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YO U ’ L L B E Delighted
BY THE WAY, NKY
Covington grabs jobs from Cincinnati; shelter breaks ground Julia Fair Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Courtney Graham, St. Elizabeth's Emergency Department nurse, is inoculated with the Pfi zer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine by RN Julie Nieman at St. Elizabeth Hospital in Fort Thomas on Dec. 17. PHOTOS BY ALBERT CESARE / THE ENQUIRER
Cincinnati’s nurses feel the strain of a long pandemic Cole Behrens and Terry DeMio Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Lee Ann Ernst, coordinator of the St. Elizabeth Infectious Disease Response Team, worked March, April, May and June on the frontlines of COVID-19 care at the Fort Thomas hospital, the epicenter of novel coronavirus pandemic care in Northern Kentucky. Now she works in the emergency room at St. E’s Edgewood, where she still sees COVID patients nearly every day. The work has been a blur. Yet she remembers in detail her encounters with patients. Like the man she cared for at the Edgewood ER: a husband, father and family provider. “The primary everything at his home,” Ernst said. “And now he is sick.” “There’s that, ‘I’ve got COVID?’ response,” Ernst said. “The absolute fright in this man’s voice. Like his whole world had been put in a blender and he was in puree.” “You’re hanging the meds, the cardiac monitor keeps beeping,” she said. The man is talking but the beeping is disruptive, she said. “And then you’re turning down the monitor so it stops beeping. At that moment, that’s not important. You just give him time to talk and just work through this.” Then there was a 100-plus-year-old survivor of the 1918 fl u pandemic who tested positive for COVID-19 in Ernst’s presence. “She smacked her thigh. She said, “Will you stop it? Are you kidding me? I’ve got the COVID!’ She laughed a little, but you could tell she understood the implication,” Ernst said. Remarkably, the woman survived. “She was adorable,” Ernst said. Ernst remembers, too, the families of her COVID-19 patients: “I legitimately feel their pain. I feel their heart. I understand what the sentence implies: ‘You can’t come in.’” And she remembers too many who died in care, when all that could be done had been done and her team could only be there for these patients and for each other. Ernst recounted this scene: “Through full PPE (personal protective equipment), the nurse called out to the intensivist that the patient was crashing.” After a fl urry of conversations among the critical care doctor and the team about what could be done, and
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Registered nurse Julie Nieman administers a Pfi zer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine to RN Sean Kathman at St. Elizabeth Hospital in Fort Thomas.
the determination that there was nothing more, the patient began to die. “The nurse asked, ‘What should I do?’ “ Ernst said. “The doctor said, ‘Take the patient’s hand,’ and she did. We all stood there and watched the monitor go fl atline and the patient stop breathing. “We cried and stood motionless in the hall.” It hasn’t all been tears for Ernst. There are victories, too, she said. “It was the days when patients went home that fueled us for the days when patients never would.” During her time at Fort Thomas, Ernst had nights she couldn’t go home and days she worked 15-hour shifts. When she did go home, she’d leave her car key in the ignition, walk inside, drop her purse on the kitchen counter, go upstairs, get in bed “and sleep like a baby.” The next morning, she’d get up, shower, grab her purse, get in her car and start again. “You get tired,” she said. “But I never want to be so tired that there isn’t at least an eff ort to address time with the patient.” “That’s a whole human being,” Ernst said. “You want them to know, we are not going to let you be totally alone. We will keep your family notifi ed. We’re going to stay with you.”
‘There’s no way to get away from it’
This is an installment of reporter Julia Fair’s series “By the way, NKY.” Here, you’ll fi nd what’s going on in Northern Kentucky. Even though The Simpsons recently featured Cincinnati in an episode, Northern Kentucky had some recent bragging rights, too. Recently, Covington grabbed some jobs that were based in Cincinnati and a new homeless shelter held its ceremonial groundbreaking. In this series, By the way, NKY – we focus on some of the news happening in the region and fi ll you in on what’s going on in your neighborhoods. If there’s something you think should be included, email reporter Julia Fair at jfair@enquirer.com By the way, here’s what’s going on in Northern Kentucky:
Cincinnati headquarters move to Covington Protective Life Corp., an insurance business, announced it will relocate from Cincinnati to Covington, according to a press release from Gov. Andy Beshear. After nearly 30 years of working in downtown Cincinnati, the company is planning to invest $17.1 million to lease 67,000 square feet in Covington’s RiverCenter. The new offi ce could open as soon as summer 2021, according to the release. It’s the latest company to move across the Ohio River. When Omnicare, a drug provider for nursing homes, and Nielsen, a marketing fi rm, moved from Covington to Cincinnati in 2011, it caused some tension between the states, according to The Enquirer archives. Then-Covington city commissioner Steve Frank called out then-Gov. John Kasich for recruiting the companies during a press conference. And, then-Gov. Steve Beshear committed to not letting that happen again. Cincinnati Mayor John Cranley’s offi ce did not respond to The Enquirer’s request for comment. In the release, company leaders said they chose the new location because of the building’s central location. It also got incentives from the Kentucky Development Finance Authority, according to the release. The 10-year incentive agreement includes up to $2.1 million in tax incentives. These are the annual targets the company needs to get the incentives: h Create and maintain 77 Kentucky-resident, full-time jobs across 10 years. h Achieve an average hourly wage target of $47.50 for the new jobs over the 10-year program life. The company may also use the Kentucky Skills Network, which provides no-cost recruitment, job placement services, reduced-cost customized training, and job training incentives, according to the release.
CJ Adams doesn’t consider herself a frontline See NURSES, Page 4A
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See NKY, Page 2A
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NKY restaurant that stayed open during COVID-19 dining order gets permit back Chris Mayhew Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Kentucky has reinstated the licenses for Beans Cafe and Bakery in Hebron and Dry Ridge days after the restaurant owner was charged with operating a restaurant without a permit. A Northern Kentucky Health Department offi cial signed the orders Dec. 18 that allowed Beans to be reinstated eff ective Dec. 21. Kentucky's ban on indoor dining has expired. Owner Richard Hayhoe was charged Dec. 15 after defying Gov. Andy Beshear's order to close to indoor dining to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Beans lost its license in November. “We have received many emails and requests from others that appreciate our standing up against the businesssuff ocating dictates coming from Governor Andy Beshear’s offi ce,” reads Beans’ GoFundMe page.
NKY Continued from Page 1A
New homeless shelter breaks ground The Emergency Shelter of Northern Kentucky has a new location. On Dec. 15, Gov. Andy Beshear was scheduled to virtually join local leaders for the shelter’s ceremonial groundbreaking at 436 West 13th Street in Covington, according to a press release. The shelter is currently located on Scott Boulevard in Covington. “Gone are the days of repurposing rooms to accommodate clients,” said Emergency Shelter of Northern Kentucky Executive Director, Kim Webb in the release. “Built to fi t our needs, this
Beans Cafe and Bakery in Hebron, continued to serve diners In November and December after losing their license to serve food. Health officials suspended the license over not following the governor's executive orders regarding COVID-19 restrictions. The license was reinstated Dec. 21. PHIL DIDION/THE ENQURIER
The owner of Beans Cafe & Bakery in Dry Ridge and Hebron faces criminal charges for violating Gov. Andy Beshear's COVID-19 related orders halting in-person dining last month. PROVIDED
new facility is a dream come true as it will enable us to provide shelter in a much more functional setting.” The Erlanger-based company Furlong Building, owned by Fort Mitchell Mayor Jude Hehman, will start construction in December. Last year, St. Elizabeth Healthcare bought the building and donated it to Kenton County, according to a Kenton County Fiscal Court meeting agenda. The shelter will lease the building for 30 years. The new 9,000 square foot facility will include: h Sleeping quarters for up to 68 people. h Showers and bathrooms available all day. h Intake and common area spaces. People will use the building as a Navigation Center, according to the release.
There, people can shower, do laundry, and connect to services. More than 60% of the project is funded, according to the release.
COVID-19 resources for NKY residents Need a COVID-19 test? Here are some helpful links to resources in Northern Kentucky. h Find a free COVID-19 test on the state’s COVID-19 website at govstatus.egov.com/kycovid19. h Find Northern Kentucky COVID-19 data on the health department website at nkyhealth.org/individual -or-family/health-alerts/coronavirus/. That’s it for this installment of By the way, NKY. Let us know if there’s something you think we should include in the next. In the meantime, here are some
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How to share news from your community The following information can be used for submitting news, photos, columns and letters; and also placing ads for obituaries: Stories: To submit a story and/or photo(s), visit https://bit.ly/2JrBepF Columns/letters: To submit letters (200 words or less) or guest columns (500 words or less) for consideration in The Community Press & Recorder, email viewpoints@communitypress.com Please include your fi rst and last
other ways to keep up with your community: h Keep an eye on your local government with us and subscribe to the free daily newsletter that gets sent directly to your inbox every morning. h Download the NKY news app and sign up for alerts to be the fi rst to know about news in your neighborhood. Julia is the Northern Kentucky government reporter through the Report For America program. The Enquirer needs local donors to help fund her grantfunded position. If you want to support Julia’s work, email her editor Carl Weiser at cweiser@cincinna.gannett.com to fi nd out how you can help fund her work. Do you know something she should know? Send her a note at jfair@enquirer.com and follow her on Twitter at @JFair_Reports.
