 months 0% financing available
***
Save up to $2,067 on a Carrier HVAC System plus a Free Connected Wi-Fi Thermostat up to 15-year Carefree parts & labor warranty free estimates and second opinions (513) 327-2592
up to 2-year parts & labor warranty on repairs
CE-GCI0166151-03
24 – 7 emergency service
upfront pricing
*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. Free WiFi 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 5/15/19. 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
Maddie Scherr of Ryle named a 2019 Kentucky Junior All-Star The KABC has selected the roster for the Kentucky/Indiana Junior All-Star Game and junior Maddie Scherr of Ryle was named to the team. The Junior AllStar series will be played in Kentucky on Sunday, June 2 and in Indiana on Monday, June 3rd. Locations will be announced at a later date. Follow the KABC and the All-Star Game on Twitter for more updates! @KABCoaches @KYAllStarGame
Norse players and one player’s father say Whitaker was emotionally abusive and a bully. They say Whitaker verbally attacked players and created a “toxic environment” of intimidation, manipulation and humiliation. Eight current players shared a diff erent perspective in a letter of support for Whitaker that was posted online. They said their experience in the program has been “positive from day one to now, despite the demands and struggles.” The letter doesn’t address any of the specifi cs raised by Taugher or Davis about how certain players were isolated from the team or degraded and verbally attacked. In one word, Davis described her experience as “heartbreaking.” “We had the potential to be so much better,” Davis said. “I want (Whitaker) to know it didn’t have to be this way.” Davis said she doesn’t care if Whitaker is fi red or keeps her job, she just wants players and parents to know the truth about the program. “My goal is to get people aware to what is happening, especially for incoming NKU basketball players,” Davis said.
Early Bird Special $47 A/C Tune-Up No Breakdown Guaranteed
513-327-2592 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 ** C36
$100 Off A/C Repair 513-327-2592 Valid with repair. See ** C23
Free HVAC or Plumbing Diagnostic with Repair 513-327-2592 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.
513-327-2592 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. Camera inspection required for 1 year guarantee on main sewer drain. See** C03
See * &**
schedule your free estimate on new equipment
nine innings April 6. ❚ St. Henry lost to Owen County 3-0 April 5 but edged Paris 13-12 April 6. ❚ Campbell County handled Holmes 15-0 April 5.
A+
513-327-2592
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ 3B
Cincinnati’s Leading Bathroom Remodeler Since 1989 More than 50,000 jobs sold!
Transform your bath for less.
Payments as low as $76 per month and no payments until Fall
*
*
SPRING SALE!
• One-Day Bathrooms • Tubs Converted to Showers • Walk-in Tubs for Aging-in-Place
1,250 1,250 50 ooff
$
BATH
• Safety Grab Bars & Seats • Handheld Showerheads & More
*
ASK ABOUT OUR SENIOR’S DISCOUNT!
CALL TODAY
513-434-1994 *$1,250 off the cost of a single bathroom project. Minimum purchase required. Purchase must be made during initial visit. Offer good off regular retail 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. Improveit Home Remodeling is neither a broker or a lender. Financing is provided by third party lenders unaffiliated with Improveit Home Remodeling, under terms and conditions arranged directly between the customer and such lender, all subject to credit requirements and satisfactory completion of finance documents. Estimated advertised payment of $76 a month assumes special financing available for new customers. 9.9% APR with a payment factor of 2% available to well qualified buyers on approved credit. Not all buyers may qualify. Higher rates apply for buyers with lower credit ratings. Example for $3,800 average attic insulation purchase: 9.9% APR revolving financing at $76 a month minimum payment. Maximum number of months to pay off estimated at less than 65 months assuming all payments made as scheduled. Some conditions may apply. See financing documents and disclosures for details. Visit improveitusa.com for additional information and conditions. Offer expires 4/30/19 CE-GCI0168902-08
www.improveitusa.com/cincibath1
4B ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
SCHOOL NEWS Feast of St. Joseph Since his recent assignment to the parish, the Rev. Samuel Owusu has been visiting the classrooms at St. Joseph School, Cold Spring, meeting the students and getting to know them better. The parish feast day, the Feast of St. Joseph was the perfect time for him to spend a little time visiting with all the students of every grade. The Rev..Gerry Reinersman and Owusu delivered ice cream to all the students at lunch time. You can be sure everyone was left smiling. Linda Gabis
Newport Central Catholic to honor military with Veterans Appreciation Day Newport Central Catholic will honor Veterans with a ceremony at 9 a.m. April 30 in the school’s gymnasium. Veterans from all branches both alumni and non-alumni are invited to be recognized in front of our student body and community for their services. The ceremony will last approximately an hour and 30 minutes and consist of a number of military tributes and addresses including keynote speaker Major Michael Marchetti of Xavier University. Before the event, veterans are invited to coff ee and donuts beginning at 8:15 a.m. in the school cafeteria. The purpose of this event is to educate our students, show gratitude for our veterans, and to engage our community. Please RSVP by visiting www.ncchs.com/vad. If you have any questions, please contact the school Advancement Department at (859) 292-0001 or Kenny Collopy, Advancement Director at kcollopy@ncchs.com We are truly grateful for the service and sacrifi ce of our Veterans. Mary Ciafardini
Cameron Dunlevy, Samuel Lonneman and Henry Smith celebrate the Feast of St. Joseph with the Rev. Samuel Owusu at St. Joseph, Cold Spring. PROVIDED
NKMS Foundation Scholarship The Northern Kentucky Medical Society (NKMS) Foundation has established a scholarship with the University of Louisville School of Medicine. The scholarship will be awarded each year to a third- or fourth-year student in good academic standing at the School of Medicine. The student must be a Kentucky resident from Boone, Campbell or Kenton County. Furthermore, the student must express a desire to practice medicine in Boone, Campbell or Kenton County upon completion of medical school and any postdoctoral training. The NMKS Foundation has maintained a similar scholarship with the University of Kentucky for several years. Because that scholarship had been so successful, the NKMS Foundation endeavored to expand its scholarship to the University of Louisville. With the help of its generous supporters, the NKMS Foundation has been able to fund this additional scholarship. The NKMS Foundation is further pleased to announce that Robert Pugh has been chosen as the fi rst recipient of the NKMS Foundation Scholarship at the University of Louisville. For additional information or inquires regarding the NKMS Foundation,
Members of the Foundation Board of Directors. Left to right str Dr. Mark Boyd, Kathy Lape, Robert Pugh (fi rst recipient), Dr. Eric Neils and Dr. Mark Schroer. Not present is Dr. Nancy Swikert. PROVIDED
The LGEC 2018 winners of the Madisonville competition.
please contact Karla Kennedy at 859496-6567 or via email to nkms@nkms.org. Karla Kennedy
“Someday, a Kentuckian may invent the Next Big Thing. I hope every student who participated in this contest is forever inspired to see opportunities around them,” said Lt. Gov. Jenean Hampton. Each fi nalist team will have 10 minutes to pitch their business to a panel of judges and answer questions. Teams will be scored on oral presentation, written business plan and the judges’ deliberations. Finalists will compete for scholarship money to be used at any in-state postsecondary school or program. The top two teams will be given admission into GSE this summer. NKU Board of Regents’ Secretary Normand Desmarais, who is also the CEO & co-founder of Entrep, believes that the Northern Kentucky region, in partnership with NKU, remains steadfast advocates of entrepreneurship and innovation. “Programs such as the Lt. Governor’s Entrepreneurship Challenge provide a platform for talented high school students residing throughout Kentucky to demonstrate their ideas and gain valuable insights,” Desmarais says. View the story here: https:// www.nku.edu/news/2019/april/ lgec.html Northern Kentucky University, Marketing + Communications
PROVIDED
NKU to host Lt. Gov. Entrepreneurship Challenge Finals Northern Kentucky University will host The Lieutenant Governor’s Entrepreneurship Challenge (LGEC) on Friday, April 12 in the Otto Budig Theatre. The Haile/US Bank College of Business’ Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (CIE) won the right to host the prestigious event after a competitive bid with other Kentucky post-secondary schools. This summer, NKU will also host the Governor’s School for Entrepreneurs (GSE), a three-week startup accelerator styled summer program for Kentucky high school students. “The CIE off ers programs and an academic curriculum that ignites a passion for the entrepreneurial mindset,” says Interim Dean Johnna Reeder Kleymeyer. The LGEC is a statewide pitch competition for high school students, with the goal of introducing students to a realistic business environment, highlighting entrepreneurial values, promoting business ownership and encouraging lifelong learning.
30 DAY SALE
269 $ 879
$
OFF PER WINDOW
*
OFF PER PATIO DOOR Offer Ends
4/30!
CALL NOW FOR A FREE IN-HOME CONSULTATION
513-268-1186 RbACincy.com
*
NO
MONEY DOWN INTEREST PAY M E N TS
FOR 12 MONTHS ~
Renewal by Andersen Midwest is independently owned and operated. *Offer expires 4/30/2019. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. $269 off per window, $879 off per patio door, plus 12 months no payments, no interest when you purchase four (4) or more windows and patio doors between 4/1/2019 & 4/30/2019 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.
CE-GCI0162752-07
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ 5B
SPRING SALE! LIMITED TIME ONLY!
BUY 1 - GET 1
40
%
OFF
AND
Fiberglass/Vinyl Windows & Doors
NO 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 for6months 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.
Savings as Beautiful as
HURRY!
Offer Expires 4/30/19
THE WINDOWS.