name on letters to the editor, along with name of your community. Include your phone number as well. With columns, include your headshot (a photo of you from shoulders up) along with your column. Include a few sentences giving your community and describing any expertise you have on the subject. Obits: To place an ad for an obituary in the Community Press, call 877-5137355 or email obits @enquirer.com
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Nurses Continued from Page 1A
nurse. She is nurse manager at Bethesda North Hospital, and as such, a leader of frontline nurses. When she shared her experiences during Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine’s COVID-19 news briefi ng earlier this month, she said she believed she was the “voice of all the other nurses” who she works with on the frontline against the novel coronavirus. It is a voice of exhaustion but also determination and professionalism. For Adams, the experience has been fraught with challenges. When the pandemic hit, Adams’ wife, Adrienne Adams, also a frontline nurse, was pregnant with twins. The couple have a 3-year-old, too. The twin boys were born healthy in June. Through that time and even beyond the pregnancy, Adams felt not only the uncertainty of the coronavirus for her patients but the additional stress of keeping the newborns safe from COVID-19. When her wife was in the hospital after the babies were born, there were times that CJ Adams couldn’t visit, because she had been working with COVID-19 patients. “Adjusting to some of those restrictions, while having a little one at home, while trying to manage in the middle of a pandemic,” Adams said. “It defi nitely showed a lot of diff erent sides of what the pandemic meant personally.” Even without a pandemic, being a bedside nurse is emotionally and physically challenging, she said, describing long hours and the chance of bad outcomes. COVID-19 has compounded the job and its eff ects on nurses. “We’re seeing sicker patients, we’re seeing younger, sicker patients,” Adams said. “And with that, there comes more death. There comes more death, more dying, and more negative outcomes for the patients.” Adams said the biggest way her nurses cope is by having a life outside work. Before the pandemic, she would manage her stress by following sports. She is a fan of Xavier University basketball, the Cincinnati Reds, and the Pittsburgh Steelers. It felt like a blow to her when March Madness was canceled last spring, Ad-
Dr. Jon Schott, an ER doctor, is inoculated with the Pfi zer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine by Julie Nieman, St. Elizabeth's registered nurse, at St. Elizabeth Hospital in Fort Thomas.
Registered nurses Gloria Guilfoile, right, and Stephanie Ryan, center, wait in the registration line for their Pfi zer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at St. Elizabeth Hospital in Fort Thomas on Dec. 17. PHOTOS BY ALBERT CESARE / THE ENQUIRER
ams said. Sports quickly were replaced by harrowing news of the death and pain the pandemic was causing. “When it’s all you hear at work and all you hear at home, there’s no way to get away from it,” Adams said. “There is not that place of refuge where we could not be a nurse and worry about what was going on at the hospital.”
‘My goal is to make somebody smile’ Tyrone Capell, 51, said he always buys two sandwiches at McDonald’s and gives one away. And he said he loves bringing a sense of optimism to his patients as a nursing aide at the Liberty Nursing Center of Colerain Township – even during a pandemic. Capell said he has seen the patients developing depression and anxiety as a result of being cut off from visits from their family, and he said he always tries to give them a positive outlook when they seem down. “My goal is to make somebody smile,” Capell said. “Lend an ear to someone who needs to talk and tell me something. And most days, I meet my goal.” A big part of maintaining the mental wellbeing of patients, Capell said, is encouraging them not to watch the news.
“It’s important we check on them and try to change their train of thought from the TV and what they’re hearing and let them know their family is looking forward to seeing them,” Capell said. He said he’s an optiCapell mistic guy who believes that speaking or thinking negatively “brings negativity to light,” but fi nding ways to see the positive helps people feel good. And it is his job, Capell said, to take care of residents, in part by uplifting their spirits – even through a pandemic. “I just see this as a test,” Capell said. “It takes a lot, it’s a stressing time, but that’s what we’re here for.”
‘We are neglecting ourselves’ Tina Arrona, an ICU nurse at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, used to balance her life as a nurse by going to the gym and exercising when she was off . Those days are gone. At least, through the novel coronavirus pandemic. Arrona, a 20-year nurse, spends her time off caring for her sick father. And while he doesn’t have COVID-19, she worries that he could get it. She has had other relatives who had
the virus and died from it. \She said she tries to be meticulously clean and cautious both at work and at home. “So that has made things a little challenging, but sometimes taking care of him takes my mind off things, especially my life here in the hospital,” Arrona said. COVID-19 has made it diffi cult for caregivers to fi nd time to care for themselves either after work or on the job, she said. She sees it at work. “In the strive to take care of our patients adequately, we are neglecting ourselves. So then we’re not drinking water, we’re Arrona not going to the bathroom, we’re not eating,” Arrona said. “So all that takes a toll on our body and makes us more susceptible to getting sick.” She cares about her patients, and not just for them, she said. And that’s what has made the work additionally stressful these months, Arrona said. She described personal turmoil as she intubated a patient recently. “You’re trying to make them feel comfortable and telling them everything is going to be OK, and we’re going to intubate them – and hopefully this is going to make them feel better,” Arrona said. “But we are not sure it’s going to make them better. And sometimes, that’s the last time a patient gets to speak, and we are the last people they get to speak to.” “This is where our moral injury happens, because this happens every day we come to work,” Arrona said. “And we are also human, but we have to maintain our composure and go on to the next patient.”
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VIEWPOINTS Teachers can overcome pandemic challenges with your support Your Turn Kim Shearer and C.J. Fryer Guest columnists
The COVID-19 pandemic has upended working operations in every industry. From health care, to retail, to restaurants and manufacturing, nothing looks the same as it did at the beginning of 2020. The industry that has been pushed to the brink of permanent change, however, serves as the bedrock for our entire workforce – education. Specifi cally, K-12 public school teachers. We are just a few of those teachers, but we have united with others from counties across the Commonwealth to create recommendations and actions that all of us, along with members of our communities, can take to ensure that our schools emerge from this pandemic stronger than when it began. Convened by the Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence, our group is composed of teachers from 23 Kentucky counties. We began meeting in July to share experiences, and to compile our thoughts into recommendations for the improvement of our schools. Through this process, we have articulated a shared vision for teaching and learning through the pandemic and identifi ed steps that can be taken to turn our vision into reality. We invite you to read the entirety of that vision at prichardcommittee.org/teacherletter.
PROVIDED
The dual pandemics of COVID-19 and racial injustice have stretched us further than we imagined in the past year. As a result of this stretching, however, we have grown. We have emerged as better teachers and stronger leaders. We have learned from each other; and we seek to advocate for our students and colleagues at the local level while gaining greater understanding of the challenges facing communities across the Commonwealth. We view our personal growth and our professional strength as a foundation for community growth in the rural communities, small towns, suburban areas and cities where we live and teach. As Kentucky teachers focused on creating invaluable instructional experiences for our students, our priorities include: h Leading at local, regional, and state
levels to guarantee all Kentucky students have equitable access to highquality teaching and learning experiences, whether they are learning in-person or remotely; and h Creating learning environments that secure student well-being, safety, and trust. To earn that trust, our fellows teachers can individually and together commit to providing equitable learning opportunities for each and every student; developing and expanding the skills and know-how necessary to strengthen the quality of our teaching and the learning experiences of our students; developing stronger, more collaborative relationships with students, parents and families, and our communities; and promoting anti-racism and diverse perspectives in culturally aware and responsive instruction.
We cannot do this work alone. In a time of constant change and unforeseen challenges, we will need resources and support from administrators, elected offi cials and local business leaders to reach our goals. These resources include: h Expanded student and family support services; h Support for student and educator mental health, well-being, safety, and trust; h Investment in high-quality and relevant instructional materials; h Anti-racism teaching and learning policies and practices; and h High-quality, relevant, teacher-selected, and job-embedded professional learning. We are calling on all Kentuckians to join us in working toward these priorities, which will have a direct impact on the quality of instruction in Kentucky classrooms, and a future impact on our workforce, economy and communities, as our students transition into working adults and thriving citizens. In an eff ort to co-design a new vision for Kentucky education, we ask for your encouragement to continue learning, and the space and grace to test new approaches and ideas. With your help, we can obtain suffi cient resources, and pursue a learner-centered mission and vision in every public school in Kentucky, and realize a big bold future for our Commonwealth. Kim Shearer is a teacher in Boone County Public Schools. C.J. Fryer is a teacher at Beechwood Independent. They are part of the fi rst cohort of Prichard Committee Teacher Fellows.
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Lawmakers blast disgraced NKY judge for ‘selfi shness’ as taxpayer costs mount Julia Fair Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
The cost to remove Kenton County Family Court Judge Dawn Gentry from offi ce climbed as she fought to keep her job. An Enquirer analysis has found taxpayers have spent at least $260,000 on Gentry’s paychecks, replacement judges’ paychecks, investigator invoices, and attorney fees, as of November. It’s been about a year since Gentry’s misconduct case became public, which accused her of using personal relationships, coercion, and retaliation as tools in her judgeship. The case created reams of invoices to pay Gentry, replacement judges, an investigator, and attorneys. The Kentucky Supreme Court recently upheld the Kentucky Judicial Conduct Commission’s vote to remove Gentry from offi ce. The costs increased as work continued on Gentry’s appeal to the court that challenged the commission’s decision. The commission is the only entity, aside from the Kentucky General Assembly, that can fi re sitting judges. Before the court’s ruling, lawmakers told The Enquirer they planned to revisit their impeachment inquiry into Gentry’s actions. That’s likely moot now unless Gentry asks the court for a rehearing. She has limited time to do so. If not, the decision is fi nal. Until then, Gentry will continue to get paid every two weeks, according to a spokesperson with the Kentucky Administrative Offi ce of the Courts. Gentry earns $136,900 a year. And, the retired judges who took over her judicial duties will continue to work. Lawmakers also told The Enquirer they plan to review checks given to Gentry and the visiting judges. Republican state Senator Chris McDaniel, who represents parts of Kenton County, called the appeal “selfish,” in an interview with The Enquirer. “Pursuing such an appeal is no more wrong or “selfish” than exercising any other constitutional right, from free speech to the right to bear arms, to the right to freely exercise one’s religion,” Gentry’s attorney, Todd Lewis, said in a statement emailed to The Enquirer. Through a Kentucky Open Records act request with the Kentucky Administrative Offi ce of the Courts, The Enquirer obtained invoices and paychecks related to the Gentry case. “Due process takes time, sometimes requires expense, and searches for an environment that instead of demeaning the basic protections of law, embraces them,” Lewis said in the statement.
How much has the case cost? In January, the Judicial Conduct Commission suspended Gentry with pay. The state paid Gentry $109,105 between January 30 and November 13. Six of the checks were delivered after the commission voted to remove her from Gentry offi ce in August, totaling $32,731. Each paycheck is $5,455. Since January, fi ve retired judges have presided over family court cases in Gentry’s court, according to public records. The state spent about $72,000 to pay those judges between January and October. About $27,000 of that is from the judges’ work after the commission voted to remove Gentry from offi ce. Those judges make $400 a day. The commission’s investigator invoiced the commission about $1,000 for the statements he collected for the investigation. The commission spent about $80,000 on attorney fees on the Judge Gentry case between September 2019 and September 2020.
Lawmakers plan to review the case “The selfi shness is genuinely appalling to me,” McDaniel told The Enquirer about Gentry’s appeal.
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Para información en español, visite el sitio web. What is this lawsuit about? The lawsuit alleges that customers who used a credit or debit card at Bargain Hunt stores were provided with electronically-printed customer receipts which had more than the last five digits of their card number printed on the receipt. Bargain Hunt denies any wrongdoing but is settling the claims in this lawsuit. Who is included in the Settlement? You are included in the Settlement if you used your personal credit or debit card at any Bargain Hunt store and you were provided with an electronically-printed customer receipt between August 1, 2016 and June 30, 2017 that shows more than the last 5 digits of your card number. What are my rights? Submit A Claim - You can get up to $100 from the Settlement. To be eligible for any money, you must submit a Claim Form by March 22, 2021 along with: (1) An original or copy of a receipt from any Bargain Hunt store between August 1, 2016 and June 30, 2017 showing more than the last 5 digits of your credit/debit card number; or (2) An original or copy of your credit/debit card statement showing your first and last name, and a purchase from any Bargain Hunt store between August 1, 2016 and June 30, 2017. Visit FactaReceiptSettlement.com for more details on benefits available and how to submit a claim. FactaReceiptSettlement.com
Do Nothing – If you do nothing, you will remain in the Settlement, but you will not receive any money from the Settlement, and you will be bound by the orders and judgment of the Court and give up your rights to sue for the claims resolved by this Settlement. Object – You can stay in the Settlement and object to the Settlement. Your objection must be mailed to the Settlement Administrator on or before February 5, 2021. Exclude Yourself – If you do not want to be legally bound by the Settlement and you want to preserve your right to sue about the claims released by this Settlement, you must request to be excluded on or before February 5, 2021. If you exclude yourself, you will not receive any money from this Settlement. The parties will request a Fairness Hearing before the Honorable Judge Andy Prather, Division 2, on April 1, 2021, at 10:00 a.m. to decide whether to approve the settlement and to award attorneys’ fees and expenses to the Settlement Class Counsel appointed by the Court, plus Settlement Class Representative incentive awards. If the hearing date/location changes, the updated information will be posted on the settlement website. Applicable pleadings will be posted on the website below after they are filed. You may attend this hearing, but you do not have to. If you want to be represented by your own lawyer, you may hire one at your own expense, but you do not have to. This is a summary notice only. For more information about the Settlement, including the Long Form Notice and Claim Form, please visit FactaReceiptSettlement.com or write Bargain Hunt Settlement, PO Box 42546, Philadelphia, PA 19101-2546 or call 1-833-913-4213.
McDaniel said she should pay back her salary earned during the appeal. He didn’t have a problem with the money the Judicial Conduct Commission spent, because the “process of removing a judge should be thorough,” he said. Before the Kentucky Supreme Court upheld the decision to remove Gentry from offi ce, Northern Kentucky lawmakers told The Enquirer they planned to revisit their impeachment inquiry into Gentry’s actions, according to a joint statement from Republican Reps. Joe Fischer, Kim Banta, Adam Koenig, Savannah Maddox, Ed Massey, Kim Moser, and Sal Santoro. When COVID-19 derailed the 2020 impeachment inquiry, Gentry’s legal team told The Enquirer they believed the lawmakers had a “wildly disproportionate response to the allegations against her.” Gentry’s attorney did not respond to The Enquirer’s request to comment on the revived impeachment inquiry. The lawmakers plan to ask the House Appropriations and Revenue Committee to consider whether the decision to pay both Gentry and the visiting judges was “a wise expenditure of taxpayer dollars,” according to the statement. 75 E $1 LU VA
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SPORTS All-Enquirer preseason NKY basketball teams named James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
The Cincinnati Enquirer is introducing the 2020-2021 All-Enquirer preseason basketball teams for Northern Kentucky. The players were chosen by the high school staff based on statistics, strength of competition and history with their varsity teams. The Northern Kentucky basketball season has been pushed back to Jan. 4.
Boys basketball Center Jude Bessler, St. Henry The 6-foot-4 center averaged 14 points and six rebounds for the Crusaders, who were 25-5 last season. He shot 52 percent from the fl oor and also hit 31 3-pointers. Guard Scotty Draud, Beechwood The 6-foot-6 senior averaged 23 points per game, hitting 63 3-pointers for the Tigers, who fi nished 21-12. He averaged seven rebounds per game. Guard Jacob Meyer, Holy Cross The 6-foot-2 sophomore served notice as a rising star last season, averaging 18 points per game last season. Forward Luke Muller, Highlands The senior sharpshooter hit 107 3pointers last year, hitting at a 43 percent clip, while averaging 16 points per game for the Ninth Region runner-up Bluebirds. Guard Kelly Niece, Simon Kenton The senior averaged 19 points per game last year despite not being 100 percent as he recovered from an ACL tear. He hit 36 3-pointers, shot 80 percent from the foul line and averaged four rebounds a contest. Guard Ian Snelling, Dixie Heights The 6-foot-2 senior averaged 17.4 points per game and hit 50 percent from the fl oor while making 38 3-pointers. Forward Chandler Starks, Covington Catholic The imposing inside threat averaged seven points and seven rebounds, shooting 51 percent for a senior-dominated team that won the Ninth Region championship. Guard Donovan Stocks, Covington Catholic The 6-foot-3 senior averaged nine points for a senior-dominated Ninth Region team, hitting 36 3-pointers. The talented shooter will look to step up his leadership this season. Guard Wyatt Vieth, St. Henry The 6-foot-3 senior averaged 18.4 points for the Crusaders, who were 25-5 and 34th District champions, as well as All “A” Classic state champions. He hit 48 3-pointers and averaged six rebounds. Guard Sam Vinson, Highlands The 6-foot-4 senior has signed with Northern Kentucky University after av-
Brossart's Marie Kiefer tries to block the shot of Clark County senior Kennedy Igo as Bishop Brossart lost 47-44 to George Rogers Clark in the semifi nals of the KHSAA 10th Region girls basketball tournament March 6, 2020, at Campbell County Middle School in Alexandria. JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER
eraging 24.7 points per game for the Bluebirds. He ran the show at point guard and hit 45 3-pointers for Highlands, who was 28-4 and Ninth Region runner-up. He averaged 8.7 rebounds and shot 80 percent from the foul line.
Girls basketball Forward Sofi a Allen, Scott The senior averaged 14 points per game last year, hitting 26 3-pointers. She recently committed to Division II Tampa. Guard/forward Lacey Bradshaw,
Notre Dame The explosive scorer averaged 14.2 points per game last year for the Ninth Region runner-up Pandas. She shot 56 percent from the fl oor and averaged six points per game as one of the region’s top inside threats. Guard Brie Crittendon, Ryle The senior was the leading scorer for the Raiders, who won their third straight Ninth Region championship last season and advanced to the state quarterfi nals before the tournament was canceled by the pandemic. She averaged 15.5 points per game, hitting 50
3-pointers, and also averaged 5.7 rebounds. She recently signed with Eastern Kentucky. Guard Macie Feldman, Notre Dame The junior point guard controls the fl oor on both sides of the court for the Pandas, who fi nished 25-7 with the 35th District championship before falling in a close game to Ryle in the Ninth Region fi nal. Feldman, who averaged 10 points per game last year, recently was off ered by NKU for hoops. Center Marie Kiefer, Bishop BrosSee BASKETBALL, Page 2B
LaRosa’s names Sports Hall of Fame inductees Melanie Laughman Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Five area sports legends – including a brother and sister team -- are the latest inductees into the Buddy LaRosa’s High School Sports Hall of Fame, along with a remarkable Kentucky volleyball coach and two fabled high school sports teams. The induction ceremony will be in summer 2021. Now in its 46th year of recognizing outstanding local high school athletes and coaches, the Buddy LaRosa’s High School Sports Hall of Fame has honored 284 athletes and coaches and eight top teams since its founding in 1975. It is the oldest and one of the only Halls of Fame of its kind in the country. This year’s class includes only the 20th fi rst-ballot inductee in Jordan Hicks and the 10th sibling inductees in Tami and Kyle Ransom, who are also only the second brother-sister combination.