CALL US TODAY! 513-306-4989
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
Since 1978
40+years & 60,000 Jobs Installed! OVER
Visit our Factory/Showroom at 3625 Hauck Rd. | Cincinnati, OH 45241
CE-GCI0162817-02
top manufacturers of windows in the country.
6B ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
COMMUNITY NEWS
Give Where You Live NKY board members, from left: Nancy Grayson, Sasha Parker-Cochran, Tess Brown, James Pilcher, Phyllis Lynch (front), Robert Mueller and Woody Mueller. PROVIDED
Teams celebrating at Ludimentis 2018. Ths year the competition will be at the Northern Kentucky Convention Center in Covington.
President Ashish Vaidya and Dr. Nita Vaidya pictured with the 2019 Lincoln Award Recipients: (from left) the Zalla Family, Carol Swarts and Bob Griffin.
PROVIDED
SCOTT BESELER, NKU PHOTOGRAPHER
Give Where You Live NKY awards fi rst ‘Speed Philanthropy’ grant
project that has been on our wish list for several years,” said Scheben Care Center Executive Director Lisa West. “Creating a safe outdoor path that is accessible for wheelchairs and individuals who are ambulatory had been just a wish until last night. There are so many deserving non-profi ts in our backyard that work tirelessly for our community- think of what we can accomplish if more join us to Give Where You Live!” Community members can get involved by reaching out to Woody Mueller at givewhereyoulivenky@gmail.com or 859-992-4153, or by visiting www.nkygives.org. Tess Brown
NKU announces 2019 Lincoln Award Honorees
ERLANGER – On a recent Thursday, dozens of strangers and friends alike combined to give $6,000 to a local charity in a process that took less than an hour. The Bill & Betsy Scheben Care Center, which provides care for adults and teens with physical and/or intellectual disabilities from its location in Florence, was the recipient of the fi rst Give Where You Live NKY grant. Give Where You Live NKY is a joint initiative presented by Horizon Community Funds of Northern Kentucky and Mueller Financial, Inc., and its format lends itself to busy community members who are looking for an easy way to give back to nonprofi ts that serve Boone, Campbell, and Kenton counties. Members nominate a nonprofi t of their choice, and three names are randomly selected and briefl y discussed by the group. The members then vote on their favorite of the three organizations, and each member contributes $100 for the grant to the winning organization. All takes place in under an hour, four times a year. The remaining 2019 Give Where You Live NKY meetings will take place on: ❚ Thursday, June 20 from 6-7 p.m. at New Riff Distilling in Newport ❚ Thursday, Sept. 19 from 6-7 p.m. (location TBA) ❚ Thursday, Dec. 12 from 6-7 p.m. at BLDG in Covington “The spirit of giving was on full display for our fi rstround event which was very exciting to see” added Mueller Financial, Inc. Owner Robert Mueller. “We were thrilled to have that level of participation and anticipate membership growing for our future giving events.” The format of Give Where You Live NKY also provides a way to connect funds to nonprofi ts without the need for nonprofi ts to expend fi nancial resources and staff time on fundraising. “Last night gave our Center the opportunity to do a
Last Call Trivia to host 5th annual National Trivia Tournament On Saturday, April 27, Newport-based company Last Call Trivia is hosting the fi fth annual Ludimentis competition. Ludimentis is an invite-only nationwide trivia tournament, where top teams compete for $10,000 in cash prizes. The term “Ludimentis” is a take on the Latin phrase “game of the mind.” This year, the competition will be held at the Northern Kentucky Convention Center in Covington. More than 500 players are expected to attend, with many teams traveling to Cincinnati from around the country. In addition to Cincinnati-based teams, players are traveling from Portland, Louisville, Cleveland, Columbus, Pittsburgh and Boise to compete. Teams earn their Ludimentis bids by collecting high scores at Last Call Trivia shows throughout the country. The highest ranking teams receive an invitation to the tournament. Prizes total $10,000, with $6,000 awarded to the winning team, $3,000 for second place, and $1,000 for third place. The competition begins at 2 p.m. on April 27 and spectators are welcome. Brianna LeCompte
Northern Kentucky University honored Bob Griffi n, Carol Swarts and the Sheila and Marty Zalla Family at NKU’s Lincoln Award Ceremony on March 26. The Lincoln Award was established in 1992 to recognize individuals who exemplify outstanding citizenship, notable achievement and distinguished service. Bob Griffi n was born in 1953 in Northern Kentucky to John L. and Rose Griffi n. He grew up with six brothers and fi ve sisters. Bob attended Northern Kentucky State College from 1971 to 1973 after accepting a scholarship to participate on the fi rst-ever basketball team at NKU, playing for legendary coach Mote Hils. Carol Swarts was born on a farm in the Sand Hills of western Nebraska in 1933, where early education was taught in a one-room country school. With the support of her parents and three brothers, Carol became a physician, earning her B.S. degree in chemistry and medical degree from the University of Nebraska in 1959. She was one of three women in her graduating class. Sheila and Marty Zalla were born and raised in Covington. They married in 1962 and had the fi rst of their 10 children in 1963. The young Zalla family bought a few acres and a farmhouse in the then-wilds of Edgewood, as Marty had always loved farming. Marty also took over as second-generation owner of Building Crafts, Inc. and grew the modest business into a multi-dimensional, multi-million dollar engineering and construction fi rm. John graduated from NKU’s Construction Management Program in 1988 and earned his MBA from NKU in 2006. In addition to being the mother of 10 children, Sheila began taking classes at Thomas More College and transferred to NKU in the early 1970s to pursue a bachelor’s degree in communications. View the story here: https://www.nku.edu/ news/2019/march/lincolnawards.html Northern Kentucky University Marketing + Communications
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Alexandria 1065 Wellington Drive, unit 7: Stephanie Crowley to Mary Richardson; $81,000 11002 Pondswoods Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Katherine Girty and Ryan Windmeyer; $289,500 1307 Osprey Court: The Drees Company to Lisa and Scott Holland; $336,000 25 Orlando Drive: Teresa and Daryl Knauer to Cinnamon and Clell Gabbard III; $218,000 539 Inverness Way: The Drees Company to Carol and Leroy Neltner; $228,500 555 Inveness Way: The Drees Company to Charlotte and Thomas Gross Jr.; $226,000 7291 Rimrock Lane: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Debra and James Sapp; $370,000 7476 Loch Lomond Drive: The Drees Company to Tina and Duncan Draper; $364,000 7482 Loch Lomond Drive: The Drees Company to Sharon and Douglas Schloemer; $306,500 7494 Loch Lamond Drive: The Drees Company to Beth and Stephen Zaugg; $353,000 763 Wigeon Drive: Stephanie and Mark Schneider to Jesse Kelly; $260,000 7823 Arcadia Boulevard: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Kelly and Nathan Rawe; $324,500 7957 Arcadia Boulevard: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Rachel Downing and Eric Combs; $364,000 836 Yorkshire Drive, unit 16-202: Fischer Attatched Homes III, LLC to Constance Huston and Owen Huston; $188,000
Bellevue 121 Anspaugh Ave.: Kelsey and Warren Hehman to Jonathan Howell; $127,000 216 Center St.: Michael Elliott to Jillian Alig ad Walter Petit; $169,500 239 Walnut St.: Lisa and William Piper to Sean Lemmons; $171,500 322 Layfayette Ave.: Karen and David Sibrel to Alisha and Austin Macnamara; $84,000 328 Locust Lane: 4th Street Capital, LLC to Elyse Kelly and Julian Botella; $187,500 841 Rossford Run: Michelle Hummel to Ashleigh Libs; $115,000
California 1096 Siry Road: Cinnamon and Clell Gabbard III to Bethany Fox and Corey Taylor; $165,000 12959 Shaw Goetz Road: Jennifer and Frederick Hiller to Margaret Peabody; $392,500
Cold Spring 16 Andrew Circle: Thomas Rawe to Donna and Kurt Luenberger; $260,000 24 Cedar Point: Laura and Jess Meloche to Eric Sehlhost; $312,500 5409 Winters Lane: Matthew Lloyd to Macus Lancaster; $173,000
Dayton 111 5th Ave.: Lisa and Dan Orem and Andrea and Darrin Surrey to Sarah Shepherd and John Adams; $147,000 136 4th Ave.: Diane Simon to Breayantey Storms; $76,000 625 4th Ave.: Susan and Daniel Piccirillo to Jessica Lovins; $62,000
Fort Thomas 15 Margaret Lane: Jeanne and Brian Hills to Rachel Seibert and Rickie Boyer; $187,500 246 Clover Ridge Ave.: Karen Vennefron to Amy and Keven Sterrett; $205,000
Highland Heights 21 Highland Meadows Circle, unit 4: Lena and Conor Dodd to Sabrina Foust; $97,500 31 Highland Meadows Circle, unit 4: James Sweigart Jr. to Sue Payne; $92,500 5164 Gary Lane: Tracy and Ronald Songer to Heather Allen and Benjamin Eastman; $175,000
Newport 1118 Park Ave.: Justine and Michael Chilell II to Richard Neltner; $505,000 551 E. 4th St.: Linette Bollinger to Margaret and Tom King; $344,000 559 E. 4th St.: 559 East Fourth, LLC to Domonic Hopson; $275,000 56 Amelia St.: Tony Cecil to Brent Snowden; $120,500
802 Maple Ave.: DDD Restoration, LLC to John Garrison; $425,000 830 Park Ave.: Ruslan and Michael Bedrick to Winter Myers; $320,000
Silver Grove 5266 Mary Ingles Highway: James Vogel to Jason Hornsby; $118,000
Southgate 74 View Terrace Drive, unit 9: Anastasia and Chase Siemer to Jessica Bolton and Bran Magweta; $73,000
Wilder 480 Lakeview Drive, unit 312: Lisa and Scott Holland to Paula Browder; $78,000 502 Licking Pike: Abe Spicer to Lia and Andy Mlner; $119,000
PUZZLE ANSWERS P A S S A U T O S C A N T R Y L I T P O O G N U A S T O S P M I L E S H O N N E W B A L L C R Y A N S O C K P R A Y A D S S A I L M I N E S N O O
R U S H M A T A N E R S U N P U T T A B T L E E K R D A A O N Y U S E R A A S S A S T S B O U T O N F A F T E D E B A T O N S A O A V K R E
D I S F U O S P E S M L O E D D I S T E T B R A S T I L E N S E
S N A R L S
H A M L E T
C A T C H O N
S N O C O N E
A T E O U T
G E N R E S
A R P W A Y E O L D E A E P M E R S C O N M P A R O K A S E Z H I O R T I S I L O S T A N A R G L E R W E E O R S I M B T A U E N G
Z E S T A A M Y A C E T S K E T O
I P P O T H A N T O R Y T E X L O N E A N T S N E S A N S U R E L I E C T E D L A S S O N Y S E R O N E F R O S O S A W L C I L E E N E D R G E D
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ 7B
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
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. CE-GCI0159019-03
8B ❚ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ANSWERS ON PAGE 6B
No. 0407 HELP!