Here are the newest LaRosa’s HOF inductees:
Coach Kim Gunning, Notre Dame Academy, 1989-2000 Greater Cincinnati has long been the hotbed of high school volleyball in the Midwest and while Cincinnati has had its share of champions, no one has set the gold standard higher than Notre Dame Academy volleyball coaching legend Kim Gunning. Gunning charted new territory in just 12 years of coaching that likely will remain unmatched in Northern Kentucky for many years to come. As head coach of the Notre Dame Academy volleyball team, Kim drove the Pandas to three Kentucky state championships and four second-place fi nishes in a state where all schools compete in the same class. In three of those losses, the Pandas lost to the No. 1-ranked team in the United States. In her 12-year coaching reign, NDA
compiled a 360-75 record (83%). Just as remarkable – her teams were district champions, Regional Champions and Northern Kentucky Athletic Conference ChampiGunning ons all 12 years. She was named Kentucky Post Coach of the Year seven times, The Kentucky Enquirer Coach of the Year eight times, the Kentucky Volleyball Coaches Association Coach of the Year three times and the National Federation Interscholastic Coaches Association Outstanding Coach for the state of Kentucky in 1993. In 2016, Gunning, then athletic director at Notre Dame Academy for 20 years, received the Brigid DeVires Outstanding Leadership award, from the Kentucky High School Athletic Association which is emblematic of the state’s top administrator. During her tenure at NDA, the school also added four sports programs (lacrosse, bowling, bass fi shing and ar-
chery) and added a gym and three outdoor sports facilities (soccer fi eld and track complex, tennis courts and softball fi eld). Currently, Kim is the assistant athletic director at St. Ursula Academy.
1954 Elder football team Of all the great Elder football teams, the 1954 Panthers’ team is the only team in school history to go unbeaten and untied throughout an entire season, but they didn’t win a state championship because there were no state playoff s then. The state champion was decided by the writers who voted in the Associated Press poll, which was skewed toward northern Ohio teams such as Massillon, which was ranked No. 1 at the end of the season, followed by Alliance, Canton McKinley, Mansfi eld Senior and Cleveland Cathedral Latin. Elder fi nSee LAROSA’S, Page 2B
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Notre Dame Academy head soccer coach David Gronotte steps down James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Covington Catholic kicker David Gronotte kicks a fi eld goal in the KHSAA playoff game against Highlands on Nov 27. He will go to West Point. JIM OWENS FOR THE ENQUIRER
LaRosa’s Continued from Page 1B
ished 10th. Coached by Virgil Scardina, Elder fi nished 10-0, outscored its opponents, 319-65, and set school records for rushing yardage (2,721 yards) and rushing touchdowns (39). The Panthers were led by quarterback 1980 LaRosa’s Hall of Famer Dick Selcer, who went on to play at Notre Dame and later fashioned a coaching career that saw him become the head coach at Xavier University. He later worked as the linebackers coach for four NFL teams, including the Bengals. Elder used the Split-T off ense, which Selcer ran to near perfection. The Panthers weren’t a physically imposing team. After center 2014 LaRosa’s Hall of Famer Danny James, who checked in at 245 pounds, there was no one else over 200. What they lacked in size they made up for in quickness, especially from halfback Paul Kelly, who led the team with 12 touchdowns and 75 points. The Elder defense posted three shutouts, intercepted 14 passes and recovered 17 fumbles. Selcer, James and tackle Dick Royer all received all-state recognition. Selcer and Royer went on to play at Notre Dame, James played at Ohio State and later for the Pittsburgh Steelers and Chicago Bears in the NFL. End Joe Schaff er was a three-year starter at defensive tackle for Tennessee and played briefl y for the Buff alo Bills. Kelly, deemed too small to play college football, played baseball at Ohio State. The late Tom Ballaban, a coaching legend in his own right, once called the 1954 Elder team, “the greatest high school team I’ve ever seen developed in Cincinnati.”
1999-2000 Mason girls basketball team Having been denied the Ohio Division I state title in two of the previous three seasons, the 1999-2000 Mason girls put an emphatic exclamation point on the ending of the careers of senior starters Racquel Ellis, Susan Lippert and Beth Jones. It didn’t hurt that the Comets featured one of the greatest female basketball players in Greater Cincinnati history in Michelle Munoz, who has just been named winner of her fi rst of two consecutive Ohio Ms. Basketball awards. The Comets had lost the previous year in the state championship game to Pickerington, ending the 1998-99 season with a 26-1 record. As the state tournament unwound, a rematch in the Division I state title loomed, and this time Mason, led by Munoz’s 18 points and fi ve rebounds downed Pickerington, 3625. They fi nished 27-0. Munoz, a LaRosa’s MVP and Hall of Famer, was twice named the Ohio Division I Player of the Year, a Parade Magazine High School All-American and Wendy’s and USA TODAY High School
Basketball Continued from Page 1B
sart The reigning 10th Region Player of the Year averaged 18 points and 10 rebounds last year for the Mustangs, leading them to the 10th Region championship game. The 6-foot-3 senior shot 54 percent from the fl oor and is also a prodigious shot-blocker averaging four per game.
The head coach of one of Kentucky’s top girls soccer programs has stepped down. David Gronotte has resigned at Notre Dame Academy after seven seasons with the girls soccer program. He is leaving so he can cheer on his son in the college football ranks. Gronotte’s son, David “Trey” Gronotte is in his senior season as the placekicker at Covington Catholic. Trey Gronotte has committed to West Point, where he will join the Army football team. NDA announced the move on Twitter, saying “Huge and heartfelt thank you to our soccer coach Dave Gronotte
All-American and Gatorade’s Ohio Player of the Year. All fi ve starters on coach Gerry Lackey’s squad earned Division I scholarships — Munoz (Tennessee), Jones (Purdue), Ellis (Kentucky), Lippert (Emory) and Jere Issenmann (Illinois).
Terrill Byrd, Colerain, class of 2005 The most feared defensive lineman anchoring the middle of one of the best defenses Ohio football has seen since the start of the football playoff s, Terrill Byrd intimidated foes throughout his career. As a senior, Byrd recorded a staggering 63 team tackles and set a school record for 37 tackles-for-losses. In doing so, he was honored as the National Defensive Player of the Year by PrepNa tion.com in 2005. Terrill symbolized a defense on a 15-0 Colerain team that in 2004 allowed only 98 points all year, including six shutouts. In 15 games, the Ohio Division I state champions allowed only a strangling 1,921 total yards (742 rushing) and eight rushing touchdowns. Terrill accumulated numerous other accolades during his career including being named fi rst-team All-Ohio, The Cincinnati Enquirer/Channel 9 Player of the Year, fi rst-team all-city by The Cincinnati Enquirer and was named Defensive Player of the Year in the Greater Miami Conference. The Cardinals were 36-3 when Terrill was a starter. He was featured in Sports Illustrated’s Faces in the Crowd and he went on to play in the Big 33 Ohio vs. Pennsylvania All-Star game. His fearsome presence continued in college at the University of Cincinnati where he started four seasons – being named Defensive Newcomer of the Year in the Big East. Terrill was a two-time Big East fi rst-team selection and in 2007 was an Associated Press AllAmerican. He went on to play in the Arena Football League.
Gaby Downey, Forest Park, class of 1985 Gaby Downey was the driving force behind the Lady Chargers’ 1984 undefeated Ohio Division I state championship team. In addition to leading Forest Park to the 1984 title – the fi rst female team from Cincinnati ever to win the state basketball title – she was named the MVP of the Ohio State Tournament. She scored 40 of Forest Park’s 98-point two-game total in the state tourney. During her career, Forest Park’s girls team sported a 90-8 overall record. Downey earned 12 varsity letters during her career, including four in volleyball, two in softball and two in track. Basketball was clearly her best sport as she scored 1,107 points and collected 718 rebounds during her varsity career. She was a Street & Smith and USA TODAY honorable mention All-American in 1984-85. She was The Cincinnati Enquirer and Cincinnati Post Player of the Year in 1984. A fi rst-team all-city selection in 1984
Kiefer has signed with Ball State for hoops. Forward Whitney Lind, Cooper The versatile 6-foot-2 sophomore averaged 16 points and eight rebounds per game for the Jaguars. She hit 32 3-pointers and shot 77 percent from the foul line. Lind is getting lots of Division I interest. Guard Sydney Lockard, Dixie Heights The dynamic point guard averaged 14.6 points per game and ran the off ense
for his passion, leadership and dedication to the program over the past 7 seasons.” Gronotte responded on Twitter “Thank you to NDA for an amazing 7 years, I am so grateful. Thanks to my wife and my family for their support and allowing me the opportunity to pursue this passion. Thanks to all the players and parents! I am excited to watch Trey at West Point! Go Army, beat Navy! Go paNDAs!” Gronotte had an overall record of 12638-11 in his seven seasons, including seven district championships, four regional titles and a state runner-up fi nish in 2017. NDA was 15-3 this past season, falling in the Ninth Region semifi nals.
and 1985, Gaby was also fi rst-team allHamilton County American League 1983-85, and in volleyball in 1983-84. She played in the Ohio North-South basketball all-star game. Graduating with a 4.0 GPA, Gaby went on to enjoy an outstanding career at Miami University where she is only one of nine players in RedHawks’ history to score more than 1,000 points (1,192) and pull down 500 rebounds (543) in her career. She was captain and MVP on the 1990 Mid-American Conference championship team that went 23-5. Gaby is a member of the inaugural class of Winton Woods-Greenhills-Forest Park Hall of Fame in 2002 and the Miami University Hall of Fame in 2009. Currently, Gaby lives in Blue Ash with her husband, Jack Kinsinger, teaches at Milford High School and is the assistant basketball coach at Princeton High School. They have fi ve children.
Jordan Hicks, Lakota West, class of 2010 Jordan Hicks was regarded by nearly every publication in the country as the No. 1 linebacker in the nation as a senior. An eight-time letterman in football and basketball, the 6-2, 225-pound Hicks was one of the most heavily recruited athletes in the nation. He was only the second player in U.S. history to be named No. 1 linebacker in the nation by both Parade Magazine and the independent Butkus Foundation. He was a consensus All-American by USA TODAY, Parade Magazine, ESPN and MaxPreps.com. Jordan joins an elite group of LaRosa’s Hall of Famers in becoming only the 20th athlete to be inducted on the fi rst ballot. As a senior, he compiled 95 tackles – 67 solo – plus three sacks and two interceptions. The accolades he collected were staggering. He was selected for the Art Teynor Award by the Ohio Football Coaches Association, emblematic of the state’s top player. He was named Gatorade Ohio Player of the Year. He was picked as the Ohio Division I Co-Player of the Year (defense) and was a twotime fi rst-team All-Ohio pick. Jordan was equally accomplished as a basketball player as he set fi ve school records including most games played (87), career steals (170), and he was only the second player in school history to score more than 1,000 points. Jordan went on to play at the University of Texas where injuries plagued his fi nal seasons. Still, he was a third-round pick (84th overall) of Philadelphia Eagles in the NFL. He signed four-year free agent contract in 2019 with the Arizona Cardinals. He is a starting linebacker with the Cardinals and lives in Phoenix.
Kyle Ransom, St. Xavier, class of 2003 St. Xavier’s reign of Ohio swimming championships may have been in jeopardy if not for the “team” play of Kyle Ransom. During his career at St. Xavier, Ran-
for the Colonels, who were 34th District champions and Ninth Region semifi nalists. She hit 35 3-pointers. Lockard has committed to Division II Kentucky Wesleyan. Guard Mya Meredith, Scott The senior missed all of last season to a knee injury after averaging over 25 points per game as a sophomore with versatile scoring ability inside and out. She recently signed with Western Kentucky. Forward Rory O’Hara, Highlands
David Gronotte has resigned as Notre Dame soccer coach. PROVIDED
som won seven Ohio state titles – six of them as part of a relay team. And during that four-year run, the Aquabombers won four straight Ohio state titles and the National Championship in 2001. Named a high school All-American 13 times during his career, Kyle fi nished his senior season with a state championship in the 200-yard individual medley (1:50.70) and anchored both state championship 200-yard freestyle relay (1:24.53) and the 400-yard freestyle relay (3:05.39) teams. In addition to winning seven state titles, he held three St. Xavier team records and was named Swimmer of the Year in 2003 by The Cincinnati Enquirer. Kyle continued his swimming career at Stanford University, where he was a three-time collegiate All-American. While at Stanford, his team won the Pac-10 conference four times and he was a two-time Pac-10 conference champion in the 200-yard free relay (2006 and 2007). Kyle won a bronze medal for Team USA as a member of the 400-yard free relay team at the World University Games (2005). Kyle was an Olympic Trials Qualifi er in 2004, 2008 and 2012, most recently competing in both the 50 and 100 freestyle. Kyle Ransom works at Deloitte Consulting as a Manager of Supply Chain in Chicago. He and his wife, Ashley, have two daughters, Charlotte and Audrey.
Tami Ransom (Checkoway), Ursuline Academy, class of 2001 Tami Ransom, sister of Hall of Famer Kyle Ransom, was an essential part of Ursuline Academy’s dynamic run of four Ohio Division I state championships from 1998-2002. Tami captured six individual Ohio state titles – three in the 200-yard individual medley – two in the 100 freestyle and one in the 100 butterfl y. Her statewinning time of 1:58.76 in the 200 IM in 2001 stood as the Ohio state record for more than 10 years. That time was the second-fastest time in U.S. prep history and was the No. 1 time in the country in 2001. Tami was part of fi ve state championship relay teams, including a threetime winner in the 400-yard freestyle relay, the 200-medley relay (1998) and the 200 free relay (2001). Tami was also runner-up in four other Ohio division I state title events. She was named the Ohio Swimmer of the Year in 2000 and 2001. She was twice named The Cincinnati Enquirer’s Swimmer of the Year and the Girls Greater Cincinnati League Swimmer of the Year in 2000 and 2001. She was picked fi rst-team all-city and All-GGCL four times. Tami went on to swim at Stanford University where she was a two-time collegiate All-American. Currently, Tami Ransom Checkoway is a Senior Consultant for Galmont Consulting in Lexington. She is also the owner of Sweet Bee Cakery. Tami and her husband, Daniel, live in Georgetown and have two children, Alex and Sarah.
The versatile 5-11 senior is a key to the postseason hopes of the consistently successful Bluebirds program. She averaged seven points per game and has signed with Division II Tampa. Center Sereniti Webb, Simon Kenton The junior is the top returning player for the perennial Eighth Region power Pioneers. The skilled post player averaged 11 points and six points while shooting 48 percent from the fl oor.
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REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Alexandria 10 Cherrywood Lane: Alicia and Jason Bauer to Heather Whittle; $180,500 10181 Pond Creek Road: Agnes Armitage to Amanda Jett; $110,000 109 Springwood Drive: Ashley and Christopher Smith to Daniel Joering; $180,000 11099 Pleasant Ridge Road: Molly and Matteo Mancini to Rebecca and Jason Kremer; $238,000 11604 Alexandria Pike: Linda Barbian and Larry Barbian to Kathy and Steven Faucher; $695,000 12878 Sycamore Creek Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Alexis Matthews and Brandon Beneker; $227,000 727 Wigeon Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Ashley Gish and Andy Thomas; $263,500 7757 Promonory Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to April and Jackson Gillespie; $409,000 8474 Whitewood Court: Jennifer and Roger Lillie Jr. to Ashlee and Brian Coleman; $225,000 9529 Licking Pike: Nancy Pollitt to Julianna and Eugene Trimbur; $280,000
Burlington 1640 Deer Run Drive: Macklyn, LLC to Sedrick Seda; $185,000 1749 Timber Lane: Cindy and Michael Hickle to Monna and Bernard Steinhard; $270,000 2199 Tealbriar Lane, unit 104: Sheila Hill to Tommy Davis; $85,000 2612 Carre Place: Stephanie Johnson to Pifr Tract Five, LLC; $192,000 2977 Holly Hill Drive: Breanna and Stuart Thaman to Jerome Phillips; $213,000 3027 Silver Brook Drive: Cari Gongwer to Viktoriyia Laurynenka; $270,000 3067 Oxford Terrace: Anita and David Viltner to Jeana and John Schwenk; $322,000 5120, 5114 Burlington Pike: Casey and Brandon Hudson to Bethany and Clinton Mills; $400,000 6041 Caroline Williams Way: Mary and Robert Webster to Amy and Randall Cobb; $235,000 7624 Falls Creek Way: Julie and Jacob Shook to Andrea Escobedo and Melecio Saucedo; $247,000
Cold Spring 111 Village Green Drive: Tyler and Lori Lang to Leeann and Joseph Ball; $290,000 360 Shadow Ridge Drive, unit 25-B: Gina and John Stebbins to Valerie Shesko; $247,000
865 Sandstone Ridge: Diana and Gary Hackbarth to Karen and Brian Roth; $385,000