1
BY PETER A. COLLINS / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ Peter A. Collins is the chairman of the math department at Huron High School, in Ann Arbor, Mich., where he has been teaching for 39 years. He has been creating crosswords for The Times since 2006. This is his 108th. When he can, Peter likes to incorporate some of the black squares into his puzzle themes, as he ingeniously does here. – W.S.
59 Peel place
AC R O S S
1 It might end up in a sack
61 Out at a library, say
63 “Yeah, why not” 9 E neighbor 64 Cyrus who sang the 2013 No. 1 hit 15 Nada “Wrecking Ball” 20 Robots 66 Once did 21 “Not exactly, but close 67 States, informally …” 68 Be prone 69 Radiated 70 Leafy salad ingredient 72 Didn’t delay
22 Filmmaker Coen 23 Checkout devices 24 Tired tale 26 Seriously annoy 27 Roll out, as a flag
104 Appealed to a higher 9 State of abandonment authority? 10 Traffic troubles 107 Religious time in 11 Where the phrase “To spring thine own self be 109 Critical message true” comes from that’s a hint to the 12 What shocked people six longest entries in stand in this puzzle 13 Raja ____, Indian 110 Circular author of “The components? Serpent and the 111 Cave dweller Rope” 113 Caruso and Pavarotti 14 Ernie ____, Pulitzerwinning journalist of 114 It makes for a boring W.W. II job
74 Inexperienced
115 1973 Beach Boys 75 Fool song 76 Something frequently 119 “Three Stooges” 31 Exciting, in modern found in pink lipstick insult lingo 77 Pupil’s location 123 Sal of “Rebel Without 32 Rock, maybe 78 Stabilizes with a a Cause” 36 Danson’s “Cheers” heavy load 124 Course of action role 81 Lump in the throat 125 Stretched tight 38 End of some hybrid 82 Geologic period 126 Caribbean game fish dog breed names 83 Get upset over 127 Changes back to 39 N.Y.C. dance company 84 Lincoln-to-Madison 0000 dir. 40 Hounds 128 Swollen 42 Tidbits for aardvarks 85 Sunrise direction, in Stuttgart 43 Bearded beast DOWN 87 River in a 1914 battle 44 They go with potatoes 1 Ballet step 90 Skim in soup 2 They have lots for sale 92 Not a science, but 46 Sting operator 3 Not exactly hit the ____ 49 Regarding ground running 94 & 95 What often 51 Vitamin stat seems to disappear 4 PlayStation company 52 Hosts, in brief 5 L.B.J. follower in a dryer 29 Stuff in a muffin, say? 30 Neighbor of Okla.
RELEASE DATE: 4/14/2019
55 Italian cheese Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
15 Keebler cracker brand 16 Member of TV’s Addams Family 17 Something scientists make light of?
2
3
4
5
24 26
27
31
32
38
39
43
44
49 59 64
11
12
53
54
83
115
72
82
99
85
86
89
100
73
87 93
101
94
102
103
108
112
109
113 117
88
68
81
107
116
56
92
98
111
58
48
77
91
110
47
76
84
106
57
42
71
80
97
19
37
67
90
18
63
75
96
36
55
62
70
79
35
46 52
17
30
41
66
74
16
29 34
61
15
25
28
51 60
14
22
45
65
78
13
40
69
95
10
33
50
25 Obstacle for a fish
32 Bro
9
23
19 Some cameo stones
31 Tour grp.
8
21
105
28 Dandies
7
20
104
18 Rear
6
114
118
119
123
124
125
126
127
128
120
121
122
33 Cab alternative 34 Common Market org. 35 Starting point in logic 37 Swimmers’ assignments 41 Slippery vendor 45 The Wildcats of the N.C.A.A. 47 Jason with the 2008 hit “I’m Yours”
98 N.C. military installation
6 Home of the Burj Khalifa: Abbr.
102 “____ Trois Mousquetaires”
7 Showed ’em what we’ve got
50 Store window sign
103 Big do
8 “It ____ hit me yet”
53 Take root
48 Poet Lowell 52 Dress seller
75 “Unto us ____ is given” 56 1978 Dire Straits hit 79 Like a string bean 57 The Ram 80 Blood-typing letters 58 Doesn’t just want 86 Word with bay or 60 Word said in passing? family 62 Headed up 88 Course registrant 64 “Morning Joe” airer 89 Cars that disappeared during the 65 Rumor starter Depression 71 Timecard abbr. 91 “Don’t know yet,” on a 72 Prized pitcher schedule 73 Please too much 92 Prefix with industry 54 Sweet summer treat
93 Bit of shaming
106 Skilled judoist
95 Involuntary actions
108 Draft
96 Make official
112 Nicholas II was the last one
97 House of cards? 99 “Wheel of Fortune” sextet
114 Big name in laptops
100 Eschewed home cooking
117 “____, Imperator!”
101 Mystery and romance, for two
120 Irk
105 Download for a tablet
122 Baseball Hall-ofFamer Roush
116 The Lion 118 “-y” pluralizer 121 W.W. II arena: Abbr.
Save Now On Home Security Monitored by ADT ® the #1 home security company in the U.S.
FREE
ADT® 24/7 Monitored Home Security
DOORBELL CAMERA When you upgrade to ADT Pulse® + Video
24/7 monitoring provides peace of mind Yard sign and window decals help deter crime Quickly connect to fire and emergency response May qualify for a homeowners insurance discount www.protection4yourhome.com
FREE HOME SECURITY SYSTEM FREE SECURITY SYSTEM
850
$
VALUE *
GIFT CARD FREE VISA From Protect Your Home
APP FREE MOBILE When you upgrade to ADT Pulse®, you can
15 PRE-WIRED DOOR/ FREE WINDOW SENSORS
FREE DOORBELL CAMERA
®
With $99 installation and purchase of 36 mo. monitoring contract. Touchscreen pictured requires additional fees. Termination fee applies. New customers only. See all offer details below.
easily arm and disarm your system from virtually anywhere.
—$100 Value
—$645 VALUE!
When you upgrade to ADT Pulse® + Video
—$229 VALUE!
513-760-6444 WE’RE AVAILABLE 24/7—CALL TODAY! Reply by 4/30/19
ACCREDITED BUSINESS ®
A+
EQUIPMENT: Equipment shown may require additional fees. GIFT CARD: $100 Visa Gift Card fulfilled by Protect Your Home through third-party provider, Mpell, upon installation of a security system. Shipping and Handling Fee applies. SENSORS: Up to 15 sensors free for pre-wired homes or up to 7 wireless sensors free. No substitutions allowed. Labor charges may apply. BASIC SYSTEM: $99 Parts and Install. 36-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $27.99 per month ($1,007.64). 24-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $27.99 per month ($671.76) for California. Offer applies to homeowners only. Basic system requires landline phone. Offer valid for new ADT Authorized Premier Provider customers only and not on purchases from ADT LLC. Cannot be combined with any other offer. The $27.99 Offer does not include Quality Service Plan (QSP), ADT’s Extended Limited Warranty. ADT Pulse: ADT Pulse Interactive Solutions Services (“ADT Pulse”), which help you manage your home environment and family lifestyle, require the purchase and/or activation of an ADT alarm system with monitored burglary service and a compatible computer, cell phone or PDA with Internet and email access. These ADT Pulse services do not cover the operation or maintenance of any household equipment/systems that are connected to the ADT Pulse equipment. All ADT Pulse services are not available with the various levels of ADT Pulse. All ADT Pulse services may not be available in all geographic areas. You may be required to pay additional charges to purchase equipment required to utilize the ADT Pulse features you desire. ADT PULSE VIDEO: ADT Pulse Video installation starts at $399. 36-month monitoring contract required from ADT Pulse Video: $58.99 per month, ($2,123.64), including Quality Service Plan (QSP). GENERAL: For all offers, the form of payment must be by credit card or electronic charge to your checking or savings account, satisfactory credit history is required and termination fee applies. Certain packages require approved landline phone. Local permit fees may be required. Certain restrictions may apply. Additional monitoring fees required for some services. For example, Burglary, Fire, Carbon Monoxide and Emergency Alert monitoring requires purchase and/or activation of an ADT security system with monitored Burglary, Fire, Carbon Monoxide and Emergency Alert devices and are an additional charge. Additional equipment may be purchased for an additional charge. Additional charges may apply in areas that require guard response service for municipal alarm verification. Prices subject to change. Prices may vary by market. Some insurance companies offer discounts on Homeowner’s Insurance. Please consult your insurance company. Photos are for illustrative purposes only and may not reflect the exact product/service actually provided. Licenses: AL-19-001104, AZ-ROC217517, AR-2008-0014, CA-ACO6320, CT-ELC.0193944-L5, FL-EC13003427, DC-EMS902653, GA-LVA205395, ID-ELE-SC-39312, IL-127.001042, KY-City of Louisville: 483, LA-F1082, LA-F1914, LA-F1915, 225-960-6301, ME-LM50017382, MD-107-1626, MA-1355C, MI-3601205773, MN-TS01807, MO: St. Louis County 89935, MS-15007958, MT-247, NV-68518, NJ Burglar Alarm Lic. # NJ-34BF00021800, NM-353366, NY-Licensed by the N.Y.S. Dept. of State UID#12000317691, #12000286451, NC-1622-CSA, OH-53891446, OK-1048, OR-170997, Pennsylvania Home Improvement Contractor Registration Number: PA022999, RI-3582, TN-1520, TX-B13734, ACR-3492, UT-6422596-6501, VT-ES-2382, VA-115120, WA-602588694/PROTEYH934RS, WI: Milwaukee PAS-0002886, WV-042433. 3750 Priority Way South Dr. Indianapolis, IN 46240 ©2018 DEFENDERS, Inc. dba Protect Your Home DF-GT-OH-CI-D2799 CE-GCI0167754-06 *
Classifieds
APRIL 11, 2019 μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 1C
cincinnati.com
Homes for Sale-Ohio
JOBS
HOMES
PETS & STUFF
RIDES
To place your ad visit: cincinnati.com/classifieds or search: classifieds
Homes for Sale-Ohio
FIREFIGHTER/PARAMEDIC
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.