Covington 108 Sterrett St.: Dee Elliot to John Clissold; $218,500 11413 Mann Road: Regina and Glen Adkins to Zachary Foster; $188,000 118 E. 43rd St.: Susan and Thomas Linton to Brittany Wood; $110,000 124 W. 34th St.: Tyler Smith to Courtney Henderson; $160,500 1310 Banklick St.: Baoku Moses to Aurora and Kylie Noah; $102,000 1331 Greenup St.: Kim Foran to Chirstopher Code; $280,000 1353 Hands Pike: Westmark Properteis, LLC to Laura Kin and Daniel Schuchter; $395,000 2205 Scott Boulevard: Nicholas Lewis to Michelle Newman and Edward Miller; $184,000 2240 Amici Drive: Mary Lou and Michael Westling to Claudia and Tom Jacobs; $360,000 2812 Indiana Ave.: The Estate of Betty Wolntzek to Paula Eckerle; $130,000 30 E. 42nd St.: John Noll to Emily and Joseph Rider; $170,000 311 W. 16th St.: John Garner to SFR3-AIC, LLC; $61,500 3116 Willowhurst Trace: Andrew Stickney to Gina and Charles Marquardt; $320,000 48 Waterside Way: Ashley Vater to Chalena White; $175,000 511 E. 19th St.: Kymie and Arthur Woolums to John Thomas; $115,000 523 Sanford St.: Erin and Clyde Kessen to Karyl Kleve and David Carnell; $280,000 6 Juarez Circle: Shay and Daniel Kim to Kymie and Arthur Woolums; $160,000 625 Edgecliff Road: Shahryar Rumi to Amy and David Roberts; $130,000
A D A M
H A S A T
A P E D O M
B A S S I
R A N T O
R U E R F L
H E R S
T A B O R M S R P I O R T E A N T I O C H E A A T D A R B I R S A K
L I E M A O S E C L A S N D Y L E A S N L D C T E O S K S N A
B A D D A T A
U S S N T I O L L I S C C H A R O A T L T W I O C A L C H R I D P L A E A S T T R A S H A T T O S P E R C U B E A N A S R T Y
Elsmere 13 Lytle Ave.: Tamara and Kenis Williams to Amelia Garber; $67,000
Erlanger 160 Herrington Court, unit 2: Triad Holdings III, LLC to Vada Smith; $110,500 160 Herrington Court, unit 7: Monica and Josh Hurd to Patrice King; $118,000 165 Green River Drive, unit 6: ALS Management, LLC to Jane Jones; $110,000 204 Stevenson Road: Joyce Smith to Nathan Caldwell; $145,000 3418 Cherry Tree Lane: Emily and Randy Hitch to Lindsey and Joseph Svatba; $158,000 3419 Treeside Court: The Drees Company to Florence Tandy and Thomas Tandy; $611,500 3505 Ridgewood Drive: Christopher Davis to Amanda Weidner; $150,000 423 James Ave.: Mekenzie Ziegler to Jessica and Bradley Moorman; $146,000 558 Perimeter Drive: Amber and Joseph Sandusky to John Jorge; $165,000 682 Mimosa Court: Regina and Keith Merkle to BSFR II Owner, LLC; $165,000 905 Hawkshead Lane: Cynthia Mulcahy to Anita Murphy and Clifford McManama; $365,000 917 Hawkshead Lane: Holly and Trevor Workman to Anita and Matthew Whitten; $295,000
Crescent Springs
Florence
2280 Edenberry Drive, unit 103: Allison Groneck to Katherine Freiderich; $122,500 550 Park St.: Lisa Greenwell to Taylor Morgan and Shawn Ackerson; $91,000
10304 Sunset Drive: Lisa and William Harrison to Kylee Bamforth; $181,000 104 Valley Drive: Sara and Chad McGaha to Jordan and Timothy Tolle; $122,000 10476 Blacksmith Place: Beverly and George Eha to Dina and Todd Taylor; $300,000 1059 Maggie's Way, unit 8-A: The Drees Company to Bonita Cummins; $234,500 109 Hillside Drive: Laura and Billy Hall to Jenny Henry; $168,500 12 Ridgeway Ave.: David Ball to Cory Beach; $155,000 13 Kelly Drive: Nicholas Diamon to Megan Milburn and Kyle Gibson; $195,000 3719 Pebble Creek Way: Kim and Mitchell Ford to Anne Dotson; $242,500 45 Rye Court: Larin and Gregory Day to Rodolfo Alvarado; $275,000 5 Fair St.: Regina Beighle to Zachary Neumann; $65,000 535 Arthur Drive, unit 10: Maria and Brian Scroggins to Matthew Acres; $75,000 6 Sanders Drive: Jennifer and Ryan Koenig to Mary Jones; $140,000 6473 Deermeade Drive: Edna and Kenneth Fulmer to Beverly and Daniel Clark; $248,000 7113 Manderlay Drive: Lisa McIntyre Homes, LLC to Keith Feys; $155,000 8230 Rose Petal Drive:
Crestview Hills 595 Palmer Court: Kathleen Cranley and Kevin Cranley to Julie and Dion Feagan; $395,000
Crittenden 659 Bracht Piner Road: Elysia and Joseph Pentecost to Kelly Charlton and Oliver Benes; $595,000
Edgewood 3071 Ashley Drive: Diana and Paul Long to The Peak Group, LLC;
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O E P T A N T H A A S K E A E I T R S T E A S T M S A Y Y D O S P H I Y C A P A O T S I A S T H
R O M E T O U R A S H A N T I L E A
E X A M
M S A N Y E R I G O T C H O O D S P A T E C H T I M U C E C I E T O K L A Z A L E D O Y L E S C O M A O O N E I U S E M A P O L L O N E M O H Y R O W M D U E S A M B A E L Y P U T T A S T O N W S P A
S C I S E L M A L E O N E D Y E R
Hedwig Obara to Christina Jonathan Vice; $258,000 8256 Woodcreek Drive: Margaret Voelker to Nicholas Bailey; $330,000 8988 Steeplebush Drive: Kristin and Jeffrey Baldwin to Xinyuan Li and Chunhua Xu; $265,000 9076 Timberbrook Lane, unit C: Nannie Farris to Sylvia and Gary Bement; $225,000
Fort Mitchell 24 Ross Ave.: Phuc Pham to Douglas Diersing; $245,000
Fort Thomas 119 S. Grand Ave.: Kathryn Conley to Amy Ryan and Robert Beckham; $155,000 3008 Nob Hill Drive: Margaret Schultz to Katharina and Eric Pfieffer; $187,000 33 Manor Lane: Andrea and Todd Razor to Natalie and Gavin Master; $461,000
Fort Wright 1064 Emery Drive: Reema Said and Ibrahim Abu to John Bailey; $115,000 1244 Upland Ave.: Teresa and Gary Kraft to Daniel Houston; $190,000
Hebron 1499 Bottomwood Drive: Jennifer an Thomas Blatz Jr. to Sara and Charles Elmore; $335,000 1664 Southcross Drive: The Drees Company to Lana and Marcus Beach; $397,500 1775 Vanburen Way: Dena Leisure and Michael Porter to Rejoice Badu and Benjamin Badu-Abaajafio; $342,000 1807 Bramble Court: Arlinghaus Builders, LLC to Amanda Little; $322,000 2539 Bethlehem Lane: Shawn and Daniel Wood to Carrie and Dustin Hopp; $250,000 2773 Shamu Drive: Colleen and Timothy Dooley to Dawn Shafer; $210,000 6455 Taylorsport Drive: Peggy and Ronald Gilbert and Ronald Gilbert to Zack Knox; $150,000
Highland Heights 103 Ridge Hill Drive: Amy and Keith Steffen to Susan and Lonnie Turner; $225,000 33 Highland Meadows Circle, unit 10: Adam Sanderfer to Sara and Timothy Beagle; $120,000
Independence 10661 Anna Lane: Stella and Robert Mullinax to Tristan Ensminger; $262,500 10664 Blooming Court: Arlinghaus Builders, LLC to Jeremy Laswell; $300,000 10704 Blooming Court: Shannon and Gregory Carr to Janell and Mark Sanzenbacker; $295,500 12017 Crabapple Court: Arlinghaus Builders, LLC to Yiting Jian and Matthew Cabeza; $300,000 12169 Madison Pike: Carol and Frederick Lemkuhl to Kimberly and Gregory Sandel Jr.; $112,500 1246 Goldsborough Lane: Shannon and Christopher Hollar to Sarah and Seth Steele; $184,000 129000 Martin Road: Donna and Jeffrey Young to Stephanie and David Beaman; $365,000 1572 Cherry Blossom Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Ashley Kidwell; $250,500 1889 Autumn Maple
Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Annette and Paul Glenn; $280,000 2288 Callant Road: Joylene and David Tucker to Stephanie and Quinn Ballinger; $170,000 24 Carrie Way: Ruth Elbert to Mekenzie and Robert Ziegler; $155,000 27 Klette St.: Amanda Collins to Kenton County Fiscal Court; $191,000 3169 Meadoway Court: Austin Rankin to Angela and Anthony Stewart; $180,000 35 Walnut Hall Drive: 2econd Chance Properties, LLC to Deborah Smith; $219,000 44 McMillan Drive: Mary and William Due to Sheila and Jeffrey Mueller; $307,500 4819 Wildwood Drive: Erin and Andrew Steele to Amanda and Bryan Lundy; $175,000 5245 Millcreek Circle: Mary and Anthony Roark to Donna and Jeffrey Young; $232,500 5322 Fowler Creek Road: Keystone Holdings, LLC to Amy and Todd Kennedy; $190,000
Lakeside Park 25 Bellemonte Ave.: Stephanie Burke to Karla and Brian Litke; $240,000
Latonia 2727 Indiana Ave.: Shelli and John Stinson to Jacob Stinson; $123,000
Ludlow 404 Rivers Breeze Court, unit 34-301: Cathleen and Raymond Neiser to Weickert's Properties, LLC; $227,000 567 Rivers Breeze Drive, unit 29-301: Marla and Brent Hoffman to Dawn Kelly; $218,000 600 Rivers Breeze Drive, unit 25-302: Kylie StigarBurke and Samuel Powers to Lynn and Kenneth Brown; $195,000 606 Rivers Breeze Drive, unit 25-101: Clare and Kenneth Lucas II to Like Durstock; $205,000
Morning View 15245 Parkers Grove Road: Shari and Patrick Wells to Epling Properties, LLC; $226,500
Newport 1028 Putnam St.: Heavenly Properties, LLC to Megan Dillon; $135,000 207 E. 7th St.: Deborah and James Peluso Jr. to Traft Property Management, LLC; $65,500 2124 Linden Road: Elizabeth and Aren Enderle to Jacob Bertram; $125,000 2239 Joyce Ave.: Michelle Mozea to Stephanie Ritter and Chase Pflum; $145,000 318 8th St.: Sukkah, LLC to Ciera Philpott and Courtney Dryer; $300,000 6 Laycock Lane: Beneditti Enterprises, Inc. to Grant Moore; $170,000 923 Hamlet St.: Merilee McElveen and Jacob Merritt to Michael Hartmann; $291,000