Community
Rentals
Announce
great places to live...
announcements, novena... Special Notices-Clas
Cincinnati Family & Senior Low Income Apts. Section 8. 1-3BR. 513-929-2402 Equal Opportunity Housing Cincinnati Low Income, Section 8 Apartments. Affordable Housing, Rent Based on Income. 2-3BR. Call 513-929-2402. Ebcon Inc. Mgt. Equal Opportunity Housing
FT. THOMAS. 1 & 2 BDRM APTS & 1 BDRM TOWNHOMES 859-441-3158 MT. LOOKOUT 1 & 2 BDRM Grandin Bridge Apartments 513-871-6419
Destin, FL, Gulf front, 2BR, Condo Rentals, in Beautiful Destin, Local owner. 513-528-9800 Office., 513-752-1735 H
Vizsla Puppies, gentle, affectionate breed, loves people, great family pet, $700 cash, vet checked, 1st shots & wormed, ready 4/27. call/text 513-405-9985
Yorkie CKC Female $500 Males $400 parents 7lbs and 3lbs, vet checked, shots, wormed, 513-525-3570
Adopt Me
Kentucky Commission on Human Rights 800-292-5566 H.O.M.E. (Housing Opportunities Made Equal) 513-721-4663
Real Estate
The City of Reading, Ohio is accepting applications for full-time FIREFIGHTER/ PARAMEDIC. Application, official job notice and requirements are available at www.readingohio.org Completed applications must be submitted, in person, at the City General Offices, 1000 Market Street, M-F 9am-5pm. Application deadline is May 7, 2019 at 4pm . Reading is an EOE.
Paying Top Dollar for Dusty Old Bourbon, Whiskey and Rum Collections!, Please email me at bondedfifth@g mail.com with what you have. ,
CASKETS $300 & BRASS URNS $75 Solid Cherry & Oak Wood only $500 - All funeral homes 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 CEMETERY LOTS FOR SALE Erlanger, KY. 2 Lots at Forest Lawn Cemetery. Garden Section, $1,950 for Both (513) 248-9688
Business
Commercial
HANDY MAN SERVICE & HAULING! 513-429-1091
opportunites, lease, Invest...
BEAUTY/NAIL SALON ONGOING BUSINESS, Fully Equipped, N.KY Upscale Area. Richwood KY. For Lease. 859-760-0441
WE SERVICE ALL APPLIANCES Also Selling Washers & Dryers w/ 1 year warranty. 513429-1091
Assorted
BUYING 35mm Photo Slides primarily
Stuff
railroad & transportation
related
1940’s- 1970’s, Comic Books 1940’s -
all kinds of things...
present, 1920’s -1950’s Dectective & Pin-
Pets find a new friend...
Automotive
Rides
ProV 17 Basstracker Hummingbird side & down scan sonar with GPS. Lowrance 522 sonar & GPS, On board charger, Minnkota Terrova remote controlled trolling motor, & rachet straps Kept inside nearly 100% Asking $5,500.00 Call Jim at 859-493-0234
05 Toyota Corolla LE, 4DR, Exc. Cond, Auto, Call: 859-525-6363
best deal for you... Buying All Vehicles Not Just Junk up $3000 Fair cash price, quick pickup. 513-662-4955
AKC Black Silver Factored Labrador Pups for Sale! $400 UTD on shots. Text: (270)250-3865 www.grandviewlabradors.com
CASH for junk cars, trucks & vans. Free pick up. Call Jim or Roy anytime 859-866-2909 or 859-991-5176
Golden Retriever Pups,1st shots/dewormed, vet checked, $900. pics @ companionbreeders. blogspot.com 859-816-8533 Havanese, Yorkies, YorkiePoos, Beagle, Shelties. Shots, Wormed & Vet Checked. Blanchester, OH. 937-725-9641
We buy junk cars and trucks cash on the spot û†û 513-720-7982 û†û
Post your rental. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
2013 Honda Civic EX, black, 41,050 mi. 859-415-0012
1 BUYER of OLD CARS CLASSIC, ANTIQUE ’30-40-50-60-70s, Running or not. 513-403-7386 LOOKING TO BUY an old foreign project car. In any condition, Running or not. Porsche, Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce, Ferrari & much more! Fast and easy transaction. Cash on the spot. If you have any of these or any other old foreign cars sitting around please call: û 703-832-2202 û
Pembrooke Welsh Corgi AKC Puppies dewormed, UTD shots, very healthy adorable puppies. See at puppyfind.com under Miller Labs Irvington KY. 502-264-3940
up Pulp Magazines, 513-325-4913
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
NEW 3BR 2BA Bracken County: $750/mo + Dep., NO Pets. Text: 513-236-9596 Can send pics.
Real Estate
Homes
starting fresh...
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 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 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. 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
BURLINGTON ANTIQUE SHOW First Show of Season Boone County Fairgrounds Burlington, KY Sunday, April 14 -----------8am-3pm $4.00/Adult Early Buying 6am-8am $6/Adult Rain or Shine 513-922-6847 burlingtonantiqueshow.com
General Auctions AUCTION 506 Market St. Felicity, Oh. 45120 Sun. April 14th 10:00 39 Guns- Ammo- 20+ Pocket Knives Antiques & Collectables Many Items From Dec. Person Advertising- Por. Mobile Oil Sign Por. Cornelius Farm Sign - Old Tonic Sign & Bottles - Coco Cola Crate & Bottles - Thermometers & Other Items - Kling Cherry BR Suit French Carved Chair - 2 Wal. Vic. Chairs - Wal. Washstand & Dressers -Trunk Floor Lamp - 2 Sets of Old China - H.P. China - Roseville Sterling Silver - Cut & Milk Glass Avondale Dairy Crock- Linins Costume Jewelry & More Household Items - Maple D.R. Suite - Patio Furniture & More! Tools- Table Saw - Mulcher MowerHusky Lawn Spreader - Lawn & Garden Tools - Fishing Supplies New 4 Wheelers & Scooters 4000 Watt Generators New Building Supplies 2 Sets of Kitchen Cabinets2,000+ Sq. Ft. of Hardwood Flooring, Buy What you Need, Pick Up Later - All Sold As Is. Call or See Web for List & Terms Towler’s Auction Service Inc. Randy Myers Auctioneer 513-315-4360 Towlersauctioninc.com
WALTON 2 acre Residential Lots, (Homes Only), 2 mi. South of Walton. Price Reduced, $52-$58K 859-802-8058
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!
Garage & Yard Sale VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifieds TO PLACE YOUR AD
Great Buys
Garage Sales neighborly deals...
I buy pre-1970’s home contents: toys, jewelry, tools, music, art, sewing, books, furniture, etc. Call: 513-473-5518 I BUY STEREO SPEAKERS, PRE AMPS, AMPS, REEL TO REEL TURNTABLE, RECORDS, INSTRUMENTS, ETC (513) 473-5518 New Haven School Clothing Old T’s, letter sweart/jackets, etc. Jay 859-835-8125
WAR RELICS US, German, Japanese Uniforms, Helmets, Guns, Swords, Medals Etc, Paying Top Dollar Call 513-309-1347
CHECK OUT CLASSIFIED online at cincinnati.com
General Auctions
ESTATE AUCTION SATURDAY
2.3 Acres, Beautiful Wooded setting on Kincaid Lake, 900 ft road frontage w/ 100 ft water frontage-Best Property of 146 acre development, other lots available, 859-356-3876
BUYING-RECORD ALBUMS & CDs, METAL, JAZZ, BLUES, ROCK, RAP, INDIE, R&B & REGGAE. 513-683-6985
APRIL 13, 2019
9:30 AM
Located at 200 MILL STREET WILLIAMSTOWN KY. 41097 FROM I-75 SOUTH TO EXIT 156 GO LEFT [EAST] TO RED LIGHT GO RIGHT TO MILL STREET ON LEFT AUCTION ON RIGHT. The Executors of Sylvia (Kyle) Conrad has contracted us to auction her household items. This is a partial list many many more items. Smoke stand, lamp table, Brothers sewing machine, rocking chair, coat tree, couch, lots of games, Health Rider tread mill, gun cabinet, baby bed, chester drawers, dresser, metal storage shelves, file cabinet, corner cabinet, kitchen table, 8 chairs, hutch, Panasonic microwave, G/E ref, misc., dishes, yard tools, misc tools, 2 wheel dolly stool, motorcycle windshield, Maytag washer and dryer, 1980 dresser, chester drawers, anitque chair, bedroom suit, misc table, misc chairs, antique wardrobe, card table and chairs, small kitchen table, 4 chairs. Terms are cash or check with proper ID. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS 6% SALES TAX CHARGE OR IF YOU ARE A DEALER BRING COPY OF TAX I.D. NUMBER
KANNADY & MOORE AUCTION SERVICE LLC Morningview & Williamstown, KY AUCTIONEERS Randy Moore Steve Kannady 859-393-5332 859-991-8494 Also check out pictures on auctionzip.com ID # 1411
ESTATE SALE 18 Meadow Ln Sat., April 13 @ 8am-4pm Cash Only! Furniture, Appliances, Antiques, Dishes, Toys, Pool Table, & Much Much More!!
Garage Sales
3701 Bristol Ct. Erlanger. Woodlyn Hills Subdivision. Fri Sept 14th and Sat Sept 15th 8am-1pm. Furniture, clothes and misc. Rain Date: Sun., April 14th Burlington 2616 Inez Ct. Sat: the 13th 9a-3p. Lawn mowers, tools, etc
Garage Sales
Garage Sales
Burlington Inside Moving Sale SATURDAY 8:30-3. Conrad to Derby Farms. Enter on Strike the Gold, Left to 2490 Venetian Way.
Community Yard Sale Chardonnay-Cold Spring, off of Pooles Creek Road. April 19 & 20, 8a-2p.
Cincinnati, Huge Rummage Sale, 681 Mt Moriah Dr, Thur: 9-6, Fri: 9-6, Sat: 9-2, Mt Moriah United Methodist Women will sponsor the Annual Rummage Sale: Fantastic bargains on: Children and infant clothing and shoes, Household items, Knick-knacks, Women and men clothing and shoes, Furniture, Baby gear, Sporting equipment, Toys, games, books, videos, Small and large appliances, Seasonal items and much, much more. Lots of items for everyone!, Dir: Off Beechmont/Ohio Pike Near Lowes
FINNEYTOWN -CHURCH RUMMAGE SALE, Sat April 13th, 9am-1pm Northern Hills Christian Church 9470 Winton Rd. Bake sale & drinks available.Supporting various mission teams
Florence: Huge Sale Fri and Sat 4/12 and 4/13 8am-1pm. Star Wars and Sports collectibles, freezer, TV, furniture, toys, clothes, kitchen, household, and lots of misc. 1830 Chesney Dr
Moving Sale Garage And Basement Tools furniture, dishes, household items. April 12th 8am-3pm and April 13th 8am-3pm 10927 APPALOOSA DR Walton
Service Directory
CALL: 877-513-7355 TO PLACE YOUR AD
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
ALL DONE
FREE ESTIMATES & INSURED
• Concrete Work & Repair • Truckpointing Brick & Stone • Pressure Washing Exterior & Chimney Repair • Gutters & Complete Gutter Maintenance • Roof & Roof Repairs • Fence & Fence Repairs • Deck & Deck Repairs **Additional Exterior Services Provided**
Call Today for your Quote
859-814-1778
NORTHERN KENTUCKY ROOFING
All Types of Roofing, Shingles and Metal, Roof Repairs, Roof Leaks Licensed and Insured
859-445-3921
NKyHomeRepair.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 ±
2C μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ APRIL 11, 2019
LOUISVILLE SPRING CLASSIC COLLECTOR CAR AUCTION SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 2019 Now accepting quality consignments. To be held at Clark Cty Auto Auction 1000 Auction Ln Jeffersonville, IN 47130 For Buy/Sell Info. - Call George Eber 615-496-2277
03 Harley Davidson Road King Classic Anniversary model, Loaded, 1 owner, like new condition,Purchased new, too old to ride, Call 859-341-0511
Nissan 2006 Quest Van SE 3.5 V6. Only 60K mi. Exc Cond., 859-525-6363 Nissan 2006 Quest Van SE 3.5 V6. Only 60K mi. Exc Cond., 859-525-6363 $ ALL VINTAGE MOTORCYCLES WANTED PRE-1980 ANY SHAPE CASH PAID $ ALL MAKES & MODELS CALL 845-389-3239 or cyclesndmore10@gmail.com
Post jobs. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
Nissan 2006 Quest Van SE 3.5 V6. Only 60K mi. Exc Cond., 859-525-6363
Your search ends here...
OUR NEW ROBOTS WON’T TAKE JOBS.
THEY’LL FIND YOU THE RIGHT ONES.
LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given by the Campbell County Fiscal Court that a public hearing will be held on Wednesday, April 17, 2019 at 5:30 PM. in the Campbell County Fiscal Court Chambers located at 1098 Monmouth Street, Newport, KY. THE PURPOSE OF THE HEARING IS TO OBTAIN COMMENTS AND SUGGESTIONS FROM THE PUBLIC PERTAINING TO THE COUNTY’S RECREATIONAL TRAILS PROGRAM GRANT APPLICATION FOR FUNDS TO RESURFACE A PORTION OF THE WALKING TRAILS AT AJ JOLLY PARK. All interested parties are invited to be present to hear or give testimony relating to the above referenced grant. Further information concerning this matter is available for public inspection at the Campbell County Administrative Offices (859-5473838) in Suite 301 at 1098 Monmouth Street, Newport, KY from 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM Monday-Friday. The Campbell County Fiscal Court will make every reasonable accommodation to assist qualified disabled persons in obtaining access to available services or in attending Fiscal Court activities. If there is a need for the Fiscal Court to be aware of a specific disability, you are encouraged to contact the Fiscal Court at 859.292.3838 or TTD/TTY at 1.800.545.1833 (ext. 947) so that suitable arrangements can be considered prior to the delivery of the service or date of the meeting.
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY CAMPBELL COUNTY FISCAL COURT CAMPBELL COUNTY, KENTUCKY Barretts Investments 1, LLC, whose mailing address is 9406 Alexandria Pike, Alexandria, Kentucky, 41001, hereby declares intention to apply for a Campbell County, Kentucky, Permit to Operate a Place of Entertainment. The premises to be issued the Permit is located at 9406 Alexandria Pike, Alexandria, Kentucky 41001, doing business as Barrett’s Pour House 1. Any person, association, corporation, or body politic may protest the granting of the permit by writing to the Campbell County Judge/Executive Honorable Steve Pendery at 1098 Monmouth Street, Newport, Kentucky 41071, on or before consideration of the permit at a public hearing to be held Wednesday, April 17, 2019 at 5:30 p.m., at the Campbell County Administration Building, 1098 Monmouth Street, Newport, Kentucky. I, Paula Spicer, Clerk of the Campbell County Fiscal Court, hereby certify that this notice was prepared by me at the direction of the Campbell County Fiscal Court. Paula K. Spicer Fiscal Court Clerk CAM,APR11,’19#3485055
Post your rental. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
Kim Serra Assistant County Administrator CAM,Apr11,’19# 3486613
LEGAL NOTICE The Campbell County Fiscal Court, at a regular meeting of the court on Wednesday, April 3, 2019 at 7:00 p.m., at the Campbell County Courthouse, 8352 East Main Street, Alexandria, Kentucky, adopted the following ordinance upon the second reading, said ordinance having been read by title and summary given for the first time at the March 20, 2019 regular meeting of the Court. CAMPBELL COUNTY FISCAL COURT CAMPBELL COUNTY, KENTUCKY ORDINANCE O-03-19 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CAMPBELL COUNTY FISCAL COURT ENACTING AND ADOPTING THE 2019 S-38 SUPPLEMENT TO THE CODE OF ORDINANCES OF THE COUNTY OF CAMPBELL, KENTUCKY (JULY 1, 2019 THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2018) The full text of Ordinance O03-19 will be on file in the Office of the County Clerk, Newport, Kentucky and is on file in the Office of the Fiscal Court Clerk, Newport, Kentucky, and same is available for inspection and use by the public during regular business hours. I, Paula K. Spicer, Clerk of the Campbell County Fiscal Court, hereby certify that this summary was prepared by me at the direction of the Campbell County Fiscal Court and that said summary is a true and accurate summary of the contents of Ordinance O-03-19. Paula K. Spicer Fiscal Court Clerk CAM,APR11,’19#3484369
FROM
"NO FROMFOOD ALLOWED."
""HOW NOFOODALLOWED. OLD ARE THESE" FRIES?" TO
You know us for shopping, and now Cars.com is the site for the entire life of your car. So for every turn, turn to Cars.com.
TO
"HOWOLDARETHESEFRIES?"