ren and Josef Mortenson to Rachel Hicks; $169,000
Taylor Mill 3514 Saddlebrook Drive: Josephine and Donald Conti Jr. to John Clissold; $250,000 4896 Reidlin Road: Victoria and Trevor Sigman to Antonia Gaspard; $150,000 710 Allen Court: Adam Lybrook to Christianna and Joseph Lewis; $120,000
Union 10088 Cedarwood Drive: Barbara and John Barnes to Lisa and Steven Hesse; $329,500 10520 Brookhurst Lane: The Drees Company to Beverly and George Eha; $437,000 10708 Stone St.: Halley and Corey Losekamp to Kelly and Carlton Rodrigo; $364,000 1083 Samuel Court: Annette and John Murray to Jennifer and Jayson Putnam; $325,000 10958 Sewel Road: Mary and Dieter Schildmeyer to Julie and John Martin; $440,000 11048 Gato del Sol: The Drees Company to Melanie and BarryMilson; $697,500 1264 Farmcrest Drive: Michael Jackson to Jennifer and Timothy Wheatley; $207,000 15099 Stable Wood Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Morgan and Jackson Laumann; $382,000 1655 Hero Court: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Megan and Andrew Sein; $390,000 1702 Pickett Run: Karla and David Burch to Michelle an Phillip Judt; $305,000 2252 Hathaway Road: Kimberly and David Parsons to Elysia Pentecost; $305,000 3677 Hathaway Road: Toby Frohlich to Gina and Edward Grout Jr.; $760,000 5149 Loch Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to James Lijewski; $460,500 9104 Diamond Trace: Arlinghaus Builders, LLC to Catherine and Maverick Gosselin; $430,000 948 Riviera Drive: Arlinghaus Builders, LLC to Kyra and Adam Zewe; $460,500
Villa Hills 2862 Cliffview Court: Angela Becker to Paula Kremer; $160,000
Walton
2885 First St.: Debra and Travis Bush to William Carr; $120,000
11204 McKays Court: Jennifer and Jayson Putnam to Ella and William Soine Jr.; $247,500 11434 Wynfair Court: Rebecca and Stephen Hearne to Erin and Andrew Steele; $290,000 12459 Sheppard Way: Rock Creek Homes, LLC to Brandi and Adam Cummins; $271,000 179 Zinfandel Lane: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Kelsey and Jacob Carpenter; $247,000 496 Rosebud Circle: JoAnn Kennedy to Jennifer and Ryan Koenig; $199,000 605 Panzeretta Drive: Sherry and Terry Clifton to Samantha Bach and Ryan Roth; $227,000
Silver Grove
Wilder
214 E. 1st St.: Christine Lawson and Donavan Beniltez to Matthew Reynolds; $75,000
25 Regiment Court: Rebecca and John Becker to Matthew Wagner; $403,000 390 Timber Ridge Drive, unit 6: Jo Demarco to Izzat Joudeh; $108,000
Park Hills 829 Saint James Ave.: Taylor and Jonah Ritter to Alyssa Smith and Zachary Murphy; $223,000
Petersburg
Southgate 247 Ridgeway Ave.: Lau-
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 2020
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CAMPBELL RECORDER
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ANSWERS ON PAGE 4B
No. 1227 TOY STORY
1
BY RANDOLPH ROSS / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
RELEASE DATE: 1/3/2021
1 Currency of Thailand 5 Kiss 9 U.S. city just south of Timpanogos Cave National Monument 13 Minus 17 Something to shoot for 19 One who hasn’t turned pro? 20 Strong adhesive 21 Indiana governor Holcomb 22 She debuted on March 9, 1959, in a blackand-white striped swimsuit 24 Virtual pet simulation game that won an Ig Nobel Prize for its Japanese creators 26 [Grrr!] 27 Glenn Miller classic 29 Purchases on 14 de febrero 31 Major talent grp. representing athletes and entertainers 32 Outpourings 36 Overplays, with ‘‘up’’ 39 Toy that was originally called ‘‘L’Écran Magique’’ (‘‘The Magic Screen’’) 44 ‘‘Lost ____ is never found again’’: Benjamin Franklin 45 Natl. Humor Month 46 Mild, light-colored cigar 47 Things found in wandering souls? Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
48 Rhodes of the Rhodes scholarship 49 Photo finishes 51 U.S./U.K. divider: Abbr. 53 Loyally following 55 Flag carrier with an alphabetically ordered name 56 Trim 57 Game that got a big boost when Johnny Carson demonstrated it with Eva Gabor on ‘‘The Tonight Show’’ 59 Showy shrub 61 Schlepped 62 City in north-central Florida 63 Writer Arthur Conan ____ 64 Umpteen 65 Day to play with new toys 69 Food ____ (Thanksgiving feeling) 71 Like subway walls, often 73 Final authority 74 William ____, founder of Investor’s Business Daily 76 ____ area, part of the brain linked to speech production 78 Toy that was derived from a wallpaper cleaner 81 ‘‘I’m here to help’’ 82 Contented sigh 83 Phillies div. 85 ____ treatment 86 Harlem attraction, with ‘‘the’’ 87 Golf great Sam 89 Place for torn-off wrapping paper
3
4
17
Randolph Ross is a retired high school principal and math teacher who lives in Manhattan. He has been making crosswords for The Times since 1991. The theme of this one arose out of some factoids about 111-Across and 33-Down that he gave a grandson. ‘‘It occurred to me that for this Christmas and Hanukkah, with so many grandparents and family not able to see the children from their lives in person, a crossword about toys might bring a smile.” — W.S.
AC R O S S
2
91 Combined 93 Most common day to call in sick: Abbr. 94 Right away 95 Toy with 18 spoken phrases, including ‘‘I love you’’ and ‘‘May I have a cookie?’’ 97 Investment firm T. ____ Price 98 A halogen-containing salt 100 ____-Locka, Fla. 101 ‘‘My luck has to change at some point’’ 103 Politician parodied by Dana Carvey on 1990s ‘‘S.N.L.’’ 107 Performed a Latin ballroom dance 111 Puzzle toy solved in a record 3.47 seconds in 2018 114 Toy that astronauts brought to space to secure tools in zero gravity 117 Goes off 118 Grannies 119 Not on solid ground, say 120 Piece in the game go 121 Strong criticism 122 Chichi 123 Spring event 124 Rigging pole
6 Game with red and yellow cards 7 1904 World’s Fair city: Abbr. 8 Flint is a form of it 9 Moonfish 10 Sacking site in A.D. 410 11 Physical, e.g. 12 ‘‘Holy cow!’’ 13 Appointment that may be hard to change 14 Curve 15 Dr. Fauci’s agcy. 16 Poli ____ 18 Premiere arrival 20 Classic comics teenager with good manners 23 They can elevate art 25 Alley ____ 28 Org. with boosters 30 The beginning, in an idiom 33 By the end of 1996, one million of this toy was sold in a shopping frenzy 34 ‘‘South Pacific’’ hero 35 2014 film directed by Ava DuVernay 36 Goes after 37 Simian world 38 First toy to be advertised on TV 40 Open hostilities DOWN 41 St. Patrick’s home 1 Longest-serving Israeli 42 See the sights prime minister, 43 Feed lines to familiarly 46 Its box once read ‘‘A 2 Driver around sweet little game for Hollywood sweet little folks’’ 3 ‘‘And, touching ____, 48 Toy that sold more make blessed my cars in America in rude hand’’: Romeo 1991 than the Honda 4 Small snare drums Accord or Ford 5 Inaccurate information Taurus
5 18
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70 Be less than ambitious 72 Subj. for some aspiring bilinguals 75 Sierra ____ 76 Operatic villains, often 77 Totaled 78 Legal assistant, briefly 79 Future J.D.’s hurdle 80 Not just available online 84 Biblical ending 86 Soon
75
86
100 105
70
81
113
50 Promoting peace 52 Actress Taylor of ‘‘Mystic Pizza’’ 54 ‘‘That was Zen, this is ____’’ (philosophy pun) 58 Smart 60 ‘‘The Tempest’’ king 62 Cleanliness fixation, e.g., in brief 63 Brit. military award 66 Little bits 67 Reason for glasses 68 Singer with a selftitled No. 1 album in 2002
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88 With some downside 90 Shot from a doc 92 Statement of resistance 95 Big name in small planes 96 Took care of a tabby, say 97 Counters 99 Tik____ (app) 102 Ballpark figures 104 Lasting impression 105 Give up (on) 106 Shopping site with a ‘‘Toys’’ section
120 124
108 Straddling 109 Sight from the Sicilian town of Taormina 110 Textile worker 111 One whistling while working in the Garden? 112 Address with dots 113 Swimsuit part 115 Suffix suggested by the wiggling of one’s hand 116 Calf-eteria?