APRIL 11, 2019 μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 3C
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN BY PROPER ORDER OF THE CAMPBELL DISTRICT COURT THAT THE FOLLOWING WERE APPOINTED FIDUCIARIES OF THE ESTATES LISTED BELOW FOR THE MONTH. ALL PERSONS HAVING A CLAIM AGAINST THE ESTATE SHALL PRESENT THEM VERIFIED ACCORDING TO THE LAW TO THE FOLLOWING FIDUCIARIES NO LATER THAN SIX MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF OPENING. DECEASED FIDUCIARY ATTORNEY DECEASED FIDUCIARY ATTORNEY BENTON THOMAS LEWIS DARREN M. KUNTZ N/A EVA HALL CHESTER HALL N/A 3717 RAWSON FARM LN. CINCINNATI, OH 45220 1126 LIBERTY ST. NEWPORT, KY 41071 CHARLES C. NELSON, JR. CYNTHIA A. NELSON DARLENE M. ROGERS SHIRLEY M. LITMER KAREN LITMER RICHARD G. JOHNSON 102 PUFFIN CT. 880 ALEXANDRIA PIKE 35 DAISY LN. 50 N. FT. THOMAS AVE. GEORGETOWN, KY 40324 STE. 104 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 BONNIE RIXSON 124 BRENTWOOD PL. LISA STEVENS MARY KAY DONAHUE JOHN HAYDEN FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 1612 COTTASSAT DR. 505 YORK ST. JEAN SCHULTZ CONNIE HOLDEN ROBERT E. BATHALTER CINCINNATI, OH 45255 NEWPORT, KY 41071 11600 CRESTVIEW LN. P.O. BOX 92 GLENN JOSEPH BICHLMEIR CONNIE RUTH BICHLMEIR J. ROBERT JENNINGS ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 34 BURNET RIDGE 3 WHISPERING WOODS LN. JACK ALBERT YOUTSEY CATHY HALLORAN DAVID F. FESSLER FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 136 RIDGE HILL DR. 14 N. GRAND AVE. LAWANDA CHERYL VIRES RAE JEAN BEIBER JOHN HAYDEN HIGHLAND HEIGHTS, KY 41076 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 4980 FOUNDERS LN. 505 YORK ST. CHERYL L. HARDIN 850 LINCOLN RD. INDEPENDENCE, KY 41051 NEWPORT, KY 41071 BELLEVUE, KY 41073 LOUIS ANTHONY WIEDEMAN DAVID WIEDEMAN ROBERT E. BLAU JACK D. YOUTSEY 848 LINCOLN RD. 779 ELIZABETH DR. 3699 ALEXANDRIA PIKE BELLEVUE, KY 41073 FLORENCE, KY 41042 COLD SPRING, KY 41076 DORA LOUISE CAYWOOD DELLA BURCHFIELD PATRICK J. WALSH JAMES SCOTT RAWLINGS DONNA J. RAWLINGS EDWARD J. RUDD 2415 HICKORYWOOD CT. 319 YORK ST. 636 MADDOX RD. P.O. BOX 25 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 NEWPORT, KY 41071 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 BROOKSVILLE, KY 41004 DIANA F. SIGMON 2415 HICKORYWOOD CT. JOANN CENTNER KATHERINE LEWIS PHILLIP E. KING ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 10624 TAYLOR MILL RD. 3612 CAROLINE ST. AARON BLACKBURN KAYLA BLACKBURN MATTHEW L. DARPEL INDEPENDENCE, KKY 41051 LATONIA, KY 41015 158 OHIO AVE. 507 CENTRE VIEW BLVD. ELIZABETH ANN BECKER JOHN E. BECKER MICHAEL W. FEDERLE FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 CRESTVIEW HILLS, KY 41017 925 LOCUST LN. 4 W. 4TH ST., STE. 400 JULIA M. NEGICH MICHAEL G. NEGICH ASHLEY MEIER BARLOW CINCINNATI, OH 45245 NEWPORT, KY 41071 5968 QUARTZ VALLEY 2221 MEMORIAL PKWY. AMBER HOUNSHELL EDDIE HOUNSHELL, JR. DAVID F. FESSLER COLD SPRING, KY 41076 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 334 BROOKWOOD DR. 14 N. GRAND AVE. ALBERT F. SCHACK RICHIE EMERSON ROBERT E. BATHALTER ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 345 FLOUR CREEK RD. P.O. BOX 92 JOYCE L. MURRAY MICHAEL A. MURRAY DAVID F. FESSLER BUTLER, KY 41006 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 24 HARRISON AVE. 14 N. GRAND AVE. HELEN EMERSON 345 FLOUR CREEK RD. BELLEVUE, KY 41073 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 BUTLER, KY 41006 HOLLY L. BUCHANAN 11 RIDGETRAIL CT. CORRINE G. DARNELL LINDA NIEWAHNER ASHLEY MEIER BARLOW WILDER, KY 41076 83 AZALEA TERRACE 2221 MEMORIAL PKWY. JACK I. MURRAY MICHAEL A. MURRAY DAVID F. FESSLER FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 24 HARRISON AVE. 14 N. GRAND AVE. PATRICK J. FAY ANGELA FAY J. DAVID BENDER BELLEVUE, KY 41073 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 24 TRAPP COURT P.O. BOX 75346 HOLLY L. BUCHANAN 11 RIDGETRAIL CT. ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 WILDER, KY 41076 MARION S. KENKEL KENNETH R. KENKEL N/A MARK MANN, JR. SHANNON MANN RICHARD G. JOHNSON 10747 KIMBERLY DR. UNION, KY 41091 4 SPRINGWOOD DR. 50 N. FT. THOMAS AVE. DANIEL R. CONNER MARY CONNER BALL ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 N/A 207 DAYTON AVE. RONALD VICKERS KIM CLOYD TRACY A. SMITH DAYTON, KY 41074 9889 CEDAR COVE LN. 421 MADISON AVE. JAMES SWANNER NORMA SWANNER PATRICK J. MONOHAN ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 COVINGTON, KY 41011 20 OVERLOOK CIRCLE 7711 EWING BLVD. HELEN HAYES CAROLYN HAYES JANN SEIDENFADEN WILDER, KY 41076 STE. 100 138 PARK RD. 122 N. FT. THOMAS AVE. FLORENCE, KY 41042 FT. MITCHELL, KY 41011 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 DOLORES M. KIERNAN MICHAEL R. KIERNAN T. LAWRENCE HICKS ARTHUR COUSINS AMANDA COUSINS JON ALIG 115 REGENCY CT. 130 DUDLEY RD. 609 5TH AVE. 415 LICKING PIKE HIGHLAND HEIGHTS, KY 41076 STE. 200 DAYTON, KY 41074 WILDER, KY 41071 EDGEWOOD, KY 41017 DEMPSEY JASON MERIDA JOHN MERIDA ADAM HILL CARRIE E. WILSON DEBRA M. BECKER JAMES W. MORGAN 54 MARY INGLES HWY. 319 YORK ST. 886 ROSEWOOD DR. 421 MADISON AVE. DAYTON, KY 41074 NEWPORT, KY 41071 VILLA HILLS, KY 41017 COVINGTON, KY 41011 HELEN RAINS KAY SHERMAN COBB HARRY J. RUST CHARLOTTE M. ALEXANDER MICHAEL P. ALEXANDER EDWARD J. BUECHEL 9927 BARRS BRANCH RD. P.O. BOX 312 1003 BENWICK RD. 182 BARNWOOD DR. ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 HENDERSONVILLE, TN 37075EDGEWOOD, KY 41017 BILLY PAUL COBB 9927 BARRS BRANCH RD. NORMA JEAN GRAY MELISA BUECHEL EDWARD J. BUECHEL ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 2643 CASTLE COURT 182 BARNWOOD DR. HOWARD W. WENDLING HAL M. WENDLING JOHN E. LANGE, III BURLINGTON, KY 41005 EDGEWOOD, KY 41017 76 BARRETT DR. 4 W. 4TH ST., STE. 400 BARRY W. ROBERTS MOLLY M. GADD RICHARD G. JOHNSON FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 NEWPORT, KY 41071 10 SUNSET AVE. 50 N. FT. THOMAS AVE. STELLA M. ZINK LINDA POTTER JANN SEIDENFADEN FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 546 YATZ DR. 122 N. FT. THOMAS AVE. MARY JANE SCHACK MICHAEL W. SCHACK HARRY J. RUST EDGEWOOD, KY 41017 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 12909 REIS LANE P.O. BOX 312 BYRON L. HENDERSON GARY HENDERSON MARK W. WEGFORD CALIFORNIA, KY 41007 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 9053 WASHINGTON TRACE 401 WASHINGTON ST. JAMES A. EDWARDS CHARLES W. EDWARDS WILLIAM J. VERAX, IV CALIFORNIA, KY 41007 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 701 NEW HOPE RD. 115 E. PIKE ST. FRED TRAUTH, JR. JEAN MORROW J. DAVID BENDER FOSTER, KY 41040 CYNTHIANA, KY 41031 41 ARCADIA AVE. P.O. BOX 75346 RAYMOND E. EMMINGER REGINA TEMPLETON JOHN E. LANGE III FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 10847 PHILLIPS RD. 4 W. 4TH ST., STE. 400 ALMA SHORT BRENDA TURNER JOYCE BOWLING MENEFEE ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001 NEWPORT, KY 41071 537 ASTON VIEWS LN. 70 SENTRY DR. JUDITH S. VARGO DREW M. VARGO JANN SEIDENFADEN CLEVES, OH 45002 WILDER, KY 41076 2031 NEW LINDEN RD. 122 N. FT. THOMAS AVE. MILDRED SCHULTE HOLLY LAIBLE CARL E. KNOCHELMANN, JR. NEWPORT, KY 41071 FT. THOMAS, KY 41075 870 STABLEWATCH DR. 526 GREENUP ST. TAUNYA NOLAN JACK, CAMPBELL COUNTY CIRCUIT CLERK INDEPENDENCE, KY 41051 COVINGTON, KY 41011 BY: GAYLA FOUREZ, DEPUTY CLERK, CAMPBELL DISTRICT PROBATE COURT
CE-0000708799
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION PUBLIC NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE FOLLOWING SETTLEMENTS HAVE BEEN PRESENTED TO THE CAMPBELL DISTRICT COURT. WRITTEN EXCEPTIONS TO THE BELOW STATEMENTS MUST BE FILED NO LATER THAN TWENTY DAYS FROM THE DATE OF THIS ADVERTISEMENT. IF NO EXCEPTIONS ARE FILED, SETTLEMENTS WILL BE CONFIRMED AND ORDERED RECORDED. DECEASED FIDUCIARY SETTLEMENT WALTER CHARLES PARROTT ROBERT PARROTT FINAL RALPH E. HOLT REBECCA A. MYERS FINAL EDWARD HERBERT HAUSER CONNIE SPINKS FINAL REBECCA LYNN FISCHER U.S. BANK ANNUAL HOWARD W. KUES GARY KUES FINAL JOYCE MARIE PROFITT SUSAN M. MILLER FINAL JOHN A. SEILER GREG LUNN FINAL JEFFREY ALAN PETERMAN STEPHANIE PETERMAN FINAL MINNIE A. HARRISON ROBERT W. HARRISON FINAL CHARLES L. HATCHER MARY BETH HATCHER FINAL HALLIE HERALD PAMELA OAKLEY PERIODIC EXCEPTIONS CAN BE MAILED TO: CAMPBELL COUNTY DISTRICT COURT ATTN. PROBATE CLERK 330 YORK STREET NEWPORT, KY 41071 TAUNYA NOLAN JACK, CAMPBELL COUNTY CIRCUIT CLERK BY: GAYLA FOUREZ, DEPUTY CLERK, CAMPBELL DISTRICT PROBATE COURT CAM,Apr’19# 3483622
The City of Southgate in conjunction with the Kentucky Association of Counties(KACo) will be accepting bids via a Reverse Online Auction on 4/25/2019 10:00 AM CDT, for the purchase of road salt for the City of Southgate local government road department. For bid participation / registration and specifications contact Orbis Online at 210831-6070 or log onto www.o rbisonline.com or contact, City of Southgate the local government agency or Scott Martin with KACo at 800264-5226. The local government agency reserves the right to reject/accept any and all bids. Bids will be accepted online only. CAM,Apr11,’19#3481617
PUBLIC NOTICE Campbell County Fiscal Court in conjunction with the Kentucky Association of Counties (KACo) will be accepting bids via a Reverse Online Auction on 4/25/2019 at 10am Central/11am Eastern for the purchase of road salt for the road department. For bid participation/registration and specifications contact Orbis Online at 210-831-6070 or log onto www.orbisonlin e.com or contact Scott Martin with KACo at 800264-5226. Campbell County Fiscal Court reserves the right to reject/accept any and all bids. Bids will be accepted online only CAM,April11,’19# 3482628
Notice is hereby given that Russell Konopa has filed an application with the Commonwealth of Kentucky Energy and Environmental Cabinet Department for Environmental Protection Division of Water to allow construction of a front and rear deck located on the property identified as 313 E Third Street, Silver Grove, Kentucky. Any comments or objections shall be directed to: Kentucky Division of Water, Floodplain Management Section, 300 Sower Blvd 3rd Floor, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601. Phone: (502) 5643410 Russell Konopa /s/ Property Owner Date: March 27, 2019 CAM,April4,11,’19#3470204
4C μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ APRIL 11, 2019
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
The following vehicles, storred at Fender’s Wrecker Service Inc, 927 Park Ave. Newport, Ky. 41071, will be sold at public auction on April 27,2019 to the highest bidder. Seller has right to bid on vehicles. Forms of payments are credit cards or cash. No titles are warrented.
PUBLIC NOTICE The City of Alexandria in conjunction with the Kentucky Association of Counties (KACo) will be accepting bids via a Reverse Online Auction on 4/25/2019 10:00 AM CDT, for the purchase of road salt for the City of Alexandria local government road department. For bid participation / registration and specifications contact Orbis Online at 210-831-6070 or log onto www.orbisonlin e.com, or contact City of Alexandria KY, the local government agency, or Scott Martin with KACo at 800-264-5226. The local government agency reserves the right to reject/accept any and all bids. Bids will be accepted online only. CAM,Apr11,’19# 3459325
1998 TOYOTA 1NXBR12E1WZ056023 DORTHY HARRIS 2007 JEEP 1J8FT47W57D249750 CHASTITY HICKS DTL FINANCE INC. 2002 CHEVROLET 1GNDT13W82K126541 AMY BERKEMEIER 2002 KIA KNAFB121725168060 SYLVANUS J. MCBRIDE 2006 DODGE 1B3EL46X66N241387 LINDA SICKLER 2003 OLDSMOBILE 1G3NL52F43C183580 PAULINE SHERROW 2004 BUICK 2G4WB52K8Y1222071 GARY PHILLIPS 1992 LEXUS JT8VK13T0N0016460 CHARLES MULLINS 1999 LINCOLN 1LNHM81W3XY645838 JEROME MITCHELL 1999 JEEP 1J4G258S4XC785069 ANTHONY WELLS 2001 CHRYSLER 3C8FY4BB71T645398 DESTINEY BLACK INTEGRITY FUNDING OHIO 2005 CHRYSLER 2C4GM68445R409077 JASON OVERBEY 2002 TOYOTA 4T3ZF13C72U501208 JOHNNY HARRISON INTEGRITY FUNDING OHIO 2004 HYUNDAI KMHDN46D64U709756 CHRISTAL MARIE HOUSLEY 2003 DODGE 1D4GP24303B109290 CLARENCE HAUBNER 2010 CHEVROLET 2G1WB5EN5A1254162 ROBERT L HIPSHER TIME AUTO SALES INC 1996 CHEVROLET 1G1JC5248T7229975 DAWN LOUISE JONES AND RUTH O NEYMAN 2005 NISSAN 1N4AL11D35C380658 JACQUELINE R. FERRARA 2005 PONTIAC 1G2NE52EX5M156757 ASHLEY LACKEY 2005 CHEVROLET 1G1JC52F157211273 WILLIAM THOMAS V1 2009 PONTIAC 5Y2SM67019Z409011 NANCY A. KORNEGAY 2007 FORD 1FTPX14V67FA19262 JRT REMODELING 2006 CHEVROLET 2G1WT58KX69320115 LASHAY MONIQUE GASKINS BEN"S AUTOMOTIVE INC 2003 ACURA 19UUA56873A013207 LOREISHA DAVIS INTEGRITY FUNDING OHIO 1999 OLDSMOBILE 1G3GR62C1X4111593 JACK R ECK 2002 HONDA 1HGCG56762A073012 VICTORIA OSBORNE INTEGRITY FUNDING OHIO 1999 DODGE 1B4HS28YXXF675264 ADAMS LINCOLN 2003 CHEVROLET 1G1JC12F337105896 H W GRAVEN 2001 BUICK 2G4WY55J911135769 CONNIE SHARP 1994 MAZDA 1YVGE22C7R5126904 TOMMIE DONNERSON 1992 HONDA 1HGCB755XNA058799 LACISHA STONE 1986 MAZDA JM2UF1119G0588032 PAUL RAY STEPHENS 11 2001 SAAB YS3DF75K317011515 JEFFREY PFLUM 2006 FORD 1FMZK05186GA02402 FELICIA JOHNSON 2002 FORD 1FTRX17242NB88172 MICHAEL E. MARLER 1992 FORD 1FTDF15N2NNB00461 GINGER BALDWIN 1998 GMC 1GKDT13W1W2955633 DANTE COLLINS TITLE MAX OF OHIO 1992 HONDA JHMBB215XNC026084 MICHELLE JACQELINE FLORES 2003 FORD 2FMZA51423BB46319 KRISTINA ODER 1999 SATURN 1G8ZP1287XZ271214 NATALIE HERALD 1998 DODGE 1B3ES42C2WD666892 JULIE JACKSON LAYCOCK 2002 MAZDA 1YVGF22D425275556 MARLEY AUTO SALES 2002 CHRYSLER 1C3EL46X82N225463 JOSHUA A GOETZ OHIO AUTO LOAN SERVICE CAM,Apr11,18,25,’19 #3460397
NOTICE Fort Thomas Board of Adjustment Public Hearing 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 April 23, 2019 at 6:00 P.M. for the following cases: CASE NO. 19-1510 - A hearing to consider an application submitted by Patrick and Shelley Hagerty, owners of 49 West Villa Place, Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The owners are requesting a left side yard Dimensional Variance for the construction of a building addition and covered porch. CASE NO. 19-1511 - A hearing to consider an application submitted by Vince and Christa Gillen, owners of property located at 221 Military Parkway, Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The owners are requesting a right side yard Dimensional Variance for the construction of an open porch. CASE NO. 19-1512 - A hearing to consider an application submitted by George and Megan Josten, owners of property located at 10 Majestic Drive, Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The owners are requesting a rear and left side yard Dimensional Variance for the construction of a building addition and a rear yard Dimensional Variance for the construction of a deck. CASE NO. 19-1513 - A hearing to consider an application submitted by Ben and Shanna Novosel, owners of property located at 1415 N. Ft. Thomas Avenue, Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The owners are requesting a rear and right side yard Dimensional Variance for the construction of a building addition. CASE NO. 19-1514 - A hearing to consider an application submitted by Greiwe Development and its partners North American Properties and Sibcy Cline, for a 3’6” variance to the 50 ft. height limit in the CBD for a proposed development which includes properties located at 9 Highland Avenue, as well as 3, 15, 19, 25 North Ft. Thomas Avenue, Fort Thomas, Kentucky for a proposed mixed-use development. 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 (Publishing Date: 4/11/2019) CAM,Apr11,’19#3486486
Announcement The Southgate Public Property and Project Corp. will meet on April 17th at 5:45 at City Hall Council Chambers at 122 Electric Ave. Southgate The Southgate Community Center Inc. will meet on May 1st at 5:45 at City Hall Council Chambers at 122 Electric Ave. Southgate CAM,Apr11,’19# 3486704
INVITATION TO BID Date: April 11, 2019 PROJECT: Central Facility Generator Standby Power
Request for Qualifications for Professional Services Date: April 11, 2019 ASSET MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
SEALED BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED AT: Northern Kentucky Water District (Owner) 2835 Crescent Springs Road P.O. Box 18640 Erlanger, Kentucky 41018 UNTIL: Date:
May 1, 2019 Time: 11:00 a.m., 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: Furnish and install a 350 KW standby diesel generator, service entrance rated transfer switch, 20KW uninterruptible power supply (UPS), and relocate an existing transformer together with the appurtenances and related work at the Northern Kentucky water district’s Central Facility at 2835 Crescent Springs Road, Erlanger, 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, KY 41018 Or Magna Engineers 861 Corporate Drive, Suite 210 Lexington, KY 40503 Copies of the Bidding Documents may be obtained from the office of Lynn Imaging at 328 Old Vine St, Lexington, KY 40507 (Phone: 859-255-1021). Charges for all documents obtained will be made on the following basis: Charge Complete set of Bidding Documents $75.00 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 lump sum basis as described in the Contract Documents. Bid security, in the form of a certified check or 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 Performance Bond and a Construction Payment Bond (insuring/bonding company shall be rated “A” by AM Best) as security for the faithful performance of the project 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. A non-mandatory pre-bid meeting will be held for prospective Bidders on April 17, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. at the Northern Kentucky Water District Central Facility, 2835 Crescent Springs Road, Erlanger, KY 41018. On request 72 hours in advance, Owner will provide each Bidder access to the site to conduct such investigations and tests as each Bidder deems necessary for submission of a Bid. Arrangements for site visits shall be made by calling Jenna Canafax, Staff Engineer with the Northern Kentucky Water District, at (859) 578-4893. Minority Bidders are encouraged to bid. Bids shall remain subject to acceptance for 90 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, V.P. Engineering, Production & Distribution Northern Kentucky Water District CMP,April11,’19#3485457
CITY OF SILVER GROVE, KENTUCKY ORDINANCE NO. 19-0301 AN ORDINANCE CHANGING THE MEETING TIME FOR THE REGULAR MEETINGS OF THE SILVER GROVE CITY COUNCIL WHEREAS, the City of Silver Grove desires to change the meeting time of the regular meetings of the Silver Grove City Council; and WHEREAS, KRS 83A.130(11) requires that the Regular Meeting of the City Council be held at least once each month and that such meeting time and place be fixed by ordinance; NOW, THEREFORE BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY OF SILVER GROVE, CAMPBELL COUNTY, KENTUCKY AS FOLLOWS: SECTION ONE The City Council of the City of Silver Grove does hereby change the Regular Meeting time of the City Council of the City of Silver Grove from 7:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. on the first Thursday of every month effective May 2", 2019. SECTION TWO Any Ordinance, or parts thereof, in conflict with this Ordinance are, to the extent of any such conflict, repealed. SECTION THREE This Ordinance shall take effect and be in full force when passed, published, and recorded according to law. P A S S E D by City Council of the City of Silver Grove, Campbell County, Kentucky assembled in regular session. First Reading: March 7, 2019 Second Reading: April 4, 2019 MAYOR NEAL BEDEL ATTEST: RONDA SANDFOSS CITY CLERK CIN,Apr11,’19#
Post your rental. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
The Northern Kentucky Water District is requesting qualifications statements for professional services relating to updating an Asset Management Program. Work will include performing a risk and resiliency assessment, updating the District’s emergency response plan, calibrating and conducting future analyses in the District’s computerized hydraulic model, and providing an updated digital asset registry and asset management plan. STATEMENT CEIVED AT:
OF
QUALIFICATIONS
WILL
BE
RE-
Northern Kentucky Water District (OWNER) 2835 Crescent Springs Road P.O. Box 18640 Erlanger, Kentucky 41018 UNTIL:Date:May 3, 2019 Time:2:00 p.m. local time The purpose of this Request for Qualifications is to solicit qualifications for these services and to identify a shortlist of firms to receive a Request for Proposal. The selected firm will be offered a contract with possible extensions for future phases. Copies of the Request for Qualifications may be obtained from the District’s office at the address indicated herein or by contacting Denise Manning at (859) 426-2718. There is no charge for these documents. Each submitted response will be reviewed and rated by a Selection Advisory Committee and a recommendation will be made to the District’s Board. The District reserves the right to reject any or all responses. Minority firms are encouraged to respond. Amy Kramer, V.P. Engineering, Production DistributionNorthern Kentucky Water District CAM,April11,’19# 3484933
&
CITY OF SILVER GROVE, KENTUCKY ORDINANCE NO. 19-0303 AN ORDINANCE ADOPTING THE REVISED, AMENDED, RESTATED CODE OF ORDINANCES FOR THE CITY OF SILVER GROVE, KENTUCKY. WHEREAS, KRS 83A.060(11) requires the examination of the code of ordinances for consistency with state law; WHEREAS, the present code of ordinances for the City of Silver Grove Kentucky is inadequately arranged and classified and are insufficient in form and substance; and WHEREAS, the City Counsel of the City of Silver Grove has authorized the examination of the code of ordinances of the City of Silver Grove, Kentucky for revision of same for consistency with state law. NOW, THEREFORE BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY OF SILVER GROVE, CAMPBELL COUNTY, KENTUCKY AS FOLLOWS : Section 1 The general ordinances of the City of Silver Grove, Kentucky as revised, amended, restated, codified, and complied in book form are hereby adopted as, and shall constitute, the “Code of Ordinances of the City of Silver Grove, Kentucky” Section II Such Code of Ordinances as adopted in Section I shall consist of the following ‘Titles as provided in Attachment A. Section III All prior ordinances pertaining to the subjects treated in said Code of Ordinances shall be deemed repealed from the effective date of this ordinance except as they are included in whole or in part in said Code; provided, such repeal shall not effect any offense committed or penalty incurred, or any tight established prior to the effective date of this ordinance, nor shall said repeal effect the provisions of ordinances levying taxes, appropriating money, annexing or detaching territory, establishing franchises, or granting special rights to certain persons, authorizing special improvements, authorizing the issuance of bonds or borrowing of money, authorizing the purchase or sale of real or personal property, granting or accepting easements, plat or dedication of land to public use, vacating or setting the boundaries of streets or other public places; nor shall said repeal effect any other ordinance of a temporary or special nature or pertaining to subjects not contained in or covered by the Code. This ordinance shall be in full force and effect ftom and after its adoption, approval and publication as is required by law. Passed by City Council of the City of Silver Grove, Campbell County, Kentucky assembled in regular session. First Reading: March 7, 2019 Second Reading: April 4, 2019 MAYOR NEAL BEDEL ATTEST: RONDA SANDFOSS CITY CLERK CAM,Apr11,’19# 3486401 2019 Northern Kentucky Water District annual water quality report for the calendar year 2018 is available. This report contains important information about your drinking water. Please go to www.nkywater.org/ccr.pdf to view your 2018 annual water quality report or to request a paper copy call (859) 441-0482. CAM,Apr11,’19#3485575
CITY OF SILVER GROVE, KENTUCKY ORDINANCE NO. 19-0302 I hereby certify that the following is the title and a Summary of Ordinance 19-0302 of the City of Silver Grove, Kentucky, as adopted on the 4th day of April, 2019. AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF SILVER GROVE, KENTUCKY AMENDING ORDINANCE 93-0602 REMOVING THE DEFINITION OF THE AMERICAN STAFFORDSHIRE TERRIER AND STAFF ORDSHIRE BULL TERRIER AS A DANGEROUS ANIMAL Said Ordinance removes the American Staffordshire Terrier, the Staffordshire Bull Terrier and the American Pit Bull Terrier from automatically being defined as a dangerous animal. I, Stephen G. Dasenbrock, an attorney licensed to practice law in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, acting as legal advisor for the City of Silver Grove, Kentucky, do hereby certify that this summary was prepared by me at the direction of the Council for the City of Silver Grove, Kentucky, and that this summary is a true and accurate summary of the contents of Ordinance 19-0302. STEPHEN G. DASENBROCK Legal Advisor, City of Silver Grove CAM,Apr11,’19# 3486380
HAND OUT THE CIGARS! Celebrate with a announcement. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
Cancellation City of Highland Heights, Kentucky Council Meeting The Highland Heights City Council meeting scheduled for 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16, 2019 at 176 Johns Hill Road is cancelled. The next council meeting is scheduled for May 7, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. CAM,Apr11,’19#3480998
CHECK OUT CLASSIFIED online at cincinnati.com