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Celebrate the new year with simple cranberry and goat cheese spread Foolproof sirloin tip roast beef Buy a roast labeled “choice” which has more fat running through it for flavor and tenderness. Beef marked “select” will be too lean for this recipe. Ingredients 21⁄ 2 to 3 pounds sirloin tip roast, tied Red wine or beef broth - 1 cup or so Ingredients herb paste Mix together: 1 teaspoon each: salt and pepper 2 teaspoons each: dried oregano and dried basil ⁄ 2 to 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
1
1 generous tablespoon garlic, minced
We like our roast medium rare. RITA HEIKENFELD/FOR THE ENQUIRER
Bit of olive oil to bring it together Instructions
Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld Guest columnist
The pandemic continues to infl uence how and why we entertain. The “why” is easy – that’s called nurturing and we all need that. The “how” is the harder part – following guidelines so we stay healthy. Maybe you’ll celebrate the new year like us, another smaller gathering. No matter, entertaining will still go on. So I’m sharing 2 tried and true recipes again. First, a simple cranberry and goat cheese
spread that makes a nice appetizer or a spread for bagels. Then, a favorite and fairly fancy roast for the holiday. Sirloin tip beef roast is less expensive than tenderloin, but if roasted correctly (the method I’m sharing is unusual) it’s a stellar entree. I’m hopeful for the year ahead and that’s my wish for you, too. Here’s a little truism apropos for these still challenging times: Contentment is not the fulfi llment of what you want, but the realization of how much you already have. Braiser pan or Dutch oven: what’s the diff erence? Check out my site for a photo tutorial.
Beef broth or red wine (a generous cup) Take the roast out an hour before roasting and leave it wrapped. After that hour, unwrap and pat dry. Preheat oven to 250. (No, that’s not a mistake!). While oven preheats, fi lm bottom of oven proof, heavy pan with olive oil. (I used my enameled cast iron braiser Smear roast with herb paste. Pour broth or wine around it. pan). Heat on medium high until oil shimmers. Put roast in pan, sear on all sides to brown. Roast uncovered until it reaches 130 degrees. This takes usually 1 hour and 30 minutes, but check toward the end of roasting time to give you an idea. Turn off oven and leave roast inside and don’t open door. After 25-40 minutes, check temperature. It should read about 135 after about 25 minutes for a rarer roast; up to 40 minutes for medium.
Cranberry goat cheese spread
Honey to taste - start with a couple teaspoons
Try dried cherries or apricots.
1
Remove from oven, let rest 10-15 minutes. Remove string. Slice thin. Drizzle with juices.
Ingredients
⁄ 4 cup or so fi nely chopped toasted walnuts or other nuts - optional
⁄ 3 cup dried cranberries, chopped coarsely
Instructions
Too rare?
8 oz. cream cheese, room temperature
Put everything in bowl and mix until blended.
⁄ 3 cup goat cheese
Keeps several days in refrigerator.
Put slices in single layer on pan and broil until desired doneness. Keep an eye on it. Broiler cooks meat fast!
1
1
2 tablespoons yogurt or to taste
Tip:
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 2020
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CAMPBELL RECORDER
SCHOOL NEWS ‘Preparing For Jesus as Joseph Did’ Joseph is a person in the Christmas story whom people seldom hear much about. This year the students at St. Joseph, Cold Spring, have been discussing the role of Joseph in the birth of Jesus; it must have been a daunting task to prepare for the birth of the king of salvation. The school theme this year is “Preparing For Jesus as Joseph Did.” The students of the school did a STREAM project this year during NTI. The students were tasked with building a manger for the baby Jesus with “found” materials from home. The results were as touching as the smiles of the children. Linda Gabis, St. Joseph Cold Spring Left, Clare Vande Water holds the manger she made as a STREAM project for St. Joseph, Cold Spring. Clare is in Alexa Mitchell’s fi rst-grade class.
Right, Reid Vorhees, a fi rst-grade student in Jill Gast’s class at St. Joseph, Cold Spring, holds the manger he created during NTI. PHOTOS PROVIDED
COMMUNITY NEWS $10,000 awarded to Emergency Shelter of Northern Kentucky Give Where You Live NKY giving circle members recently awarded $10,000 to Emergency Shelter of Northern Kentucky in a process that took less than an hour. The grants cap off a year of quarterly meetings that brought upwards of $25,000 in giving by community members in 2020 alone. “We are proud to present the Emergency Shelter of Northern Kentucky with this quarter’s Give Where You Live NKY grant,” said Horizon Community Funds President Nancy Grayson. “When we give together, we See COMMUNITY NEWS, Page 11B
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From left: Woody Mueller, Bob Mueller, Jason Worms, Nancy Grayson, Brian Sergent and Kim Webb. PROVIDED CE-GCI0531808-02
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COMMUNITY NEWS Continued from Page 10B
make an even bigger impact in our own back yard. During this pandemic, it’s more important than ever to help support our community.” 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. “There is no better gift right now in our community than to give the gift of a bed in a warm and safe place to sleep, and this $10,000 gift could not have come at a better time,” said Emergency Shelter Executive Director Kim Webb. “When we opened on December 15, we moved overnight shelter operations to the Campbell County Detention Center campus, which both doubled our capacity and our costs. We strive to do the right thing knowing that it will work out, and the $10,000 helps to work it out.” The 2021 Give Where You Live NKY meetings will be held on March 18, June 17, Sept. 16, and Dec. 9 – all on Thursdays, all from 6-7 p.m. “With temperatures dropping heading into winter, it was comforting to see an organization like the Emergency Shelter of Northern Kentucky awarded the funds from our latest Give Where You Live NKY round,” said Mueller Financial Partner Woody Mueller. “Our members recognized the need and came together once again to help protect our most vulnerable.” The giving circle runs on a tight schedule at each meeting. Participating 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, just four times per year. The previous winners of Give Where You Live grants include The Scheben Care Center in Florence; The Gateway Community and Technical College Foundation, which has campus sites across Northern Kentucky; Lucky Tales Rescue in Fort Thomas; Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library in Covington; Northern Kentucky Children’s Advocacy Center in Florence; Family Nurturing
From left: Erin Soard, Traditional Bank Representative; Susan Douglas, GSKWR CEO. PROVIDED
Center in Florence; GO Pantry in Florence; The Barracks Project in Covington; and, Covington Partners in Covington. The community can get involved by reaching out to Tess Brown at tbrown@horizonfunds.org or 859-6208221, or by visiting www.nkygives.org. Tess Brown, Horizon Community Funds of Northern Kentucky
The season for snow and ice Like it or not, winter brings the damaging eff ects of snow and ice to trees and shrubs. Wet snows are bad, but freezing rain is often worse. Ice storms typically start as warm rain falls through rapidly cooling air at groundlevel. This results in rain quickly turning to ice on all exposed surfaces. Freezing rain is especially serious on evergreens and deciduous species that have not shed all their foliage. Ice is heavy. A half inch on a power line can weigh 500 pounds. For Scully trees this can amount to a weight increase of 30 times. Corrective pruning and replacement are the only solutions once breakage has occurred. But, are there options to prevent breakage? The natural tendency is to protect plants by shaking the ice and snow from the branches. Unfortunately, this can cause long-term damage. As ice bends
the branches, fl uids in conductive tissues are still liquid. Only later do they freeze. Shaking damages the conductive tubes and results in air pockets called embolisms or cavitation that will never again be able to conduct water and mineral elements. The result is that plants become stressed, grow poorly, and suff er desiccation making them more likely to be attacked by diseases and insects. The best recommendation for plants covered in wet snow or ice is to do nothing. If branches are in eminent danger of breaking, ice can be melted with cold water from a sprinkler. (Warm or hot water damages plants.) Using cold water to melt ice is with the understanding that both will refreeze on the ground. This should never be used where ice is likely to accumulate on walks or roads. Quick Tip: Trees and concrete are both easily damaged by deicing salts. Use sand instead of salt, especially near sensitive plants as arborvitae, beech, holly, dogwood, hemlock, Scotch pine and white pine. DJ Scully is the Campbell County Extension Agent for Natural Resources and Environmental Management, and an ISA Certifi ed Arborist. He can be reached at 859-572-2600 or djscully@uky.edu
Local girl scout campaign funds membership for 250 girls ERLANGER, Ky. – Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road (GSKWR)
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 2020
Now is the time to rally behind local business. USA TODAY’s Support Local initiative is sparking communities across the country to take action and make it happen.
Say ‘thank you’ to the local businesses you love by purchasing gift cards and online services, or add your own business to our free listings to receive support from your community. Please visit supportlocal.usatoday.com to join the cause.
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launched a ‘Sisterhood Giving Challenge’ on Giving Tuesday with a phenomenal outcome – providing the opportunity for 250 Kentucky girls, who could otherwise not aff ord to be involved in Girl Scouts, to be part of the Girl Scout Sisterhood. Rick & Mary Beth Griffi th committed to match one hundred Girl Scout memberships; Traditional Bank, with fourteen locations in fi ve Kentucky counties (Bourbon, Clark, Fayette, Franklin and Montgomery) followed suit by contributing the funds for 40 additional local Girl Scout memberships; other community supporters, partners and individuals contributed over 100 more Girl Scout memberships, totaling nearly 250 memberships. “As a Council, we couldn’t be more grateful that underserved girls in our local community will have the opportunity to form bonds with other girls, create lasting memories and learn vital life and leadership skills,” said Susan Douglas, CEO of Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road. As the preeminent leadership development organization for girls, GSKWR believes that all girls should have access to the experiential learning and leadership development opportunities that Girl Scouts provides. Interested in joining Girl Scouts or donating to off er the Girl Scout experience to a local girl? Visit the GSKWR website to learn more: https://www.gskentucky.org To learn more about how Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road is creating experiential and leadership opportunities for growth, please visit www.gskentucky.org. Amy Greene, Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road
UK Cooperative Extension agent named FCS Educator of the Year Rosie Allen of Edgewood has received the 2020 Family and Consumer Sciences Educator of the Year award from the Kentucky Extension Allen Association of Family and Consumer Sciences. Allen is the Area Nutrition Education Program Agent for eight northern Kentucky counties. She began her career with the University of Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service in 1991. Rosie Allen, University of Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service
Help Keep Local Business Going. support local.
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 2020
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